############################################################# # Client side: use sockets to send data to the server, and # print server's reply to each message line; 'localhost' # means that the server is running on the same machine as # the client, which lets us test client and server on one # machine; to test over the net, run a server on a remote # machine, and set serverHost or argv[1] to machine's domain # name or IP addr; Python sockets are a portable BSD socket # interface, with object methods for standard socket calls; ############################################################# import sys from socket import * # portable socket interface plus constants serverHost = 'localhost' # server name, or: 'starship.python.net' serverPort = 50007 # non-reserved port used by the server message = ['Hello network world'] # default text to send to server if len(sys.argv) > 1: serverHost = sys.argv[1] # or server from cmd line arg 1 if len(sys.argv) > 2: # or text from cmd line args 2..n message = sys.argv[2:] # one message for each arg listed sockobj = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM) # make a TCP/IP socket object sockobj.connect((serverHost, serverPort)) # connect to server machine and port for line in message: sockobj.send(line) # send line to server over socket data = sockobj.recv(1024) # receive line from server: up to 1k print 'Client received:', `data` sockobj.close() # close socket to send eof to server