document that CanRead() and GetImageCount() functions of wxImageHandlers do NOT modif...
[wxWidgets.git] / interface / wx / stream.h
1 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
2 // Name: stream.h
3 // Purpose: interface of wxStreamBase and its derived classes
4 // Author: wxWidgets team
5 // RCS-ID: $Id$
6 // Licence: wxWindows license
7 /////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
8
9
10 /**
11 These enumeration values are returned by various functions in the context
12 of wxStream classes.
13 */
14 enum wxStreamError
15 {
16 wxSTREAM_NO_ERROR = 0, //!< No error occurred.
17 wxSTREAM_EOF, //!< EOF reached in Read() or similar.
18 wxSTREAM_WRITE_ERROR, //!< generic write error on the last write call.
19 wxSTREAM_READ_ERROR //!< generic read error on the last read call.
20 };
21
22 /**
23 @class wxStreamBase
24
25 This class is the base class of most stream related classes in wxWidgets.
26 It must not be used directly.
27
28 @library{wxbase}
29 @category{streams}
30
31 @see wxStreamBuffer
32 */
33 class wxStreamBase
34 {
35 public:
36 /**
37 Creates a dummy stream object. It doesn't do anything.
38 */
39 wxStreamBase();
40
41 /**
42 Destructor.
43 */
44 virtual ~wxStreamBase();
45
46 /**
47 This function returns the last error.
48 */
49 wxStreamError GetLastError() const;
50
51 /**
52 Returns the length of the stream in bytes. If the length cannot be
53 determined (this is always the case for socket streams for example),
54 returns ::wxInvalidOffset.
55
56 @since 2.5.4
57 */
58 virtual wxFileOffset GetLength() const;
59
60 /**
61 This function returns the size of the stream.
62 For example, for a file it is the size of the file.
63
64 @warning
65 There are streams which do not have size by definition, such as socket
66 streams. In that cases, GetSize() returns 0 so you should always test its
67 return value.
68 */
69 virtual size_t GetSize() const;
70
71 /**
72 Returns @true if no error occurred on the stream.
73
74 @see GetLastError()
75 */
76 virtual bool IsOk() const;
77
78 /**
79 Returns @true if the stream supports seeking to arbitrary offsets.
80 */
81 virtual bool IsSeekable() const;
82
83 /**
84 Returns the opposite of IsOk().
85 You can use this function to test the validity of the stream as if
86 it was a pointer:
87
88 @code
89 bool DoSomething(wxInputStream& stream)
90 {
91 wxInt32 data;
92 if (!stream.Read(&data, 4))
93 return false;
94 ...
95 }
96 @endcode
97 */
98 bool operator!() const;
99
100 protected:
101
102 /**
103 Internal function.
104 It is called when the stream needs to change the current position.
105
106 @param pos
107 Offset to seek to.
108 @param mode
109 One of the ::wxSeekMode enumeration values.
110
111 @return The new stream position or ::wxInvalidOffset on error.
112 */
113 virtual wxFileOffset OnSysSeek(wxFileOffset pos, wxSeekMode mode);
114
115 /**
116 Internal function.
117 It is called when the stream needs to know the real position.
118
119 @return The current stream position.
120 */
121 virtual wxFileOffset OnSysTell() const;
122 };
123
124 /**
125 @class wxStreamBuffer
126
127 wxStreamBuffer is a cache manager for wxStreamBase: it manages a stream buffer
128 linked to a stream.
129
130 Each stream always has one autoinitialized stream buffer, but you may
131 attach more of them to the same stream.
132
133 @library{wxbase}
134 @category{streams}
135
136 @see wxStreamBase, @ref overview_stream
137 */
138 class wxStreamBuffer
139 {
140 public:
141
142 /**
143 Constructor, creates a new stream buffer using @a stream as a parent stream
144 and mode as the IO mode.
145
146 @param stream
147 The parent stream.
148 @param mode
149 Can be: wxStreamBuffer::read, wxStreamBuffer::write, wxStreamBuffer::read_write.
150
151 One stream can have many stream buffers but only one is used internally
152 to pass IO call (e.g. wxInputStream::Read() -> wxStreamBuffer::Read()),
153 but you can call directly wxStreamBuffer::Read without any problems.
154 Note that all errors and messages linked to the stream are stored in the
155 stream, not the stream buffers:
156
157 @code
158 streambuffer.Read(...);
159 streambuffer2.Read(...);
160 // This call erases previous error messages set by 'streambuffer'
161 // assuming that both instances are stream buffers for the same stream
162 @endcode
163
164 @see SetBufferIO()
165 */
166 wxStreamBuffer(wxStreamBase& stream, BufMode mode);
167
168 /**
169 Constructor for an input buffer of the specified size.
170
171 Using it is equivalent to using the constructor above with read mode
172 and calling SetBufferIO() but is more convenient.
173
174 @since 2.9.0
175
176 @param bufsize
177 The size of buffer in bytes.
178 @param stream
179 The associated input stream, the buffer will be used in read mode.
180 */
181 wxStreamBuffer(size_t bufsize, wxInputStream& stream);
182
183 /**
184 Constructor for an output buffer of the specified size.
185
186 Using it is equivalent to using the constructor above with write mode
187 and calling SetBufferIO() but is more convenient.
188
189 @since 2.9.0
190
191 @param bufsize
192 The size of buffer in bytes.
193 @param stream
194 The associated output stream, the buffer will be used in write mode.
195 */
196 wxStreamBuffer(size_t bufsize, wxOutputStream& stream);
197
198 /**
199 Constructor; creates a new empty stream buffer which won't flush any data
200 to a stream. mode specifies the type of the buffer (read, write, read_write).
201
202 This stream buffer has the advantage to be stream independent and to work
203 only on memory buffers but it is still compatible with the rest of the
204 wxStream classes. You can write, read to this special stream and it will
205 grow (if it is allowed by the user) its internal buffer.
206 Briefly, it has all functionality of a "normal" stream.
207
208 @warning
209 The "read_write" mode doesn't currently work for standalone stream buffers.
210
211 @see SetBufferIO()
212 */
213 wxStreamBuffer(BufMode mode);
214
215 /**
216 Copy constructor.
217
218 This method initializes the stream buffer with the data of the specified
219 stream buffer. The new stream buffer has the same attributes, size, position
220 and they share the same buffer. This will cause problems if the stream to
221 which the stream buffer belong is destroyed and the newly cloned stream
222 buffer continues to be used, trying to call functions in the (destroyed)
223 stream. It is advised to use this feature only in very local area of the
224 program.
225 */
226 wxStreamBuffer(const wxStreamBuffer& buffer);
227
228 /**
229 Destructor.
230 It finalizes all IO calls and frees all internal buffers if necessary.
231 */
232 wxStreamBuffer();
233
234 /**
235 Fill the IO buffer.
236 */
237 bool FillBuffer();
238
239 /**
240 Toggles the fixed flag. Usually this flag is toggled at the same time as
241 @e flushable. This flag allows (when it has the @false value) or forbids
242 (when it has the @true value) the stream buffer to resize dynamically the
243 IO buffer.
244
245 @see SetBufferIO()
246 */
247 void Fixed(bool fixed);
248
249 /**
250 Flushes the IO buffer.
251 */
252 bool FlushBuffer();
253
254 /**
255 Toggles the flushable flag.
256 If @a flushable is disabled, no data are sent to the parent stream.
257 */
258 void Flushable(bool flushable);
259
260 /**
261 Returns a pointer on the end of the stream buffer.
262 */
263 void* GetBufferEnd() const;
264
265 /**
266 Returns a pointer on the current position of the stream buffer.
267 */
268 void* GetBufferPos() const;
269
270 /**
271 Returns the size of the buffer.
272 */
273 size_t GetBufferSize() const;
274
275 /**
276 Returns a pointer on the start of the stream buffer.
277 */
278 void* GetBufferStart() const;
279
280 /**
281 Gets a single char from the stream buffer. It acts like the Read() call.
282
283 @warning
284 You aren't directly notified if an error occurred during the IO call.
285
286 @see Read()
287 */
288 virtual char GetChar();
289
290 /**
291 Returns the amount of available data in the buffer.
292 */
293 size_t GetDataLeft();
294
295 /**
296 Returns the current position (counted in bytes) in the stream buffer.
297 */
298 size_t GetIntPosition() const;
299
300 /**
301 Returns the amount of bytes read during the last IO call to the parent stream.
302 */
303 size_t GetLastAccess() const;
304
305 /**
306 Puts a single char to the stream buffer.
307
308 @warning
309 You aren't directly notified if an error occurred during the IO call.
310
311 @see Read()
312 */
313 virtual void PutChar(char c);
314
315 /**
316 Reads a block of the specified size and stores the data in buffer.
317 This function tries to read from the buffer first and if more data has
318 been requested, reads more data from the associated stream and updates
319 the buffer accordingly until all requested data is read.
320
321 @return It returns the size of the data read. If the returned size is
322 different of the specified size, an error has occurred and
323 should be tested using GetLastError().
324 */
325 virtual size_t Read(void* buffer, size_t size);
326
327 /**
328 Copies data to @a buffer.
329 The function returns when @a buffer is full or when there isn't
330 any more data in the current buffer.
331
332 @see Write()
333 */
334 size_t Read(wxStreamBuffer* buffer);
335
336 /**
337 Resets to the initial state variables concerning the buffer.
338 */
339 void ResetBuffer();
340
341 /**
342 Changes the current position.
343 Parameter @a mode may be one of the following:
344
345 - @b wxFromStart: The position is counted from the start of the stream.
346 - @b wxFromCurrent: The position is counted from the current position of the stream.
347 - @b wxFromEnd: The position is counted from the end of the stream.
348
349 @return Upon successful completion, it returns the new offset as
350 measured in bytes from the beginning of the stream.
351 Otherwise, it returns ::wxInvalidOffset.
352 */
353 virtual wxFileOffset Seek(wxFileOffset pos, wxSeekMode mode);
354
355 /**
356 Specifies which pointers to use for stream buffering.
357 You need to pass a pointer on the start of the buffer end and another
358 on the end. The object will use this buffer to cache stream data.
359 It may be used also as a source/destination buffer when you create an
360 empty stream buffer (See wxStreamBuffer::wxStreamBuffer).
361
362 @remarks
363 When you use this function, you will have to destroy the IO buffers
364 yourself after the stream buffer is destroyed or don't use it anymore.
365 In the case you use it with an empty buffer, the stream buffer will not
366 resize it when it is full.
367
368 @see wxStreamBuffer(), Fixed(), Flushable()
369 */
370 void SetBufferIO(void* start, void* end, bool takeOwnership = false);
371
372 /**
373 Destroys or invalidates the previous IO buffer and allocates a new one of the
374 specified size.
375
376 @warning
377 All previous pointers aren't valid anymore.
378
379 @remarks
380 The created IO buffer is growable by the object.
381
382 @see Fixed(), Flushable()
383 */
384 void SetBufferIO(size_t bufsize);
385
386 /**
387 Sets the current position (in bytes) in the stream buffer.
388
389 @warning
390 Since it is a very low-level function, there is no check on the position:
391 specifying an invalid position can induce unexpected results.
392 */
393 void SetIntPosition(size_t pos);
394
395 /**
396 Returns the parent stream of the stream buffer.
397 @deprecated use GetStream() instead
398 */
399 wxStreamBase* Stream();
400
401 /**
402 Gets the current position in the stream. This position is calculated from
403 the @e real position in the stream and from the internal buffer position: so
404 it gives you the position in the @e real stream counted from the start of
405 the stream.
406
407 @return Returns the current position in the stream if possible,
408 ::wxInvalidOffset in the other case.
409 */
410 virtual wxFileOffset Tell() const;
411
412 /**
413 Truncates the buffer to the current position.
414
415 @note Truncate() cannot be used to enlarge the buffer. This is
416 usually not needed since the buffer expands automatically.
417 */
418 void Truncate();
419
420 /**
421 Writes a block of the specified size using data of buffer.
422 The data are cached in a buffer before being sent in one block to the stream.
423 */
424 virtual size_t Write(const void* buffer, size_t size);
425
426 /**
427 See Read().
428 */
429 size_t Write(wxStreamBuffer* buffer);
430 };
431
432
433
434 /**
435 @class wxOutputStream
436
437 wxOutputStream is an abstract base class which may not be used directly.
438 It is the base class of all streams which provide a Write() function,
439 i.e. which can be used to output data (e.g. to a file, to a socket, etc).
440
441 If you want to create your own output stream, you'll need to derive from this
442 class and implement the protected OnSysWrite() function only.
443
444 @library{wxbase}
445 @category{streams}
446 */
447 class wxOutputStream : public wxStreamBase
448 {
449 public:
450 /**
451 Creates a dummy wxOutputStream object.
452 */
453 wxOutputStream();
454
455 /**
456 Destructor.
457 */
458 virtual ~wxOutputStream();
459
460 /**
461 Closes the stream, returning @false if an error occurs.
462 The stream is closed implicitly in the destructor if Close() is not
463 called explicitly.
464
465 If this stream wraps another stream or some other resource such
466 as a file, then the underlying resource is closed too if it is owned
467 by this stream, or left open otherwise.
468 */
469 virtual bool Close();
470
471 /**
472 Returns the number of bytes written during the last Write().
473 It may return 0 even if there is no error on the stream if it is
474 only temporarily impossible to write to it.
475 */
476 virtual size_t LastWrite() const;
477
478 /**
479 Puts the specified character in the output queue and increments the
480 stream position.
481 */
482 void PutC(char c);
483
484 /**
485 Changes the stream current position.
486
487 @param pos
488 Offset to seek to.
489 @param mode
490 One of wxFromStart, wxFromEnd, wxFromCurrent.
491
492 @return The new stream position or ::wxInvalidOffset on error.
493 */
494 virtual wxFileOffset SeekO(wxFileOffset pos, wxSeekMode mode = wxFromStart);
495
496 /**
497 Returns the current stream position.
498 */
499 virtual wxFileOffset TellO() const;
500
501 /**
502 Writes up to the specified amount of bytes using the data of buffer.
503 Note that not all data can always be written so you must check the number
504 of bytes really written to the stream using LastWrite() when this function
505 returns.
506
507 In some cases (for example a write end of a pipe which is currently full)
508 it is even possible that there is no errors and zero bytes have been written.
509 This function returns a reference on the current object, so the user can
510 test any states of the stream right away.
511 */
512 virtual wxOutputStream& Write(const void* buffer, size_t size);
513
514 /**
515 Reads data from the specified input stream and stores them
516 in the current stream. The data is read until an error is raised
517 by one of the two streams.
518 */
519 wxOutputStream& Write(wxInputStream& stream_in);
520
521 protected:
522 /**
523 Internal function. It is called when the stream wants to write data of the
524 specified size @a bufsize into the given @a buffer.
525
526 It should return the size that was actually wrote (which maybe zero if
527 @a bufsize is zero or if an error occurred; in this last case the internal
528 variable @c m_lasterror should be appropriately set).
529 */
530 size_t OnSysWrite(const void* buffer, size_t bufsize);
531 };
532
533
534 /**
535 @class wxInputStream
536
537 wxInputStream is an abstract base class which may not be used directly.
538 It is the base class of all streams which provide a Read() function,
539 i.e. which can be used to read data from a source (e.g. a file, a socket, etc).
540
541 If you want to create your own input stream, you'll need to derive from this
542 class and implement the protected OnSysRead() function only.
543
544 @library{wxbase}
545 @category{streams}
546 */
547 class wxInputStream : public wxStreamBase
548 {
549 public:
550 /**
551 Creates a dummy input stream.
552 */
553 wxInputStream();
554
555 /**
556 Destructor.
557 */
558 virtual ~wxInputStream();
559
560 /**
561 Returns @true if some data is available in the stream right now, so that
562 calling Read() wouldn't block.
563 */
564 virtual bool CanRead() const;
565
566 /**
567 Returns @true after an attempt has been made to read past the end of the
568 stream.
569 */
570 virtual bool Eof() const;
571
572 /**
573 Returns the first character in the input queue and removes it,
574 blocking until it appears if necessary.
575
576 On success returns a value between 0 - 255; on end of file returns @c wxEOF.
577 */
578 int GetC();
579
580 /**
581 Returns the last number of bytes read.
582 */
583 virtual size_t LastRead() const;
584
585 /**
586 Returns the first character in the input queue without removing it.
587 */
588 virtual char Peek();
589
590 /**
591 Reads the specified amount of bytes and stores the data in buffer.
592 To check if the call was successfull you must use LastRead() to check
593 if this call did actually read @a size bytes (if it didn't, GetLastError()
594 should return a meaningful value).
595
596 @warning
597 The buffer absolutely needs to have at least the specified size.
598
599 @return This function returns a reference on the current object, so the
600 user can test any states of the stream right away.
601 */
602 virtual wxInputStream& Read(void* buffer, size_t size);
603
604 /**
605 Reads data from the input queue and stores it in the specified output stream.
606 The data is read until an error is raised by one of the two streams.
607
608 @return This function returns a reference on the current object, so the
609 user can test any states of the stream right away.
610 */
611 wxInputStream& Read(wxOutputStream& stream_out);
612
613 /**
614 Changes the stream current position.
615
616 This operation in general is possible only for seekable streams
617 (see wxStreamBase::IsSeekable()); non-seekable streams support only
618 seeking positive amounts in mode @c wxFromCurrent (this is implemented
619 by reading data and simply discarding it).
620
621 @param pos
622 Offset to seek to.
623 @param mode
624 One of wxFromStart, wxFromEnd, wxFromCurrent.
625
626 @return The new stream position or ::wxInvalidOffset on error.
627 */
628 virtual wxFileOffset SeekI(wxFileOffset pos, wxSeekMode mode = wxFromStart);
629
630 /**
631 Returns the current stream position or ::wxInvalidOffset if it's not
632 available (e.g. socket streams do not have a size nor a current stream
633 position).
634 */
635 virtual wxFileOffset TellI() const;
636
637 /**
638 This function is only useful in read mode.
639 It is the manager of the "Write-Back" buffer. This buffer acts like a
640 temporary buffer where data which has to be read during the next read IO
641 call are put. This is useful when you get a big block of data which you
642 didn't want to read: you can replace them at the top of the input queue
643 by this way.
644
645 Be very careful about this call in connection with calling SeekI() on
646 the same stream. Any call to SeekI() will invalidate any previous call
647 to this method (otherwise you could SeekI() to one position, "unread" a
648 few bytes there, SeekI() to another position and data would be either
649 lost or corrupted).
650
651 @return Returns the amount of bytes saved in the Write-Back buffer.
652 */
653 size_t Ungetch(const void* buffer, size_t size);
654
655 /**
656 This function acts like the previous one except that it takes only one
657 character: it is sometimes shorter to use than the generic function.
658 */
659 bool Ungetch(char c);
660
661 protected:
662
663 /**
664 Internal function. It is called when the stream wants to read data of the
665 specified size @a bufsize and wants it to be placed inside @a buffer.
666
667 It should return the size that was actually read or zero if EOF has been
668 reached or an error occurred (in this last case the internal @c m_lasterror
669 variable should be set accordingly as well).
670 */
671 size_t OnSysRead(void* buffer, size_t bufsize);
672 };
673
674
675
676
677 /**
678 @class wxCountingOutputStream
679
680 wxCountingOutputStream is a specialized output stream which does not write any
681 data anywhere, instead it counts how many bytes would get written if this were a
682 normal stream. This can sometimes be useful or required if some data gets
683 serialized to a stream or compressed by using stream compression and thus the
684 final size of the stream cannot be known other than pretending to write the stream.
685 One case where the resulting size would have to be known is if the data has
686 to be written to a piece of memory and the memory has to be allocated before
687 writing to it (which is probably always the case when writing to a memory stream).
688
689 @library{wxbase}
690 @category{streams}
691 */
692 class wxCountingOutputStream : public wxOutputStream
693 {
694 public:
695 /**
696 Creates a wxCountingOutputStream object.
697 */
698 wxCountingOutputStream();
699
700 /**
701 Destructor.
702 */
703 virtual ~wxCountingOutputStream();
704
705 /**
706 Returns the current size of the stream.
707 */
708 size_t GetSize() const;
709 };
710
711
712 /**
713 @class wxBufferedInputStream
714
715 This stream acts as a cache. It caches the bytes read from the specified
716 input stream (see wxFilterInputStream).
717 It uses wxStreamBuffer and sets the default in-buffer size to 1024 bytes.
718 This class may not be used without some other stream to read the data
719 from (such as a file stream or a memory stream).
720
721 @library{wxbase}
722 @category{streams}
723
724 @see wxStreamBuffer, wxInputStream, wxBufferedOutputStream
725 */
726 class wxBufferedInputStream : public wxFilterInputStream
727 {
728 public:
729 /**
730 Constructor using the provided buffer or default.
731
732 @param stream
733 The associated low-level stream.
734 @param buffer
735 The buffer to use if non-@NULL. Notice that the ownership of this
736 buffer is taken by the stream, i.e. it will delete it. If this
737 parameter is @NULL a default 1KB buffer is used.
738 */
739 wxBufferedInputStream(wxInputStream& stream,
740 wxStreamBuffer *buffer = NULL);
741
742 /**
743 Constructor allowing to specify the size of the buffer.
744
745 This is just a more convenient alternative to creating a wxStreamBuffer
746 of the given size and using the other overloaded constructor of this
747 class.
748
749 @param stream
750 The associated low-level stream.
751 @param bufsize
752 The size of the buffer, in bytes.
753
754 @since 2.9.0
755 */
756 wxBufferedInputStream(wxInputStream& stream, size_t bufsize);
757
758 /**
759 Destructor.
760 */
761 virtual ~wxBufferedInputStream();
762 };
763
764
765
766
767 /**
768 Enumeration values used by wxFilterClassFactory.
769 */
770 enum wxStreamProtocolType
771 {
772 wxSTREAM_PROTOCOL, //!< wxFileSystem protocol (should be only one).
773 wxSTREAM_MIMETYPE, //!< MIME types the stream handles.
774 wxSTREAM_ENCODING, //!< The HTTP Content-Encodings the stream handles.
775 wxSTREAM_FILEEXT //!< File extensions the stream handles.
776 };
777
778 /**
779 @class wxFilterClassFactory
780
781 Allows the creation of filter streams to handle compression formats such
782 as gzip and bzip2.
783
784 For example, given a filename you can search for a factory that will
785 handle it and create a stream to decompress it:
786
787 @code
788 factory = wxFilterClassFactory::Find(filename, wxSTREAM_FILEEXT);
789 if (factory)
790 stream = factory->NewStream(new wxFFileInputStream(filename));
791 @endcode
792
793 wxFilterClassFactory::Find can also search for a factory by MIME type,
794 HTTP encoding or by wxFileSystem protocol.
795 The available factories can be enumerated using wxFilterClassFactory::GetFirst()
796 and wxFilterClassFactory::GetNext().
797
798 @library{wxbase}
799 @category{streams}
800
801 @see wxFilterInputStream, wxFilterOutputStream, wxArchiveClassFactory,
802 @ref overview_archive
803 */
804 class wxFilterClassFactory : public wxObject
805 {
806 public:
807 /**
808 Returns @true if this factory can handle the given protocol, MIME type, HTTP
809 encoding or file extension.
810
811 When using @c wxSTREAM_FILEEXT for the second parameter, the first parameter
812 can be a complete filename rather than just an extension.
813 */
814 bool CanHandle(const wxString& protocol,
815 wxStreamProtocolType type = wxSTREAM_PROTOCOL) const;
816
817 /**
818 A static member that finds a factory that can handle a given protocol, MIME
819 type, HTTP encoding or file extension. Returns a pointer to the class
820 factory if found, or @NULL otherwise.
821 It does not give away ownership of the factory.
822
823 When using @c wxSTREAM_FILEEXT for the second parameter, the first parameter
824 can be a complete filename rather than just an extension.
825 */
826 static const wxFilterClassFactory* Find(const wxString& protocol,
827 wxStreamProtocolType type = wxSTREAM_PROTOCOL);
828
829 //@{
830 /**
831 GetFirst and GetNext can be used to enumerate the available factories.
832 For example, to list them:
833
834 @code
835 wxString list;
836 const wxFilterClassFactory *factory = wxFilterClassFactory::GetFirst();
837
838 while (factory) {
839 list << factory->GetProtocol() << _T("\n");
840 factory = factory->GetNext();
841 }
842 @endcode
843
844 GetFirst()/GetNext() return a pointer to a factory or @NULL if no more
845 are available. They do not give away ownership of the factory.
846 */
847 static const wxFilterClassFactory* GetFirst();
848 const wxFilterClassFactory* GetNext() const;
849 //@}
850
851 /**
852 Returns the wxFileSystem protocol supported by this factory.
853 Equivalent to @code wxString(*GetProtocols()) @endcode.
854 */
855 wxString GetProtocol() const;
856
857 /**
858 Returns the protocols, MIME types, HTTP encodings or file extensions
859 supported by this factory, as an array of null terminated strings.
860 It does not give away ownership of the array or strings.
861
862 For example, to list the file extensions a factory supports:
863
864 @code
865 wxString list;
866 const wxChar *const *p;
867
868 for (p = factory->GetProtocols(wxSTREAM_FILEEXT); *p; p++)
869 list << *p << _T("\n");
870 @endcode
871 */
872 virtual const wxChar * const* GetProtocols(wxStreamProtocolType type = wxSTREAM_PROTOCOL) const = 0;
873
874 //@{
875 /**
876 Create a new input or output stream to decompress or compress a given stream.
877
878 If the parent stream is passed as a pointer then the new filter stream
879 takes ownership of it. If it is passed by reference then it does not.
880 */
881 virtual wxFilterInputStream* NewStream(wxInputStream& stream) const = 0;
882 virtual wxFilterOutputStream* NewStream(wxOutputStream& stream) const = 0;
883 virtual wxFilterInputStream* NewStream(wxInputStream* stream) const = 0;
884 virtual wxFilterOutputStream* NewStream(wxOutputStream* stream) const = 0;
885 //@}
886
887 /**
888 Remove the file extension of @a location if it is one of the file
889 extensions handled by this factory.
890 */
891 wxString PopExtension(const wxString& location) const;
892
893 /**
894 Adds this class factory to the list returned by GetFirst()/GetNext().
895
896 It is not necessary to do this to use the filter streams. It is usually
897 used when implementing streams, typically the implementation will
898 add a static instance of its factory class.
899
900 It can also be used to change the order of a factory already in the list,
901 bringing it to the front. This isn't a thread safe operation so can't be
902 done when other threads are running that will be using the list.
903
904 The list does not take ownership of the factory.
905 */
906 void PushFront();
907
908 /**
909 Removes this class factory from the list returned by GetFirst()/GetNext().
910 Removing from the list isn't a thread safe operation so can't be done
911 when other threads are running that will be using the list.
912
913 The list does not own the factories, so removing a factory does not delete it.
914 */
915 void Remove();
916 };
917
918
919
920 /**
921 @class wxFilterOutputStream
922
923 A filter stream has the capability of a normal stream but it can be placed
924 on top of another stream. So, for example, it can compress, encrypt the data
925 which are passed to it and write them to another stream.
926
927 @note
928 The use of this class is exactly the same as of wxOutputStream.
929 Only a constructor differs and it is documented below.
930
931 @library{wxbase}
932 @category{streams}
933
934 @see wxFilterClassFactory, wxFilterInputStream
935 */
936 class wxFilterOutputStream : public wxOutputStream
937 {
938 public:
939 //@{
940 /**
941 Initializes a "filter" stream.
942
943 If the parent stream is passed as a pointer then the new filter stream
944 takes ownership of it. If it is passed by reference then it does not.
945 */
946 wxFilterOutputStream(wxOutputStream& stream);
947 wxFilterOutputStream(wxOutputStream* stream);
948 //@}
949 };
950
951
952
953 /**
954 @class wxFilterInputStream
955
956 A filter stream has the capability of a normal stream but it can be placed on
957 top of another stream. So, for example, it can uncompress or decrypt the data which
958 are read from another stream and pass it to the requester.
959
960 @note
961 The interface of this class is the same as that of wxInputStream.
962 Only a constructor differs and it is documented below.
963
964 @library{wxbase}
965 @category{streams}
966
967 @see wxFilterClassFactory, wxFilterOutputStream
968 */
969 class wxFilterInputStream : public wxInputStream
970 {
971 public:
972 //@{
973 /**
974 Initializes a "filter" stream.
975
976 If the parent stream is passed as a pointer then the new filter stream
977 takes ownership of it. If it is passed by reference then it does not.
978 */
979 wxFilterInputStream(wxInputStream& stream);
980 wxFilterInputStream(wxInputStream* stream);
981 //@}
982 };
983
984
985
986 /**
987 @class wxBufferedOutputStream
988
989 This stream acts as a cache. It caches the bytes to be written to the specified
990 output stream (See wxFilterOutputStream). The data is only written when the
991 cache is full, when the buffered stream is destroyed or when calling SeekO().
992
993 This class may not be used without some other stream to write the data
994 to (such as a file stream or a memory stream).
995
996 @library{wxbase}
997 @category{streams}
998
999 @see wxStreamBuffer, wxOutputStream
1000 */
1001 class wxBufferedOutputStream : public wxFilterOutputStream
1002 {
1003 public:
1004 /**
1005 Constructor using the provided buffer or default.
1006
1007 @param stream
1008 The associated low-level stream.
1009 @param buffer
1010 The buffer to use if non-@NULL. Notice that the ownership of this
1011 buffer is taken by the stream, i.e. it will delete it. If this
1012 parameter is @NULL a default 1KB buffer is used.
1013 */
1014 wxBufferedOutputStream(wxOutputStream& stream,
1015 wxStreamBuffer *buffer = NULL);
1016
1017 /**
1018 Constructor allowing to specify the size of the buffer.
1019
1020 This is just a more convenient alternative to creating a wxStreamBuffer
1021 of the given size and using the other overloaded constructor of this
1022 class.
1023
1024 @param stream
1025 The associated low-level stream.
1026 @param bufsize
1027 The size of the buffer, in bytes.
1028
1029 @since 2.9.0
1030 */
1031 wxBufferedOutputStream(wxOutputStream& stream, size_t bufsize);
1032
1033 /**
1034 Destructor. Calls Sync() and destroys the internal buffer.
1035 */
1036 virtual ~wxBufferedOutputStream();
1037
1038 /**
1039 Calls Sync() and changes the stream position.
1040 */
1041 virtual wxFileOffset SeekO(wxFileOffset pos, wxSeekMode mode = wxFromStart);
1042
1043 /**
1044 Flushes the buffer and calls Sync() on the parent stream.
1045 */
1046 virtual void Sync();
1047 };
1048
1049