Unless you need interoperability outside your particular program, serializing via ImageIO can be a slow solution. It may be faster to read and write the BufferedImage's pixels directly. Here's a complete solution:
public class SerializedImage
implements Serializable {
private BufferedImage mImage;
public SerializedImage( BufferedImage image ) {
mImage = image;
}
public BufferedImage getImage() {
return mImage;
}
private void writeObject( ObjectOutputStream streamOut )
throws IOException {
streamOut.writeInt( mImage.getWidth() );
streamOut.writeInt( mImage.getHeight() );
streamOut.writeInt( mImage.getType() );
streamOut.writeObject( ( (DataBufferInt) mImage.getRaster().getDataBuffer() ).getData() );
}
private void readObject( ObjectInputStream streamIn )
throws IOException, ClassNotFoundException {
mImage = new BufferedImage( streamIn.readInt(), streamIn.readInt(), streamIn.readInt() );
int[] savedBuffer = (int[]) streamIn.readObject();
int[] buffer = ( (DataBufferInt) mImage.getRaster().getDataBuffer() ).getData();
System.arraycopy( savedBuffer, 0, buffer, 0, savedBuffer.length );
}
}
UPDATE: @haraldK asked for some benchmarks. Like all micro-benchmarks, you should take these with a grain of salt. As @haraldK pointed out, if you're writing the serialized form out to disk, I/O probably becomes the limiting factor. Always test for your own use-case.
But a simple benchmark that does in-memory serializing/deserializing (to a byte array) is over 10x faster. This doesn't seem unreasonable, given that a) PNG compression is a non-trivial task; b) presumably the PNG compression has to at least read the pixel data, and then do a lot of processing on it, whereas SerializedImage just needs to read the pixel data and it's done.
Here's the code:
// Create
BufferedImage image = new BufferedImage( 100, 200, BufferedImage.TYPE_INT_ARGB );
Graphics2D graphics = (Graphics2D) image.getGraphics();
graphics.setColor( Color.red );
graphics.fillRect( 1, 1, 50, 50 );
SerializedImage serializedImage = new SerializedImage( image );
long start = System.currentTimeMillis();
for( int loop = 0; loop < 10_000; loop++ ) {
ByteArrayOutputStream outputStream = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
// Write
try ( ObjectOutputStream objectOutputStream = new ObjectOutputStream( outputStream ) ) {
objectOutputStream.writeObject( serializedImage );
}
// Read
try ( ObjectInputStream objectInputStream = new ObjectInputStream( new ByteArrayInputStream( outputStream.toByteArray() ) ) ) {
( (SerializedImage) objectInputStream.readObject() ).getImage();
}
}
long end = System.currentTimeMillis() - start;
System.out.println( "SerializedImage took " + end + "ms" );
start = System.currentTimeMillis();
for( int loop = 0; loop < 10_000; loop++ ) {
ByteArrayOutputStream outputStream = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
// Write
ImageIO.write( image, "png", outputStream );
// Read
ImageIO.read( new ByteArrayInputStream( outputStream.toByteArray() ));
}
end = System.currentTimeMillis() - start;
System.out.println( "ImageIO took " + end + "ms" );
Out of curiosity I tried this with FileOutputStream/FileInputStream instead. It's still faster than ImageIO, but only around 4x faster. Some of @haraldK's experiments (below) were only around 2x faster. So your mileage may vary.