Thank you Barry.

(Two, three, eh.... I guess I forgot to count, eh?)

-----Original Message-----
From: Discussion of advanced .NET topics.
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Barry Kelly
Sent: Thursday, May 17, 2007 2:53 PM
To: ADVANCED-DOTNET@DISCUSS.DEVELOP.COM
Subject: Re: [ADVANCED-DOTNET] TCP socket Communications

Peter Osucha <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Ok, so I can create two socket objects from my C# app (the client app)
> with settings as follows 

Three socket objects.

> IP Address: 192.168.2.31, port: 6001
> IP Address: 192.168.2.32, port: 6001
> IP Address: 192.168.2.33, port: 6001

If there are three machines, which have those IPs, and there are server
(listening) programs running on each of those machines, each listening
on port 6001, yes.

> And connect to all those sockets at the same time.

Connect, using those sockets, to those IP and port combinations, yes.

> The hosts
> (listening) apps require me to use port 6001 in the connection
> properties above since they are only listening on port 6001.
> 
> Correct?

Yes.

-- Barry

-- 
http://barrkel.blogspot.com/

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