1 // Protocol Buffers - Google's data interchange format
2 // Copyright 2008 Google Inc. All rights reserved.
3 // https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/
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 common implementations of the interfaces defined in
36 // zero_copy_stream.h which are included in the "lite" protobuf library.
37 // These implementations cover I/O on raw arrays and strings, as well as
38 // adaptors which make it easy to implement streams based on traditional
39 // streams. Of course, many users will probably want to write their own
40 // implementations of these interfaces specific to the particular I/O
41 // abstractions they prefer to use, but these should cover the most common
42 // cases.
43
44 #ifndef GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_IO_ZERO_COPY_STREAM_IMPL_LITE_H__
45 #define GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_IO_ZERO_COPY_STREAM_IMPL_LITE_H__
46
47 #include <memory>
48 #ifndef _SHARED_PTR_H
49 #include <google/protobuf/stubs/shared_ptr.h>
50 #endif
51 #include <string>
52 #include <iosfwd>
53 #include <google/protobuf/io/zero_copy_stream.h>
54 #include <google/protobuf/stubs/callback.h>
55 #include <google/protobuf/stubs/common.h>
56 #include <google/protobuf/stubs/scoped_ptr.h>
57 #include <google/protobuf/stubs/stl_util.h>
58
59
60 namespace google {
61 namespace protobuf {
62 namespace io {
63
64 // ===================================================================
65
66 // A ZeroCopyInputStream backed by an in-memory array of bytes.
67 class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT ArrayInputStream : public ZeroCopyInputStream {
68 public:
69 // Create an InputStream that returns the bytes pointed to by "data".
70 // "data" remains the property of the caller but must remain valid until
71 // the stream is destroyed. If a block_size is given, calls to Next()
72 // will return data blocks no larger than the given size. Otherwise, the
73 // first call to Next() returns the entire array. block_size is mainly
74 // useful for testing; in production you would probably never want to set
75 // it.
76 ArrayInputStream(const void* data, int size, int block_size = -1);
77 ~ArrayInputStream();
78
79 // implements ZeroCopyInputStream ----------------------------------
80 bool Next(const void** data, int* size);
81 void BackUp(int count);
82 bool Skip(int count);
83 int64 ByteCount() const;
84
85
86 private:
87 const uint8* const data_; // The byte array.
88 const int size_; // Total size of the array.
89 const int block_size_; // How many bytes to return at a time.
90
91 int position_;
92 int last_returned_size_; // How many bytes we returned last time Next()
93 // was called (used for error checking only).
94
95 GOOGLE_DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS(ArrayInputStream);
96 };
97
98 // ===================================================================
99
100 // A ZeroCopyOutputStream backed by an in-memory array of bytes.
101 class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT ArrayOutputStream : public ZeroCopyOutputStream {
102 public:
103 // Create an OutputStream that writes to the bytes pointed to by "data".
104 // "data" remains the property of the caller but must remain valid until
105 // the stream is destroyed. If a block_size is given, calls to Next()
106 // will return data blocks no larger than the given size. Otherwise, the
107 // first call to Next() returns the entire array. block_size is mainly
108 // useful for testing; in production you would probably never want to set
109 // it.
110 ArrayOutputStream(void* data, int size, int block_size = -1);
111 ~ArrayOutputStream();
112
113 // implements ZeroCopyOutputStream ---------------------------------
114 bool Next(void** data, int* size);
115 void BackUp(int count);
116 int64 ByteCount() const;
117
118 private:
119 uint8* const data_; // The byte array.
120 const int size_; // Total size of the array.
121 const int block_size_; // How many bytes to return at a time.
122
123 int position_;
124 int last_returned_size_; // How many bytes we returned last time Next()
125 // was called (used for error checking only).
126
127 GOOGLE_DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS(ArrayOutputStream);
128 };
129
130 // ===================================================================
131
132 // A ZeroCopyOutputStream which appends bytes to a string.
133 class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT StringOutputStream : public ZeroCopyOutputStream {
134 public:
135 // Create a StringOutputStream which appends bytes to the given string.
136 // The string remains property of the caller, but it is mutated in arbitrary
137 // ways and MUST NOT be accessed in any way until you're done with the
138 // stream. Either be sure there's no further usage, or (safest) destroy the
139 // stream before using the contents.
140 //
141 // Hint: If you call target->reserve(n) before creating the stream,
142 // the first call to Next() will return at least n bytes of buffer
143 // space.
144 explicit StringOutputStream(string* target);
145 ~StringOutputStream();
146
147 // implements ZeroCopyOutputStream ---------------------------------
148 bool Next(void** data, int* size);
149 void BackUp(int count);
150 int64 ByteCount() const;
151
152 protected:
153 void SetString(string* target);
154
155 private:
156 static const int kMinimumSize = 16;
157
158 string* target_;
159
160 GOOGLE_DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS(StringOutputStream);
161 };
162
163 // LazyStringOutputStream is a StringOutputStream with lazy acquisition of
164 // the output string from a callback. The string is owned externally, and not
165 // deleted in the stream destructor.
166 class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT LazyStringOutputStream : public StringOutputStream {
167 public:
168 // Callback should be permanent (non-self-deleting). Ownership is transferred
169 // to the LazyStringOutputStream.
170 explicit LazyStringOutputStream(ResultCallback<string*>* callback);
171 ~LazyStringOutputStream();
172
173 // implements ZeroCopyOutputStream, overriding StringOutputStream -----------
174 bool Next(void** data, int* size);
175 int64 ByteCount() const;
176
177 private:
178 const google::protobuf::scoped_ptr<ResultCallback<string*> > callback_;
179 bool string_is_set_;
180
181 GOOGLE_DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS(LazyStringOutputStream);
182 };
183
184 // Note: There is no StringInputStream. Instead, just create an
185 // ArrayInputStream as follows:
186 // ArrayInputStream input(str.data(), str.size());
187
188 // ===================================================================
189
190 // A generic traditional input stream interface.
191 //
192 // Lots of traditional input streams (e.g. file descriptors, C stdio
193 // streams, and C++ iostreams) expose an interface where every read
194 // involves copying bytes into a buffer. If you want to take such an
195 // interface and make a ZeroCopyInputStream based on it, simply implement
196 // CopyingInputStream and then use CopyingInputStreamAdaptor.
197 //
198 // CopyingInputStream implementations should avoid buffering if possible.
199 // CopyingInputStreamAdaptor does its own buffering and will read data
200 // in large blocks.
201 class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT CopyingInputStream {
202 public:
203 virtual ~CopyingInputStream();
204
205 // Reads up to "size" bytes into the given buffer. Returns the number of
206 // bytes read. Read() waits until at least one byte is available, or
207 // returns zero if no bytes will ever become available (EOF), or -1 if a
208 // permanent read error occurred.
209 virtual int Read(void* buffer, int size) = 0;
210
211 // Skips the next "count" bytes of input. Returns the number of bytes
212 // actually skipped. This will always be exactly equal to "count" unless
213 // EOF was reached or a permanent read error occurred.
214 //
215 // The default implementation just repeatedly calls Read() into a scratch
216 // buffer.
217 virtual int Skip(int count);
218 };
219
220 // A ZeroCopyInputStream which reads from a CopyingInputStream. This is
221 // useful for implementing ZeroCopyInputStreams that read from traditional
222 // streams. Note that this class is not really zero-copy.
223 //
224 // If you want to read from file descriptors or C++ istreams, this is
225 // already implemented for you: use FileInputStream or IstreamInputStream
226 // respectively.
227 class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT CopyingInputStreamAdaptor : public ZeroCopyInputStream {
228 public:
229 // Creates a stream that reads from the given CopyingInputStream.
230 // If a block_size is given, it specifies the number of bytes that
231 // should be read and returned with each call to Next(). Otherwise,
232 // a reasonable default is used. The caller retains ownership of
233 // copying_stream unless SetOwnsCopyingStream(true) is called.
234 explicit CopyingInputStreamAdaptor(CopyingInputStream* copying_stream,
235 int block_size = -1);
236 ~CopyingInputStreamAdaptor();
237
238 // Call SetOwnsCopyingStream(true) to tell the CopyingInputStreamAdaptor to
239 // delete the underlying CopyingInputStream when it is destroyed.
SetOwnsCopyingStream(bool value)240 void SetOwnsCopyingStream(bool value) { owns_copying_stream_ = value; }
241
242 // implements ZeroCopyInputStream ----------------------------------
243 bool Next(const void** data, int* size);
244 void BackUp(int count);
245 bool Skip(int count);
246 int64 ByteCount() const;
247
248 private:
249 // Insures that buffer_ is not NULL.
250 void AllocateBufferIfNeeded();
251 // Frees the buffer and resets buffer_used_.
252 void FreeBuffer();
253
254 // The underlying copying stream.
255 CopyingInputStream* copying_stream_;
256 bool owns_copying_stream_;
257
258 // True if we have seen a permenant error from the underlying stream.
259 bool failed_;
260
261 // The current position of copying_stream_, relative to the point where
262 // we started reading.
263 int64 position_;
264
265 // Data is read into this buffer. It may be NULL if no buffer is currently
266 // in use. Otherwise, it points to an array of size buffer_size_.
267 google::protobuf::scoped_array<uint8> buffer_;
268 const int buffer_size_;
269
270 // Number of valid bytes currently in the buffer (i.e. the size last
271 // returned by Next()). 0 <= buffer_used_ <= buffer_size_.
272 int buffer_used_;
273
274 // Number of bytes in the buffer which were backed up over by a call to
275 // BackUp(). These need to be returned again.
276 // 0 <= backup_bytes_ <= buffer_used_
277 int backup_bytes_;
278
279 GOOGLE_DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS(CopyingInputStreamAdaptor);
280 };
281
282 // ===================================================================
283
284 // A generic traditional output stream interface.
285 //
286 // Lots of traditional output streams (e.g. file descriptors, C stdio
287 // streams, and C++ iostreams) expose an interface where every write
288 // involves copying bytes from a buffer. If you want to take such an
289 // interface and make a ZeroCopyOutputStream based on it, simply implement
290 // CopyingOutputStream and then use CopyingOutputStreamAdaptor.
291 //
292 // CopyingOutputStream implementations should avoid buffering if possible.
293 // CopyingOutputStreamAdaptor does its own buffering and will write data
294 // in large blocks.
295 class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT CopyingOutputStream {
296 public:
297 virtual ~CopyingOutputStream();
298
299 // Writes "size" bytes from the given buffer to the output. Returns true
300 // if successful, false on a write error.
301 virtual bool Write(const void* buffer, int size) = 0;
302 };
303
304 // A ZeroCopyOutputStream which writes to a CopyingOutputStream. This is
305 // useful for implementing ZeroCopyOutputStreams that write to traditional
306 // streams. Note that this class is not really zero-copy.
307 //
308 // If you want to write to file descriptors or C++ ostreams, this is
309 // already implemented for you: use FileOutputStream or OstreamOutputStream
310 // respectively.
311 class LIBPROTOBUF_EXPORT CopyingOutputStreamAdaptor : public ZeroCopyOutputStream {
312 public:
313 // Creates a stream that writes to the given Unix file descriptor.
314 // If a block_size is given, it specifies the size of the buffers
315 // that should be returned by Next(). Otherwise, a reasonable default
316 // is used.
317 explicit CopyingOutputStreamAdaptor(CopyingOutputStream* copying_stream,
318 int block_size = -1);
319 ~CopyingOutputStreamAdaptor();
320
321 // Writes all pending data to the underlying stream. Returns false if a
322 // write error occurred on the underlying stream. (The underlying
323 // stream itself is not necessarily flushed.)
324 bool Flush();
325
326 // Call SetOwnsCopyingStream(true) to tell the CopyingOutputStreamAdaptor to
327 // delete the underlying CopyingOutputStream when it is destroyed.
SetOwnsCopyingStream(bool value)328 void SetOwnsCopyingStream(bool value) { owns_copying_stream_ = value; }
329
330 // implements ZeroCopyOutputStream ---------------------------------
331 bool Next(void** data, int* size);
332 void BackUp(int count);
333 int64 ByteCount() const;
334
335 private:
336 // Write the current buffer, if it is present.
337 bool WriteBuffer();
338 // Insures that buffer_ is not NULL.
339 void AllocateBufferIfNeeded();
340 // Frees the buffer.
341 void FreeBuffer();
342
343 // The underlying copying stream.
344 CopyingOutputStream* copying_stream_;
345 bool owns_copying_stream_;
346
347 // True if we have seen a permenant error from the underlying stream.
348 bool failed_;
349
350 // The current position of copying_stream_, relative to the point where
351 // we started writing.
352 int64 position_;
353
354 // Data is written from this buffer. It may be NULL if no buffer is
355 // currently in use. Otherwise, it points to an array of size buffer_size_.
356 google::protobuf::scoped_array<uint8> buffer_;
357 const int buffer_size_;
358
359 // Number of valid bytes currently in the buffer (i.e. the size last
360 // returned by Next()). When BackUp() is called, we just reduce this.
361 // 0 <= buffer_used_ <= buffer_size_.
362 int buffer_used_;
363
364 GOOGLE_DISALLOW_EVIL_CONSTRUCTORS(CopyingOutputStreamAdaptor);
365 };
366
367 // ===================================================================
368
369 // mutable_string_data() and as_string_data() are workarounds to improve
370 // the performance of writing new data to an existing string. Unfortunately
371 // the methods provided by the string class are suboptimal, and using memcpy()
372 // is mildly annoying because it requires its pointer args to be non-NULL even
373 // if we ask it to copy 0 bytes. Furthermore, string_as_array() has the
374 // property that it always returns NULL if its arg is the empty string, exactly
375 // what we want to avoid if we're using it in conjunction with memcpy()!
376 // With C++11, the desired memcpy() boils down to memcpy(..., &(*s)[0], size),
377 // where s is a string*. Without C++11, &(*s)[0] is not guaranteed to be safe,
378 // so we use string_as_array(), and live with the extra logic that tests whether
379 // *s is empty.
380
381 // Return a pointer to mutable characters underlying the given string. The
382 // return value is valid until the next time the string is resized. We
383 // trust the caller to treat the return value as an array of length s->size().
mutable_string_data(string * s)384 inline char* mutable_string_data(string* s) {
385 #ifdef LANG_CXX11
386 // This should be simpler & faster than string_as_array() because the latter
387 // is guaranteed to return NULL when *s is empty, so it has to check for that.
388 return &(*s)[0];
389 #else
390 return string_as_array(s);
391 #endif
392 }
393
394 // as_string_data(s) is equivalent to
395 // ({ char* p = mutable_string_data(s); make_pair(p, p != NULL); })
396 // Sometimes it's faster: in some scenarios p cannot be NULL, and then the
397 // code can avoid that check.
as_string_data(string * s)398 inline std::pair<char*, bool> as_string_data(string* s) {
399 char *p = mutable_string_data(s);
400 #ifdef LANG_CXX11
401 return std::make_pair(p, true);
402 #else
403 return make_pair(p, p != NULL);
404 #endif
405 }
406
407 } // namespace io
408 } // namespace protobuf
409
410 } // namespace google
411 #endif // GOOGLE_PROTOBUF_IO_ZERO_COPY_STREAM_IMPL_LITE_H__
412