I'm taking over an existing JAVA project which containing the following code:
class ConnectionHandler extends Thread {
private Socket socket;
public ConnectionHandler(Socket s) {
this.socket = s;
}
private void doSthForRequest(ObjectInputStream in, ObjectOutputStream out) throws Exception {
// Do something and write output to out:
// out.writeObject(someOutput);
}
public void run() {
ObjectOutputStream out = null;
ObjectInputStream in = null;
try {
in = new ObjectInputStream(socket.getInputStream());
out = new ObjectOutputStream(socket.getOutputStream());
while (true) {
out.reset();
doSthForRequest(in, out);
}
} catch (Exception ex) {
if (out != null && !socket.isOutputShutdown()) {
try {
out.writeObject(ex);
out.flush();
} catch (Exception ex2) {}
}
} finally {
if (out != null) {
try {
out.reset(); // any reason for this?
} catch (Exception ee) {}
}
if (out != null) {
try {
out.close();
} catch (Exception ee) {}
}
try {
socket.close();
} catch (Exception e) {}
}
socket = null;
}
}
There are ConnectionHandler threads which serving request and producing output on a socket. And my question is:
Does the reset() call still make any sense if there is a close() call immediately after it?
The original author just leaves one line comment // clear outputstream cache
which makes me confused...
Appreciate your help!