562

What is the best way to copy the contents of one stream to another? Is there a standard utility method for this?

1
  • Maybe more importantly at this point, how do you copy the contents "streamably", meaning that it only copies the source stream as something consumes the destination stream...?
    – drzaus
    Oct 13, 2015 at 22:34

13 Answers 13

734

From .NET 4.5 on, there is the Stream.CopyToAsync method

input.CopyToAsync(output);

This will return a Task that can be continued on when completed, like so:

await input.CopyToAsync(output)

// Code from here on will be run in a continuation.

Note that depending on where the call to CopyToAsync is made, the code that follows may or may not continue on the same thread that called it.

The SynchronizationContext that was captured when calling await will determine what thread the continuation will be executed on.

Additionally, this call (and this is an implementation detail subject to change) still sequences reads and writes (it just doesn't waste a threads blocking on I/O completion).

From .NET 4.0 on, there's is the Stream.CopyTo method

input.CopyTo(output);

For .NET 3.5 and before

There isn't anything baked into the framework to assist with this; you have to copy the content manually, like so:

public static void CopyStream(Stream input, Stream output)
{
    byte[] buffer = new byte[32768];
    int read;
    while ((read = input.Read(buffer, 0, buffer.Length)) > 0)
    {
        output.Write (buffer, 0, read);
    }
}

Note 1: This method will allow you to report on progress (x bytes read so far ...)
Note 2: Why use a fixed buffer size and not input.Length? Because that Length may not be available! From the docs:

If a class derived from Stream does not support seeking, calls to Length, SetLength, Position, and Seek throw a NotSupportedException.

12
  • 60
    Note that this is not the fastest way to do it. In the provided code snippet, you have to wait for the Write to complete before a new block is read. When doing the Read and Write asynchronously this waiting will disappear. In some situation this will make the copy twice as fast. However it will make the code a lot more complicated so if speed is not an issue, keep it simple and use this simple loop. This question on StackOverflow has some code that illustrates the async Read/Write: stackoverflow.com/questions/1540658/… Regards, Sebastiaan Nov 6, 2009 at 7:10
  • 16
    FWIW, in my testing I've found that 4096 is actually faster than 32K. Something to do with how the CLR allocates chunks over a certain size. Because of this, the .NET implementation of Stream.CopyTo apparently uses 4096.
    – Jeff
    Feb 18, 2012 at 0:03
  • 1
    If you want to know how CopyToAsync is implemented or make modifications like I did (I needed to be able specify the maximum number of bytes to copy) then it's available as CopyStreamToStreamAsync in "Samples for Parallel Programming with the .NET Framework" code.msdn.microsoft.com/ParExtSamples
    – Michael
    Jun 2, 2013 at 2:00
  • 1
    FIY, optimal buffer size iz 81920 bytes, not 32768 Jun 21, 2016 at 8:51
  • 2
    @Jeff latest referecnceSource shows that it actually uses 81920 bytes buffer. Jun 21, 2016 at 8:52
73

MemoryStream has .WriteTo(outstream);

and .NET 4.0 has .CopyTo on normal stream object.

.NET 4.0:

instream.CopyTo(outstream);
4
  • I do not see many samples on the web using these methods. Is this because they are fairly new or is there some limitations?
    – GeneS
    Nov 24, 2011 at 17:21
  • 3
    It's because they are new in .NET 4.0. Stream.CopyTo() basically does exactly the same for loop that the approved answer does, with some additional sanity checks. The default buffer size is 4096, but there is also an overload to specify a larger one. Dec 1, 2011 at 22:28
  • 12
    Stream need to be rewinded after copy: instream.Position = 0;
    – Draykos
    Jan 24, 2013 at 15:37
  • 8
    In addition to rewinding the input stream, I also found a need to rewind the output stream: outstream.Position = 0;
    – JonH
    Mar 27, 2015 at 15:40
33

I use the following extension methods. They have optimized overloads for when one stream is a MemoryStream.

    public static void CopyTo(this Stream src, Stream dest)
    {
        int size = (src.CanSeek) ? Math.Min((int)(src.Length - src.Position), 0x2000) : 0x2000;
        byte[] buffer = new byte[size];
        int n;
        do
        {
            n = src.Read(buffer, 0, buffer.Length);
            dest.Write(buffer, 0, n);
        } while (n != 0);           
    }

    public static void CopyTo(this MemoryStream src, Stream dest)
    {
        dest.Write(src.GetBuffer(), (int)src.Position, (int)(src.Length - src.Position));
    }

    public static void CopyTo(this Stream src, MemoryStream dest)
    {
        if (src.CanSeek)
        {
            int pos = (int)dest.Position;
            int length = (int)(src.Length - src.Position) + pos;
            dest.SetLength(length); 

            while(pos < length)                
                pos += src.Read(dest.GetBuffer(), pos, length - pos);
        }
        else
            src.CopyTo((Stream)dest);
    }
3

.NET Framework 4 introduce new "CopyTo" method of Stream Class of System.IO namespace. Using this method we can copy one stream to another stream of different stream class.

Here is example for this.

    FileStream objFileStream = File.Open(Server.MapPath("TextFile.txt"), FileMode.Open);
    Response.Write(string.Format("FileStream Content length: {0}", objFileStream.Length.ToString()));

    MemoryStream objMemoryStream = new MemoryStream();

    // Copy File Stream to Memory Stream using CopyTo method
    objFileStream.CopyTo(objMemoryStream);
    Response.Write("<br/><br/>");
    Response.Write(string.Format("MemoryStream Content length: {0}", objMemoryStream.Length.ToString()));
    Response.Write("<br/><br/>");
0
2

There is actually, a less heavy-handed way of doing a stream copy. Take note however, that this implies that you can store the entire file in memory. Don't try and use this if you are working with files that go into the hundreds of megabytes or more, without caution.

public static void CopySmallTextStream(Stream input, Stream output)
{
  using (StreamReader reader = new StreamReader(input))
  using (StreamWriter writer = new StreamWriter(output))
  {
    writer.Write(reader.ReadToEnd());
  }
}

NOTE: There may also be some issues concerning binary data and character encodings.

5
  • 6
    The default constructor for StreamWriter creates a UTF8 stream without a BOM (msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/fysy0a4b.aspx) so there's no danger of encoding problems. Binary data almost certainly shouldn't be copied this way. Nov 9, 2009 at 16:27
  • 14
    one could easily argue that loading "the entire file in memory" is hardly considered "less heavy-handed".
    – Seph
    Jan 3, 2012 at 12:23
  • i get outmemory exception because of this
    – ColacX
    Dec 16, 2016 at 14:59
  • 1
    This is not stream to stream. reader.ReadToEnd() puts everything in RAM
    – Bizhan
    May 11, 2020 at 14:01
  • I renamed the method from 'CopyStream()' to 'CopySmallTextStream()'. Perhaps this will help make the caveats of this solution more obvious in downstream codebases.
    – hannasm
    Aug 5, 2020 at 1:55
1

The basic questions that differentiate implementations of "CopyStream" are:

  • size of the reading buffer
  • size of the writes
  • Can we use more than one thread (writing while we are reading).

The answers to these questions result in vastly different implementations of CopyStream and are dependent on what kind of streams you have and what you are trying to optimize. The "best" implementation would even need to know what specific hardware the streams were reading and writing to.

1
  • 1
    ... or the best implementation could have overloads to allow you to specify the buffer size, write size, and whether threads are allowed?
    – MarkJ
    Mar 23, 2010 at 16:40
0

Unfortunately, there is no really simple solution. You can try something like that:

Stream s1, s2;
byte[] buffer = new byte[4096];
int bytesRead = 0;
while (bytesRead = s1.Read(buffer, 0, buffer.Length) > 0) s2.Write(buffer, 0, bytesRead);
s1.Close(); s2.Close();

But the problem with that that different implementation of the Stream class might behave differently if there is nothing to read. A stream reading a file from a local harddrive will probably block until the read operaition has read enough data from the disk to fill the buffer and only return less data if it reaches the end of file. On the other hand, a stream reading from the network might return less data even though there are more data left to be received.

Always check the documentation of the specific stream class you are using before using a generic solution.

1
  • 6
    The generic solution will work here - Nick's answer is a fine one. The buffer size is an arbitrary choice of course, but 32K sounds reasonable. I think Nick's solution is right not to close the streams though - leave that to the owner.
    – Jon Skeet
    Oct 23, 2008 at 15:31
0

There may be a way to do this more efficiently, depending on what kind of stream you're working with. If you can convert one or both of your streams to a MemoryStream, you can use the GetBuffer method to work directly with a byte array representing your data. This lets you use methods like Array.CopyTo, which abstract away all the issues raised by fryguybob. You can just trust .NET to know the optimal way to copy the data.

0

if you want a procdure to copy a stream to other the one that nick posted is fine but it is missing the position reset, it should be

public static void CopyStream(Stream input, Stream output)
{
    byte[] buffer = new byte[32768];
    long TempPos = input.Position;
    while (true)    
    {
        int read = input.Read (buffer, 0, buffer.Length);
        if (read <= 0)
            return;
        output.Write (buffer, 0, read);
    }
    input.Position = TempPos;// or you make Position = 0 to set it at the start
}

but if it is in runtime not using a procedure you shpuld use memory stream

Stream output = new MemoryStream();
byte[] buffer = new byte[32768]; // or you specify the size you want of your buffer
long TempPos = input.Position;
while (true)    
{
    int read = input.Read (buffer, 0, buffer.Length);
    if (read <= 0)
        return;
    output.Write (buffer, 0, read);
 }
    input.Position = TempPos;// or you make Position = 0 to set it at the start
1
  • 3
    You shouldn't change the position of the input stream, because not all streams allow random access. In a network stream, for example, you cannot change position, only read and/or write. Oct 20, 2010 at 0:50
0

Since none of the answers have covered an asynchronous way of copying from one stream to another, here is a pattern that I've successfully used in a port forwarding application to copy data from one network stream to another. It lacks exception handling to emphasize the pattern.

const int BUFFER_SIZE = 4096;

static byte[] bufferForRead = new byte[BUFFER_SIZE];
static byte[] bufferForWrite = new byte[BUFFER_SIZE];

static Stream sourceStream = new MemoryStream();
static Stream destinationStream = new MemoryStream();

static void Main(string[] args)
{
    // Initial read from source stream
    sourceStream.BeginRead(bufferForRead, 0, BUFFER_SIZE, BeginReadCallback, null);
}

private static void BeginReadCallback(IAsyncResult asyncRes)
{
    // Finish reading from source stream
    int bytesRead = sourceStream.EndRead(asyncRes);
    // Make a copy of the buffer as we'll start another read immediately
    Array.Copy(bufferForRead, 0, bufferForWrite, 0, bytesRead);
    // Write copied buffer to destination stream
    destinationStream.BeginWrite(bufferForWrite, 0, bytesRead, BeginWriteCallback, null);
    // Start the next read (looks like async recursion I guess)
    sourceStream.BeginRead(bufferForRead, 0, BUFFER_SIZE, BeginReadCallback, null);
}

private static void BeginWriteCallback(IAsyncResult asyncRes)
{
    // Finish writing to destination stream
    destinationStream.EndWrite(asyncRes);
}
1
  • 4
    Surely if the second read completes before the first write then you will write over the contents of bufferForWrite from the first read, before it is is written out. Nov 18, 2011 at 9:50
0

For .NET 3.5 and before try :

MemoryStream1.WriteTo(MemoryStream2);
1
  • That only works if you're dealing with MemoryStreams though.
    – Nyerguds
    Feb 12, 2019 at 8:19
0

Easy and safe - make new stream from original source:

    MemoryStream source = new MemoryStream(byteArray);
    MemoryStream copy = new MemoryStream(byteArray);
-3

The following code to solve the issue copy the Stream to MemoryStream using CopyTo

Stream stream = new MemoryStream();

//any function require input the stream. In mycase to save the PDF file as stream document.Save(stream);

MemoryStream newMs = (MemoryStream)stream;

byte[] getByte = newMs.ToArray();

//Note - please dispose the stream in the finally block instead of inside using block as it will throw an error 'Access denied as the stream is closed'

1
  • 2
    Welcome to Stack Overflow. When adding an answer to an eleven year old question with twelve existing answers including an accepted answer it is very important to point out what new aspect of the question your answer addresses. Please use code formatting for code. Answers are better when the include an explanation of how and why they work. Aug 6, 2020 at 4:19

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