There's no such thing as a no buffering send over tcp/ip.

Your app buffers.
The java layer buffers.
The OS network layer buffers.
The network itself buffers.
The various HTTP intermediaries buffer.
The network hardware between you and the remote buffers.
The remote side also has its buffers.

Any one of those can prevent the remote side app from seeing the data you
want in the time frame that you want.
This buffering can be further exacerbated by traffic muxing, traffic
aggregation, compression, etc...

If the timeliness of the data is important, you'll be better off using UDP,
as that will reduce the number of points where buffering can occur (but not
eliminate it!)
But then you are on the hook for out of order packets, dropped packets
resend, etc.. (pretty much what the TCP layer is doing)
(This is how most network gaming works, video conferencing, live streaming,
webrtc, etc...)

If you push enough data before your flush() to consume those various
buffers then you can, in a round about way, force the data through.
However, if any layer has congestion, then you suddenly are blocking again.

Timeliness and SSE are at odds with each other, mainly due to the fact that
you are dealing with HTTP and all that it brings to the table.

If timeliness is not a requirement, then stick with SSE and all of the
buffering that exists.

You should seriously consider cometd, as it will not send if the specific
endpoint is congested, queuing up those messages until the congestion
abates some.
You can even use the cometd features for message timeout (the message
expires and is old after x ms) and message ack (confirmation that the
remote endpoint got the specific message. useful for unreliable clients on
unreliable networks. wifi/mobile).

Joakim Erdfelt / [email protected]

On Thu, Jul 28, 2016 at 6:50 AM, Viktor Szathmáry <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Hi,
>
> Is there a way to disable buffering, so that the output is immediately
> sent to the client?
>
> Thanks,
>   Viktor
>
>
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