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.
read
call, consume the necessary amount of bytes from the Enumerator.val consume = body |>>> Iteratee.consume[Array[Byte]]()
Thennew ByteArrayInputStream(consume)
later on. I think this is a naive implementation of your second comment, however without the buffering.