java.io.EOFException - ActiveMQ messaging broker - java

Here is the trace which is from startup.log (tomcat)
java.io.EOFException
at java.io.DataInputStream.readInt(DataInputStream.java:392)
at org.apache.activemq.openwire.OpenWireFormat.unmarshal(OpenWireFormat.java:267)
at org.apache.activemq.transport.tcp.TcpTransport.readCommand(TcpTransport.java:240)
at org.apache.activemq.transport.tcp.TcpTransport.doRun(TcpTransport.java:232)
at org.apache.activemq.transport.tcp.TcpTransport.run(TcpTransport.java:215)
at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:745)
Using below URL to connect broker:
failover:(ssl://{0}?wireFormat.maxInactivityDuration=0)?maxReconnectAttempts=5
{0} - actual ip address to connect
Added the maxinactivity =0 because of below WARN, but getting this exception in log 5 times a day.
org.apache.activemq.transport.InactivityIOException: Channel was inactive for too (>30000) long: tcp://127.0.0.1:52659
whats wrong with my configurations? or should i investigate further in ssl or tcp connection transport layers? what is the reason behind the exception?

The errors indicate that something is happening at the socket level that is causing a disconnect or half open socket to result and therefore the client is detect and reporting that it has disconnected.
There are many reasons why this could be happening, you might have a load balancer in the middle that is killing the client connection or the broker might be getting hung etc. It doesn't appear to be a client issue, the client is telling you the connection failed.

Related

Software caused connection abort: socket write error for KerberosRestTemplate (spring-security-kerberos-client) [duplicate]

Given this stack trace snippet
Caused by: java.net.SocketException:
Software caused connection abort:
socket write error at
java.net.SocketOutputStream.socketWrite0(Native
Method)
I tried to answer the following questions:
What code is throwing this exception? (JVM?/Tomcat?/My code?)
What causes this exception to be thrown?
Regarding #1:
Sun's JVM source doesn't contain this exact message, but I think the text Software caused connection abort: socket write error is from the native implementation of SocketOutputStream:
private native void socketWrite0(FileDescriptor fd, byte[] b, int off,
int len) throws IOException;
Regarding #2
My guess is that it is caused when the client has terminated the connection, before getting the full response (e.g. sent a request, but before getting the full response, it got closed / terminated / offline)
Questions:
Are the above assumptions correct (#1 and #2)?
Can this be diffrentiated from the situation: "could not write to the client, due to a network error on the server side"? or would that render the same error message?
And most important: Is there an official document (e.g from Sun) stating the above?
I need to have a proof that this stack trace is the socket client's "fault", and there is nothing that the server could have done to avoid it. (except catching the exception, or using a non Sun JVM SocketOutputStream, though both don't really avoid the fact the client has terminated)
This error can occur when the local network system aborts a
connection, such as when WinSock closes an established connection
after data retransmission fails (receiver never acknowledges data sent
on a datastream socket).
See this MSDN article. See also Some information about 'Software caused connection abort'.
The java.net.SocketException is thrown when there is an error creating or accessing a socket (such as TCP). This usually can be caused when the server has terminated the connection (without properly closing it), so before getting the full response. In most cases this can be caused either by the timeout issue (e.g. the response takes too much time or server is overloaded with the requests), or the client sent the SYN, but it didn't receive ACK (acknowledgment of the connection termination). For timeout issues, you can consider increasing the timeout value.
The Socket Exception usually comes with the specified detail message about the issue.
Example of detailed messages:
Software caused connection abort: recv failed.
The error indicates an attempt to send the message and the connection has been aborted by your server. If this happened while connecting to the database, this can be related to using not compatible Connector/J JDBC driver.
Possible solution: Make sure you've proper libraries/drivers in your CLASSPATH.
Software caused connection abort: connect.
This can happen when there is a problem to connect to the remote. For example due to virus-checker rejecting the remote mail requests.
Possible solution: Check Virus scan service whether it's blocking the port for the outgoing requests for connections.
Software caused connection abort: socket write error.
Possible solution: Make sure you're writing the correct length of bytes to the stream. So double check what you're sending. See this thread.
Connection reset by peer: socket write error / Connection aborted by peer: socket write error
The application did not check whether keep-alive connection had been timed out on the server side.
Possible solution: Ensure that the HttpClient is non-null before reading from the connection.E13222_01
Connection reset by peer.
The connection has been terminated by the peer (server).
Connection reset.
The connection has been either terminated by the client or closed by the server end of the connection due to request with the request.
See: What's causing my java.net.SocketException: Connection reset?
I have seen this most often when a corporate firewall on a workstation/laptop gets in the way, it kills the connection.
eg. I have a server process and a client process on the same machine. The server is listening on all interfaces (0.0.0.0) and the client attempts a connection to the public/home interface (note not the loopback interface 127.0.0.1).
If the machine is has its network disconnected (eg wifi turned off) then the connection is formed. If the machine is connected to the corporate network (directly or vpn) then the connection is formed.
However, if the machine is connected to a public wifi (or home network) then the firewall kicks in an kills the connection. In this situation connecting the client to the loopback interface works fine, just not to the home/public interface.
Hope this helps.
To prove which component fails I would monitor the TCP/IP communication using wireshark and look who is actaully closing the port, also timeouts could be relevant.
For anyone using simple Client Server programms and getting this error, it is a problem of unclosed (or closed to early) Input or Output Streams.
Have you checked the Tomcat source code and the JVM source ? That may give you more help.
I think your general thinking is good. I would expect a ConnectException in the scenario that you couldn't connect. The above looks very like it's client-driven.
I was facing the same issue.
Commonly This kind of error occurs due to client has closed its connection and server still trying to write on that client.
So make sure that your client has its connection open until server done with its outputstream.
And one more thing, Don`t forgot to close input and output stream.
Hope this helps.
And if still facing issue than brief your problem here in details.
Had an SSLPoke.bat (SSL troubleshooting script) window script that was getting this error despite importing the correct certificates into the cacerts trustore.
C:\Java\jdk1.8.0_111\jre\lib\security>SSLPoke.bat
C:\Java\jdk1.8.0_111\jre\lib\security>"C:\jdk1.8.0_101\jre\bin\java"
`SSLPoke tfs.corp.****.com 443`
java.net.SocketException: Software caused connection abort: recv failed
`at java.net.SocketInputStream.socketRead0(Native Method)`
`at java.net.SocketInputStream.socketRead(SocketInputStream.java:116)`
`at java.net.SocketInputStream.read(SocketInputStream.java:170)`
`at java.net.SocketInputStream.read(SocketInputStream.java:141)`
`at sun.security.ssl.InputRecord.readFully(InputRecord.java:465)`
`at sun.security.ssl.InputRecord.read(InputRecord.java:503)`
`at sun.security.ssl.SSLSocketImpl.readRecord(SSLSocketImpl.java:973)`
`at sun.security.ssl.SSLSocketImpl.performInitialHandshake
(SSLSocketImpl.java:1375)`
`at sun.security.ssl.SSLSocketImpl.writeRecord(SSLSocketImpl.java:747)`
`at sun.security.ssl.AppOutputStream.write(AppOutputStream.java:123)`
`at sun.security.ssl.AppOutputStream.write(AppOutputStream.java:138)`
`at SSLPoke.main(SSLPoke.java:28)`
I then checked some old notes about some network changes at my job. We would
need in some cases to add the JVM parameter
-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true to make connections to certain machines
in our network to avoid this error.
C:\Java\jdk1.8.0_111\jre\lib\security>"C:\Java\jdk1.8.0_111\bin\java"  
**-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true**  SSLPoke tfs.corp.****.com 443
Successfully connected
The code for SSLPoke can be downloaded from here:
https://gist.github.com/4ndrej/4547029
This error happened to me while testing my soap service with SoapUI client, basically I was trying to get a very big message (>500kb) and SoapUI closed the connection by timeout.
On SoapUI go to:
File-->Preferences--Socket Timeout(ms)
...and put a large value, such as 180000 (3 minutes), this won't be the perfect fix for your issue because the file is in fact to large, but at least you will have a response.
Closed connection in another client
In my case, the error was:
java.net.SocketException: Software caused connection abort: recv failed
It was received in eclipse while debugging a java application accessing a H2 database. The source of the error was that I had initially opened the database with SQuirreL to check manually for integrity. I did use the flag to enable multiple connections to the same DB (i.e. AUTO_SERVER=TRUE), so there was no problem connecting to the DB from java.
The error appeared when, after a while --it is a long java process-- I decided to close SQuirreL to free resources. It appears as if SQuirreL were the one "owning" the DB server instance and that it was shut down with the SQuirreL connection.
Restarting the Java application did not yield the error again.
config
Windows 7
Eclipse Kepler
SQuirreL 3.6
org.h2.Driver ver 1.4.192
In the situation explained below, client side will throw such an exception:
The server is asked to authenticate client certificate, but the client provides a certificate which Extended Key Usage doesn't support client auth, so the server doesn't accept the client's certificate, and then it closes the connection.
My server was throwing this exception in the pass 2 days and I solved it by moving the disconnecting function with:
outputStream.close();
inputStream.close();
Client.close();
To the end of the listing thread.
if it will helped anyone.
In my case, I developped the client and the server side, and I have the exception :
Cause : error marshalling arguments; nested exception is:
java.net.SocketException: Software caused connection abort: socket
write error
when classes in client and server are different. I don't download server's classes (Interfaces) on the client, I juste add same files in the project.
But the path must be exactly the same.
For example, on the server project I have java\rmi\services packages with some serviceInterface and implementations, I have to create the same package on the client project. If I change it by java/rmi/server/services for example, I get the above exception.
Same exception if the interface version is different between client and server (even with an empty row added inadvertently ... I think rmi makes a sort of hash of classes to check version ... I don't know...
If it could help ...
I was facing the same problem with wireMock while mocking the rest API calls.
Earlier I was defining the server like this:
WireMockServer wireMockServer = null;
But it should be defined like as shown below:
#Rule
public WireMockRule wireMockRule = new WireMockRule(8089);

Jersey REST service throw Timeout exception

we have a Jersey REST service, and REST client using Spring's REST template, once in a while we noticed the client got 500 Internal Server Error from the REST service:
error: 500 Internal Server Error; nested exception is org.springframework.web.client.HttpServerErrorException: 500 Internal Server Error
when checking the server's log we found this:
org.apache.catalina.core.StandardWrapperValve invoke
SEVERE: Servlet.service() for servlet [ABC] in context with path [] threw exception [javax.ws.rs.ProcessingException: java.net.ConnectException: Connection timed out (Connection timed out)] with root cause
java.net.ConnectException: Connection timed out (Connection timed out)
at java.net.PlainSocketImpl.socketConnect(Native Method)
at java.net.AbstractPlainSocketImpl.doConnect(AbstractPlainSocketImpl.java:350)
I'm not sure what the problem is here, is the server timeout or the client got timeout? If it's client issue, i can add retry, but what to do if it's server timeout?
The error Connection timed out: means that your request did not get a response within the specific time or in time period. and there is many reasons for time out our response bot get in time period:
1) may be ip address or port is incorrect.
2) may be ip address is down.
3) you server or host is taking longer or more time than your specify time for timeout.
4) may be firewall of server or host blocking the requests or port which you are using.
5) internet access or local network issue or connectivity.
6) packet loss due to wrong network configuration or traffic overload.
c) overloading of too many requests issue at host or server .

Multiple threading socket issue - Software caused connection abort: socket write error [duplicate]

Given this stack trace snippet
Caused by: java.net.SocketException:
Software caused connection abort:
socket write error at
java.net.SocketOutputStream.socketWrite0(Native
Method)
I tried to answer the following questions:
What code is throwing this exception? (JVM?/Tomcat?/My code?)
What causes this exception to be thrown?
Regarding #1:
Sun's JVM source doesn't contain this exact message, but I think the text Software caused connection abort: socket write error is from the native implementation of SocketOutputStream:
private native void socketWrite0(FileDescriptor fd, byte[] b, int off,
int len) throws IOException;
Regarding #2
My guess is that it is caused when the client has terminated the connection, before getting the full response (e.g. sent a request, but before getting the full response, it got closed / terminated / offline)
Questions:
Are the above assumptions correct (#1 and #2)?
Can this be diffrentiated from the situation: "could not write to the client, due to a network error on the server side"? or would that render the same error message?
And most important: Is there an official document (e.g from Sun) stating the above?
I need to have a proof that this stack trace is the socket client's "fault", and there is nothing that the server could have done to avoid it. (except catching the exception, or using a non Sun JVM SocketOutputStream, though both don't really avoid the fact the client has terminated)
This error can occur when the local network system aborts a
connection, such as when WinSock closes an established connection
after data retransmission fails (receiver never acknowledges data sent
on a datastream socket).
See this MSDN article. See also Some information about 'Software caused connection abort'.
The java.net.SocketException is thrown when there is an error creating or accessing a socket (such as TCP). This usually can be caused when the server has terminated the connection (without properly closing it), so before getting the full response. In most cases this can be caused either by the timeout issue (e.g. the response takes too much time or server is overloaded with the requests), or the client sent the SYN, but it didn't receive ACK (acknowledgment of the connection termination). For timeout issues, you can consider increasing the timeout value.
The Socket Exception usually comes with the specified detail message about the issue.
Example of detailed messages:
Software caused connection abort: recv failed.
The error indicates an attempt to send the message and the connection has been aborted by your server. If this happened while connecting to the database, this can be related to using not compatible Connector/J JDBC driver.
Possible solution: Make sure you've proper libraries/drivers in your CLASSPATH.
Software caused connection abort: connect.
This can happen when there is a problem to connect to the remote. For example due to virus-checker rejecting the remote mail requests.
Possible solution: Check Virus scan service whether it's blocking the port for the outgoing requests for connections.
Software caused connection abort: socket write error.
Possible solution: Make sure you're writing the correct length of bytes to the stream. So double check what you're sending. See this thread.
Connection reset by peer: socket write error / Connection aborted by peer: socket write error
The application did not check whether keep-alive connection had been timed out on the server side.
Possible solution: Ensure that the HttpClient is non-null before reading from the connection.E13222_01
Connection reset by peer.
The connection has been terminated by the peer (server).
Connection reset.
The connection has been either terminated by the client or closed by the server end of the connection due to request with the request.
See: What's causing my java.net.SocketException: Connection reset?
I have seen this most often when a corporate firewall on a workstation/laptop gets in the way, it kills the connection.
eg. I have a server process and a client process on the same machine. The server is listening on all interfaces (0.0.0.0) and the client attempts a connection to the public/home interface (note not the loopback interface 127.0.0.1).
If the machine is has its network disconnected (eg wifi turned off) then the connection is formed. If the machine is connected to the corporate network (directly or vpn) then the connection is formed.
However, if the machine is connected to a public wifi (or home network) then the firewall kicks in an kills the connection. In this situation connecting the client to the loopback interface works fine, just not to the home/public interface.
Hope this helps.
To prove which component fails I would monitor the TCP/IP communication using wireshark and look who is actaully closing the port, also timeouts could be relevant.
For anyone using simple Client Server programms and getting this error, it is a problem of unclosed (or closed to early) Input or Output Streams.
Have you checked the Tomcat source code and the JVM source ? That may give you more help.
I think your general thinking is good. I would expect a ConnectException in the scenario that you couldn't connect. The above looks very like it's client-driven.
I was facing the same issue.
Commonly This kind of error occurs due to client has closed its connection and server still trying to write on that client.
So make sure that your client has its connection open until server done with its outputstream.
And one more thing, Don`t forgot to close input and output stream.
Hope this helps.
And if still facing issue than brief your problem here in details.
Had an SSLPoke.bat (SSL troubleshooting script) window script that was getting this error despite importing the correct certificates into the cacerts trustore.
C:\Java\jdk1.8.0_111\jre\lib\security>SSLPoke.bat
C:\Java\jdk1.8.0_111\jre\lib\security>"C:\jdk1.8.0_101\jre\bin\java"
`SSLPoke tfs.corp.****.com 443`
java.net.SocketException: Software caused connection abort: recv failed
`at java.net.SocketInputStream.socketRead0(Native Method)`
`at java.net.SocketInputStream.socketRead(SocketInputStream.java:116)`
`at java.net.SocketInputStream.read(SocketInputStream.java:170)`
`at java.net.SocketInputStream.read(SocketInputStream.java:141)`
`at sun.security.ssl.InputRecord.readFully(InputRecord.java:465)`
`at sun.security.ssl.InputRecord.read(InputRecord.java:503)`
`at sun.security.ssl.SSLSocketImpl.readRecord(SSLSocketImpl.java:973)`
`at sun.security.ssl.SSLSocketImpl.performInitialHandshake
(SSLSocketImpl.java:1375)`
`at sun.security.ssl.SSLSocketImpl.writeRecord(SSLSocketImpl.java:747)`
`at sun.security.ssl.AppOutputStream.write(AppOutputStream.java:123)`
`at sun.security.ssl.AppOutputStream.write(AppOutputStream.java:138)`
`at SSLPoke.main(SSLPoke.java:28)`
I then checked some old notes about some network changes at my job. We would
need in some cases to add the JVM parameter
-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true to make connections to certain machines
in our network to avoid this error.
C:\Java\jdk1.8.0_111\jre\lib\security>"C:\Java\jdk1.8.0_111\bin\java"  
**-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true**  SSLPoke tfs.corp.****.com 443
Successfully connected
The code for SSLPoke can be downloaded from here:
https://gist.github.com/4ndrej/4547029
This error happened to me while testing my soap service with SoapUI client, basically I was trying to get a very big message (>500kb) and SoapUI closed the connection by timeout.
On SoapUI go to:
File-->Preferences--Socket Timeout(ms)
...and put a large value, such as 180000 (3 minutes), this won't be the perfect fix for your issue because the file is in fact to large, but at least you will have a response.
Closed connection in another client
In my case, the error was:
java.net.SocketException: Software caused connection abort: recv failed
It was received in eclipse while debugging a java application accessing a H2 database. The source of the error was that I had initially opened the database with SQuirreL to check manually for integrity. I did use the flag to enable multiple connections to the same DB (i.e. AUTO_SERVER=TRUE), so there was no problem connecting to the DB from java.
The error appeared when, after a while --it is a long java process-- I decided to close SQuirreL to free resources. It appears as if SQuirreL were the one "owning" the DB server instance and that it was shut down with the SQuirreL connection.
Restarting the Java application did not yield the error again.
config
Windows 7
Eclipse Kepler
SQuirreL 3.6
org.h2.Driver ver 1.4.192
In the situation explained below, client side will throw such an exception:
The server is asked to authenticate client certificate, but the client provides a certificate which Extended Key Usage doesn't support client auth, so the server doesn't accept the client's certificate, and then it closes the connection.
My server was throwing this exception in the pass 2 days and I solved it by moving the disconnecting function with:
outputStream.close();
inputStream.close();
Client.close();
To the end of the listing thread.
if it will helped anyone.
In my case, I developped the client and the server side, and I have the exception :
Cause : error marshalling arguments; nested exception is:
java.net.SocketException: Software caused connection abort: socket
write error
when classes in client and server are different. I don't download server's classes (Interfaces) on the client, I juste add same files in the project.
But the path must be exactly the same.
For example, on the server project I have java\rmi\services packages with some serviceInterface and implementations, I have to create the same package on the client project. If I change it by java/rmi/server/services for example, I get the above exception.
Same exception if the interface version is different between client and server (even with an empty row added inadvertently ... I think rmi makes a sort of hash of classes to check version ... I don't know...
If it could help ...
I was facing the same problem with wireMock while mocking the rest API calls.
Earlier I was defining the server like this:
WireMockServer wireMockServer = null;
But it should be defined like as shown below:
#Rule
public WireMockRule wireMockRule = new WireMockRule(8089);

"java.net.SocketException: Software caused connection abort: socket write error" on streaming multidimensional array [duplicate]

Given this stack trace snippet
Caused by: java.net.SocketException:
Software caused connection abort:
socket write error at
java.net.SocketOutputStream.socketWrite0(Native
Method)
I tried to answer the following questions:
What code is throwing this exception? (JVM?/Tomcat?/My code?)
What causes this exception to be thrown?
Regarding #1:
Sun's JVM source doesn't contain this exact message, but I think the text Software caused connection abort: socket write error is from the native implementation of SocketOutputStream:
private native void socketWrite0(FileDescriptor fd, byte[] b, int off,
int len) throws IOException;
Regarding #2
My guess is that it is caused when the client has terminated the connection, before getting the full response (e.g. sent a request, but before getting the full response, it got closed / terminated / offline)
Questions:
Are the above assumptions correct (#1 and #2)?
Can this be diffrentiated from the situation: "could not write to the client, due to a network error on the server side"? or would that render the same error message?
And most important: Is there an official document (e.g from Sun) stating the above?
I need to have a proof that this stack trace is the socket client's "fault", and there is nothing that the server could have done to avoid it. (except catching the exception, or using a non Sun JVM SocketOutputStream, though both don't really avoid the fact the client has terminated)
This error can occur when the local network system aborts a
connection, such as when WinSock closes an established connection
after data retransmission fails (receiver never acknowledges data sent
on a datastream socket).
See this MSDN article. See also Some information about 'Software caused connection abort'.
The java.net.SocketException is thrown when there is an error creating or accessing a socket (such as TCP). This usually can be caused when the server has terminated the connection (without properly closing it), so before getting the full response. In most cases this can be caused either by the timeout issue (e.g. the response takes too much time or server is overloaded with the requests), or the client sent the SYN, but it didn't receive ACK (acknowledgment of the connection termination). For timeout issues, you can consider increasing the timeout value.
The Socket Exception usually comes with the specified detail message about the issue.
Example of detailed messages:
Software caused connection abort: recv failed.
The error indicates an attempt to send the message and the connection has been aborted by your server. If this happened while connecting to the database, this can be related to using not compatible Connector/J JDBC driver.
Possible solution: Make sure you've proper libraries/drivers in your CLASSPATH.
Software caused connection abort: connect.
This can happen when there is a problem to connect to the remote. For example due to virus-checker rejecting the remote mail requests.
Possible solution: Check Virus scan service whether it's blocking the port for the outgoing requests for connections.
Software caused connection abort: socket write error.
Possible solution: Make sure you're writing the correct length of bytes to the stream. So double check what you're sending. See this thread.
Connection reset by peer: socket write error / Connection aborted by peer: socket write error
The application did not check whether keep-alive connection had been timed out on the server side.
Possible solution: Ensure that the HttpClient is non-null before reading from the connection.E13222_01
Connection reset by peer.
The connection has been terminated by the peer (server).
Connection reset.
The connection has been either terminated by the client or closed by the server end of the connection due to request with the request.
See: What's causing my java.net.SocketException: Connection reset?
I have seen this most often when a corporate firewall on a workstation/laptop gets in the way, it kills the connection.
eg. I have a server process and a client process on the same machine. The server is listening on all interfaces (0.0.0.0) and the client attempts a connection to the public/home interface (note not the loopback interface 127.0.0.1).
If the machine is has its network disconnected (eg wifi turned off) then the connection is formed. If the machine is connected to the corporate network (directly or vpn) then the connection is formed.
However, if the machine is connected to a public wifi (or home network) then the firewall kicks in an kills the connection. In this situation connecting the client to the loopback interface works fine, just not to the home/public interface.
Hope this helps.
To prove which component fails I would monitor the TCP/IP communication using wireshark and look who is actaully closing the port, also timeouts could be relevant.
For anyone using simple Client Server programms and getting this error, it is a problem of unclosed (or closed to early) Input or Output Streams.
Have you checked the Tomcat source code and the JVM source ? That may give you more help.
I think your general thinking is good. I would expect a ConnectException in the scenario that you couldn't connect. The above looks very like it's client-driven.
I was facing the same issue.
Commonly This kind of error occurs due to client has closed its connection and server still trying to write on that client.
So make sure that your client has its connection open until server done with its outputstream.
And one more thing, Don`t forgot to close input and output stream.
Hope this helps.
And if still facing issue than brief your problem here in details.
Had an SSLPoke.bat (SSL troubleshooting script) window script that was getting this error despite importing the correct certificates into the cacerts trustore.
C:\Java\jdk1.8.0_111\jre\lib\security>SSLPoke.bat
C:\Java\jdk1.8.0_111\jre\lib\security>"C:\jdk1.8.0_101\jre\bin\java"
`SSLPoke tfs.corp.****.com 443`
java.net.SocketException: Software caused connection abort: recv failed
`at java.net.SocketInputStream.socketRead0(Native Method)`
`at java.net.SocketInputStream.socketRead(SocketInputStream.java:116)`
`at java.net.SocketInputStream.read(SocketInputStream.java:170)`
`at java.net.SocketInputStream.read(SocketInputStream.java:141)`
`at sun.security.ssl.InputRecord.readFully(InputRecord.java:465)`
`at sun.security.ssl.InputRecord.read(InputRecord.java:503)`
`at sun.security.ssl.SSLSocketImpl.readRecord(SSLSocketImpl.java:973)`
`at sun.security.ssl.SSLSocketImpl.performInitialHandshake
(SSLSocketImpl.java:1375)`
`at sun.security.ssl.SSLSocketImpl.writeRecord(SSLSocketImpl.java:747)`
`at sun.security.ssl.AppOutputStream.write(AppOutputStream.java:123)`
`at sun.security.ssl.AppOutputStream.write(AppOutputStream.java:138)`
`at SSLPoke.main(SSLPoke.java:28)`
I then checked some old notes about some network changes at my job. We would
need in some cases to add the JVM parameter
-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true to make connections to certain machines
in our network to avoid this error.
C:\Java\jdk1.8.0_111\jre\lib\security>"C:\Java\jdk1.8.0_111\bin\java"  
**-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true**  SSLPoke tfs.corp.****.com 443
Successfully connected
The code for SSLPoke can be downloaded from here:
https://gist.github.com/4ndrej/4547029
This error happened to me while testing my soap service with SoapUI client, basically I was trying to get a very big message (>500kb) and SoapUI closed the connection by timeout.
On SoapUI go to:
File-->Preferences--Socket Timeout(ms)
...and put a large value, such as 180000 (3 minutes), this won't be the perfect fix for your issue because the file is in fact to large, but at least you will have a response.
Closed connection in another client
In my case, the error was:
java.net.SocketException: Software caused connection abort: recv failed
It was received in eclipse while debugging a java application accessing a H2 database. The source of the error was that I had initially opened the database with SQuirreL to check manually for integrity. I did use the flag to enable multiple connections to the same DB (i.e. AUTO_SERVER=TRUE), so there was no problem connecting to the DB from java.
The error appeared when, after a while --it is a long java process-- I decided to close SQuirreL to free resources. It appears as if SQuirreL were the one "owning" the DB server instance and that it was shut down with the SQuirreL connection.
Restarting the Java application did not yield the error again.
config
Windows 7
Eclipse Kepler
SQuirreL 3.6
org.h2.Driver ver 1.4.192
In the situation explained below, client side will throw such an exception:
The server is asked to authenticate client certificate, but the client provides a certificate which Extended Key Usage doesn't support client auth, so the server doesn't accept the client's certificate, and then it closes the connection.
My server was throwing this exception in the pass 2 days and I solved it by moving the disconnecting function with:
outputStream.close();
inputStream.close();
Client.close();
To the end of the listing thread.
if it will helped anyone.
In my case, I developped the client and the server side, and I have the exception :
Cause : error marshalling arguments; nested exception is:
java.net.SocketException: Software caused connection abort: socket
write error
when classes in client and server are different. I don't download server's classes (Interfaces) on the client, I juste add same files in the project.
But the path must be exactly the same.
For example, on the server project I have java\rmi\services packages with some serviceInterface and implementations, I have to create the same package on the client project. If I change it by java/rmi/server/services for example, I get the above exception.
Same exception if the interface version is different between client and server (even with an empty row added inadvertently ... I think rmi makes a sort of hash of classes to check version ... I don't know...
If it could help ...
I was facing the same problem with wireMock while mocking the rest API calls.
Earlier I was defining the server like this:
WireMockServer wireMockServer = null;
But it should be defined like as shown below:
#Rule
public WireMockRule wireMockRule = new WireMockRule(8089);

Connection reset by peer java.net.SocketException: Transport endpoint is not connected

I am using NIO threads in which ServerSocketChannel will be opened and client port will be bind.But when we tried to read the data from Socket chanel then below mention exception was displayed.It will be greatful if anyone provides the solution.
Connection reset by peer java.net.SocketException: Transport endpoint is not connected
at sun.nio.ch.SocketChannelImpl.shutdown(Native Method)
at sun.nio.ch.SocketChannelImpl.shutdownOutput(SocketChannelImpl.java:669)
at sun.nio.ch.SocketAdaptor.shutdownOutput(SocketAdaptor.java:386)
at iyp.trncomms.ConnRecordWriter.checkShutDown(ConnRecordWriter.java:131)
at iyp.trncomms.ConnRecordWriter.continueWriting(ConnRecordWriter.java:214)
at iyp.trncomms.ConnRecordWriter.retry(ConnRecordWriter.java:101)
at iyp.trncomms.ConnRecordWriter.shutDown(ConnRecordWriter.java:92)
at iyp.trncomms.ConnRecord$WorkingState.toOnHoldState(ConnRecord.java:1224)
at iyp.trncomms.ConnRecord$WorkingState.onInputError(ConnRecord.java:1152)
at iyp.trncomms.ConnRecord.read(ConnRecord.java:124)
at iyp.trncomms.NIO.run(NIO.java:137)
Connection reset by peer is pretty explicit. You opened the connection, but the remote side closed it before your code executed. You need to investigate the logs on the remote system to see why the connection was closed prematurely.
You seem to be calling shutdownOutput() in an error case. That's not going to work: you already got an error, this will cause another one. Just close the channel.

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