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94.204* Object-Oriented Software Development
Unit 13
I/O Stream Hierarchy
Case Study of an Inheritance Hierarchy
•
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
revised January 30, 2001
1
I/O Streams
• All input and output in Java is based on streams.
• A stream is a flow of data with a reader on one end and a writer on
the other end
Reader
Writer
– Streams are sequences of bytes
– Streams in Java are one-way.
– A Writer = Anything that can send a sequence of bytes
– A Reader = Anything that can receive a sequence of bytes
Preview ! Seamless interchange between terminals, files,
URLs, blocks of memory, sockets (remote computers)
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
2
Java I/O Stream Classes
• In the package java.io, there is an inheritance hierarchy of streams
supported
InputStream
ConcreteInputSubclasses
OutputStream
ConcreteOutputSubclasses
• InputStream and OutputStream are abstract classes
– Concrete subclasses must be provided; Instantitate these.
• Stream are objects to/from which data are sent/received.
• Because all I/O objects are subclassed from InputStream &
OutputStream, they can be used interchangeably (type-casting along class
hierarchy)
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
3
Java.io.InputStream
• Full UML of java.io.InputStream
java.io.InputStream
read():int
read(:byte[]):int
read(:byte[],:off:int,len:int):int
skip(n:long):long
available():int
close():int
reset()
mark(readLimit:int)
markSupported():boolean
• read() is the only abstract method
(UML : Italics for abstract)
• read() is the lowest-level interface for
all streams : a flow of byte-level data.
• Other read methods are implemented in
terms of this one
• Other methods provide default
behaviour, to be overridden by
subclasses.
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
4
Java.io.OutputStream
• Full UML of java.io.OutputStream
java.io.OutputStream
write():int
write(:byte[]):int
write(:byte[],:off:int,len:int):int
flush()
• write() is the only abstract method
• Other write methods are
implemented in terms of this one.
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
5
Java I/O Class Design
•
The Problem :
– Although everything is ultimately a series of bytes, we don’t want to
manipulate bytes; We want to program at a higher level (abstraction!)
– There is a great variety of scenarios to cover
• Data abstraction : Instead of bytes, let’s read int, float, char
• Higher-level : As well as the primitive types, we want to support
I/O of classes, such as String but also user-defined classes
• Sources : Terminal, File, URL, ….sockets
• Behaviours : Buffering, look-ahead, random-access
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
6
Java I/O Class Design
• The Java approach is a pluggable solution
– A Layered approach based on stream wrapper or filters :
• Java supplies you with a whole slew of filters (as classes), where
each class adds one type of behaviour. You can then layer (or
wrap) these filters in any pattern to achieve the kind of behaviour
you require.
Data
Buffered
File
• In the next slides, we look at the major parts of the full I/O hierarchy, but
in stages. The breakdown is artificial and serves only to break discussion
into manageable pieces.
• We also look first at the Input side, then follow with the Output
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
7
Java Input Class Hierarchy
• Part I : At the first level of the Input hierarchy are a set of concrete
subclasses that can be viewed as the “source”
• Allows you to connect a stream to a particular type of source.
InputStream
PipedInputStream
FileInputStream
Reading from sockets
(remote communication)
Reading from files
StringBufferInputStream
ByteArrayInputStream
ObjectInputStream
Reading from string buffers
Reading from byte array(memory)
Reading from any object
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
8
Java Input Class Hierarchy
Example : Using one of the “source” InputStream subclasses.
•
Suppose we wish to read from a file :
FileInputStream istream = new FileInputStream("t.tmp");
istream.read();
// FileInputStream must provide implementation
istream.read(bytes,n);
// Could have used InputStream’s version,
// FileInputStream overrides for efficiency
You can only read bytes or arrays of bytes from this file.
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
9
Java Input Class Hierarchy
• Part II : There is a second level of the I/O hierarchy which is collectively
called the filter or stream wrappers
– Filters add behaviour to the stream
InputStream
FilterInputStream
PipedInputStream
It is another abstract class.
In order to learn how to use it,
We must look at its concrete
Subclasses.
FileInputStream
StringBufferInputStream
ByteArrayInputStream
ObjectInputStream
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
10
Java Input Class Hierarchy
• Part II : FilterInputStream
InputStream
FilterInputStream
BufferedInputStream
PushbackInputStream
DataInputStream
InflaterInputStream
ZipInputStream
GZIPInputStream
LineNumberInputStream
CheckedInputStream
JarInputStream
DigestInputStream
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
11
Summary of Input Filter Classes
• BufferedInputStream : Adds the ability to buffer, and support for
mark() and reset() methods.
• PushBackInputStream : Adds the ability to “unread” something.
• DataInputStream : Support for primitive data types
• LineNumberInputStream : Keeps track of the current line number
where a line is a sequence of bytes followed by a CR
• CheckedInputStream :Adds the ability to maintain a checksum on the
data (for data integrity)
• DigestInputStream : A security mechanism for reading messages
“digested” in a transparent stream of bits.
• InflaterInputStream : Allows the reading of compressed data.
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
12
Java Input Class Hierarchy
Example : Using one of the “filter” InputStream subclasses.
• Continuing from the previous example, suppose we wish to read data
from a file :
FileInputStream istream = new
FileInputStream("t.tmp");
DataInputStream dstream = new
DataInputStream(istream);
Wrapping the FileInputStream
Into a DataInputStream !
int i = dstream.readInt();
char c = dstream.readChar();
String line = dstream.readLine();
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
Now can read integers,
Characters, whole lines,
Instead of just bytes.
13
Stream Wrapping
How does Stream Wrapping Work ?
• Take a look at any of the constructors for the filter classes.
eg. public DataInputStream(InputStream in)
• The constructor is part of a chain :
Input : The parameter to the constructor is an inputstream.
But you don’t have to use an InputStream; you can use any
subclass of InputStream.
Output : The object created by the constructor is a DataInputStream
(which is itself a subclass of InputStream and thus could be
used for further wrapping in another filter class).
Because all the input subclasses inherit from java.io.InputStream, they can be
used as the input in the constructor of another stream.
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
14
Java Output Class Hierarchy
• The Output Class Hierarchy follows as similar format
OutputStream
PipedOutputStream Writing to sockets
(remote communication)
FileOutputStream Writing to files
ByteArrayOutputStream
Writing to byte array(memory)
ObjectOutputStream Writing to any object
FilterOutputStream
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
15
Java Output Class Hierarchy
• Part II : FilterOutputStream
OutputStream
FilterInputStream
BufferedOutputStream
DeflaterOutputStream
DataInputStream
ZipOutputStream GZIPOutputStream
DigestOutputStream
CheckedOutputStream
JarOutputStream
PrintStream
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
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I/O Examples : Writing Objects to a file
FileOutputStream ostream = new
FileOutputStream("t.tmp");
ObjectOutputStream p = new ObjectOutputStream(ostream);
int i = 5;
p.writeInt(i);
p.writeObject( “Writing a String object” );
p.writeUTF(“Writing a string as primitive data”);
p.writeObject( new Date (2001,1,21));
ostream.close();
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
17
Detour About Object Streams : Serializable
• When you write an object to an OutputStream (eg. To a file), what
information must be stored in order for it to be read back from an
InputStream ?
– Object Type
– Data that describes the current state of the object
•
Reading and writing objects involves a process called serialization.
– Applied only to objects, not to primitive data types (which use
DataInput/Output interfaces)
– Saves objects in a particular file format (Details are not important
in order to use, but interested people are referred to Core Java)
– Java provides default serialization. In order to use this, your class
must simply identify itself by implementing java.io.Serializable
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
18
Detour About Object Streams : Serializable
package java.io;
/** … The serialization interface has no methods
or fields and serves only to identify the
semantics of being serializable. To allow
subtypes of non-serializable classes to be
serialized, the subtype may assume
responsibility for saving and restoring the
state of the supertype's public, protected, and
(if accessible) package fields.
**/
public interface Serializable {
static final long serialVersionUID =
1196656838076753133L;
}
• Like Cloneable, this is a “tagging” interface (no methods)
• JVM supplies a default serialization process to any objects tagged as
Serializable; You don’t have to provide any implementation yourself if
the default is fine.
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
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Detour About Object Streams : Serializable
You can also override the serializing methods, and provide your own
private void readObject(ObjectInputStream in)
throws IOException, ClassNotFoundException;
private void writeObject(ObjectOutputStream out)
throws IOException;
• These will override the default, reading & writing the object’s data but not its superclass’s.
• In order to provide a completely new serialization mechanism, you must
implement java.io.Externalizable
Why ?
Security : Java’s serialization format is well-known and can be hacked.
But that’s a whole other course !
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
20
Java I/O Class Hierarchy : Interfaces
•
Suppose we now want to read/write from/to a Random Access file
– Behaviour : Access any specified location in a file
•
Solution ?
InputStream OutputStream
RandomAccess
•
Weakness :
– Random access is not a stream because it is not a sequence of bytes;
– Moreover, a random access file permits both read and write!
– You can’t subclass it from Input/OutputStream yet they do indeed share
many behaviours (eg. Reading/writing primitive data types), suggesting
that a better solution is by way of interfaces.
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
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Java I/O Class Hierarchy : Interfaces
• Quoting from Jbuilder : The DataInput interface provides for reading
bytes from a binary stream and reconstructing from them data in any of
the Java primitive types.
InputStream
OutputStream
FilterInputStream
FilterOutputStream
DataInputStream
DataOutputStream
DataInput
Shares behaviour
With IOStream
DataOutput
RandomAccessFile
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
Has Own Behaviour Too :
Both Input & Output!
22
Java I/O Class Hierarchy
• A second look at the ObjectInput/OutputStreams
– When reading/writing objects, you are ultimately reading/writing
primitive data types
– You often want to read both primitive types and objects from a
stream.
• Conclusion : Reading/writing objects shares and extends behaviour of
reading/writing data
ObjectInputStream
ObjectInput
DataInput
Quoting from Jbuilder : ObjectInput extends
the DataInput interface to include the reading
of objects. DataInput includes methods for
the input of primitive types, ObjectInput
extends that interface to include objects,
arrays, and Strings.
Similarly for Output
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
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Reader/Writer Class Hierarchy.
InputStream
OutputStream
• InputStream and OutputStream operate on sequences of bytes.
– Used for reading/writing binary data.
– eg. Files are binary files  Cannot view them for text editors.
• There is a whole separate hierarchy, mostly duplicated, that operates
on UNICODE text
eg. Files are text files  Can view with a text editor.
Reader
Writer
Copyright(c) Systems and Computer Engineering, Carleton Univeristy,
2001
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