Mercurial > jhg
view src/org/tmatesoft/hg/internal/DataAccess.java @ 333:467fd379b653
Specific accessor that omits predefined entries in the [paths] section
author | Artem Tikhomirov <tikhomirov.artem@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 09 Nov 2011 04:56:36 +0100 |
parents | b413b16d10a5 |
children | 5e95b0da26f2 |
line wrap: on
line source
/* * Copyright (c) 2010-2011 TMate Software Ltd * * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by * the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License. * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the * GNU General Public License for more details. * * For information on how to redistribute this software under * the terms of a license other than GNU General Public License * contact TMate Software at support@hg4j.com */ package org.tmatesoft.hg.internal; import java.io.IOException; import java.nio.ByteBuffer; /** * relevant parts of DataInput, non-stream nature (seek operation), explicit check for end of data. * convenient skip (+/- bytes) * Primary goal - effective file read, so that clients don't need to care whether to call few * distinct getInt() or readBytes(totalForFewInts) and parse themselves instead in an attempt to optimize. * * @author Artem Tikhomirov * @author TMate Software Ltd. */ public class DataAccess { public boolean isEmpty() { return true; } public int length() { return 0; } /** * get this instance into initial state * @throws IOException * @return <code>this</code> for convenience */ public DataAccess reset() throws IOException { // nop, empty instance is always in the initial state return this; } // absolute positioning public void seek(int offset) throws IOException { throw new UnsupportedOperationException(); } // relative positioning public void skip(int bytes) throws IOException { throw new UnsupportedOperationException(); } // shall be called once this object no longer needed public void done() { // no-op in this empty implementation } public int readInt() throws IOException { byte[] b = new byte[4]; readBytes(b, 0, 4); return b[0] << 24 | (b[1] & 0xFF) << 16 | (b[2] & 0xFF) << 8 | (b[3] & 0xFF); } public long readLong() throws IOException { byte[] b = new byte[8]; readBytes(b, 0, 8); int i1 = b[0] << 24 | (b[1] & 0xFF) << 16 | (b[2] & 0xFF) << 8 | (b[3] & 0xFF); int i2 = b[4] << 24 | (b[5] & 0xFF) << 16 | (b[6] & 0xFF) << 8 | (b[7] & 0xFF); return ((long) i1) << 32 | ((long) i2 & 0xFFFFFFFFl); } public void readBytes(byte[] buf, int offset, int length) throws IOException { throw new UnsupportedOperationException(); } // reads bytes into ByteBuffer, up to its limit or total data length, whichever smaller // FIXME perhaps, in DataAccess paradigm (when we read known number of bytes, we shall pass specific byte count to read) public void readBytes(ByteBuffer buf) throws IOException { // int toRead = Math.min(buf.remaining(), (int) length()); // if (buf.hasArray()) { // readBytes(buf.array(), buf.arrayOffset(), toRead); // } else { // byte[] bb = new byte[toRead]; // readBytes(bb, 0, bb.length); // buf.put(bb); // } // FIXME optimize to read as much as possible at once while (!isEmpty() && buf.hasRemaining()) { buf.put(readByte()); } } public byte readByte() throws IOException { throw new UnsupportedOperationException(); } // XXX decide whether may or may not change position in the DataAccess // FIXME exception handling is not right, just for the sake of quick test public byte[] byteArray() throws IOException { reset(); byte[] rv = new byte[length()]; readBytes(rv, 0, rv.length); return rv; } }