My application uses a somewhat complex inmutable data structure that is encoded in a binary file. I need to have access to it at the byte level, avoiding any copying. Normally, I would use C or C++ pointer arithmetic and typecasts, to access and interpret the raw byte values. I would like to do the same with Swift.
I have found that the following works:
class RawData {
var data: NSData!
init(rawData: NSData) {
data = rawData
}
func read<T>(byteLocation: Int) -> T {
let bytes = data.subdataWithRange(NSMakeRange(byteLocation, sizeof(T))).bytes
return UnsafePointer<T>(bytes).memory
}
func example_ReadAnIntAtByteLocation5() -> Int {
return read(5) as Int
}
}
However, I am not sure how efficient it is. Do data.subdataWithRange
and NSMakeRange
allocate objects every time I call them, or are they just syntactic sugar for dealing with pointers?
Is there a better way to do this in Swift?
EDIT:
I have created a small Objective-C class that just encapsulates a function to offset a pointer by a given number of bytes:
@implementation RawDataOffsetPointer
inline void* offsetPointer(void* ptr, int bytes){
return (char*)ptr + bytes;
}
@end
If I include this class in the bridging header, then I can change my read
method to
func read<T>(byteLocation: Int) -> T {
let ptr = offsetPointer(data.bytes, CInt(byteLocation))
return UnsafePointer<T>(ptr).memory
}
which will not copy data from my buffer, or allocate other objects.
However, it would still be nice to do some pointer arithmetic from Swift, if it were possible.
UInt8
s from an NSData in a completely safe way? Or from a file even? I'm using this NSData/subdata dance in a binary file parser dingus I'm writing now, I really hate looking at that "unsafe" nonsense but it seems like the only way I can get the raw bytes out of the file.