Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

How to chain multiple different InputStreams into one InputStream

I'm wondering if there is any ideomatic way to chain multiple InputStreams into one continual InputStream in Java (or Scala).

What I need it for is to parse flat files that I load over the network from an FTP-Server. What I want to do is to take file[1..N], open up streams and then combine them into one stream. So when file1 comes to an end, I want to start reading from file2 and so on, until I reach the end of fileN.

I need to read these files in a specific order, data comes from a legacy system that produces files in barches so data in one depends on data in another file, but I would like to handle them as one continual stream to simplify my domain logic interface.

I searched around and found PipedInputStream, but I'm not positive that is what I need. An example would be helpful.

like image 480
Magnus Avatar asked Jan 12 '13 16:01

Magnus


3 Answers

It's right there in JDK! Quoting JavaDoc of SequenceInputStream:

A SequenceInputStream represents the logical concatenation of other input streams. It starts out with an ordered collection of input streams and reads from the first one until end of file is reached, whereupon it reads from the second one, and so on, until end of file is reached on the last of the contained input streams.

You want to concatenate arbitrary number of InputStreams while SequenceInputStream accepts only two. But since SequenceInputStream is also an InputStream you can apply it recursively (nest them):

new SequenceInputStream(
    new SequenceInputStream(
        new SequenceInputStream(file1, file2),
        file3
    ),
    file4
);

...you get the idea.

See also

  • How do you merge two input streams in Java? (dup?)
like image 128
Tomasz Nurkiewicz Avatar answered Nov 12 '22 20:11

Tomasz Nurkiewicz


This is done using SequencedInputStream, which is straightforward in Java, as Tomasz Nurkiewicz's answer shows. I had to do this repeatedly in a project recently, so I added some Scala-y goodness via the "pimp my library" pattern.

object StreamUtils {
  implicit def toRichInputStream(str: InputStream) = new RichInputStream(str)

  class RichInputStream(str: InputStream) {
// a bunch of other handy Stream functionality, deleted

    def ++(str2: InputStream): InputStream = new SequenceInputStream(str, str2)
  }
}

With that, I can do stream sequencing as follows

val mergedStream = stream1++stream2++stream3

or even

val streamList = //some arbitrary-length list of streams, non-empty
val mergedStream = streamList.reduceLeft(_++_)
like image 37
Dave Griffith Avatar answered Nov 12 '22 22:11

Dave Griffith


Another solution: first create a list of input stream and then create the sequence of input streams:

List<InputStream> iss = Files.list(Paths.get("/your/path"))
        .filter(Files::isRegularFile)
        .map(f -> {
            try {
                return new FileInputStream(f.toString());
            } catch (Exception e) {
                throw new RuntimeException(e);
            }
        }).collect(Collectors.toList());

new SequenceInputStream(Collections.enumeration(iss)))
like image 16
freedev Avatar answered Nov 12 '22 22:11

freedev