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use encode::encode_to_slice; use std::io::{ErrorKind, Result, Write}; use std::{cmp, fmt}; use {encode_config_slice, Config}; pub(crate) const BUF_SIZE: usize = 1024; /// The most bytes whose encoding will fit in `BUF_SIZE` const MAX_INPUT_LEN: usize = BUF_SIZE / 4 * 3; // 3 bytes of input = 4 bytes of base64, always (because we don't allow line wrapping) const MIN_ENCODE_CHUNK_SIZE: usize = 3; /// A `Write` implementation that base64 encodes data before delegating to the wrapped writer. /// /// Because base64 has special handling for the end of the input data (padding, etc), there's a /// `finish()` method on this type that encodes any leftover input bytes and adds padding if /// appropriate. It's called automatically when deallocated (see the `Drop` implementation), but /// any error that occurs when invoking the underlying writer will be suppressed. If you want to /// handle such errors, call `finish()` yourself. /// /// # Examples /// /// ``` /// use std::io::Write; /// /// // use a vec as the simplest possible `Write` -- in real code this is probably a file, etc. /// let mut wrapped_writer = Vec::new(); /// { /// let mut enc = base64::write::EncoderWriter::new( /// &mut wrapped_writer, base64::STANDARD); /// /// // handle errors as you normally would /// enc.write_all(b"asdf").unwrap(); /// // could leave this out to be called by Drop, if you don't care /// // about handling errors /// enc.finish().unwrap(); /// /// } /// /// // base64 was written to the writer /// assert_eq!(b"YXNkZg==", &wrapped_writer[..]); /// /// ``` /// /// # Panics /// /// Calling `write()` after `finish()` is invalid and will panic. /// /// # Errors /// /// Base64 encoding itself does not generate errors, but errors from the wrapped writer will be /// returned as per the contract of `Write`. /// /// # Performance /// /// It has some minor performance loss compared to encoding slices (a couple percent). /// It does not do any heap allocation. pub struct EncoderWriter<'a, W: 'a + Write> { config: Config, /// Where encoded data is written to w: &'a mut W, /// Holds a partial chunk, if any, after the last `write()`, so that we may then fill the chunk /// with the next `write()`, encode it, then proceed with the rest of the input normally. extra_input: [u8; MIN_ENCODE_CHUNK_SIZE], /// How much of `extra` is occupied, in `[0, MIN_ENCODE_CHUNK_SIZE]`. extra_input_occupied_len: usize, /// Buffer to encode into. May hold leftover encoded bytes from a previous write call that the underlying writer /// did not write last time. output: [u8; BUF_SIZE], /// How much of `output` is occupied with encoded data that couldn't be written last time output_occupied_len: usize, /// True iff padding / partial last chunk has been written. finished: bool, /// panic safety: don't write again in destructor if writer panicked while we were writing to it panicked: bool, } impl<'a, W: Write> fmt::Debug for EncoderWriter<'a, W> { fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { write!( f, "extra_input: {:?} extra_input_occupied_len:{:?} output[..5]: {:?} output_occupied_len: {:?}", self.extra_input, self.extra_input_occupied_len, &self.output[0..5], self.output_occupied_len ) } } impl<'a, W: Write> EncoderWriter<'a, W> { /// Create a new encoder that will write to the provided delegate writer `w`. pub fn new(w: &'a mut W, config: Config) -> EncoderWriter<'a, W> { EncoderWriter { config, w, extra_input: [0u8; MIN_ENCODE_CHUNK_SIZE], extra_input_occupied_len: 0, output: [0u8; BUF_SIZE], output_occupied_len: 0, finished: false, panicked: false, } } /// Encode all remaining buffered data and write it, including any trailing incomplete input /// triples and associated padding. /// /// Once this succeeds, no further writes can be performed, as that would produce invalid /// base64. /// /// This may write to the delegate writer multiple times if the delegate writer does not accept all input provided /// to its `write` each invocation. /// /// # Errors /// /// The first error that is not of [`ErrorKind::Interrupted`] will be returned. pub fn finish(&mut self) -> Result<()> { if self.finished { return Ok(()); }; self.write_all_encoded_output()?; if self.extra_input_occupied_len > 0 { let encoded_len = encode_config_slice( &self.extra_input[..self.extra_input_occupied_len], self.config, &mut self.output[..], ); self.output_occupied_len = encoded_len; self.write_all_encoded_output()?; // write succeeded, do not write the encoding of extra again if finish() is retried self.extra_input_occupied_len = 0; } self.finished = true; Ok(()) } /// Write as much of the encoded output to the delegate writer as it will accept, and store the /// leftovers to be attempted at the next write() call. Updates `self.output_occupied_len`. /// /// # Errors /// /// Errors from the delegate writer are returned. In the case of an error, /// `self.output_occupied_len` will not be updated, as errors from `write` are specified to mean /// that no write took place. fn write_to_delegate(&mut self, current_output_len: usize) -> Result<()> { self.panicked = true; let res = self.w.write(&self.output[..current_output_len]); self.panicked = false; return res.map(|consumed| { debug_assert!(consumed <= current_output_len); if consumed < current_output_len { self.output_occupied_len = current_output_len.checked_sub(consumed).unwrap(); // If we're blocking on I/O, the minor inefficiency of copying bytes to the // start of the buffer is the least of our concerns... // Rotate moves more than we need to, but copy_within isn't stabilized yet. self.output.rotate_left(consumed); } else { self.output_occupied_len = 0; } () }); } /// Write all buffered encoded output. If this returns `Ok`, `self.output_occupied_len` is `0`. /// /// This is basically write_all for the remaining buffered data but without the undesirable /// abort-on-`Ok(0)` behavior. /// /// # Errors /// /// Any error emitted by the delegate writer abort the write loop and is returned, unless it's /// `Interrupted`, in which case the error is ignored and writes will continue. fn write_all_encoded_output(&mut self) -> Result<()> { while self.output_occupied_len > 0 { let remaining_len = self.output_occupied_len; match self.write_to_delegate(remaining_len) { // try again on interrupts ala write_all Err(ref e) if e.kind() == ErrorKind::Interrupted => {} // other errors return Err(e) => return Err(e), // success no-ops because remaining length is already updated Ok(_) => {} }; } debug_assert_eq!(0, self.output_occupied_len); Ok(()) } } impl<'a, W: Write> Write for EncoderWriter<'a, W> { /// Encode input and then write to the delegate writer. /// /// Under non-error circumstances, this returns `Ok` with the value being the number of bytes /// of `input` consumed. The value may be `0`, which interacts poorly with `write_all`, which /// interprets `Ok(0)` as an error, despite it being allowed by the contract of `write`. See /// https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/56889 for more on that. /// /// If the previous call to `write` provided more (encoded) data than the delegate writer could /// accept in a single call to its `write`, the remaining data is buffered. As long as buffered /// data is present, subsequent calls to `write` will try to write the remaining buffered data /// to the delegate and return either `Ok(0)` -- and therefore not consume any of `input` -- or /// an error. /// /// # Errors /// /// Any errors emitted by the delegate writer are returned. fn write(&mut self, input: &[u8]) -> Result<usize> { if self.finished { panic!("Cannot write more after calling finish()"); } if input.is_empty() { return Ok(0); } // The contract of `Write::write` places some constraints on this implementation: // - a call to `write()` represents at most one call to a wrapped `Write`, so we can't // iterate over the input and encode multiple chunks. // - Errors mean that "no bytes were written to this writer", so we need to reset the // internal state to what it was before the error occurred // before reading any input, write any leftover encoded output from last time if self.output_occupied_len > 0 { let current_len = self.output_occupied_len; return self.write_to_delegate(current_len) // did not read any input .map(|_| 0) } debug_assert_eq!(0, self.output_occupied_len); // how many bytes, if any, were read into `extra` to create a triple to encode let mut extra_input_read_len = 0; let mut input = input; let orig_extra_len = self.extra_input_occupied_len; let mut encoded_size = 0; // always a multiple of MIN_ENCODE_CHUNK_SIZE let mut max_input_len = MAX_INPUT_LEN; // process leftover un-encoded input from last write if self.extra_input_occupied_len > 0 { debug_assert!(self.extra_input_occupied_len < 3); if input.len() + self.extra_input_occupied_len >= MIN_ENCODE_CHUNK_SIZE { // Fill up `extra`, encode that into `output`, and consume as much of the rest of // `input` as possible. // We could write just the encoding of `extra` by itself but then we'd have to // return after writing only 4 bytes, which is inefficient if the underlying writer // would make a syscall. extra_input_read_len = MIN_ENCODE_CHUNK_SIZE - self.extra_input_occupied_len; debug_assert!(extra_input_read_len > 0); // overwrite only bytes that weren't already used. If we need to rollback extra_len // (when the subsequent write errors), the old leading bytes will still be there. self.extra_input[self.extra_input_occupied_len..MIN_ENCODE_CHUNK_SIZE] .copy_from_slice(&input[0..extra_input_read_len]); let len = encode_to_slice( &self.extra_input[0..MIN_ENCODE_CHUNK_SIZE], &mut self.output[..], self.config.char_set.encode_table(), ); debug_assert_eq!(4, len); input = &input[extra_input_read_len..]; // consider extra to be used up, since we encoded it self.extra_input_occupied_len = 0; // don't clobber where we just encoded to encoded_size = 4; // and don't read more than can be encoded max_input_len = MAX_INPUT_LEN - MIN_ENCODE_CHUNK_SIZE; // fall through to normal encoding } else { // `extra` and `input` are non empty, but `|extra| + |input| < 3`, so there must be // 1 byte in each. debug_assert_eq!(1, input.len()); debug_assert_eq!(1, self.extra_input_occupied_len); self.extra_input[self.extra_input_occupied_len] = input[0]; self.extra_input_occupied_len += 1; return Ok(1); }; } else if input.len() < MIN_ENCODE_CHUNK_SIZE { // `extra` is empty, and `input` fits inside it self.extra_input[0..input.len()].copy_from_slice(input); self.extra_input_occupied_len = input.len(); return Ok(input.len()); }; // either 0 or 1 complete chunks encoded from extra debug_assert!(encoded_size == 0 || encoded_size == 4); debug_assert!( // didn't encode extra input MAX_INPUT_LEN == max_input_len // encoded one triple || MAX_INPUT_LEN == max_input_len + MIN_ENCODE_CHUNK_SIZE ); // encode complete triples only let input_complete_chunks_len = input.len() - (input.len() % MIN_ENCODE_CHUNK_SIZE); let input_chunks_to_encode_len = cmp::min(input_complete_chunks_len, max_input_len); debug_assert_eq!(0, max_input_len % MIN_ENCODE_CHUNK_SIZE); debug_assert_eq!(0, input_chunks_to_encode_len % MIN_ENCODE_CHUNK_SIZE); encoded_size += encode_to_slice( &input[..(input_chunks_to_encode_len)], &mut self.output[encoded_size..], self.config.char_set.encode_table(), ); // not updating `self.output_occupied_len` here because if the below write fails, it should // "never take place" -- the buffer contents we encoded are ignored and perhaps retried // later, if the consumer chooses. self.write_to_delegate(encoded_size) // no matter whether we wrote the full encoded buffer or not, we consumed the same // input .map(|_| extra_input_read_len + input_chunks_to_encode_len) .map_err( |e| { // in case we filled and encoded `extra`, reset extra_len self.extra_input_occupied_len = orig_extra_len; e }) } /// Because this is usually treated as OK to call multiple times, it will *not* flush any /// incomplete chunks of input or write padding. fn flush(&mut self) -> Result<()> { self.write_all_encoded_output()?; self.w.flush() } } impl<'a, W: Write> Drop for EncoderWriter<'a, W> { fn drop(&mut self) { if !self.panicked { // like `BufWriter`, ignore errors during drop let _ = self.finish(); } } }