14

I need to bridge two libraries over a stream.

QDataStream which is a stream from Qt

and some function from another libraries that looks like this

void read_something(istream& i);

I have no control over how the QDataStream is created and I'm not allowed to change the interface of read_somthing function.

The first thing I can think of is write a class that inherits istream and wraps QDataStream. Have anybody done that before?

If what I thought wasn't the proper way, I wonder what is the best way to achieve that.

1
  • Are you writing your own implementation of read_something, or are you trying to call this function?
    – Ropez
    Aug 11, 2009 at 18:02

2 Answers 2

18

What you should do is write a streambuf which uses the QDataStream readBytes and writeBytes to implement its functions. Then register the streambuf into a istream with rdbuf (you can also write an istream descendant which does this when initialized).

Boost contains a library aiming at facilitating the writing of streambuf. It could be simpler to use it than understanding the streambuf interface (personally I never have used it but I've written multiple streambuf; I'll see if I've a example that I can post).

Edit: here is something (commented in French -- it comes from the french FAQ of fr.comp.lang.c++ --, I have no time for translation and think it is better to leave them than to remove them) which wraps FILE* call into a streambuf. This also is a show case of a use of private inheritance: ensuring that what could be a member is initialized before a base class. In the case of IOStream, the base class could as well receive a NULL pointer and then the member init() used to set the streambuf.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <assert.h>

#include <iostream>
#include <streambuf>

// streambuf minimal encapsulant un FILE*
//    - utilise les tampons de FILE donc n'a pas de tampon interne en
//      sortie et a un tampon interne de taille 1 en entree car l'interface
//      de streambuf ne permet pas de faire moins;
//    - ne permet pas la mise en place d'un tampon
//    - une version plus complete devrait permettre d'acceder aux
//      informations d'erreur plus precises de FILE* et interfacer aussi
//      les autres possibilites de FILE* (entre autres synchroniser les
//      sungetc/sputbackc avec la possibilite correspondante de FILE*)

class FILEbuf: public std::streambuf
{
public:

  explicit FILEbuf(FILE* cstream);
  // cstream doit etre non NULL.

protected:

  std::streambuf* setbuf(char_type* s, std::streamsize n);

  int_type overflow(int_type c);
  int      sync();

  int_type underflow();

private:

  FILE*    cstream_;
  char     inputBuffer_[1];
};

FILEbuf::FILEbuf(FILE* cstream)
  : cstream_(cstream)
{
  // le constructeur de streambuf equivaut a
  // setp(NULL, NULL);
  // setg(NULL, NULL, NULL);
  assert(cstream != NULL);
}

std::streambuf* FILEbuf::setbuf(char_type* s, std::streamsize n)
{
  // ne fait rien, ce qui est autorise.  Une version plus complete
  // devrait vraissemblablement utiliser setvbuf
  return NULL;
}

FILEbuf::int_type FILEbuf::overflow(int_type c)
{
  if (traits_type::eq_int_type(c, traits_type::eof())) {
    // la norme ne le demande pas exactement, mais si on nous passe eof
    // la coutume est de faire la meme chose que sync()
    return (sync() == 0
        ? traits_type::not_eof(c)
        : traits_type::eof());
  } else {
    return ((fputc(c, cstream_) != EOF)
        ? traits_type::not_eof(c)
        : traits_type::eof());
  }
}

int FILEbuf::sync()
{
  return (fflush(cstream_) == 0
      ? 0
      : -1);
}

FILEbuf::int_type FILEbuf::underflow()
{
  // Assurance contre des implementations pas strictement conformes a la
  // norme qui guaranti que le test est vrai.  Cette guarantie n'existait
  // pas dans les IOStream classiques.
  if (gptr() == NULL || gptr() >= egptr()) {
    int gotted = fgetc(cstream_);
    if (gotted == EOF) {
      return traits_type::eof();
    } else {
      *inputBuffer_ = gotted;
      setg(inputBuffer_, inputBuffer_, inputBuffer_+1);
      return traits_type::to_int_type(*inputBuffer_);
    }
  } else {
    return traits_type::to_int_type(*inputBuffer_);
  }
}

// ostream minimal facilitant l'utilisation d'un FILEbuf
// herite de maniere privee de FILEbuf, ce qui permet de s'assurer
// qu'il est bien initialise avant std::ostream

class oFILEstream: private FILEbuf, public std::ostream 
{
public:
  explicit oFILEstream(FILE* cstream);
};

oFILEstream::oFILEstream(FILE* cstream)
  : FILEbuf(cstream), std::ostream(this)
{
}

// istream minimal facilitant l'utilisation d'un FILEbuf
// herite de maniere privee de FILEbuf, ce qui permet de s'assurer
// qu'il est bien initialise avant std::istream

class iFILEstream: private FILEbuf, public std::istream
{
public:
  explicit iFILEstream(FILE* cstream);
};

iFILEstream::iFILEstream(FILE* cstream)
  : FILEbuf(cstream), std::istream(this)
{
}

// petit programme de test
#include <assert.h>
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
  FILE* ocstream = fopen("result", "w");
  assert (ocstream != NULL);
  oFILEstream ocppstream(ocstream);
  ocppstream << "Du texte";
  fprintf(ocstream, " melange");
  fclose(ocstream);
  FILE* icstream = fopen("result", "r");
  assert (icstream != NULL);
  iFILEstream icppstream(icstream);
  std::string word1;
  std::string word2;
  icppstream >> word1;
  icppstream >> word2;
  char buf[1024];
  fgets(buf, 1024, icstream);
  std::cout << "Got :" << word1 << ':' << word2 << ':' << buf << '\n';
}
1
  • 1
    Note a far easier alternative would be to use sink and source concepts. For example, a sink object would wrap the FILE* and would only need to implement a write function within which a call is made to fwrite over the FILE pointer. The sink can then be wrapped in a boost::iostream::stream<Sink> which can then be treated like a std::ostream. Ah I see somebody has already indicated this solution below.
    – Ben J
    Aug 15, 2013 at 13:19
9

The boost stream solution:

namespace boost {
    namespace iostreams {

        class DataStreamSource
        {
        public:
            typedef char char_type;
            typedef source_tag  category;

            DataStreamSource( QDataStream *const source ) : m_source(source){
            }
            std::streamsize read(char* buffer, std::streamsize n) {
                return m_source ? m_source->readRawData(buffer, n) : -1;
            }

        private:
            QDataStream *const m_source;
        };
    }
}

// using DataStreamSource 
namespace io = boost::iostreams;
QFile fl("temp.bin");
fl.open(QIODevice::ReadOnly);
QDataStream s(&fl);
io::stream< io::DataStreamSource > dataStream( &s );   
read_something(dataStream);
1
  • 1
    @lyxera I've also made a Sink - Source - Device QIODevice bridge: stackoverflow.com/questions/848269/mixing-qt-with-stl-and-boost-are-there-any-bridges-to-make-it-easy/856812#856812
    – TimW
    Aug 14, 2009 at 7:54

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

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