/* * Copyright 2011- Per Wendel * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package spark.utils; import java.io.File; import java.io.IOException; import java.io.InputStream; import java.io.InputStreamReader; import java.io.PrintWriter; import java.io.Reader; import java.io.StringWriter; import java.io.Writer; /** * General IO stream manipulation utilities. * <p> * This class provides static utility methods for input/output operations. * <ul> * <li>closeQuietly - these methods close a stream ignoring nulls and exceptions * <li>toXxx/read - these methods read data from a stream * <li>write - these methods write data to a stream * <li>copy - these methods copy all the data from one stream to another * <li>contentEquals - these methods compare the content of two streams * </ul> * <p> * The byte-to-char methods and char-to-byte methods involve a conversion step. * Two methods are provided in each case, one that uses the platform default * encoding and the other which allows you to specify an encoding. You are * encouraged to always specify an encoding because relying on the platform * default can lead to unexpected results, for example when moving from * development to production. * <p> * All the methods in this class that read a stream are buffered internally. * This means that there is no cause to use a <code>BufferedInputStream</code> * or <code>BufferedReader</code>. The default buffer size of 4K has been shown * to be efficient in tests. * <p> * Wherever possible, the methods in this class do <em>not</em> flush or close * the stream. This is to avoid making non-portable assumptions about the * streams' origin and further use. Thus the caller is still responsible for * closing streams after use. * <p> * Origin of code: Excalibur. * * @author Peter Donald * @author Jeff Turner * @author Matthew Hawthorne * @author Stephen Colebourne * @author Gareth Davis * @author Ian Springer * @author Niall Pemberton * @author Sandy McArthur * @version $Id: IOUtils.java 481854 2006-12-03 18:30:07Z scolebourne $ */ public final class IOUtils { // NOTE: This class is focussed on InputStream, OutputStream, Reader and // Writer. Each method should take at least one of these as a parameter, // or return one of them. /** * The Unix directory separator character. */ public static final char DIR_SEPARATOR_UNIX = '/'; /** * The Windows directory separator character. */ public static final char DIR_SEPARATOR_WINDOWS = '\\'; /** * The system directory separator character. */ public static final char DIR_SEPARATOR = File.separatorChar; /** * The Unix line separator string. */ public static final String LINE_SEPARATOR_UNIX = "\n"; /** * The Windows line separator string. */ public static final String LINE_SEPARATOR_WINDOWS = "\r\n"; /** * The system line separator string. */ public static final String LINE_SEPARATOR; static { // avoid security issues StringWriter buf = new StringWriter(4); // NOSONAR PrintWriter out = new PrintWriter(buf); out.println(); LINE_SEPARATOR = buf.toString(); } /** * The default buffer size to use. */ private static final int DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE = 1024 * 4; private IOUtils() {} // read toString //----------------------------------------------------------------------- /** * Get the contents of an <code>InputStream</code> as a String * using the default character encoding of the platform. * <p> * This method buffers the input internally, so there is no need to use a * <code>BufferedInputStream</code>. * * @param input the <code>InputStream</code> to read from * @return the requested String * @throws NullPointerException if the input is null * @throws IOException if an I/O error occurs */ public static String toString(InputStream input) throws IOException { StringWriter sw = new StringWriter(); copy(input, sw); return sw.toString(); } /** * Copy bytes from an <code>InputStream</code> to chars on a * <code>Writer</code> using the default character encoding of the platform. * <p> * This method buffers the input internally, so there is no need to use a * <code>BufferedInputStream</code>. * <p> * This method uses {@link InputStreamReader}. * * @param input the <code>InputStream</code> to read from * @param output the <code>Writer</code> to write to * @throws NullPointerException if the input or output is null * @throws IOException if an I/O error occurs * @since Commons IO 1.1 */ public static void copy(InputStream input, Writer output) throws IOException { InputStreamReader in = new InputStreamReader(input); // NOSONAR copy(in, output); } // copy from Reader //----------------------------------------------------------------------- /** * Copy chars from a <code>Reader</code> to a <code>Writer</code>. * <p> * This method buffers the input internally, so there is no need to use a * <code>BufferedReader</code>. * <p> * Large streams (over 2GB) will return a chars copied value of * <code>-1</code> after the copy has completed since the correct * number of chars cannot be returned as an int. For large streams * use the <code>copyLarge(Reader, Writer)</code> method. * * @param input the <code>Reader</code> to read from * @param output the <code>Writer</code> to write to * @return the number of characters copied * @throws NullPointerException if the input or output is null * @throws IOException if an I/O error occurs * @throws ArithmeticException if the character count is too large * @since Commons IO 1.1 */ public static int copy(Reader input, Writer output) throws IOException { long count = copyLarge(input, output); if (count > Integer.MAX_VALUE) { return -1; } return (int) count; } /** * Copy chars from a large (over 2GB) <code>Reader</code> to a <code>Writer</code>. * <p> * This method buffers the input internally, so there is no need to use a * <code>BufferedReader</code>. * * @param input the <code>Reader</code> to read from * @param output the <code>Writer</code> to write to * @return the number of characters copied * @throws NullPointerException if the input or output is null * @throws IOException if an I/O error occurs * @since Commons IO 1.3 */ public static long copyLarge(Reader input, Writer output) throws IOException { char[] buffer = new char[DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE]; long count = 0; int n = 0; while (-1 != (n = input.read(buffer))) { output.write(buffer, 0, n); count += n; } return count; } }