We're porting an app with loads of cross-platform code to Cocoa. Using the low-level file handling routines that directly work on files on disk for loading/saving is a mandatory.
As the NSFileWrapper
is designed to present the contents of files in memory via NSData
and abstracts away the actual file-on-disk details we can't use that directly, right?
So to be able to use our low-level file handling code using
fopen()
fread()
and similar ANSI-C stuff we are thinking about
- using the
NSFileWrapper
APIs ofNSDocument
, - write the
NSData
from the file wrapper back to a temp. folder
(e.g. ~/Library/Caches/) - hand over that temp. file (~100k .. 1MB) to the lower levels.
Writing of files would work similarly - just the other way around.
Now - is this approach the simplest way to get direct access to the files that the NSFileWrapper
represents? Are we overlooking some API in file wrapper?
Is there any trouble we could run into - thinking of sandboxing and iCloud in particular..?
As we'd like to support file bundles with more than 1 file we'd rather like to stick with the file wrapper based APIs in NSDocument
and not use the NSURL
based methods.
Any feedback/critics appreciated!