/* * Buffer.java February 2001 * * Copyright (C) 2001, Niall Gallagher <niallg@users.sf.net> * * 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 org.simpleframework.common.buffer; import java.io.IOException; import java.io.InputStream; /** * The <code>Buffer</code> interface represents a collection of bytes * that can be written to and later read. This is used to provide a * region of memory is such a way that the underlying representation * of that memory is independent of its use. Typically buffers are * implemented as either allocated byte arrays or files. * * @author Niall Gallagher * * @see org.simpleframework.common.buffer.Allocator */ public interface Buffer { /** * This method is used to allocate a segment of this buffer as a * separate buffer object. This allows the buffer to be sliced in * to several smaller independent buffers, while still allowing the * parent buffer to manage a single buffer. This is useful if the * parent is split in to logically smaller segments. * * @return this returns a buffer which is a segment of this buffer */ Buffer allocate() throws IOException; /** * This method is used so that a buffer can be represented as a * stream of bytes. This provides a quick means to access the data * that has been written to the buffer. It wraps the buffer within * an input stream so that it can be read directly. * * @return a stream that can be used to read the buffered bytes */ InputStream open() throws IOException; /** * This method is used to acquire the buffered bytes as a string. * This is useful if the contents need to be manipulated as a * string or transferred into another encoding. If the UTF-8 * content encoding is not supported the platform default is * used, however this is unlikely as UTF-8 should be supported. * * @return this returns a UTF-8 encoding of the buffer contents */ String encode() throws IOException; /** * This method is used to acquire the buffered bytes as a string. * This is useful if the contents need to be manipulated as a * string or transferred into another encoding. This will convert * the bytes using the specified character encoding format. * * @param charset this is the charset to encode the data with * * @return this returns the encoding of the buffer contents */ String encode(String charset) throws IOException; /** * This method is used to append bytes to the end of the buffer. * This will expand the capacity of the buffer if there is not * enough space to accommodate the extra bytes. * * @param array this is the byte array to append to this buffer * * @return this returns this buffer for another operation */ Buffer append(byte[] array) throws IOException; /** * This method is used to append bytes to the end of the buffer. * This will expand the capacity of the buffer if there is not * enough space to accommodate the extra bytes. * * @param array this is the byte array to append to this buffer * @param len the number of bytes to be read from the array * @param off this is the offset to begin reading the bytes from * * @return this returns this buffer for another operation */ Buffer append(byte[] array, int off, int len) throws IOException; /** * This will clear all data from the buffer. This simply sets the * count to be zero, it will not clear the memory occupied by the * instance as the internal buffer will remain. This allows the * memory occupied to be reused as many times as is required. */ void clear() throws IOException; /** * This method is used to ensure the buffer can be closed. Once * the buffer is closed it is an immutable collection of bytes and * can not longer be modified. This ensures that it can be passed * by value without the risk of modification of the bytes. */ void close() throws IOException; /** * This is used to provide the number of bytes that have been * written to the buffer. This increases as bytes are appended * to the buffer. if the buffer is cleared this resets to zero. * * @return this returns the number of bytes within the buffer */ long length(); }