Class AtomicFile
- java.lang.Object
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- com.google.android.exoplayer2.util.AtomicFile
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public final class AtomicFile extends Object
A helper class for performing atomic operations on a file by creating a backup file until a write has successfully completed.Atomic file guarantees file integrity by ensuring that a file has been completely written and synced to disk before removing its backup. As long as the backup file exists, the original file is considered to be invalid (left over from a previous attempt to write the file).
Atomic file does not confer any file locking semantics. Do not use this class when the file may be accessed or modified concurrently by multiple threads or processes. The caller is responsible for ensuring appropriate mutual exclusion invariants whenever it accesses the file.
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Constructor Summary
Constructors Constructor Description AtomicFile(File baseName)
Create a new AtomicFile for a file located at the given File path.
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Method Summary
All Methods Instance Methods Concrete Methods Modifier and Type Method Description void
delete()
Delete the atomic file.void
endWrite(OutputStream str)
Call when you have successfully finished writing to the stream returned bystartWrite()
.boolean
exists()
Returns whether the file or its backup exists.InputStream
openRead()
Open the atomic file for reading.OutputStream
startWrite()
Start a new write operation on the file.
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Constructor Detail
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AtomicFile
public AtomicFile(File baseName)
Create a new AtomicFile for a file located at the given File path. The secondary backup file will be the same file path with ".bak" appended.
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Method Detail
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exists
public boolean exists()
Returns whether the file or its backup exists.
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delete
public void delete()
Delete the atomic file. This deletes both the base and backup files.
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startWrite
public OutputStream startWrite() throws IOException
Start a new write operation on the file. This returns anOutputStream
to which you can write the new file data. If the whole data is written successfully you must callendWrite(OutputStream)
. On failure you should callOutputStream.close()
only to free up resources used by it.Example usage:
DataOutputStream dataOutput = null; try { OutputStream outputStream = atomicFile.startWrite(); dataOutput = new DataOutputStream(outputStream); // Wrapper stream dataOutput.write(data1); dataOutput.write(data2); atomicFile.endWrite(dataOutput); // Pass wrapper stream } finally{ if (dataOutput != null) { dataOutput.close(); } }
Note that if another thread is currently performing a write, this will simply replace whatever that thread is writing with the new file being written by this thread, and when the other thread finishes the write the new write operation will no longer be safe (or will be lost). You must do your own threading protection for access to AtomicFile.
- Throws:
IOException
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endWrite
public void endWrite(OutputStream str) throws IOException
Call when you have successfully finished writing to the stream returned bystartWrite()
. This will close, sync, and commit the new data. The next attempt to read the atomic file will return the new file stream.- Parameters:
str
- Outer-most wrapper OutputStream used to write to the stream returned bystartWrite()
.- Throws:
IOException
- See Also:
startWrite()
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openRead
public InputStream openRead() throws FileNotFoundException
Open the atomic file for reading. If there previously was an incomplete write, this will roll back to the last good data before opening for read.Note that if another thread is currently performing a write, this will incorrectly consider it to be in the state of a bad write and roll back, causing the new data currently being written to be dropped. You must do your own threading protection for access to AtomicFile.
- Throws:
FileNotFoundException
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