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I've been reading up a lot on Iteratees & Enumerators in order to implement a new module in my application.

I'm now at a point where I'm integrating with a 3rd party Java library, and am stuck at working with this method:

public Email addAttachment(String name, InputStream file) throws IOException {
    this.attachments.put(name, file);
    return this;
}

What I have in my API is the body returned from a WS HTTP call that is an Enumerator[Array[Byte]].

I am wondering now how to write an Iteratee that would process the chunks of Array[Bytes] and create an InputStream to use in this method.

(Side bar): There are other versions of the addAttachment method that take java.io.File however I want to avoid writing to the disk in this operation, and would rather deal with streams.

I attempted to start by writing something like this:

Iteratee.foreach[Array[Byte]] { bytes =>
    ???
}

However I'm not sure how to interact with the java InputStream here. I found something called a ByteArrayInputStream however that takes the entire Array[Byte] in its constructor, which I'm not sure would work in this scenario as I'm working with chunks ?

I probably need some Java help here!

Thanks for any help in advance.

7
  • This is a difficult one. I think your best bet is to create an implementation of the InputStream interface with the underlying enumerator. And then on every read call, consume the necessary amount of bytes from the Enumerator.
    – Martijn
    Jan 19, 2015 at 15:34
  • Other than that, I think your best bet is caching everything and feeding it into a ByteArrayInputStream. The problem is, Enumerator is a flow of data with a push mechanic and InputStream uses a pull mechanic, which means, you need to have a buffer somewhere otherwise this isn't going to work. You can buffer everything for now, and maybe decide later, what to do when performance is becoming a bottleneck. Maybe do partial buffers, you get the point.
    – Martijn
    Jan 19, 2015 at 15:44
  • 2
    I haven't tested this yet but I tried something like this: val consume = body |>>> Iteratee.consume[Array[Byte]]() Then new ByteArrayInputStream(consume) later on. I think this is a naive implementation of your second comment, however without the buffering.
    – goralph
    Jan 19, 2015 at 17:08
  • I can look if I can put something together later tonight. I don't know how long this WS api will last though. Heard something about Akka streams being implemented soon into Play.
    – Martijn
    Jan 19, 2015 at 17:47
  • I will try something also. I'm calling my own service that generates PDF documents and I then pull them over http. Oh so they're planning to remove 'getStream' from the WS api?
    – goralph
    Jan 19, 2015 at 18:09

1 Answer 1

3

If I'm following you, I think you want to work with PipedInputStream and PipedOutputStream:

https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/io/PipedInputStream.html

You always use them in pairs. You can construct the pair like so:

PipedInputStream in = new PipedInputStream(); //can also specify a buffer size
PipedOutputStream out = new PipedOutputSream(in);

Pass the input stream to the API, and in your own code iterate through your chucks and write your bytes.

The only caveat is that you need to read/write in separate threads. In your case, its probably good to do your iterating / writing in a separate thread. I'm sure you can handle it in Scala better than me, in Java it would be something like:

PipedInputStream in = new PipedInputStream(); //can also specify a buffer size
PipedOutputStream out = new PipedOutputSream(out);
new Thread(() -> {
  // do your looping in here, write to 'out'
  out.close();
}).run();
email.addAttachment(in);
email.send();
in.close();

(Leaving out exception handling & resource handling for clarity)

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