public abstract class Encoder
extends java.lang.Object
This is the low-level encoding API. For each flavor of encoding there is an instance of this class that performs the actual encoding. Overriding and implementing Encoders outside of the OWASP Encoder's project is not currently supported.
Unless otherwise documented, instances of these classes are
thread-safe. Encoders implementations do not generally carry
state, and if they do the state will be flush with a call to encode(java.nio.CharBuffer, java.nio.CharBuffer, boolean) with
endOfInput set to true.
To use an Encoder instance directly, repeatedly call encode(java.nio.CharBuffer, java.nio.CharBuffer, boolean) with
the endOfInput parameter set to false while there
is (the possibility of) more input to encode. Once there is no
more input to encode, call encode(java.nio.CharBuffer,
java.nio.CharBuffer, boolean) with endOfInput set to
true until the method returns CoderResult.UNDERFLOW.
In general, this class is not expected to be needed directly.
Use the Encode fluent interface for encoding Strings or
EncodedWriter for large blocks of contextual encoding.
Encode,
EncodedWriter| Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
|---|---|
java.nio.charset.CoderResult |
encode(java.nio.CharBuffer input,
java.nio.CharBuffer output,
boolean endOfInput)
This is the kernel of encoding.
|
public java.nio.charset.CoderResult encode(java.nio.CharBuffer input,
java.nio.CharBuffer output,
boolean endOfInput)
This is the kernel of encoding. Currently only CharBuffers
backed by arrays (i.e. CharBuffer.hasArray()
returns true) are supported. Using a
direct-mapped CharBuffer will result in an
UnsupportedOperationException, though this behavior
may change in future releases.
This method should be called repeatedly while endOfInput set to false while there is more input.
Once there is no more input, this method should be called
endOfInput set to false until CoderResult.UNDERFLOW is returned.
After any call to this method, except when endOfInput is true and the method returns UNDERFLOW, there may be characters left to encode in the
input buffer (i.e. input.hasRemaining() ==
true). This will happen when the encoder needs to see more
input before determining what to do--for example when encoding
for CDATA, if the input ends with "foo]]", the encoder
will need to see the next character to determine if it is a ">"
or not.
Example usage:
CharBuffer input = CharBuffer.allocate(1024);
CharBuffer output = CharBuffer.allocate(1024);
CoderResult cr;
// assuming doRead fills in the input buffer or
// returns -1 at end of input
while(doRead(input) != -1) {
input.flip();
for (;;) {
cr = encoder.encode(input, output, false);
if (cr.isUnderflow()) {
break;
}
if (cr.isOverflow()) {
// assuming doWrite flushes the encoded
// characters somewhere.
output.flip();
doWrite(output);
output.compact();
}
}
input.compact();
}
// at end of input
input.flip();
do {
cr = encoder.encode(input, output, true);
output.flip();
doWrite(output);
output.compact();
} while (cr.isOverflow());
input - the input buffer to encodeoutput - the output buffer to receive the encoded resultsendOfInput - set to true if there is no more input, and any
remaining characters at the end of input will either be encoded or
replaced as invalid.CoderResult.UNDERFLOW
or CoderResult.OVERFLOW. No other
CoderResult value will be returned. Characters or sequences
that might conceivably return and invalid or unmappable
character result (as part of the nio Charset API) are
automatically replaced to avoid security implications.Copyright © 2010 - 2023 Adobe. All Rights Reserved