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using namespace System::IO;
using namespace System::Net;
using namespace System::Net::Sockets;
using namespace System::Text;
using namespace System::Threading;
void main()
// Set the TcpListener on port 13000.
Int32 port = 13000;
IPAddress^ localAddr = IPAddress::Parse( "127.0.0.1" );
// TcpListener* server = new TcpListener(port);
TcpListener^ server = gcnew TcpListener( localAddr,port );
// Start listening for client requests.
server->Start();
// Buffer for reading data
array<Byte>^bytes = gcnew array<Byte>(256);
String^ data = nullptr;
// Enter the listening loop.
while ( true )
Console::Write( "Waiting for a connection... " );
// Perform a blocking call to accept requests.
// You could also use server.AcceptSocket() here.
TcpClient^ client = server->AcceptTcpClient();
Console::WriteLine( "Connected!" );
data = nullptr;
// Get a stream Object* for reading and writing
NetworkStream^ stream = client->GetStream();
Int32 i;
// Loop to receive all the data sent by the client.
while ( i = stream->Read( bytes, 0, bytes->Length ) )
// Translate data bytes to a ASCII String*.
data = Text::Encoding::ASCII->GetString( bytes, 0, i );
Console::WriteLine( "Received: {0}", data );
// Process the data sent by the client.
data = data->ToUpper();
array<Byte>^msg = Text::Encoding::ASCII->GetBytes( data );
// Send back a response.
stream->Write( msg, 0, msg->Length );
Console::WriteLine( "Sent: {0}", data );
// Shutdown and end connection
client->Close();
catch ( SocketException^ e )
Console::WriteLine( "SocketException: {0}", e );
Console::WriteLine( "\nHit enter to continue..." );
Console::Read();
using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Net;
using System.Net.Sockets;
using System.Text;
class MyTcpListener
public static void Main()
TcpListener server = null;
// Set the TcpListener on port 13000.
Int32 port = 13000;
IPAddress localAddr = IPAddress.Parse("127.0.0.1");
// TcpListener server = new TcpListener(port);
server = new TcpListener(localAddr, port);
// Start listening for client requests.
server.Start();
// Buffer for reading data
Byte[] bytes = new Byte[256];
String data = null;
// Enter the listening loop.
while(true)
Console.Write("Waiting for a connection... ");
// Perform a blocking call to accept requests.
// You could also use server.AcceptSocket() here.
using TcpClient client = server.AcceptTcpClient();
Console.WriteLine("Connected!");
data = null;
// Get a stream object for reading and writing
NetworkStream stream = client.GetStream();
int i;
// Loop to receive all the data sent by the client.
while((i = stream.Read(bytes, 0, bytes.Length))!=0)
// Translate data bytes to a ASCII string.
data = System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.GetString(bytes, 0, i);
Console.WriteLine("Received: {0}", data);
// Process the data sent by the client.
data = data.ToUpper();
byte[] msg = System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.GetBytes(data);
// Send back a response.
stream.Write(msg, 0, msg.Length);
Console.WriteLine("Sent: {0}", data);
catch(SocketException e)
Console.WriteLine("SocketException: {0}", e);
finally
server.Stop();
Console.WriteLine("\nHit enter to continue...");
Console.Read();
Imports System.IO
Imports System.Net
Imports System.Net.Sockets
Imports System.Text
Class MyTcpListener
Public Shared Sub Main()
Dim server As TcpListener
server=nothing
' Set the TcpListener on port 13000.
Dim port As Int32 = 13000
Dim localAddr As IPAddress = IPAddress.Parse("127.0.0.1")
server = New TcpListener(localAddr, port)
' Start listening for client requests.
server.Start()
' Buffer for reading data
Dim bytes(1024) As Byte
Dim data As String = Nothing
' Enter the listening loop.
While True
Console.Write("Waiting for a connection... ")
' Perform a blocking call to accept requests.
' You could also use server.AcceptSocket() here.
Dim client As TcpClient = server.AcceptTcpClient()
Console.WriteLine("Connected!")
data = Nothing
' Get a stream object for reading and writing
Dim stream As NetworkStream = client.GetStream()
Dim i As Int32
' Loop to receive all the data sent by the client.
i = stream.Read(bytes, 0, bytes.Length)
While (i <> 0)
' Translate data bytes to a ASCII string.
data = System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.GetString(bytes, 0, i)
Console.WriteLine("Received: {0}", data)
' Process the data sent by the client.
data = data.ToUpper()
Dim msg As Byte() = System.Text.Encoding.ASCII.GetBytes(data)
' Send back a response.
stream.Write(msg, 0, msg.Length)
Console.WriteLine("Sent: {0}", data)
i = stream.Read(bytes, 0, bytes.Length)
End While
' Shutdown and end connection
client.Close()
End While
Catch e As SocketException
Console.WriteLine("SocketException: {0}", e)
Finally
server.Stop()
End Try
Console.WriteLine(ControlChars.Cr + "Hit enter to continue....")
Console.Read()
End Sub
End Class
See
TcpClient
for a client example.
The
TcpListener
class provides simple methods that listen for and accept incoming connection requests in blocking synchronous mode. You can use either a
TcpClient
or a
Socket
to connect with a
TcpListener
. Create a
TcpListener
using an
IPEndPoint
, a Local IP address and port number, or just a port number. Specify
Any
for the local IP address and 0 for the local port number if you want the underlying service provider to assign those values for you. If you choose to do this, you can use the
LocalEndpoint
property to identify the assigned information, after the socket has connected.
Use the
Start
method to begin listening for incoming connection requests.
Start
will queue incoming connections until you either call the
Stop
method or it has queued
MaxConnections
. Use either
AcceptSocket
or
AcceptTcpClient
to pull a connection from the incoming connection request queue. These two methods will block. If you want to avoid blocking, you can use the
Pending
method first to determine if connection requests are available in the queue.
Call the
Stop
method to close the
TcpListener
.
The
Stop
method does not close any accepted connections. You are responsible for closing these separately.