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IOInput Class Referenceabstract

#include <IOInput.h>

Inheritance diagram for IOInput:
IOChannel Storage File DavixFile DCacheFile File LocalCacheFile LStoreFile StorageAccountProxy XrdFile

Public Member Functions

int read (void)
 
IOSize read (IOBuffer into)
 
virtual IOSize read (void *into, IOSize n)=0
 
virtual IOSize readv (IOBuffer *into, IOSize buffers)
 
IOSize xread (IOBuffer into)
 
IOSize xread (void *into, IOSize n)
 
IOSize xreadv (IOBuffer *into, IOSize buffers)
 
virtual ~IOInput (void)
 Destruct the stream. A no-op. More...
 

Detailed Description

Abstract base class for stream-oriented input sources.

Definition at line 7 of file IOInput.h.

Constructor & Destructor Documentation

IOInput::~IOInput ( void  )
virtual

Destruct the stream. A no-op.

Definition at line 6 of file IOInput.cc.

7 {}

Member Function Documentation

int IOInput::read ( void  )

Read the next single byte from the input stream and return it as an unsigned char cast to an int, -1 to indicate end of intput data.

If this is a blocking stream, the call will block until the byte can be read, end of data is reached, or an exception is thrown. For a non-blocking input a character is returned if one is available, otherwise an exception is thrown.

The base class implementation simply forwards the call to read(void *, IOSize) method.

Returns
The byte cast from a unsigned char to an int (in range 0...255, inclusive) if one could be read, or -1 to indicate end of input data.
Exceptions
Incase of error, a #IOError exception is thrown. This includes the situation where the input stream is in non-blocking mode and no input is currently available (FIXME: make this simpler; clarify which exception).

Definition at line 54 of file IOInput.cc.

References gen::n.

Referenced by read(), IOChannel::read(), Storage::read(), File::read(), readv(), Storage::readv(), XrdFile::readv(), and xread().

55 {
56  unsigned char byte;
57  IOSize n = read (&byte, 1);
58  return n == 0 ? -1 : byte;
59 }
int read(void)
Definition: IOInput.cc:54
size_t IOSize
Definition: IOTypes.h:14
IOSize IOInput::read ( IOBuffer  into)

Read from the input stream into the buffer starting at into and of size n.

If this is a blocking stream, the call will block until some data can be read, end of input is reached, or an exception is thrown. For a non-blocking stream the available input is returned. If none is available, an exception is thrown.

The base class implementation simply forwards the call to read(void *, IOSize) method.

Returns
The number of bytes actually read. This is less or equal to the size of the buffer. Zero indicates that the end of the input has been reached: end of file, or remote end closing for a connected channel like a pipe or a socket. Otherwise the value can be less than requested if limited amount of input is currently available for platform or implementation reasons.
Exceptions
Incase of error, a #IOError exception is thrown. This includes the situation where the input stream is in non-blocking mode and no input is currently available (FIXME: make this simpler; clarify which exception).

Definition at line 84 of file IOInput.cc.

References IOBuffer::data(), read(), and IOBuffer::size().

85 { return read (into.data (), into.size ()); }
void * data(void) const
Definition: IOBuffer.h:45
int read(void)
Definition: IOInput.cc:54
IOSize size(void) const
Definition: IOBuffer.h:50
IOSize IOInput::read ( void *  into,
IOSize  n 
)
pure virtual

Read into into at most n number of bytes.

If this is a blocking stream, the call will block until some data can be read, end of input is reached, or an exception is thrown. For a non-blocking stream the available input is returned. If none is available, an exception is thrown.

Returns
The number of bytes actually read. This is less or equal to the size of the buffer. Zero indicates that the end of the input has been reached: end of file, or remote end closing for a connected channel like a pipe or a socket. Otherwise the value can be less than requested if limited amount of input is currently available for platform or implementation reasons.
Exceptions
Incase of error, a #IOError exception is thrown. This includes the situation where the input stream is in non-blocking mode and no input is currently available (FIXME: make this simpler; clarify which exception).

Implemented in XrdFile, File, DCacheFile, LStoreFile, DavixFile, StorageAccountProxy, LocalCacheFile, and IOChannel.

IOSize IOInput::readv ( IOBuffer into,
IOSize  buffers 
)
virtual

Read from the input stream into multiple scattered buffers. There are buffers to fill in an array starting at into; the memory those buffers occupy does not need to be contiguous. The buffers are filled in the order given, eac buffer is filled fully before the subsequent buffers.

If this is a blocking stream, the call will block until some data can be read, end of input is reached, or an exception is thrown. For a non-blocking stream the available input is returned. If none is available, an exception is thrown.

The base class implementation uses read(void *, IOSize) method, but derived classes may implement a more efficient alternative.

Returns
The number of bytes actually read. This is less or equal to the size of the buffer. Zero indicates that the end of the input has been reached: end of file, or remote end closing for a connected channel like a pipe or a socket. Otherwise the value can be less than requested if limited amount of input is currently available for platform or implementation reasons. Note that the return value indicates the number of bytes read, not the number of buffers; it is the sum total of bytes filled into all the buffers.
Exceptions
Incase of error, a #IOError exception is thrown. However if some data has already been read, the error is swallowed and the method returns the data read so far. It is assumed that persistent errors will occur anyway on the next read and sporadic errors like stream becoming unvailable can be ignored. Use xread() if a different policy is desirable.

Reimplemented in XrdFile, File, DCacheFile, DavixFile, StorageAccountProxy, LocalCacheFile, and IOChannel.

Definition at line 117 of file IOInput.cc.

References mps_fire::i, read(), and mps_update::status.

118 {
119  assert (! buffers || into);
120 
121  // Keep reading as long as possible; ignore errors if we have read
122  // something, otherwise pass it on.
123  IOSize status;
124  IOSize done = 0;
125  try
126  {
127  for (IOSize i = 0; i < buffers; done += status, ++i)
128  if ((status = read (into [i])) == 0)
129  break;
130  }
131  catch (cms::Exception &)
132  {
133  if (! done)
134  throw;
135  }
136 
137  return done;
138 }
int read(void)
Definition: IOInput.cc:54
size_t IOSize
Definition: IOTypes.h:14
IOSize IOInput::xread ( IOBuffer  into)

Like the corresponding read() method but reads until the requested number of bytes are read or end of file is reached. Reads n bytes of data into the buffer into. This method is simply redirected to xread(void *, IOSize).

Unlike read() which may return less data than requested, this function attempts to read, possibly in multiple read() calls, the exact requested amount of data. It stops reading only if it reaches the end of the input stream (i.e., read() returns zero).

If the you know the stream blocks on read() and it would be inconvenient to handle partial read() results, use this method as a convenience for hiding platforms and circumstance differences. It makes no sense to use this method with non-blocking input.

Returns
The number of bytes actually read into the buffer, i.e. the size of the buffer. It will be less only if the end of the file has been reached.
Exceptions
Allexceptions from read() are passed through unhandled. Therefore it is possible that an exception is thrown when this function has already read some data.

Definition at line 166 of file IOInput.cc.

References IOBuffer::data(), and IOBuffer::size().

Referenced by xreadv().

167 { return xread (into.data (), into.size ()); }
void * data(void) const
Definition: IOBuffer.h:45
IOSize xread(IOBuffer into)
Definition: IOInput.cc:166
IOSize size(void) const
Definition: IOBuffer.h:50
IOSize IOInput::xread ( void *  into,
IOSize  n 
)

Like the corresponding read() method but reads until the requested number of bytes are read or end of file is reached. Reads data into the buffer into for its full size.

Unlike read() which may return less data than requested, this function attempts to read, possibly in multiple read() calls, the exact requested amount of data. It stops reading only if it reaches the end of the input stream (i.e., read() returns zero).

If the you know the stream blocks on read() and it would be inconvenient to handle partial read() results, use this method as a convenience for hiding platforms and circumstance differences. It makes no sense to use this method with non-blocking input.

Returns
The number of bytes actually read into the buffer, i.e. the size of the buffer. It will be less only if the end of the file has been reached.
Exceptions
Allexceptions from read() are passed through unhandled. Therefore it is possible that an exception is thrown when this function has already read some data.

Definition at line 191 of file IOInput.cc.

References read(), and x.

192 {
193  assert (into);
194 
195  // Keep reading as long as possible. Let system errors fly over
196  // us, they are a hard error.
197  IOSize x;
198  IOSize done = 0;
199  while (done < n && (x = read ((char *) into + done, n - done)))
200  done += x;
201 
202  return done;
203 }
int read(void)
Definition: IOInput.cc:54
size_t IOSize
Definition: IOTypes.h:14
IOSize IOInput::xreadv ( IOBuffer into,
IOSize  buffers 
)

Like the corresponding readv() method but reads until the requested number of bytes are read or end of file is reached. Reads data into buffers starting at into, each for its full size. The buffers are filled in the order given. This method uses xread(void *, IOSize).

Unlike readv() which may return less data than requested, this function attempts to read, possibly in multiple read() calls, the exact requested amount of data. It stops reading only if it reaches the end of the input stream (i.e., read() returns zero).

If the you know the stream blocks on read() and it would be inconvenient to handle partial read() results, use this method as a convenience for hiding platforms and circumstance differences. It makes no sense to use this method with non-blocking input.

Returns
The number of bytes actually read into the buffer, i.e. the size of the buffer. It will be less only if the end of the file has been reached.
Exceptions
Allexceptions from read() are passed through unhandled. Therefore it is possible that an exception is thrown when this function has already read some data.

Definition at line 229 of file IOInput.cc.

References mps_fire::i, findQualityFiles::size, x, and xread().

230 {
231  // FIXME: Use read(into, buffers) and then sort out in case of
232  // failure, the readv probably succeed directly with much less
233  // overhead.
234 
235  assert (! buffers || into);
236 
237  // Keep reading as long as possible. Let system errors fly
238  // over us, they are a hard error.
239  IOSize x;
240  IOSize done = 0;
241  for (IOSize i = 0; i < buffers; ++i)
242  {
243  done += (x = xread (into [i]));
244  if (x < into [i].size ())
245  break;
246  }
247  return done;
248 }
size
Write out results.
IOSize xread(IOBuffer into)
Definition: IOInput.cc:166
size_t IOSize
Definition: IOTypes.h:14