I have the following statement:
DataInputStream is = new DataInputStream(process.getInputStream());
I would like to print the contents of this input stream but I dont know the size of this stream. How should I read this stream and print it?
I have the following statement:
DataInputStream is = new DataInputStream(process.getInputStream());
I would like to print the contents of this input stream but I dont know the size of this stream. How should I read this stream and print it?
It is common to all Streams, that the length is not known in advance. Using a standard InputStream
the usual solution is to simply call read
until -1
is returned.
But I assume, that you have wrapped a standard InputStream
with a DataInputStream
for a good reason: To parse binary data. (Note: Scanner
is for textual data only.)
The JavaDoc for DataInputStream
shows you, that this class has two different ways to indicate EOF - each method either returns -1
or throws an EOFException
. A rule of thumb is:
InputStream
uses the "return -1
" convention,InputStream
throws the EOFException
.If you use readShort
for example, read until an exception is thrown, if you use "read()", do so until -1
is returned.
Tip: Be very careful in the beginning and lookup each method you use from DataInputStream
- a rule of thumb can break.
DataStreams
detects an end-of-file condition by catching EOFException
, instead of testing for an invalid return value." –
Sardanapalus DataInput
, which are not inherited from InputStream
, throw EOFException
. Thanks for clarifying. –
Sardanapalus Call is.read(byte[])
repeadely, passing a pre-allocated buffer (you can keep reusing the same buffer). The function will return the number of bytes actually read, or -1 at the end of the stream (in which case, stop):
byte[] buf = new byte[8192];
int nread;
while ((nread = is.read(buf)) >= 0) {
// process the first `nread` bytes of `buf`
}
byte[] buffer = new byte[100];
int numberRead = 0;
do{
numberRead = is.read(buffer);
if (numberRead != -1){
// do work here
}
}while (numberRead == buffer.length);
Keep reading a set buffer size in a loop. If the return value is ever less than the size of the buffer you know you have reached the end of the stream. If the return value is -1, there is no data in the buffer.
DataInputStream
is something obsolete. I recommend you to use Scanner
instead.
Scanner sc = new Scanner (process.getInputStream());
while (sc.hasNextXxx()) {
System.out.println(sc.nextXxx());
}
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