001/*
002 * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
003 * contributor license agreements.  See the NOTICE file distributed with
004 * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
005 * The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
006 * (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
007 * the License.  You may obtain a copy of the License at
008 * 
009 *      http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
010 * 
011 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
012 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
013 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
014 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
015 * limitations under the License.
016 */
017package org.apache.commons.io;
018
019import java.io.ByteArrayInputStream;
020import java.io.IOException;
021import java.io.InputStream;
022import java.io.InputStreamReader;
023import java.io.OutputStream;
024import java.io.OutputStreamWriter;
025import java.io.Reader;
026import java.io.StringReader;
027import java.io.Writer;
028
029/**
030 * This class provides static utility methods for buffered
031 * copying between sources (<code>InputStream</code>, <code>Reader</code>,
032 * <code>String</code> and <code>byte[]</code>) and destinations
033 * (<code>OutputStream</code>, <code>Writer</code>, <code>String</code> and
034 * <code>byte[]</code>).
035 * <p>
036 * Unless otherwise noted, these <code>copy</code> methods do <em>not</em>
037 * flush or close the streams. Often doing so would require making non-portable
038 * assumptions about the streams' origin and further use. This means that both
039 * streams' <code>close()</code> methods must be called after copying. if one
040 * omits this step, then the stream resources (sockets, file descriptors) are
041 * released when the associated Stream is garbage-collected. It is not a good
042 * idea to rely on this mechanism. For a good overview of the distinction
043 * between "memory management" and "resource management", see
044 * <a href="http://www.unixreview.com/articles/1998/9804/9804ja/ja.htm">this
045 * UnixReview article</a>.
046 * <p>
047 * For byte-to-char methods, a <code>copy</code> variant allows the encoding
048 * to be selected (otherwise the platform default is used). We would like to
049 * encourage you to always specify the encoding because relying on the platform
050 * default can lead to unexpected results.
051 * <p
052 * We don't provide special variants for the <code>copy</code> methods that
053 * let you specify the buffer size because in modern VMs the impact on speed
054 * seems to be minimal. We're using a default buffer size of 4 KB.
055 * <p>
056 * The <code>copy</code> methods use an internal buffer when copying. It is
057 * therefore advisable <em>not</em> to deliberately wrap the stream arguments
058 * to the <code>copy</code> methods in <code>Buffered*</code> streams. For
059 * example, don't do the following:
060 * <pre>
061 *  copy( new BufferedInputStream( in ), new BufferedOutputStream( out ) );
062 *  </pre>
063 * The rationale is as follows:
064 * <p>
065 * Imagine that an InputStream's read() is a very expensive operation, which
066 * would usually suggest wrapping in a BufferedInputStream. The
067 * BufferedInputStream works by issuing infrequent
068 * {@link java.io.InputStream#read(byte[] b, int off, int len)} requests on the
069 * underlying InputStream, to fill an internal buffer, from which further
070 * <code>read</code> requests can inexpensively get their data (until the buffer
071 * runs out).
072 * <p>
073 * However, the <code>copy</code> methods do the same thing, keeping an
074 * internal buffer, populated by
075 * {@link InputStream#read(byte[] b, int off, int len)} requests. Having two
076 * buffers (or three if the destination stream is also buffered) is pointless,
077 * and the unnecessary buffer management hurts performance slightly (about 3%,
078 * according to some simple experiments).
079 * <p>
080 * Behold, intrepid explorers; a map of this class:
081 * <pre>
082 *       Method      Input               Output          Dependency
083 *       ------      -----               ------          -------
084 * 1     copy        InputStream         OutputStream    (primitive)
085 * 2     copy        Reader              Writer          (primitive)
086 *
087 * 3     copy        InputStream         Writer          2
088 *
089 * 4     copy        Reader              OutputStream    2
090 *
091 * 5     copy        String              OutputStream    2
092 * 6     copy        String              Writer          (trivial)
093 *
094 * 7     copy        byte[]              Writer          3
095 * 8     copy        byte[]              OutputStream    (trivial)
096 * </pre>
097 * <p>
098 * Note that only the first two methods shuffle bytes; the rest use these
099 * two, or (if possible) copy using native Java copy methods. As there are
100 * method variants to specify the encoding, each row may
101 * correspond to up to 2 methods.
102 * <p>
103 * Origin of code: Excalibur.
104 *
105 * @version $Id: CopyUtils.java 1302056 2012-03-18 03:03:38Z ggregory $
106 * @deprecated Use IOUtils. Will be removed in 2.0.
107 *  Methods renamed to IOUtils.write() or IOUtils.copy().
108 *  Null handling behaviour changed in IOUtils (null data does not
109 *  throw NullPointerException).
110 */
111@Deprecated
112public class CopyUtils {
113
114    /**
115     * The default size of the buffer.
116     */
117    private static final int DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE = 1024 * 4;
118
119    /**
120     * Instances should NOT be constructed in standard programming.
121     */
122    public CopyUtils() { }
123
124    // ----------------------------------------------------------------
125    // byte[] -> OutputStream
126    // ----------------------------------------------------------------
127
128    /**
129     * Copy bytes from a <code>byte[]</code> to an <code>OutputStream</code>.
130     * @param input the byte array to read from
131     * @param output the <code>OutputStream</code> to write to
132     * @throws IOException In case of an I/O problem
133     */
134    public static void copy(byte[] input, OutputStream output)
135            throws IOException {
136        output.write(input);
137    }
138
139    // ----------------------------------------------------------------
140    // byte[] -> Writer
141    // ----------------------------------------------------------------
142
143    /**
144     * Copy and convert bytes from a <code>byte[]</code> to chars on a
145     * <code>Writer</code>.
146     * The platform's default encoding is used for the byte-to-char conversion.
147     * @param input the byte array to read from
148     * @param output the <code>Writer</code> to write to
149     * @throws IOException In case of an I/O problem
150     */
151    public static void copy(byte[] input, Writer output)
152            throws IOException {
153        ByteArrayInputStream in = new ByteArrayInputStream(input);
154        copy(in, output);
155    }
156
157
158    /**
159     * Copy and convert bytes from a <code>byte[]</code> to chars on a
160     * <code>Writer</code>, using the specified encoding.
161     * @param input the byte array to read from
162     * @param output the <code>Writer</code> to write to
163     * @param encoding The name of a supported character encoding. See the
164     * <a href="http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets">IANA
165     * Charset Registry</a> for a list of valid encoding types.
166     * @throws IOException In case of an I/O problem
167     */
168    public static void copy(
169            byte[] input,
170            Writer output,
171            String encoding)
172                throws IOException {
173        ByteArrayInputStream in = new ByteArrayInputStream(input);
174        copy(in, output, encoding);
175    }
176
177
178    // ----------------------------------------------------------------
179    // Core copy methods
180    // ----------------------------------------------------------------
181
182    /**
183     * Copy bytes from an <code>InputStream</code> to an
184     * <code>OutputStream</code>.
185     * @param input the <code>InputStream</code> to read from
186     * @param output the <code>OutputStream</code> to write to
187     * @return the number of bytes copied
188     * @throws IOException In case of an I/O problem
189     */
190    public static int copy(
191            InputStream input,
192            OutputStream output)
193                throws IOException {
194        byte[] buffer = new byte[DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE];
195        int count = 0;
196        int n = 0;
197        while (-1 != (n = input.read(buffer))) {
198            output.write(buffer, 0, n);
199            count += n;
200        }
201        return count;
202    }
203
204    // ----------------------------------------------------------------
205    // Reader -> Writer
206    // ----------------------------------------------------------------
207
208    /**
209     * Copy chars from a <code>Reader</code> to a <code>Writer</code>.
210     * @param input the <code>Reader</code> to read from
211     * @param output the <code>Writer</code> to write to
212     * @return the number of characters copied
213     * @throws IOException In case of an I/O problem
214     */
215    public static int copy(
216            Reader input,
217            Writer output)
218                throws IOException {
219        char[] buffer = new char[DEFAULT_BUFFER_SIZE];
220        int count = 0;
221        int n = 0;
222        while (-1 != (n = input.read(buffer))) {
223            output.write(buffer, 0, n);
224            count += n;
225        }
226        return count;
227    }
228
229    // ----------------------------------------------------------------
230    // InputStream -> Writer
231    // ----------------------------------------------------------------
232
233    /**
234     * Copy and convert bytes from an <code>InputStream</code> to chars on a
235     * <code>Writer</code>.
236     * The platform's default encoding is used for the byte-to-char conversion.
237     * @param input the <code>InputStream</code> to read from
238     * @param output the <code>Writer</code> to write to
239     * @throws IOException In case of an I/O problem
240     */
241    public static void copy(
242            InputStream input,
243            Writer output)
244                throws IOException {
245        InputStreamReader in = new InputStreamReader(input);
246        copy(in, output);
247    }
248
249    /**
250     * Copy and convert bytes from an <code>InputStream</code> to chars on a
251     * <code>Writer</code>, using the specified encoding.
252     * @param input the <code>InputStream</code> to read from
253     * @param output the <code>Writer</code> to write to
254     * @param encoding The name of a supported character encoding. See the
255     * <a href="http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets">IANA
256     * Charset Registry</a> for a list of valid encoding types.
257     * @throws IOException In case of an I/O problem
258     */
259    public static void copy(
260            InputStream input,
261            Writer output,
262            String encoding)
263                throws IOException {
264        InputStreamReader in = new InputStreamReader(input, encoding);
265        copy(in, output);
266    }
267
268
269    // ----------------------------------------------------------------
270    // Reader -> OutputStream
271    // ----------------------------------------------------------------
272
273    /**
274     * Serialize chars from a <code>Reader</code> to bytes on an
275     * <code>OutputStream</code>, and flush the <code>OutputStream</code>.
276     * @param input the <code>Reader</code> to read from
277     * @param output the <code>OutputStream</code> to write to
278     * @throws IOException In case of an I/O problem
279     */
280    public static void copy(
281            Reader input,
282            OutputStream output)
283                throws IOException {
284        OutputStreamWriter out = new OutputStreamWriter(output);
285        copy(input, out);
286        // XXX Unless anyone is planning on rewriting OutputStreamWriter, we
287        // have to flush here.
288        out.flush();
289    }
290
291    // ----------------------------------------------------------------
292    // String -> OutputStream
293    // ----------------------------------------------------------------
294
295    /**
296     * Serialize chars from a <code>String</code> to bytes on an
297     * <code>OutputStream</code>, and
298     * flush the <code>OutputStream</code>.
299     * @param input the <code>String</code> to read from
300     * @param output the <code>OutputStream</code> to write to
301     * @throws IOException In case of an I/O problem
302     */
303    public static void copy(
304            String input,
305            OutputStream output)
306                throws IOException {
307        StringReader in = new StringReader(input);
308        OutputStreamWriter out = new OutputStreamWriter(output);
309        copy(in, out);
310        // XXX Unless anyone is planning on rewriting OutputStreamWriter, we
311        // have to flush here.
312        out.flush();
313    }
314
315    // ----------------------------------------------------------------
316    // String -> Writer
317    // ----------------------------------------------------------------
318
319    /**
320     * Copy chars from a <code>String</code> to a <code>Writer</code>.
321     * @param input the <code>String</code> to read from
322     * @param output the <code>Writer</code> to write to
323     * @throws IOException In case of an I/O problem
324     */
325    public static void copy(String input, Writer output)
326                throws IOException {
327        output.write(input);
328    }
329
330}