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Home/ Questions/Q 6740201
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 26, 20262026-05-26T11:34:40+00:00 2026-05-26T11:34:40+00:00

For good or bad I have been using code like the following without any

  • 0

For good or bad I have been using code like the following without any problems:

ZipFile aZipFile = new ZipFile(fileName);   
InputStream zipInput = aZipFile.getInputStream(name);  
int theSize = zipInput.available();  
byte[] content = new byte[theSize];  
zipInput.read(content, 0, theSize);

I have used it (this logic of obtaining the available size and reading directly to a byte buffer)
for File I/O without any issues and I used it with zip files as well.

But recently I stepped into a case that the zipInput.read(content, 0, theSize); actually reads 3 bytes less that the theSize available.

And since the code is not in a loop to check the length returned by zipInput.read(content, 0, theSize); I read the file with the 3 last bytes missing
and later the program can not function properly (the file is a binary file).

Strange enough with different zip files of larger size e.g. 1075 bytes (in my case the problematic zip entry is 867 bytes) the code works fine!

I understand that the logic of the code is probably not the “best” but why am I suddenly getting this problem now?

And how come if I run the program immediately with a larger zip entry it works?

Any input is highly welcome

Thanks

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-26T11:34:40+00:00Added an answer on May 26, 2026 at 11:34 am

    From the InputStream read API docs:

    An attempt is made to read as many as len bytes, but a smaller number
    may be read.

    … and:

    Returns: the total number of bytes read into the buffer, or -1 if
    there is no more data because the end of the stream has been reached.

    In other words unless the read method returns -1 there is still more data available to read, but you cannot guarantee that read will read exactly the specified number of bytes. The specified number of bytes is the upper bound describing the maximum amount of data it will read.

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