1

I have a 16mb binary file and I want to read bytes without using any loop. like if i want to read 16 byte i can pass 16 to some method(if there is any) and it give me my desired result... right now i am using loop for reading bytes but my application is so huge i am afraid that it do not get slow.kindly give me some hint.

thanks alot.

7
  • 5
    What do you think happens in the magical method you pass the number in?
    – Noel M
    Aug 13, 2010 at 10:35
  • but my team lead was forcing me to search some thing i asked him in method there must a loop but he said no, it might be different.
    – sajjoo
    Aug 13, 2010 at 10:36
  • 4
    Perhaps you could put a relevant code snippet in your question, and perhaps ask if it is performant, or if there are any improvements that can be made?
    – Noel M
    Aug 13, 2010 at 10:37
  • I think your team leader was thinking about buffered readers, but then again you'll need loops to read through them. Aug 13, 2010 at 10:46
  • 1
    I think the real problem here is that you and your team lead are not communicating effectively.
    – Stephen C
    Aug 13, 2010 at 12:21

4 Answers 4

2

I can give you two answers, but they're not practical. In real life you'll use a loop to read the bytes.

Valid answer 1

public byte[] readWithNoLoop(InputStream in, int size) {
   byte[] result = new byte[16777216];  // 16 MByte
   byte b = 0;

   if ((b = in.read()) >= 0) result[0] = b;
   if ((b = in.read()) >= 0) result[1] = b;
   if ((b = in.read()) >= 0) result[2] = b;

   // ...

   if ((b = in.read()) >= 0) result[16777215] = b;

   return b;
}

Valid answer 2

use a massive parallel systems that can read the file in parallel. You need 16777216 processing units and a supporting file storage system but you can read in O(1) (theoretically).


If you encounter massive perfomance problems while reading the file, check if you use a BufferedInputStream, reading bytes from a 'normal' stream kills performance. (Example)

If it still doesn't help, then have a look at the java.nio classes. They can map files to memory. The Grep example should give you a direction.

0
1

You can use BufferedInputStream#read(byte[] b, int off, int len)

2
  • Yes, but: 1) The implementation of that contains loops; 2) You need to loop in your client code to read from it safely. I'm not saying it's a bad idea, I'm pointing out that the requirements are nonsensical and a better answer would be "WTF do you want to do that for" rather than trying to conform to them. Aug 13, 2010 at 11:13
  • Yes, I thought requirements were about reading n bytes in a single call instead of inefficiently reading them one by one.
    – hhbarriuso
    Aug 13, 2010 at 18:25
0
import java.io.*;

public class NoLoopReader {
  public static void main (String[] args) throws Exception {
    String fileName = args[0];
    InputStream is = new BufferedInputStream(new FileInputStream(fileName));
    File file = new File(fileName);
    int size = (int)file.length();

    byte[] buffer = new byte[size];
    is.read(buffer,0,size);
  }
}
2
  • That is.read(byte[], int, int) contains a for loop in the implementation.
    – Noel M
    Aug 13, 2010 at 11:00
  • wrapping into BufferedInputStream is a bad idea and helps nothing.
    – bestsss
    Jan 20, 2011 at 16:50
0

You might check file size on disk, create appropriate buffer and use this read method to do bulk load (as you can see it calls native readBytes). Of course I have no idea if there is no loop inside of readBytes (most likely there is, but that may depend on implementation of JVM)... :)

In FileInputStream

/**
 * Reads up to <code>b.length</code> bytes of data from this input
 * stream into an array of bytes. This method blocks until some input
 * is available.
 *
 * @param      b   the buffer into which the data is read.
 * @return     the total number of bytes read into the buffer, or
 *             <code>-1</code> if there is no more data because the end of
 *             the file has been reached.
 * @exception  IOException  if an I/O error occurs.
 */
public int read(byte b[]) throws IOException {

return readBytes(b, 0, b.length); }

/**
 * Reads up to <code>len</code> bytes of data from this input stream
 * into an array of bytes. If <code>len</code> is not zero, the method
 * blocks until some input is available; otherwise, no
 * bytes are read and <code>0</code> is returned.
 *
 * @param      b     the buffer into which the data is read.
 * @param      off   the start offset in the destination array <code>b</code>
 * @param      len   the maximum number of bytes read.
 * @return     the total number of bytes read into the buffer, or
 *             <code>-1</code> if there is no more data because the end of
 *             the file has been reached.
 * @exception  NullPointerException If <code>b</code> is <code>null</code>.
 * @exception  IndexOutOfBoundsException If <code>off</code> is negative, 
 * <code>len</code> is negative, or <code>len</code> is greater than 
 * <code>b.length - off</code>
 * @exception  IOException  if an I/O error occurs.
 */
public int read(byte b[], int off, int len) throws IOException {

return readBytes(b, off, len); }

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.