I'm writing a UDP server, which is a first for me; I've only done a bit of TCP communications. And I'm having trouble figuring out exactly how to distinguish which user is which, since UDP deals only with packets rather than connections and I therefore cannot tell exactly who I'm communicating with.
Here is pseudocode of my current server loop:
DatagramPacket p;
socket.receive(p); // now p contains the user's IP and port, and the data
int key = getKey(p);
if(key == 0) { // connection request
key = makeKey(p);
clients.add(key, p.ip);
send(p.ip, p.port, key); // give the user his key
} else { // user has a key
// verify key belongs to that IP address
// lookup the user's session data based on the key
// react to the packet in the context of the session
}
When designing this, I kept in mind these points:
Multiple users may exist on the same IP address, due to the presence of routers, therefore users must have a separate identification key.
Packets can be spoofed, so the key should be checked against its original IP address and ignored if a different IP tries to use the key.
The outbound port on the client side might change among packets.
Is that third assumption correct, or can I simply assume that one user = one IP+port combination? Is this commonly done, or should I continue to create a special key like I am currently doing?
I'm not completely clear on how TCP negotiates a connection so if you think I should model it off of TCP then please link me to a good tutorial or something on TCP's SYN/SYNACK/ACK mess.
Also note, I do have a provision to resend a key, if an IP sends a 0 and that IP already has a pending key; I omitted it to keep the snippet simple. I understand that UDP is not guaranteed to arrive, and I plan to add reliability to the main packet handling code later as well.