I couldn’t find anything ready-made, so I came up with:
class membuf : public basic_streambuf<char>
{
public:
membuf(char* p, size_t n) {
setg(p, p, p + n);
setp(p, p + n);
}
}
Usage:
char *mybuffer;
size_t length;
// ... allocate "mybuffer", put data into it, set "length"
membuf mb(mybuffer, length);
istream reader(&mb);
// use "reader"
I know of stringstream, but it doesn’t seem to be able to work with binary data of given length.
Am I inventing my own wheel here?
EDIT
- It must not copy the input data, just create something that will iterate over the data.
- It must be portable – at least it should work both under gcc and MSVC.
I’m assuming that your input data is binary (not text), and that you want to extract chunks of binary data from it. All without making a copy of your input data.
You can combine
boost::iostreams::basic_array_sourceandboost::iostreams::stream_buffer(from Boost.Iostreams) withboost::archive::binary_iarchive(from Boost.Serialization) to be able to use convenient extraction >> operators to read chunks of binary data.With GCC 4.4.1 on AMD64, it outputs:
Boost.Serialization is very powerful and knows how to serialize all basic types, strings, and even STL containers. You can easily make your types serializable. See the documentation. Hidden somewhere in the Boost.Serialization sources is an example of a portable binary archive that knows how to perform the proper swapping for your machine’s endianness. This might be useful to you as well.
If you don’t need the fanciness of Boost.Serialization and are happy to read the binary data in an fread()-type fashion, you can use
basic_array_sourcein a simpler way:I get the same output with this program.