IOUtils

User guide

User guide

Commons-IO contains
utility classes,
endian classes,
line iterator,
file filters,
file comparators and
stream implementations.

For a more detailed descriptions, take a look at the
javadocs.

Utility classes

IOUtils

IOUtils
contains utility methods dealing with reading, writing and copying.
The methods work on InputStream, OutputStream, Reader and Writer.

As an example, consider the task of reading bytes
from a URL, and printing them. This would typically done like this:

 InputStream in = new URL( "http://jakarta.apache.org" ).openStream();
 try {
   InputStreamReader inR = new InputStreamReader( in );
   BufferedReader buf = new BufferedReader( inR );
   String line;
   while ( ( line = buf.readLine() ) != null ) {
     System.out.println( line );
   }
 } finally {
   in.close();
 }

With the IOUtils class, that could be done with:

 InputStream in = new URL( "http://jakarta.apache.org" ).openStream();
 try {
   System.out.println( IOUtils.toString( in ) );
 } finally {
   IOUtils.closeQuietly(in);
 }

In certain application domains, such IO operations are
common, and this class can save a great deal of time. And you can
rely on well-tested code.

For utility code such as this, flexibility and speed are of primary importance.
However you should also understand the limitations of this approach.
Using the above technique to read a 1GB file would result in an
attempt to create a 1GB String object!

FileUtils

The FileUtils
class contains utility methods for working with File objects.
These include reading, writing, copying and comparing files.

For example to read an entire file line by line you could use:

 File file = new File("/commons/io/project.properties");
 List lines = FileUtils.readLines(file, "UTF-8");

FilenameUtils

The FilenameUtils
class contains utility methods for working with filenames without
using File objects. The class aims to be consistent
between Unix and Windows, to aid transitions between these
environments (such as moving from development to production).

For example to normalize a filename removing double dot segments:

 String filename = "C:/commons/io/../lang/project.xml";
 String normalized = FilenameUtils.normalize(filename);
 // result is "C:/commons/lang/project.xml"

FileSystemUtils

The FileSystemUtils
class contains
utility methods for working with the file system
to access functionality not supported by the JDK.
Currently, the only method is to get the free space on a drive.
Note that this uses the command line, not native code.

For example to find the free space on a drive:

 long freeSpace = FileSystemUtils.freeSpace("C:/");

Endian classes

Different computer architectures adopt different
conventions for byte ordering. In so-called
"Little Endian" architectures (eg Intel), the low-order
byte is stored in memory at the lowest address, and
subsequent bytes at higher addresses. For "Big Endian"
architectures (eg Motorola), the situation is reversed.

There are two classes in this package of relevance:

  • The EndianUtils
    class contains static methods for swapping the Endian-ness
    of Java primitives and streams.
  • The SwappedDataInputStream
    class is an implementation of the DataInput interface. With
    this, one can read data from files of non-native Endian-ness.

For more information, see
http://www.cs.umass.edu/~verts/cs32/endian.html

Line iterator

The org.apache.commons.io.LineIterator class
provides a flexible way for working with a line-based file.
An instance can be created directly, or via factory methods on
FileUtils or IOUtils.
The recommended usage pattern is:

 LineIterator it = FileUtils.lineIterator(file, "UTF-8");
 try {
   while (it.hasNext()) {
     String line = it.nextLine();
     /// do something with line
   }
 } finally {
   LineIterator.closeQuietly(iterator);
 }

File filters

The org.apache.commons.io.filefilter
package defines an interface
(IOFileFilter)
that combines both java.io.FileFilter and
java.io.FilenameFilter. Besides
that the package offers a series of ready-to-use
implementations of the IOFileFilter
interface including
implementation that allow you to combine other such filters.

These filters can be used to list files or in FileDialog, for example.

See the
filefilter
package javadoc for more details.

File comparators

The org.apache.commons.io.comparator
package provides a number of java.util.Comparator
implementations for java.io.File.

These comparators can be used to sort lists and arrays of files, for example.

See the
comparator
package javadoc for more details.

Streams

The org.apache.commons.io.input and
org.apache.commons.io.output packages
contain various useful implementations of streams.
These include:

  • Null output stream - that silently absorbs all data sent to it
  • Tee output stream - that sends output data to two streams instead of one
  • Byte array output stream - that is a faster version of the JDK class
  • Counting streams - that count the number of bytes passed
  • Proxy streams - that delegate to the correct method in the proxy
  • Lockable writer - that provides synchronization of writes using a lock file

See the
input or
output
package javadoc for more details.

原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/lexus/p/2391333.html