Max:
I've never seen a procedure that binds a protocol to a port number. (The http 
protocol you mention usually uses TCP port number 80, but the port choice for 
this protocol is up to the discretion of the programmer. The file /etc/services 
binds names to numbers so that tools like tcpdump and netstat can convert port 
numbers to names and that can be useful sometimes. But, you can violate these 
conventions without any consequences. If you use TCP port number 79 to carry 
http traffic, my netstat program will think it's the finger protocol. You can 
event set the port number that an http server uses for receiving connections if 
you want. It's completely legal to run a WWW server on, say, TCP port 666.)

On the other hand, there are procedures for getting an IP protocol by name...  
they will convert the character string "UDP" into a structure called a protoent 
i.e., getprotobyname("UDP"); The protoent structure in this example will 
contain the number 17 in host byte order as the member p_proto. But, that's a 
different kind of protocol than what you are considering. The bindings between 
IP protocol names and numbers are "written in stone", because every OS 
(windows, Mac, Linux, etc.) needs to know which protocol handler to invoke 
whenever an IP datagram arrives. If this wasn't true then interoperability 
would suffer. Maybe this is why getprotobyname() exists in the C runtime 
libraries? I've never used it. And it doesn't seem necessary.

Have you considered using an Enum? That could bind the string "http" to the 
port number 80.
John

----- Original Message -----
From: kurchi.subhra.ha...@oracle.com
To: weijun.w...@oracle.com
Cc: net-dev@openjdk.java.net
Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2012 9:16:28 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern
Subject: Re: getportbyname in Java?

I don't think so...

Thanks,
- Kurchi

On 13.11.2012 16:40, Weijun Wang wrote:
> Is there a Java API I can translate "http" to 80?
>
> Thanks
> Max

-- 
-Kurchi

Reply via email to