This very well may just be a KISS moment, but I feel like I should ask anyway.
I have a thread and it's reading from a sockets InputStream. Since I am dealing in particularly small data sizes (as in the data that I can expect to recieve from is in the order of 100 - 200 bytes), I set the buffer array size to 256. As part of my read function I have a check that will ensure that when I read from the InputStream that I got all of the data. If I didn't then I will recursively call the read function again. For each recursive call I merge the two buffer arrays back together.
My problem is, while I never anticipate using more than the buffer of 256, I want to be safe. But if sheep begin to fly and the buffer is significantly more the read the function (by estimation) will begin to take an exponential curve more time to complete.
How can I increase the effiency of the read function and/or the buffer merging?
Here is the read function as it stands.
int BUFFER_AMOUNT = 256;
private int read(byte[] buffer) throws IOException {
int bytes = mInStream.read(buffer); // Read the input stream
if (bytes == -1) { // If bytes == -1 then we didn't get all of the data
byte[] newBuffer = new byte[BUFFER_AMOUNT]; // Try to get the rest
int newBytes;
newBytes = read(newBuffer); // Recurse until we have all the data
byte[] oldBuffer = new byte[bytes + newBytes]; // make the final array size
// Merge buffer into the begining of old buffer.
// We do this so that once the method finishes, we can just add the
// modified buffer to a queue later in the class for processing.
for (int i = 0; i < bytes; i++)
oldBuffer[i] = buffer[i];
for (int i = bytes; i < bytes + newBytes; i++) // Merge newBuffer into the latter half of old Buffer
oldBuffer[i] = newBuffer[i];
// Used for the recursion
buffer = oldBuffer; // And now we set buffer to the new buffer full of all the data.
return bytes + newBytes;
}
return bytes;
}
EDIT: Am I being paranoid (unjustifiedly) and should just set the buffer to 2048 and call it done?