Konstantin Kolinko wrote:
2011/10/27 Christopher Schultz <ch...@christopherschultz.net>:
On 10/27/2011 4:58 AM, Anantaneni Harish wrote:
Thanks for the directions the Rainer. Actually the issue is just
solved.
We have changed from BufferedReader in = request.getReader();
to
BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader(new
InputStreamReader(request.getInputStream()));
Now whole body has been read at my client's environment as well.
But would like to know, what causes the issue. Do you have any
idea, why same method can read whole data in my environment and
does not read whole data at my customer's environment?
You'll have to provide more information, such as the code you are
using.
I'm fairly sure Tomcat is not the source of the problem.
+1.
I think you need to pay more attention on the documentation of the
java.io.Reader#read() method, or maybe look for a tutorial.
See also documentation for java.io.InputStream#available().
In short: the read() method returns a portion of data that is
currently available. If you need more data you must call read()
repeatedly in a loop until it returns -1.
.. and the difference between two systems, may be that on one system, the network is
faster (or the system slower, or the buffer bigger) and so by the time you do the read,
there are more bytes available in the buffer.
If you had provided some of your source code that performs reading, we
would be able to point at the exact error in your code.
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