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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DAFFODIL-2502?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
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Mike Beckerle reassigned DAFFODIL-2502:
---------------------------------------

    Assignee: Mike Beckerle

> Parse must behave properly for reading data from TCP sockets
> ------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: DAFFODIL-2502
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DAFFODIL-2502
>             Project: Daffodil
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: API, Back End
>    Affects Versions: 3.0.0
>            Reporter: Mike Beckerle
>            Assignee: Mike Beckerle
>            Priority: Major
>
> Daffodil assumes the input streams are like files - reads are always blocking 
> for either 1 or more bytes of data, or End-of-data.
> People want to use Daffodil to read data from TCP/IP sockets. These can 
> return 0 bytes from a read because there is no data available, but that does 
> NOT mean the end of data. It's just a temporary condition. More data may come 
> along.
> Daffodil's InputSourceDataInputStream is wrapped around a regular Java input 
> stream, and enables us to support incoming messages which do not conform to 
> byte-boundaries.
> The problem is that there's no way for users to wrap an 
> InputSourceDataInputStream around a TCP/IP socket, and have it behave 
> properly when a read() call temporarily says 0 bytes available.
> Obviously we don't want to sit in a tight loop just retrying the read until 
> we get either some bytes or end-of-data.
> The right API here is that if the read() of the underlying java stream 
> returns 0 bytes, that a hook function supplied by the API user is called.
> One obvious thing a user can do is put a call to Thread.yield() in the hook. 
> (That might even want to be the default behavior if they supply no hook.) 
> Then if they have a separate thread parsing the data with daffodil, that 
> thread will at least yield the CPU, i.e., behave politely in a multi-threaded 
> world.
> More advanced usage could start a Daffodil parse using co-routines, returning 
> control to the caller when the parse must pause due to read() of the Java 
> input stream returning 0 bytes.
>  
>  



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