encoding_rs_io

Crates.ioencoding_rs_io
lib.rsencoding_rs_io
version0.1.7
sourcesrc
created_at2018-07-22 00:34:13.672472
updated_at2020-02-07 13:38:43.322801
descriptionStreaming transcoding for encoding_rs
homepage
repositoryhttps://github.com/BurntSushi/encoding_rs_io
max_upload_size
id75429
size66,948
Andrew Gallant (BurntSushi)

documentation

https://docs.rs/encoding_rs_io

README

encoding_rs_io

This crate provides streaming adapters for the encoding_rs crate. Adapters implement the standard library I/O traits and provide streaming transcoding support.

Build status

Documentation

https://docs.rs/encoding_rs_io

Usage

Add this to your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
encoding_rs_io = "0.1"

and this to your crate root:

extern crate encoding_rs_io;

Example

This example shows how to create a decoder that transcodes UTF-16LE (the source, indicated by a BOM) to UTF-8 (the destination).

extern crate encoding_rs;
extern crate encoding_rs_io;

use std::error::Error;
use std::io::Read;

use encoding_rs_io::DecodeReaderBytes;

fn main() {
    example().unwrap();
}

fn example() -> Result<(), Box<Error>> {
    let source_data = &b"\xFF\xFEf\x00o\x00o\x00b\x00a\x00r\x00"[..];
    // N.B. `source_data` can be any arbitrary io::Read implementation.
    let mut decoder = DecodeReaderBytes::new(source_data);

    let mut dest = String::new();
    // decoder implements the io::Read trait, so it can easily be plugged
    // into any consumer expecting an arbitrary reader.
    decoder.read_to_string(&mut dest)?;
    assert_eq!(dest, "foobar");
    Ok(())
}

Future work

Currently, this crate only provides a way to get possibly valid UTF-8 from some source encoding. There are other transformations that may be useful that we could include in this crate. Namely:

  • An encoder that accepts an arbitrary std::io::Write implementation and takes valid UTF-8 and transcodes it to a selected destination encoding. This encoder would implement std::fmt::Write.
  • A decoder that accepts an arbitrary std::fmt::Write implementation and takes arbitrary bytes and transcodes them from a selected source encoding to valid UTF-8. This decoder would implement std::io::Write.
  • An encoder that accepts an arbitrary UnicodeRead implementation and takes valid UTF-8 and transcodes it to a selected destination encoding. This encoder would implement std::io::Read.
  • A decoder that accepts an arbitrary std::io::Read implementation and takes arbitrary bytes and transcodes them from a selected source encoding to valid UTF-8. This decoder would implement the UnicodeRead trait.

Where UnicodeRead is a hypothetical trait that does not yet exist. Its definition might look something like this:

trait UnicodeRead {
    fn read(&mut self, buf: &mut str) -> Result<usize>;
}

Interestingly, of the above transformations, none of them correspond to DecodeReaderBytes. Namely, DecodeReaderBytes most closely corresponds to the last option, but instead of guaranteeing valid UTF-8 by implementing a trait like UnicodeRead, it instead implements std::io::Read, which pushes UTF-8 handling on to the caller. However, it turns out that this particular use case is important for operations like search, which can often be written in a way that don't assume UTF-8 validity but still benefit from it.

It's not clear which of the above transformations is actually useful, but all of them could theoretically exist. There is more discussion on this topic here (and in particular, the above formulation was taken almost verbatim from Simon Sapin's comments): https://github.com/hsivonen/encoding_rs/issues/8

It is also perhaps worth stating that this crate very much intends on remaining coupled to encoding_rs, which helps restrict the scope, but may be too biased toward Web oriented encoding to solve grander encoding challenges. As such, it may very well be that this crate is actually a stepping stone to something with a larger scope. But first, we must learn.

License

This project is licensed under either of

at your option.

Commit count: 30

cargo fmt