BMemoryIO and BMallocIO

Derived from: public BPositionIO

Declared in: be/support/DataIO.h

Library: libbe.so


Overview

[method summary]

BMallocIO and BMemoryIO represent a buffer of dynamically allocated memory. You assign the buffer to a BMemoryIO object on construction, while a BMallocIO object allocates the buffer when you first call Write() or WriteAt(). On subsequent calls, BMallocIO makes sure enough memory is allocated to hold all the data you intend to write, reallocating it if necessary. Memory is allocated in multiples of a block size that you can set.

Both classes implement the BPositionIO protocol. They inherit the Read() and Write() functions that BPositionIO implements.


Constructor and Destructor


BMemoryIO(), BMallocIO()

      BMemoryIO(void *buffer size_t numBytes) 
      BMemoryIO(const void *buffer size_t numBytes) 
      BMallocIO(void) 

The BMemoryIO constructor assigns the object a buffer with at least numBytes of available memory. If the buffer is declared const, the object is read-only; calls to Write() and WriteAt() will fail. Otherwise, the buffer can be both read and written. In either case, the caller retains responsibility for the buffer; the BMemoryIO object won't free it.

The BMallocIO constructor creates an empty object and sets the default block size to 256 bytes. The constructor doesn't allocate any memory; memory is allocated when you first write to the object or when you call SetSize() to set the amount of memory.


~BMemoryIO(), ~BMallocIO()

      virtual ~BMemoryIO() 
      virtual ~BMallocIO() 

The BMemoryIO destructor does nothing; the BMallocIO destructor frees all memory that was allocated by the object.


Member Functions


Buffer(), BufferLength()

      const void *Buffer(void) const
      size_t BufferLength(void) const

Buffer() returns a pointer to the memory that the BMallocIO object has allocated, or NULL if it hasn't yet had occasion to allocate any memory. BufferLength() returns the number of data bytes in the buffer (not necessarily the full number of bytes that were allocated).


Position() see Seek()


ReadAt()

      virtual ssize_t ReadAt(off_t position, void *buffer, size_t numBytes)

Copies up to numBytes bytes of data from the object to the buffer and returns the actual number of bytes placed in the buffer. The data is read beginning at the position offset.

This function doesn't read beyond the end of the data. If there are fewer than numBytes of data available at the position offset, it reads only through the last data byte and returns a smaller number than numBytes. If position is out of range, it returns 0.

Both classes define essentially the same ReadAt() function.


Seek(), Position()

      virtual off_t Seek(off_t position, int32 mode)
      virtual off_t Position(void) const

Seek() sets the position in the data buffer where the Read() and Write() functions (inherited from BPositionIO) begin reading and writing. How the position argument is understood depends on the mode flag. There are three possible modes:

For BMallocIO, attempts to seek beyond the end of the data and the end of allocated memory are successful. When Write() is subsequently called, the object updates its conception of where the data ends to bring the current position within range. If necessary, enough memory will be allocated to accommodate any data added at the current position. However, Write() will fail for a BMemoryIO object if the current position is beyond the end of assigned memory.

Both Seek() and Position() return the current position as an offset in bytes from the beginning of allocated memory.


SetBlockSize(), SetSize()

      void SetBlockSize(size_t blockSize)
      virtual status_t SetSize(off_t numBytes)

SetBlockSize() sets the size of the memory blocks that the BMallocIO object deals with. The object allocates memory in multiples of the block size. The default is 256 bytes.

SetSize() sets the size of allocated memory to numBytes (modulo the block size). Shrinking the buffer should always be successful (B_OK); if the buffer can't be grown, B_NO_MEMORY is returned.


WriteAt()

      virtual ssize_t WriteAt(off_t position, const void *buffer, size_t numBytes)

Copies numBytes bytes of data from buffer into allocated memory beginning at position, and returns the number of bytes written.

For BMallocIO, a successful WriteAt() always return numBytes--WriteAt() reallocates the buffer (in multiples of the block size) if it needs more room. If the reallocation fails, this function returns B_NO_MEMORY.

However, the BMemoryIO version of WriteAt() won't write outside the memory buffer. If position is beyond the end of the buffer, it returns 0. If the object is read-only, it returns B_NOT_ALLOWED.






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Last modified January 29, 1998.