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IoStream

Codecov Maven Central License: MPL 2.0 Javadocs Dependencies

A fun experiment revisiting classic Java I/O API.

  • Fluent builder for Java standard InputStream, OutputStream, Reader and Writer and Filter classes
  • Provides File, ByteArray, String, Socket, Pipe, Buffered, Zip, Console and generic stream wrapper resources
  • Supports Base64, GZip and Cipher filters
  • Retains default Java behavior and parameters
  • Composed objects are unambiguously closed as one
  • Composed objects expose underlying resource for retrieval of results / follow up operations
try (PrintWriterOf<File> fileWriter = IO.file("myfile.gz").gzip().printWriter()) {
    File theFile = fileWriter.get();
    fileWriter.write("Hello from file " + theFile.getName());
}

"It's the little things"

What is this for?

Part of the original JDK 1.0, Java's original blocking I/O API celebrated it's 21st birthday on January 23, 2017. The venerable Java "streams" classes are now of legal drinking age in most of the places they're allowed to go! And because of Java's insistence on backward compatibility, everything is still as it was back then. Everything but the rest of the world, that is. Ahem. Who feels like programming like it's 1996?

Mind you, there isn't much that is broken with the streams functionality. Sequential I/O is not something that changes much, if ever. It's just that the classes have become somewhat unwieldy when used alongside contemporary Java libraries. Let's give them a little makeover, shall we?

If you are using Maven, start by adding this snippet to your pom.xml

<dependency>
    <groupId>ca.rbon</groupId>
    <artifactId>iostream</artifactId>
    <version>0.9.1</version>
</dependency>

Sadly I do no have gradle at the ready, but I'm sure you smart foxes will know where to insert what I believe to be ca.rbon:iostream:0.9.1.

Because it uses default interface methods, this library requires Java 1.8 (and nothing but).

How does it work?

First, IoStream wraps the streams and their charset aware sibblings in a more palatable fluent-builder (or Factory Method, for you pattern freaks) so you don't have to new anything when you need to do some sweet blocking I/O.

import ca.rbon.iostream.IO;

Then start by typing IO. and autocomplete-away!

Building

Because streams and readers/writers are often paired together, the fluent builder guides you from the selection of the underlying resource (File, byte[], Socket...) to the way of accessing it (BufferedStream, ZipStream, Writer...).

PrintWriter writer = IO.file("yesss.txt").printWriter();

You will notice that printWriter() above actually returns something called PrintWriterOf<File>. This is a subclass of the standard java.io.PrintWriter that can be safely use as such. All IoStream final methods return *Of<File> classes extending normal java.io classes. Their added functionality is explained below (hint: checkout their getInner() method.).

If a resource only implements streams (like socket()), and you require Writer or Reader char-oriented access, the builder will transparently insert an OutputStreamWriter or InputStreamReader adapter for you.

BufferedWriter writer = IO.socket("spamaway.net", 25).bufferedWriter();

try-with syntax

Obviously, IoStream goes hand in hand with the try-with syntax introduced in JDK 7.

try (Writer w = IO.file("mouha.txt").printWriter()) {
    w.append("haha");
}

Retrieving inner results

It is often required to access the resource after all streams are closed in order to obtain the final operation result. This is a pattern especially common with auto-instantiated resources such as byte arrays out streams, string writers or temp files.

IoStream makes the job easier by allowing access to the resulting resource straight from the outmost object. This is done magically with IoStream's *Of<T> classes, which subclass regular java.io classes. Because we are modern, sane people, we can ignore this detail by using the var keyword from JDK 10+. Then all you have to do is call the getInner() method to retrieve the inner resource you just built.

var writer = IO.bytes().printWriter();
// ...
writer.close();
byte[] myPrecious = writer.getInner();

By comparison, classic JDK code forces you to juggle with the inner and outer streams:

ByteArrayOutputStream innerStream = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
Writer outerStream = new PrintWriter(innerStream);
// ...
outerStream.close();
byte[] myPrecious = innerStream.toByteArray();

Companion libraries

IoStream is an excellent companion to Apache Commons IO's IOUtils class. There is little overlap between the libraries. IoStream helps to build the streams while IOUtils takes care of the operations, such as copy() :

try (var in = IO.file("A").reader(); var out = IO.file("B").writer()) {
    IOUtils.copy(in, out);
}

Things you can do with it

Convert to IntStream

try (var pw = IO.file("numbers.bin").inputStream()) {
    pw.intStream().sum();
}

Byte Arrays, Random & IOUtils

IO.bytes().outputStream();
byte[] bytes = IO.bytes().dataOutputStream().getInner();

IO.bytes(new byte[] { 0, 1, 2 }).objectInputStream();

Files

FileOutputStream out = IO.file("noooes.txt").outputStream();

try (var myFile = IO.file("mouha.txt").printWriter()) {
    myFile.write("haha");
}
   

IO.file("doum.zip").zipInputStream("UTF-8");
IO.file("dam.txt", true).bufferedWriter();

var tmpout = IO.tempFile().dataOutputStream();
tmpout.write(42);
String tmpFilename = tmpout.getInner().getAbsolutePath();

Strings

IO.string("agaga gogo").bufferedReader();
IO.string("agaga gogo").reader();

String str = IO.string().bufferedWriter().getInner();

Sockets

IO.socket("gloogloo.com", 80).bufferedOutputStream();
InputStream smtpHoneypot = IO.socket("localhost", 25).inputStream(); 

Pipe

IO.socket("gloogloo.com", 80).bufferedOutputStream();
InputStream smtpHoneypot = IO.socket("localhost", 25).inputStream(); 

Random

try (var pw = IO.random().inputStream()) {
	// add 5 random numbers
    pw.intStream().limit(5).sum();
}

Existing input and output streams integration

InputStream providedInput = new ByteArrayInputStream(new byte[7]);
IO.stream(providedInput).gzipInputStream();

OutputStream providedOutput = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
IO.stream(providedOutput).printWriter(256);

Writing text to a File, GZipped, Base64, UTF-16 encoded. 256-byte buffer, autoflush.

// this example is pretty extreme
try (var pw = IO.file("myfile.txt").base64().gzip(55).printWriter("UTF-16", 256, true)) {
    File myFileTxt = pw.getInner();
    pw.write("Hello from file " + myFileTxt.getName());
}

FAQ

Why not guava?

You mean this? Sure, but it's bigger and comes with its own classes and superseded the original Java classes. Plus, I could not wrap my head around it in 10 seconds, which is all it should take for such a thing. So I spent 10 hours writing this lib instead.

But my eyes are still bleeding!

Hey, Java can be a pain. We could push it further with compiler @Annotations or dynamically generated bytecode, but then we'd have a different set of problems. Why don't you try a different language?

Why doesn't IoStream support $feature

The goal is to support just Java stream classes (Sockets, Pipes) with their original semantics. No additional transitive deps. No fixing of the original sins. Some parts are still missing, but once it's done, it's done. You'll know because it'll be version 1.0.

Samples

Standard comparison

IoStream enabled-code

public byte[] usingIoStream() throws IOException {
    var writer = IO.bytes().printWriter();
    writer.write("doodoo");
    writer.close();
    return writer.getInner();
}

Classic java streams

public byte[] classicStreams() throws IOException {
    ByteArrayOutputStream byteOutputStream = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
    PrintWriter writer = new PrintWriter(byteOutputStream);
    writer.write("doodoo");
    writer.close();
    byteOutputStream.close();
    return byteOutputStream.toByteArray();
}

Commented

IoStream enabled-code

public byte[] fluent() throws IOException {
    // create and combine both objects
    var writer = IO.bytes().printWriter();

    // write the string
    writer.write("doodoo");

    // close the writer and the inner stream at once
    writer.close();

    // extract result
    return writer.getInner();
}

Classic java streams

public byte[] classic() throws IOException {
    // explicitly create inner stream to extract result
    ByteArrayOutputStream byteOutputStream = new ByteArrayOutputStream();

    // create outer writer
    PrintWriter writer = new PrintWriter(byteOutputStream);

    // write a string
    writer.write("doodoo");

    // close the writer
    writer.close();

    // dont forget to close inner stream too
    byteOutputStream.close();

    // extract result from inner stream
    return byteOutputStream.toByteArray();
}

Using try-with-resources

IoStream enabled-code

try (var writer = IO.bytes().printWriter()) {
    writer.write("doodoo");
    return writer.getInner();
}

Classic java streams

try (ByteArrayOutputStream byteOutputStream = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
    PrintWriter writer = new PrintWriter(byteOutputStream)) {
    writer.write("doodoo");
    return byteOutputStream.toByteArray();
}