1// Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format
2// Copyright 2008 Google Inc.  All rights reserved.
3// http://code.google.com/p/protobuf/
4//
5// Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
6// modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
7// met:
8//
9//     * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
10// notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
11//     * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above
12// copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer
13// in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
14// distribution.
15//     * Neither the name of Google Inc. nor the names of its
16// contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
17// this software without specific prior written permission.
18//
19// THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
20// "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
21// LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
22// A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
23// OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
24// SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
25// LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
26// DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
27// THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
28// (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
29// OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
30
31// Author: kenton@google.com (Kenton Varda)
32//  Based on original Protocol Buffers design by
33//  Sanjay Ghemawat, Jeff Dean, and others.
34//
35// This file contains the ZeroCopyInputStream and ZeroCopyOutputStream
36// interfaces, which represent abstract I/O streams to and from which
37// protocol buffers can be read and written.  For a few simple
38// implementations of these interfaces, see zero_copy_stream_impl.h.
39//
40// These interfaces are different from classic I/O streams in that they
41// try to minimize the amount of data copying that needs to be done.
42// To accomplish this, responsibility for allocating buffers is moved to
43// the stream object, rather than being the responsibility of the caller.
44// So, the stream can return a buffer which actually points directly into
45// the final data structure where the bytes are to be stored, and the caller
46// can interact directly with that buffer, eliminating an intermediate copy
47// operation.
48//
49// As an example, consider the common case in which you are reading bytes
50// from an array that is already in memory (or perhaps an mmap()ed file).
51// With classic I/O streams, you would do something like:
52//   char buffer[BUFFER_SIZE];
53//   input->Read(buffer, BUFFER_SIZE);
54//   DoSomething(buffer, BUFFER_SIZE);
55// Then, the stream basically just calls memcpy() to copy the data from
56// the array into your buffer.  With a ZeroCopyInputStream, you would do
57// this instead:
58//   const void* buffer;
59//   int size;
60//   input->Next(&buffer, &size);
61//   DoSomething(buffer, size);
62// Here, no copy is performed.  The input stream returns a pointer directly
63// into the backing array, and the caller ends up reading directly from it.
64//
65// If you want to be able to read the old-fashion way, you can create
66// a CodedInputStream or CodedOutputStream wrapping these objects and use
67// their ReadRaw()/WriteRaw() methods.  These will, of course, add a copy
68// step, but Coded*Stream will handle buffering so at least it will be
69// reasonably efficient.
70//
71// ZeroCopyInputStream example:
72//   // Read in a file and print its contents to stdout.
73//   int fd = open("myfile", O_RDONLY);
74//   ZeroCopyInputStream* input = new FileInputStream(fd);
75//
76//   const void* buffer;
77//   int size;
78//   while (input->Next(&buffer, &size)) {
79//     cout.write(buffer, size);
80//   }
81//
82//   delete input;
83//   close(fd);
84//
85// ZeroCopyOutputStream example:
86//   // Copy the contents of "infile" to "outfile", using plain read() for
87//   // "infile" but a ZeroCopyOutputStream for "outfile".
88//   int infd = open("infile", O_RDONLY);
89//   int outfd = open("outfile", O_WRONLY);
90//   ZeroCopyOutputStream* output = new FileOutputStream(outfd);
91//
92//   void* buffer;
93//   int size;
94//   while (output->Next(&buffer, &size)) {
95//     int bytes = read(infd, buffer, size);
96//     if (bytes < size) {
97//       // Reached EOF.
98//       output->BackUp(size - bytes);
99//       break;
100//     }
101//   }
102//
103//   delete output;
104//   close(infd);
105//   close(outfd);
106
107#ifndef GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_IO_ZERO_COPY_STREAM_H__
108#define GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_IO_ZERO_COPY_STREAM_H__
109
110#include <string>
111#include <google/protobuf/stubs/common.h>
112
113namespace google {
114
115namespace protobuf {
116namespace io {
117
118// Defined in this file.
119class ZeroCopyInputStream;
120class ZeroCopyOutputStream;
121
122// Abstract interface similar to an input stream but designed to minimize
123// copying.
124class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT ZeroCopyInputStream {
125 public:
126  inline ZeroCopyInputStream() {}
127  virtual ~ZeroCopyInputStream();
128
129  // Obtains a chunk of data from the stream.
130  //
131  // Preconditions:
132  // * "size" and "data" are not NULL.
133  //
134  // Postconditions:
135  // * If the returned value is false, there is no more data to return or
136  //   an error occurred.  All errors are permanent.
137  // * Otherwise, "size" points to the actual number of bytes read and "data"
138  //   points to a pointer to a buffer containing these bytes.
139  // * Ownership of this buffer remains with the stream, and the buffer
140  //   remains valid only until some other method of the stream is called
141  //   or the stream is destroyed.
142  // * It is legal for the returned buffer to have zero size, as long
143  //   as repeatedly calling Next() eventually yields a buffer with non-zero
144  //   size.
145  virtual bool Next(const void** data, int* size) = 0;
146
147  // Backs up a number of bytes, so that the next call to Next() returns
148  // data again that was already returned by the last call to Next().  This
149  // is useful when writing procedures that are only supposed to read up
150  // to a certain point in the input, then return.  If Next() returns a
151  // buffer that goes beyond what you wanted to read, you can use BackUp()
152  // to return to the point where you intended to finish.
153  //
154  // Preconditions:
155  // * The last method called must have been Next().
156  // * count must be less than or equal to the size of the last buffer
157  //   returned by Next().
158  //
159  // Postconditions:
160  // * The last "count" bytes of the last buffer returned by Next() will be
161  //   pushed back into the stream.  Subsequent calls to Next() will return
162  //   the same data again before producing new data.
163  virtual void BackUp(int count) = 0;
164
165  // Skips a number of bytes.  Returns false if the end of the stream is
166  // reached or some input error occurred.  In the end-of-stream case, the
167  // stream is advanced to the end of the stream (so ByteCount() will return
168  // the total size of the stream).
169  virtual bool Skip(int count) = 0;
170
171  // Returns the total number of bytes read since this object was created.
172  virtual int64 ByteCount() const = 0;
173
174
175 private:
176  GOOGLE_DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS(ZeroCopyInputStream);
177};
178
179// Abstract interface similar to an output stream but designed to minimize
180// copying.
181class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT ZeroCopyOutputStream {
182 public:
183  inline ZeroCopyOutputStream() {}
184  virtual ~ZeroCopyOutputStream();
185
186  // Obtains a buffer into which data can be written.  Any data written
187  // into this buffer will eventually (maybe instantly, maybe later on)
188  // be written to the output.
189  //
190  // Preconditions:
191  // * "size" and "data" are not NULL.
192  //
193  // Postconditions:
194  // * If the returned value is false, an error occurred.  All errors are
195  //   permanent.
196  // * Otherwise, "size" points to the actual number of bytes in the buffer
197  //   and "data" points to the buffer.
198  // * Ownership of this buffer remains with the stream, and the buffer
199  //   remains valid only until some other method of the stream is called
200  //   or the stream is destroyed.
201  // * Any data which the caller stores in this buffer will eventually be
202  //   written to the output (unless BackUp() is called).
203  // * It is legal for the returned buffer to have zero size, as long
204  //   as repeatedly calling Next() eventually yields a buffer with non-zero
205  //   size.
206  virtual bool Next(void** data, int* size) = 0;
207
208  // Backs up a number of bytes, so that the end of the last buffer returned
209  // by Next() is not actually written.  This is needed when you finish
210  // writing all the data you want to write, but the last buffer was bigger
211  // than you needed.  You don't want to write a bunch of garbage after the
212  // end of your data, so you use BackUp() to back up.
213  //
214  // Preconditions:
215  // * The last method called must have been Next().
216  // * count must be less than or equal to the size of the last buffer
217  //   returned by Next().
218  // * The caller must not have written anything to the last "count" bytes
219  //   of that buffer.
220  //
221  // Postconditions:
222  // * The last "count" bytes of the last buffer returned by Next() will be
223  //   ignored.
224  virtual void BackUp(int count) = 0;
225
226  // Returns the total number of bytes written since this object was created.
227  virtual int64 ByteCount() const = 0;
228
229
230 private:
231  GOOGLE_DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS(ZeroCopyOutputStream);
232};
233
234}  // namespace io
235}  // namespace protobuf
236
237}  // namespace google
238#endif  // GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_IO_ZERO_COPY_STREAM_H__
239