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

java.io.InputStream Maven / Gradle / Ivy

/*
 *  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
 *  contributor license agreements.  See the NOTICE file distributed with
 *  this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
 *  The ASF licenses this file to You 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 java.io;

import com.jtransc.JTranscArrays;
import com.jtransc.annotation.haxe.HaxeAddFilesTemplate;
import com.jtransc.annotation.haxe.HaxeNativeConversion;
import com.jtransc.io.JTranscIoTools;

@HaxeAddFilesTemplate(base = "hx", value = { "hx/JavaHaxeInput.hx" })
@HaxeNativeConversion(
	haxeType = "haxe.io.Input",
	toHaxe = "new JavaHaxeInput.Haxe(@self)",
	toJava = "new JavaHaxeInput.Java(@self)"
)
public abstract class InputStream extends Object implements Closeable {

    /**
     * This constructor does nothing. It is provided for signature
     * compatibility.
     */
    public InputStream() {
        /* empty */
    }

    /**
     * Returns an estimated number of bytes that can be read or skipped without blocking for more
     * input.
     *
     * 

Note that this method provides such a weak guarantee that it is not very useful in * practice. * *

Firstly, the guarantee is "without blocking for more input" rather than "without * blocking": a read may still block waiting for I/O to complete — the guarantee is * merely that it won't have to wait indefinitely for data to be written. The result of this * method should not be used as a license to do I/O on a thread that shouldn't be blocked. * *

Secondly, the result is a * conservative estimate and may be significantly smaller than the actual number of bytes * available. In particular, an implementation that always returns 0 would be correct. * In general, callers should only use this method if they'd be satisfied with * treating the result as a boolean yes or no answer to the question "is there definitely * data ready?". * *

Thirdly, the fact that a given number of bytes is "available" does not guarantee that a * read or skip will actually read or skip that many bytes: they may read or skip fewer. * *

It is particularly important to realize that you must not use this method to * size a container and assume that you can read the entirety of the stream without needing * to resize the container. Such callers should probably write everything they read to a * {@link ByteArrayOutputStream} and convert that to a byte array. Alternatively, if you're * reading from a file, {@link File#length} returns the current length of the file (though * assuming the file's length can't change may be incorrect, reading a file is inherently * racy). * *

The default implementation of this method in {@code InputStream} always returns 0. * Subclasses should override this method if they are able to indicate the number of bytes * available. * * @return the estimated number of bytes available * @throws IOException if this stream is closed or an error occurs */ public int available() throws IOException { return 0; } /** * Closes this stream. Concrete implementations of this class should free * any resources during close. This implementation does nothing. * * @throws IOException * if an error occurs while closing this stream. */ public void close() throws IOException { /* empty */ } /** * Sets a mark position in this InputStream. The parameter {@code readlimit} * indicates how many bytes can be read before the mark is invalidated. * Sending {@code reset()} will reposition the stream back to the marked * position provided {@code readLimit} has not been surpassed. *

* This default implementation does nothing and concrete subclasses must * provide their own implementation. * * @param readlimit * the number of bytes that can be read from this stream before * the mark is invalidated. * @see #markSupported() * @see #reset() */ public void mark(int readlimit) { /* empty */ } /** * Indicates whether this stream supports the {@code mark()} and * {@code reset()} methods. The default implementation returns {@code false}. * * @return always {@code false}. * @see #mark(int) * @see #reset() */ public boolean markSupported() { return false; } /** * Reads a single byte from this stream and returns it as an integer in the * range from 0 to 255. Returns -1 if the end of the stream has been * reached. Blocks until one byte has been read, the end of the source * stream is detected or an exception is thrown. * * @throws IOException * if the stream is closed or another IOException occurs. */ public abstract int read() throws IOException; /** * Equivalent to {@code read(buffer, 0, buffer.length)}. */ public int read(byte[] buffer) throws IOException { return read(buffer, 0, buffer.length); } /** * Reads up to {@code byteCount} bytes from this stream and stores them in * the byte array {@code buffer} starting at {@code byteOffset}. * Returns the number of bytes actually read or -1 if the end of the stream * has been reached. * * @throws IndexOutOfBoundsException * if {@code byteOffset < 0 || byteCount < 0 || byteOffset + byteCount > buffer.length}. * @throws IOException * if the stream is closed or another IOException occurs. */ public int read(byte[] buffer, int byteOffset, int byteCount) throws IOException { JTranscArrays.checkOffsetAndCount(buffer.length, byteOffset, byteCount); for (int i = 0; i < byteCount; ++i) { int c; try { if ((c = read()) == -1) { return i == 0 ? -1 : i; } } catch (IOException e) { if (i != 0) return i; throw e; } buffer[byteOffset + i] = (byte) c; } return byteCount; } /** * Resets this stream to the last marked location. Throws an * {@code IOException} if the number of bytes read since the mark has been * set is greater than the limit provided to {@code mark}, or if no mark * has been set. *

* This implementation always throws an {@code IOException} and concrete * subclasses should provide the proper implementation. * * @throws IOException * if this stream is closed or another IOException occurs. */ public synchronized void reset() throws IOException { throw new IOException(); } /** * Skips at most {@code n} bytes in this stream. This method does nothing and returns * 0 if {@code n} is negative, but some subclasses may throw. * *

Note the "at most" in the description of this method: this method may choose to skip * fewer bytes than requested. Callers should always check the return value. * *

This default implementation reads bytes into a temporary * buffer. Concrete subclasses should provide their own implementation. * * @param byteCount the number of bytes to skip. * @return the number of bytes actually skipped. * @throws IOException * if this stream is closed or another IOException occurs. */ public long skip(long byteCount) throws IOException { return JTranscIoTools.skipByReading(this, byteCount); } }





© 2015 - 2024 Weber Informatics LLC | Privacy Policy