Byte[] to InputStream or OutputStream

298,492

Solution 1

You create and use byte array I/O streams as follows:

byte[] source = ...;
ByteArrayInputStream bis = new ByteArrayInputStream(source);
// read bytes from bis ...

ByteArrayOutputStream bos = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
// write bytes to bos ...
byte[] sink = bos.toByteArray();

Assuming that you are using a JDBC driver that implements the standard JDBC Blob interface (not all do), you can also connect a InputStream or OutputStream to a blob using the getBinaryStream and setBinaryStream methods1, and you can also get and set the bytes directly.

(In general, you should take appropriate steps to handle any exceptions, and close streams. However, closing bis and bos in the example above is unnecessary, since they aren't associated with any external resources; e.g. file descriptors, sockets, database connections.)

1 - The setBinaryStream method is really a getter. Go figure.

Solution 2

I'm assuming you mean that 'use' means read, but what i'll explain for the read case can be basically reversed for the write case.

so you end up with a byte[]. this could represent any kind of data which may need special types of conversions (character, encrypted, etc). let's pretend you want to write this data as is to a file.

firstly you could create a ByteArrayInputStream which is basically a mechanism to supply the bytes to something in sequence.

then you could create a FileOutputStream for the file you want to create. there are many types of InputStreams and OutputStreams for different data sources and destinations.

lastly you would write the InputStream to the OutputStream. in this case, the array of bytes would be sent in sequence to the FileOutputStream for writing. For this i recommend using IOUtils

byte[] bytes = ...;//
ByteArrayInputStream in = new ByteArrayInputStream(bytes);
FileOutputStream out = new FileOutputStream(new File(...));
IOUtils.copy(in, out);
IOUtils.closeQuietly(in);
IOUtils.closeQuietly(out);

and in reverse

FileInputStream in = new FileInputStream(new File(...));
ByteArrayOutputStream out = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
IOUtils.copy(in, out);
IOUtils.closeQuietly(in);
IOUtils.closeQuietly(out);
byte[] bytes = out.toByteArray();

if you use the above code snippets you'll need to handle exceptions and i recommend you do the 'closes' in a finally block.

Solution 3

we can convert byte[] array into input stream by using ByteArrayInputStream

String str = "Welcome to awesome Java World";
    byte[] content = str.getBytes();
    int size = content.length;
    InputStream is = null;
    byte[] b = new byte[size];
    is = new ByteArrayInputStream(content);

For full example please check here http://www.onlinecodegeek.com/2015/09/how-to-convert-byte-into-inputstream.html

Solution 4

There is no conversion between InputStream/OutputStream and the bytes they are working with. They are made for binary data, and just read (or write) the bytes one by one as is.

A conversion needs to happen when you want to go from byte to char. Then you need to convert using a character set. This happens when you make String or Reader from bytes, which are made for character data.

Solution 5

output = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
...
input = new ByteArrayInputStream( output.toByteArray() )
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GuruKulki
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GuruKulki

Updated on July 08, 2022

Comments

  • GuruKulki
    GuruKulki almost 2 years

    I have a blob column in my database table, for which I have to use byte[] in my Java program as a mapping and to use this data I have to convert it to InputStream or OutputStream. But I don't know what happens internally when I do so. Can anyone briefly explain me what's happening when I do this conversion?

  • Avihai Marchiano
    Avihai Marchiano almost 12 years
    didnt you mean - ByteArrayOutputStream out = new ByteArrayOutputStream(); instead ByteArrayOutputStream out = new ByteArrayInputStream();
  • Stephen C
    Stephen C over 10 years
    Circular buffers do not solve the OP's problem. In the Question as written, the OP needs the entire content in a single byte array.
  • JustinKSU
    JustinKSU about 10 years
    CloseQuietly should probably be in a finally clause.