All Downloads are FREE. Search and download functionalities are using the official Maven repository.

com.google.protobuf.CodedInputStream Maven / Gradle / Ivy

There is a newer version: 5.3.3
Show newest version
// Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format
// Copyright 2008 Google Inc.  All rights reserved.
// http://code.google.com/p/protobuf/
//
// Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
// modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
// met:
//
//     * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
// notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
//     * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
// copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer
// in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
// distribution.
//     * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its
// contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
// this software without specific prior written permission.
//
// THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
// "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
// LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
// A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
// OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
// SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
// LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
// DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
// THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
// (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
// OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

package com.google.protobuf;

import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.List;

/**
 * Reads and decodes protocol message fields.
 * 

* This class contains two kinds of methods: methods that read specific * protocol message constructs and field types (e.g. {@link #readTag()} and * {@link #readInt32()}) and methods that read low-level values (e.g. * {@link #readRawVarint32()} and {@link #readRawBytes}). If you are reading * encoded protocol messages, you should use the former methods, but if you are * reading some other format of your own design, use the latter. * * @author [email protected] Kenton Varda */ public final class CodedInputStream { private static final int DEFAULT_RECURSION_LIMIT = 64; private static final int DEFAULT_SIZE_LIMIT = 64 << 20; // 64MB private static final int BUFFER_SIZE = 4096; // ----------------------------------------------------------------- private final byte[] buffer; private final InputStream input; private int bufferSize; private int bufferSizeAfterLimit; // ----------------------------------------------------------------- private int bufferPos; private int lastTag; /** * The total number of bytes read before the current buffer. The total * bytes read up to the current position can be computed as * {@code totalBytesRetired + bufferPos}. This value may be negative if * reading started in the middle of the current buffer (e.g. if the * constructor that takes a byte array and an offset was used). */ private int totalBytesRetired; /** * The absolute position of the end of the current message. */ private int currentLimit = Integer.MAX_VALUE; /** * See setRecursionLimit() */ private int recursionDepth; private int recursionLimit = DEFAULT_RECURSION_LIMIT; /** * See setSizeLimit() */ private int sizeLimit = DEFAULT_SIZE_LIMIT; private CodedInputStream(final byte[] buffer, final int off, final int len) { this.buffer = buffer; bufferSize = off + len; bufferPos = off; totalBytesRetired = -off; input = null; } private CodedInputStream(final InputStream input) { buffer = new byte[BUFFER_SIZE]; bufferSize = 0; bufferPos = 0; totalBytesRetired = 0; this.input = input; } /** * Create a new CodedInputStream wrapping the given InputStream. */ public static CodedInputStream newInstance(final InputStream input) { return new CodedInputStream(input); } /** * Create a new CodedInputStream wrapping the given byte array. */ public static CodedInputStream newInstance(final byte[] buf) { return newInstance(buf, 0, buf.length); } /** * Create a new CodedInputStream wrapping the given byte array slice. */ public static CodedInputStream newInstance(final byte[] buf, final int off, final int len) { return new CodedInputStream(buf, off, len); } /** * Reads a varint from the input one byte at a time, so that it does not * read any bytes after the end of the varint. If you simply wrapped the * stream in a CodedInputStream and used {@link #readRawVarint32(InputStream)} * then you would probably end up reading past the end of the varint since * CodedInputStream buffers its input. */ static int readRawVarint32(final InputStream input) throws IOException { final int firstByte = input.read(); if (firstByte == -1) { throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.truncatedMessage(); } return readRawVarint32(firstByte, input); } /** * Like {@link #readRawVarint32(InputStream)}, but expects that the caller * has already read one byte. This allows the caller to determine if EOF * has been reached before attempting to read. */ static int readRawVarint32(final int firstByte, final InputStream input) throws IOException { if ((firstByte & 0x80) == 0) { return firstByte; } int result = firstByte & 0x7f; int offset = 7; for (; offset < 32; offset += 7) { final int b = input.read(); if (b == -1) { throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.truncatedMessage(); } result |= (b & 0x7f) << offset; if ((b & 0x80) == 0) { return result; } } // Keep reading up to 64 bits. for (; offset < 64; offset += 7) { final int b = input.read(); if (b == -1) { throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.truncatedMessage(); } if ((b & 0x80) == 0) { return result; } } throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.malformedVarint(); } /** * Decode a ZigZag-encoded 32-bit value. ZigZag encodes signed integers * into values that can be efficiently encoded with varint. (Otherwise, * negative values must be sign-extended to 64 bits to be varint encoded, * thus always taking 10 bytes on the wire.) * * @param n An unsigned 32-bit integer, stored in a signed int because * Java has no explicit unsigned support. * @return A signed 32-bit integer. */ public static int decodeZigZag32(final int n) { return (n >>> 1) ^ -(n & 1); } /** * Decode a ZigZag-encoded 64-bit value. ZigZag encodes signed integers * into values that can be efficiently encoded with varint. (Otherwise, * negative values must be sign-extended to 64 bits to be varint encoded, * thus always taking 10 bytes on the wire.) * * @param n An unsigned 64-bit integer, stored in a signed int because * Java has no explicit unsigned support. * @return A signed 64-bit integer. */ public static long decodeZigZag64(final long n) { return (n >>> 1) ^ -(n & 1); } /** * Attempt to read a field tag, returning zero if we have reached EOF. * Protocol message parsers use this to read tags, since a protocol message * may legally end wherever a tag occurs, and zero is not a valid tag number. */ public int readTag() throws IOException { if (isAtEnd()) { lastTag = 0; return 0; } lastTag = readRawVarint32(); if (WireFormat.getTagFieldNumber(lastTag) == 0) { // If we actually read zero (or any tag number corresponding to field // number zero), that's not a valid tag. throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.invalidTag(); } return lastTag; } /** * Verifies that the last call to readTag() returned the given tag value. * This is used to verify that a nested group ended with the correct * end tag. * * @throws InvalidProtocolBufferException {@code value} does not match the * last tag. */ public void checkLastTagWas(final int value) throws InvalidProtocolBufferException { if (lastTag != value) { throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.invalidEndTag(); } } /** * Reads and discards a single field, given its tag value. * * @return {@code false} if the tag is an endgroup tag, in which case * nothing is skipped. Otherwise, returns {@code true}. */ public boolean skipField(final int tag) throws IOException { switch (WireFormat.getTagWireType(tag)) { case WireFormat.WIRETYPE_VARINT: readInt32(); return true; case WireFormat.WIRETYPE_FIXED64: readRawLittleEndian64(); return true; case WireFormat.WIRETYPE_LENGTH_DELIMITED: skipRawBytes(readRawVarint32()); return true; case WireFormat.WIRETYPE_START_GROUP: skipMessage(); checkLastTagWas( WireFormat.makeTag(WireFormat.getTagFieldNumber(tag), WireFormat.WIRETYPE_END_GROUP)); return true; case WireFormat.WIRETYPE_END_GROUP: return false; case WireFormat.WIRETYPE_FIXED32: readRawLittleEndian32(); return true; default: throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.invalidWireType(); } } // ================================================================= /** * Reads and discards an entire message. This will read either until EOF * or until an endgroup tag, whichever comes first. */ public void skipMessage() throws IOException { while (true) { final int tag = readTag(); if (tag == 0 || !skipField(tag)) { return; } } } /** * Read a {@code double} field value from the stream. */ public double readDouble() throws IOException { return Double.longBitsToDouble(readRawLittleEndian64()); } /** * Read a {@code float} field value from the stream. */ public float readFloat() throws IOException { return Float.intBitsToFloat(readRawLittleEndian32()); } /** * Read a {@code uint64} field value from the stream. */ public long readUInt64() throws IOException { return readRawVarint64(); } /** * Read an {@code int64} field value from the stream. */ public long readInt64() throws IOException { return readRawVarint64(); } /** * Read an {@code int32} field value from the stream. */ public int readInt32() throws IOException { return readRawVarint32(); } /** * Read a {@code fixed64} field value from the stream. */ public long readFixed64() throws IOException { return readRawLittleEndian64(); } /** * Read a {@code fixed32} field value from the stream. */ public int readFixed32() throws IOException { return readRawLittleEndian32(); } // ----------------------------------------------------------------- /** * Read a {@code bool} field value from the stream. */ public boolean readBool() throws IOException { return readRawVarint32() != 0; } /** * Read a {@code string} field value from the stream. */ public String readString() throws IOException { final int size = readRawVarint32(); if (size <= (bufferSize - bufferPos) && size > 0) { // Fast path: We already have the bytes in a contiguous buffer, so // just copy directly from it. final String result = new String(buffer, bufferPos, size, "UTF-8"); bufferPos += size; return result; } else { // Slow path: Build a byte array first then copy it. return new String(readRawBytes(size), "UTF-8"); } } /** * Read a {@code group} field value from the stream. */ public void readGroup(final int fieldNumber, final MessageLite.Builder builder, final ExtensionRegistryLite extensionRegistry) throws IOException { if (recursionDepth >= recursionLimit) { throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.recursionLimitExceeded(); } ++recursionDepth; builder.mergeFrom(this, extensionRegistry); checkLastTagWas( WireFormat.makeTag(fieldNumber, WireFormat.WIRETYPE_END_GROUP)); --recursionDepth; } /** * Reads a {@code group} field value from the stream and merges it into the * given {@link UnknownFieldSet}. * * @deprecated UnknownFieldSet.Builder now implements MessageLite.Builder, so * you can just call {@link #readGroup}. */ @Deprecated public void readUnknownGroup(final int fieldNumber, final MessageLite.Builder builder) throws IOException { // We know that UnknownFieldSet will ignore any ExtensionRegistry so it // is safe to pass null here. (We can't call // ExtensionRegistry.getEmptyRegistry() because that would make this // class depend on ExtensionRegistry, which is not part of the lite // library.) readGroup(fieldNumber, builder, null); } /** * Read an embedded message field value from the stream. */ public void readMessage(final MessageLite.Builder builder, final ExtensionRegistryLite extensionRegistry) throws IOException { final int length = readRawVarint32(); if (recursionDepth >= recursionLimit) { throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.recursionLimitExceeded(); } final int oldLimit = pushLimit(length); ++recursionDepth; builder.mergeFrom(this, extensionRegistry); checkLastTagWas(0); --recursionDepth; popLimit(oldLimit); } /** * Read a {@code bytes} field value from the stream. */ public ByteString readBytes() throws IOException { final int size = readRawVarint32(); if (size <= (bufferSize - bufferPos) && size > 0) { // Fast path: We already have the bytes in a contiguous buffer, so // just copy directly from it. final ByteString result = ByteString.copyFrom(buffer, bufferPos, size); bufferPos += size; return result; } else { // Slow path: Build a byte array first then copy it. return ByteString.copyFrom(readRawBytes(size)); } } /** * Read a {@code uint32} field value from the stream. */ public int readUInt32() throws IOException { return readRawVarint32(); } /** * Read an enum field value from the stream. Caller is responsible * for converting the numeric value to an actual enum. */ public int readEnum() throws IOException { return readRawVarint32(); } /** * Read an {@code sfixed32} field value from the stream. */ public int readSFixed32() throws IOException { return readRawLittleEndian32(); } /** * Read an {@code sfixed64} field value from the stream. */ public long readSFixed64() throws IOException { return readRawLittleEndian64(); } /** * Read an {@code sint32} field value from the stream. */ public int readSInt32() throws IOException { return decodeZigZag32(readRawVarint32()); } /** * Read an {@code sint64} field value from the stream. */ public long readSInt64() throws IOException { return decodeZigZag64(readRawVarint64()); } /** * Read a raw Varint from the stream. If larger than 32 bits, discard the * upper bits. */ public int readRawVarint32() throws IOException { byte tmp = readRawByte(); if (tmp >= 0) { return tmp; } int result = tmp & 0x7f; if ((tmp = readRawByte()) >= 0) { result |= tmp << 7; } else { result |= (tmp & 0x7f) << 7; if ((tmp = readRawByte()) >= 0) { result |= tmp << 14; } else { result |= (tmp & 0x7f) << 14; if ((tmp = readRawByte()) >= 0) { result |= tmp << 21; } else { result |= (tmp & 0x7f) << 21; result |= (tmp = readRawByte()) << 28; if (tmp < 0) { // Discard upper 32 bits. for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++) { if (readRawByte() >= 0) { return result; } } throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.malformedVarint(); } } } } return result; } /** * Read a raw Varint from the stream. */ public long readRawVarint64() throws IOException { int shift = 0; long result = 0; while (shift < 64) { final byte b = readRawByte(); result |= (long) (b & 0x7F) << shift; if ((b & 0x80) == 0) { return result; } shift += 7; } throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.malformedVarint(); } /** * Read a 32-bit little-endian integer from the stream. */ public int readRawLittleEndian32() throws IOException { final byte b1 = readRawByte(); final byte b2 = readRawByte(); final byte b3 = readRawByte(); final byte b4 = readRawByte(); return (((int) b1 & 0xff)) | (((int) b2 & 0xff) << 8) | (((int) b3 & 0xff) << 16) | (((int) b4 & 0xff) << 24); } /** * Read a 64-bit little-endian integer from the stream. */ public long readRawLittleEndian64() throws IOException { final byte b1 = readRawByte(); final byte b2 = readRawByte(); final byte b3 = readRawByte(); final byte b4 = readRawByte(); final byte b5 = readRawByte(); final byte b6 = readRawByte(); final byte b7 = readRawByte(); final byte b8 = readRawByte(); return (((long) b1 & 0xff)) | (((long) b2 & 0xff) << 8) | (((long) b3 & 0xff) << 16) | (((long) b4 & 0xff) << 24) | (((long) b5 & 0xff) << 32) | (((long) b6 & 0xff) << 40) | (((long) b7 & 0xff) << 48) | (((long) b8 & 0xff) << 56); } /** * Set the maximum message recursion depth. In order to prevent malicious * messages from causing stack overflows, {@code CodedInputStream} limits * how deeply messages may be nested. The default limit is 64. * * @return the old limit. */ public int setRecursionLimit(final int limit) { if (limit < 0) { throw new IllegalArgumentException( "Recursion limit cannot be negative: " + limit); } final int oldLimit = recursionLimit; recursionLimit = limit; return oldLimit; } /** * Set the maximum message size. In order to prevent malicious * messages from exhausting memory or causing integer overflows, * {@code CodedInputStream} limits how large a message may be. * The default limit is 64MB. You should set this limit as small * as you can without harming your app's functionality. Note that * size limits only apply when reading from an {@code InputStream}, not * when constructed around a raw byte array (nor with * {@link ByteString#newCodedInput}). *

* If you want to read several messages from a single CodedInputStream, you * could call {@link #resetSizeCounter()} after each one to avoid hitting the * size limit. * * @return the old limit. */ public int setSizeLimit(final int limit) { if (limit < 0) { throw new IllegalArgumentException( "Size limit cannot be negative: " + limit); } final int oldLimit = sizeLimit; sizeLimit = limit; return oldLimit; } /** * Resets the current size counter to zero (see {@link #setSizeLimit(int)}). */ public void resetSizeCounter() { totalBytesRetired = -bufferPos; } /** * Sets {@code currentLimit} to (current position) + {@code byteLimit}. This * is called when descending into a length-delimited embedded message. * *

Note that {@code pushLimit()} does NOT affect how many bytes the * {@code CodedInputStream} reads from an underlying {@code InputStream} when * refreshing its buffer. If you need to prevent reading past a certain * point in the underlying {@code InputStream} (e.g. because you expect it to * contain more data after the end of the message which you need to handle * differently) then you must place a wrapper around you {@code InputStream} * which limits the amount of data that can be read from it. * * @return the old limit. */ public int pushLimit(int byteLimit) throws InvalidProtocolBufferException { if (byteLimit < 0) { throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.negativeSize(); } byteLimit += totalBytesRetired + bufferPos; final int oldLimit = currentLimit; if (byteLimit > oldLimit) { throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.truncatedMessage(); } currentLimit = byteLimit; recomputeBufferSizeAfterLimit(); return oldLimit; } private void recomputeBufferSizeAfterLimit() { bufferSize += bufferSizeAfterLimit; final int bufferEnd = totalBytesRetired + bufferSize; if (bufferEnd > currentLimit) { // Limit is in current buffer. bufferSizeAfterLimit = bufferEnd - currentLimit; bufferSize -= bufferSizeAfterLimit; } else { bufferSizeAfterLimit = 0; } } /** * Discards the current limit, returning to the previous limit. * * @param oldLimit The old limit, as returned by {@code pushLimit}. */ public void popLimit(final int oldLimit) { currentLimit = oldLimit; recomputeBufferSizeAfterLimit(); } /** * Returns the number of bytes to be read before the current limit. * If no limit is set, returns -1. */ public int getBytesUntilLimit() { if (currentLimit == Integer.MAX_VALUE) { return -1; } final int currentAbsolutePosition = totalBytesRetired + bufferPos; return currentLimit - currentAbsolutePosition; } /** * Returns true if the stream has reached the end of the input. This is the * case if either the end of the underlying input source has been reached or * if the stream has reached a limit created using {@link #pushLimit(int)}. */ public boolean isAtEnd() throws IOException { return bufferPos == bufferSize && !refillBuffer(false); } /** * The total bytes read up to the current position. Calling * {@link #resetSizeCounter()} resets this value to zero. */ public int getTotalBytesRead() { return totalBytesRetired + bufferPos; } /** * Called with {@code this.buffer} is empty to read more bytes from the * input. If {@code mustSucceed} is true, refillBuffer() gurantees that * either there will be at least one byte in the buffer when it returns * or it will throw an exception. If {@code mustSucceed} is false, * refillBuffer() returns false if no more bytes were available. */ private boolean refillBuffer(final boolean mustSucceed) throws IOException { if (bufferPos < bufferSize) { throw new IllegalStateException( "refillBuffer() called when buffer wasn't empty."); } if (totalBytesRetired + bufferSize == currentLimit) { // Oops, we hit a limit. if (mustSucceed) { throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.truncatedMessage(); } else { return false; } } totalBytesRetired += bufferSize; bufferPos = 0; bufferSize = (input == null) ? -1 : input.read(buffer); if (bufferSize == 0 || bufferSize < -1) { throw new IllegalStateException( "InputStream#read(byte[]) returned invalid result: " + bufferSize + "\nThe InputStream implementation is buggy."); } if (bufferSize == -1) { bufferSize = 0; if (mustSucceed) { throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.truncatedMessage(); } else { return false; } } else { recomputeBufferSizeAfterLimit(); final int totalBytesRead = totalBytesRetired + bufferSize + bufferSizeAfterLimit; if (totalBytesRead > sizeLimit || totalBytesRead < 0) { throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.sizeLimitExceeded(); } return true; } } /** * Read one byte from the input. * * @throws InvalidProtocolBufferException The end of the stream or the current * limit was reached. */ public byte readRawByte() throws IOException { if (bufferPos == bufferSize) { refillBuffer(true); } return buffer[bufferPos++]; } /** * Read a fixed size of bytes from the input. * * @throws InvalidProtocolBufferException The end of the stream or the current * limit was reached. */ public byte[] readRawBytes(final int size) throws IOException { if (size < 0) { throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.negativeSize(); } if (totalBytesRetired + bufferPos + size > currentLimit) { // Read to the end of the stream anyway. skipRawBytes(currentLimit - totalBytesRetired - bufferPos); // Then fail. throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.truncatedMessage(); } if (size <= bufferSize - bufferPos) { // We have all the bytes we need already. final byte[] bytes = new byte[size]; System.arraycopy(buffer, bufferPos, bytes, 0, size); bufferPos += size; return bytes; } else if (size < BUFFER_SIZE) { // Reading more bytes than are in the buffer, but not an excessive number // of bytes. We can safely allocate the resulting array ahead of time. // First copy what we have. final byte[] bytes = new byte[size]; int pos = bufferSize - bufferPos; System.arraycopy(buffer, bufferPos, bytes, 0, pos); bufferPos = bufferSize; // We want to use refillBuffer() and then copy from the buffer into our // byte array rather than reading directly into our byte array because // the input may be unbuffered. refillBuffer(true); while (size - pos > bufferSize) { System.arraycopy(buffer, 0, bytes, pos, bufferSize); pos += bufferSize; bufferPos = bufferSize; refillBuffer(true); } System.arraycopy(buffer, 0, bytes, pos, size - pos); bufferPos = size - pos; return bytes; } else { // The size is very large. For security reasons, we can't allocate the // entire byte array yet. The size comes directly from the input, so a // maliciously-crafted message could provide a bogus very large size in // order to trick the app into allocating a lot of memory. We avoid this // by allocating and reading only a small chunk at a time, so that the // malicious message must actually *be* extremely large to cause // problems. Meanwhile, we limit the allowed size of a message elsewhere. // Remember the buffer markers since we'll have to copy the bytes out of // it later. final int originalBufferPos = bufferPos; final int originalBufferSize = bufferSize; // Mark the current buffer consumed. totalBytesRetired += bufferSize; bufferPos = 0; bufferSize = 0; // Read all the rest of the bytes we need. int sizeLeft = size - (originalBufferSize - originalBufferPos); final List chunks = new ArrayList(); while (sizeLeft > 0) { final byte[] chunk = new byte[Math.min(sizeLeft, BUFFER_SIZE)]; int pos = 0; while (pos < chunk.length) { final int n = (input == null) ? -1 : input.read(chunk, pos, chunk.length - pos); if (n == -1) { throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.truncatedMessage(); } totalBytesRetired += n; pos += n; } sizeLeft -= chunk.length; chunks.add(chunk); } // OK, got everything. Now concatenate it all into one buffer. final byte[] bytes = new byte[size]; // Start by copying the leftover bytes from this.buffer. int pos = originalBufferSize - originalBufferPos; System.arraycopy(buffer, originalBufferPos, bytes, 0, pos); // And now all the chunks. for (final byte[] chunk : chunks) { System.arraycopy(chunk, 0, bytes, pos, chunk.length); pos += chunk.length; } // Done. return bytes; } } /** * Reads and discards {@code size} bytes. * * @throws InvalidProtocolBufferException The end of the stream or the current * limit was reached. */ public void skipRawBytes(final int size) throws IOException { if (size < 0) { throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.negativeSize(); } if (totalBytesRetired + bufferPos + size > currentLimit) { // Read to the end of the stream anyway. skipRawBytes(currentLimit - totalBytesRetired - bufferPos); // Then fail. throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.truncatedMessage(); } if (size <= bufferSize - bufferPos) { // We have all the bytes we need already. bufferPos += size; } else { // Skipping more bytes than are in the buffer. First skip what we have. int pos = bufferSize - bufferPos; totalBytesRetired += pos; bufferPos = 0; bufferSize = 0; // Then skip directly from the InputStream for the rest. while (pos < size) { final int n = (input == null) ? -1 : (int) input.skip(size - pos); if (n <= 0) { throw InvalidProtocolBufferException.truncatedMessage(); } pos += n; totalBytesRetired += n; } } } }





© 2015 - 2024 Weber Informatics LLC | Privacy Policy