I am trying to create a Zip file in .NET 4.5 (System.IO.Compression) from a series of byte arrays. As an example, from an API I am using I end up with a List<Attachment>
and each Attachment
has a property called Body
which is a byte[]
. How can I iterate over that list and create a zip file that contains each attachment?
Right now I am under the impression that I would have to write each attachment to disk and create the zip file from that.
//This is great if I had the files on disk
ZipFile.CreateFromDirectory(startPath, zipPath);
//How can I create it from a series of byte arrays?
After a little more playing around and reading I was able to figure this out. Here is how you can create a zip file (archive) with multiple files without writing any temporary data to disk:
using (var compressedFileStream = new MemoryStream())
{
//Create an archive and store the stream in memory.
using (var zipArchive = new ZipArchive(compressedFileStream, ZipArchiveMode.Create, false)) {
foreach (var caseAttachmentModel in caseAttachmentModels) {
//Create a zip entry for each attachment
var zipEntry = zipArchive.CreateEntry(caseAttachmentModel.Name);
//Get the stream of the attachment
using (var originalFileStream = new MemoryStream(caseAttachmentModel.Body))
using (var zipEntryStream = zipEntry.Open()) {
//Copy the attachment stream to the zip entry stream
originalFileStream.CopyTo(zipEntryStream);
}
}
}
return new FileContentResult(compressedFileStream.ToArray(), "application/zip") { FileDownloadName = "Filename.zip" };
}
This is a variation of the great accepted answer posted by the OP. However, this is for WebForms instead of MVC. I'm working with the assumption that caseAttachmentModel.Body is a byte[]
Essentially everything is the same except with an additional method that sends the zip out as a Response.
using (var compressedFileStream = new MemoryStream()) {
//Create an archive and store the stream in memory.
using (var zipArchive = new ZipArchive(compressedFileStream, ZipArchiveMode.Update, false)) {
foreach (var caseAttachmentModel in caseAttachmentModels) {
//Create a zip entry for each attachment
var zipEntry = zipArchive.CreateEntry(caseAttachmentModel.Name);
//Get the stream of the attachment
using (var originalFileStream = new MemoryStream(caseAttachmentModel.Body)) {
using (var zipEntryStream = zipEntry.Open()) {
//Copy the attachment stream to the zip entry stream
originalFileStream.CopyTo(zipEntryStream);
}
}
}
}
sendOutZIP(compressedFileStream.ToArray(), "FileName.zip");
}
private void sendOutZIP(byte[] zippedFiles, string filename)
{
Response.Clear();
Response.ClearContent();
Response.ClearHeaders();
Response.ContentType = "application/x-compressed";
Response.Charset = string.Empty;
Response.Cache.SetCacheability(System.Web.HttpCacheability.Public);
Response.AddHeader("Content-Disposition", "attachment; filename=" + filename);
Response.BinaryWrite(zippedFiles);
Response.OutputStream.Flush();
Response.OutputStream.Close();
Response.End();
}
I would also like to point out that advice given by @Levi Fuller on references in the accepted answer is spot on!
GZipStream and DeflateStream seem like they would let you use steams/byte arrays to solve your problem, but maybe not with a compression file format usable by most users. (ie, your file would have a .gz extension) If this file is only used internally, that might be okay.
I don't know how you might make a ZIP using Microsoft's libraries, but I remember this library supporting the sort of things you might find useful: http://sevenzipsharp.codeplex.com/
It's licensed under LGPL.
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