001/* 002 * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more 003 * contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with 004 * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. 005 * The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0 006 * (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with 007 * the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at 008 * 009 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 010 * 011 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software 012 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, 013 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. 014 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 015 * limitations under the License. 016 */ 017 018package org.apache.commons.net.tftp; 019 020import java.net.DatagramPacket; 021import java.net.InetAddress; 022 023/** 024 * A final class derived from TFTPPacket defining the TFTP Acknowledgement packet type. 025 * <p> 026 * Details regarding the TFTP protocol and the format of TFTP packets can be found in RFC 783. But the point of these classes is to keep you from having to 027 * worry about the internals. Additionally, only very few people should have to care about any of the TFTPPacket classes or derived classes. Almost all users 028 * should only be concerned with the {@link org.apache.commons.net.tftp.TFTPClient} class {@link org.apache.commons.net.tftp.TFTPClient#receiveFile 029 * receiveFile()} and {@link org.apache.commons.net.tftp.TFTPClient#sendFile sendFile()} methods. 030 * 031 * 032 * @see TFTPPacket 033 * @see TFTPPacketException 034 * @see TFTP 035 */ 036 037public final class TFTPAckPacket extends TFTPPacket { 038 /** The block number being acknowledged by the packet. */ 039 int blockNumber; 040 041 /** 042 * Creates an acknowledgement packet based from a received datagram. Assumes the datagram is at least length 4, else an ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException may 043 * be thrown. 044 * 045 * @param datagram The datagram containing the received acknowledgement. 046 * @throws TFTPPacketException If the datagram isn't a valid TFTP acknowledgement packet. 047 */ 048 TFTPAckPacket(final DatagramPacket datagram) throws TFTPPacketException { 049 super(TFTPPacket.ACKNOWLEDGEMENT, datagram.getAddress(), datagram.getPort()); 050 final byte[] data; 051 052 data = datagram.getData(); 053 054 if (getType() != data[1]) { 055 throw new TFTPPacketException("TFTP operator code does not match type."); 056 } 057 058 this.blockNumber = (data[2] & 0xff) << 8 | data[3] & 0xff; 059 } 060 061 /** 062 * Creates an acknowledgment packet to be sent to a host at a given port acknowledging receipt of a block. 063 * 064 * @param destination The host to which the packet is going to be sent. 065 * @param port The port to which the packet is going to be sent. 066 * @param blockNumber The block number being acknowledged. 067 */ 068 public TFTPAckPacket(final InetAddress destination, final int port, final int blockNumber) { 069 super(TFTPPacket.ACKNOWLEDGEMENT, destination, port); 070 this.blockNumber = blockNumber; 071 } 072 073 /** 074 * Returns the block number of the acknowledgement. 075 * 076 * @return The block number of the acknowledgement. 077 */ 078 public int getBlockNumber() { 079 return blockNumber; 080 } 081 082 /** 083 * Creates a UDP datagram containing all the TFTP acknowledgement packet data in the proper format. This is a method exposed to the programmer in case he 084 * wants to implement his own TFTP client instead of using the {@link org.apache.commons.net.tftp.TFTPClient} class. Under normal circumstances, you should 085 * not have a need to call this method. 086 * 087 * @return A UDP datagram containing the TFTP acknowledgement packet. 088 */ 089 @Override 090 public DatagramPacket newDatagram() { 091 final byte[] data; 092 093 data = new byte[4]; 094 data[0] = 0; 095 data[1] = (byte) type; 096 data[2] = (byte) ((blockNumber & 0xffff) >> 8); 097 data[3] = (byte) (blockNumber & 0xff); 098 099 return new DatagramPacket(data, data.length, address, port); 100 } 101 102 /** 103 * This is a method only available within the package for implementing efficient datagram transport by eliminating buffering. It takes a datagram as an 104 * argument, and a byte buffer in which to store the raw datagram data. Inside the method, the data is set as the datagram's data and the datagram returned. 105 * 106 * @param datagram The datagram to create. 107 * @param data The buffer to store the packet and to use in the datagram. 108 * @return The datagram argument. 109 */ 110 @Override 111 DatagramPacket newDatagram(final DatagramPacket datagram, final byte[] data) { 112 data[0] = 0; 113 data[1] = (byte) type; 114 data[2] = (byte) ((blockNumber & 0xffff) >> 8); 115 data[3] = (byte) (blockNumber & 0xff); 116 117 datagram.setAddress(address); 118 datagram.setPort(port); 119 datagram.setData(data); 120 datagram.setLength(4); 121 122 return datagram; 123 } 124 125 /** 126 * Sets the block number of the acknowledgement. 127 * 128 * @param blockNumber the number to set 129 */ 130 public void setBlockNumber(final int blockNumber) { 131 this.blockNumber = blockNumber; 132 } 133 134 /** 135 * For debugging 136 * 137 * @since 3.6 138 */ 139 @Override 140 public String toString() { 141 return super.toString() + " ACK " + blockNumber; 142 } 143}