Class Base64
- java.lang.Object
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- org.java_websocket.util.Base64
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public class Base64 extends Object
Encodes and decodes to and from Base64 notation.
Homepage: http://iharder.net/base64.
Example:
String encoded = Base64.encode( myByteArray );
byte[] myByteArray = Base64.decode( encoded );
The options parameter, which appears in a few places, is used to pass several pieces of information to the encoder. In the "higher level" methods such as encodeBytes( bytes, options ) the options parameter can be used to indicate such things as first gzipping the bytes before encoding them, not inserting linefeeds, and encoding using the URL-safe and Ordered dialects.
Note, according to RFC3548, Section 2.1, implementations should not add line feeds unless explicitly told to do so. I've got Base64 set to this behavior now, although earlier versions broke lines by default.
The constants defined in Base64 can be OR-ed together to combine options, so you might make a call like this:
String encoded = Base64.encodeBytes( mybytes, Base64.GZIP | Base64.DO_BREAK_LINES );
to compress the data before encoding it and then making the output have newline characters.
Also...
String encoded = Base64.encodeBytes( crazyString.getBytes() );
Change Log:
- v2.3.7 - Fixed subtle bug when base 64 input stream contained the value 01111111, which is an invalid base 64 character but should not throw an ArrayIndexOutOfBoundsException either. Led to discovery of mishandling (or potential for better handling) of other bad input characters. You should now get an IOException if you try decoding something that has bad characters in it.
- v2.3.6 - Fixed bug when breaking lines and the final byte of the encoded string ended in the last column; the buffer was not properly shrunk and contained an extra (null) byte that made it into the string.
- v2.3.5 - Fixed bug in
encodeFromFile(java.lang.String)
where estimated buffer size was wrong for files of size 31, 34, and 37 bytes. - v2.3.4 - Fixed bug when working with gzipped streams whereby flushing the Base64.OutputStream closed the Base64 encoding (by padding with equals signs) too soon. Also added an option to suppress the automatic decoding of gzipped streams. Also added experimental support for specifying a class loader when using the method.
- v2.3.3 - Changed default char encoding to US-ASCII which reduces the internal Java footprint with its CharEncoders and so forth. Fixed some javadocs that were inconsistent. Removed imports and specified things like java.io.IOException explicitly inline.
- v2.3.2 - Reduced memory footprint! Finally refined the "guessing" of how big the final encoded data will be so that the code doesn't have to create two output arrays: an oversized initial one and then a final, exact-sized one. Big win when using the family of methods (and not using the gzip options which uses a different mechanism with streams and stuff).
- v2.3.1 - Added
encodeBytesToBytes(byte[], int, int, int)
and some similar helper methods to be more efficient with memory by not returning a String but just a byte array. - v2.3 - This is not a drop-in replacement! This is two years of comments
and bug fixes queued up and finally executed. Thanks to everyone who sent
me stuff, and I'm sorry I wasn't able to distribute your fixes to everyone else.
Much bad coding was cleaned up including throwing exceptions where necessary
instead of returning null values or something similar. Here are some changes
that may affect you:
- Does not break lines, by default. This is to keep in compliance with RFC3548.
- Throws exceptions instead of returning null values. Because some operations (especially those that may permit the GZIP option) use IO streams, there is a possiblity of an java.io.IOException being thrown. After some discussion and thought, I've changed the behavior of the methods to throw java.io.IOExceptions rather than return null if ever there's an error. I think this is more appropriate, though it will require some changes to your code. Sorry, it should have been done this way to begin with.
- Removed all references to System.out, System.err, and the like. Shame on me. All I can say is sorry they were ever there.
- Throws IllegalArgumentExceptions as needed such as when passed arrays are null or offsets are invalid.
- Cleaned up as much javadoc as I could to avoid any javadoc warnings. This was especially annoying before for people who were thorough in their own projects and then had gobs of javadoc warnings on this file.
- v2.2.1 - Fixed bug using URL_SAFE and ORDERED encodings. Fixed bug when using very small files (~< 40 bytes).
- v2.2 - Added some helper methods for encoding/decoding directly from
one file to the next. Also added a main() method to support command line
encoding/decoding from one file to the next. Also added these Base64 dialects:
- The default is RFC3548 format.
- Calling Base64.setFormat(Base64.BASE64_FORMAT.URLSAFE_FORMAT) generates URL and file name friendly format as described in Section 4 of RFC3548. http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc3548.html
- Calling Base64.setFormat(Base64.BASE64_FORMAT.ORDERED_FORMAT) generates URL and file name friendly format that preserves lexical ordering as described in http://www.faqs.org/qa/rfcc-1940.html
- v2.1 - Cleaned up javadoc comments and unused variables and methods. Added some convenience methods for reading and writing to and from files.
- v2.0.2 - Now specifies UTF-8 encoding in places where the code fails on systems with other encodings (like EBCDIC).
- v2.0.1 - Fixed an error when decoding a single byte, that is, when the encoded data was a single byte.
- v2.0 - I got rid of methods that used booleans to set options. Now everything is more consolidated and cleaner. The code now detects when data that's being decoded is gzip-compressed and will decompress it automatically. Generally things are cleaner. You'll probably have to change some method calls that you were making to support the new options format (ints that you "OR" together).
- v1.5.1 - Fixed bug when decompressing and decoding to a byte[] using decode( String s, boolean gzipCompressed ). Added the ability to "suspend" encoding in the Output Stream so you can turn on and off the encoding if you need to embed base64 data in an otherwise "normal" stream (like an XML file).
- v1.5 - Output stream pases on flush() command but doesn't do anything itself. This helps when using GZIP streams. Added the ability to GZip-compress objects before encoding them.
- v1.4 - Added helper methods to read/write files.
- v1.3.6 - Fixed OutputStream.flush() so that 'position' is reset.
- v1.3.5 - Added flag to turn on and off line breaks. Fixed bug in input stream where last buffer being read, if not completely full, was not returned.
- v1.3.4 - Fixed when "improperly padded stream" error was thrown at the wrong time.
- v1.3.3 - Fixed I/O streams which were totally messed up.
I am placing this code in the Public Domain. Do with it as you will. This software comes with no guarantees or warranties but with plenty of well-wishing instead! Please visit http://iharder.net/base64 periodically to check for updates or to contribute improvements.
- Version:
- 2.3.7
- Author:
- Robert Harder, rob@iharder.net
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Nested Class Summary
Nested Classes Modifier and Type Class Description static class
Base64.InputStream
ABase64.InputStream
will read data from another java.io.InputStream, given in the constructor, and encode/decode to/from Base64 notation on the fly.static class
Base64.OutputStream
ABase64.OutputStream
will write data to another java.io.OutputStream, given in the constructor, and encode/decode to/from Base64 notation on the fly.
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Field Summary
Fields Modifier and Type Field Description static int
DECODE
Specify decoding in first bit.static int
DO_BREAK_LINES
Do break lines when encoding.static int
DONT_GUNZIP
Specify that gzipped data should not be automatically gunzipped.static int
ENCODE
Specify encoding in first bit.static int
GZIP
Specify that data should be gzip-compressed in second bit.static int
NO_OPTIONS
No options specified.static int
ORDERED
Encode using the special "ordered" dialect of Base64 described here: http://www.faqs.org/qa/rfcc-1940.html.static int
URL_SAFE
Encode using Base64-like encoding that is URL- and Filename-safe as described in Section 4 of RFC3548: http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc3548.html.
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Method Summary
All Methods Static Methods Concrete Methods Modifier and Type Method Description static byte[]
decode(byte[] source)
Low-level access to decoding ASCII characters in the form of a byte array.static byte[]
decode(byte[] source, int off, int len, int options)
Low-level access to decoding ASCII characters in the form of a byte array.static byte[]
decode(String s)
Decodes data from Base64 notation, automatically detecting gzip-compressed data and decompressing it.static byte[]
decode(String s, int options)
Decodes data from Base64 notation, automatically detecting gzip-compressed data and decompressing it.static byte[]
decodeFromFile(String filename)
Convenience method for reading a base64-encoded file and decoding it.static String
encodeBytes(byte[] source)
Encodes a byte array into Base64 notation.static String
encodeBytes(byte[] source, int off, int len, int options)
Encodes a byte array into Base64 notation.static byte[]
encodeBytesToBytes(byte[] source, int off, int len, int options)
Similar toencodeBytes(byte[], int, int, int)
but returns a byte array instead of instantiating a String.static String
encodeFromFile(String filename)
Convenience method for reading a binary file and base64-encoding it.
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Field Detail
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NO_OPTIONS
public static final int NO_OPTIONS
No options specified. Value is zero.- See Also:
- Constant Field Values
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ENCODE
public static final int ENCODE
Specify encoding in first bit. Value is one.- See Also:
- Constant Field Values
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DECODE
public static final int DECODE
Specify decoding in first bit. Value is zero.- See Also:
- Constant Field Values
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GZIP
public static final int GZIP
Specify that data should be gzip-compressed in second bit. Value is two.- See Also:
- Constant Field Values
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DONT_GUNZIP
public static final int DONT_GUNZIP
Specify that gzipped data should not be automatically gunzipped.- See Also:
- Constant Field Values
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DO_BREAK_LINES
public static final int DO_BREAK_LINES
Do break lines when encoding. Value is 8.- See Also:
- Constant Field Values
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URL_SAFE
public static final int URL_SAFE
Encode using Base64-like encoding that is URL- and Filename-safe as described in Section 4 of RFC3548: http://www.faqs.org/rfcs/rfc3548.html. It is important to note that data encoded this way is not officially valid Base64, or at the very least should not be called Base64 without also specifying that is was encoded using the URL- and Filename-safe dialect.- See Also:
- Constant Field Values
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ORDERED
public static final int ORDERED
Encode using the special "ordered" dialect of Base64 described here: http://www.faqs.org/qa/rfcc-1940.html.- See Also:
- Constant Field Values
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Method Detail
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encodeBytes
public static String encodeBytes(byte[] source)
Encodes a byte array into Base64 notation. Does not GZip-compress data.- Parameters:
source
- The data to convert- Returns:
- The data in Base64-encoded form
- Throws:
IllegalArgumentException
- if source array is null- Since:
- 1.4
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encodeBytes
public static String encodeBytes(byte[] source, int off, int len, int options) throws IOException
Encodes a byte array into Base64 notation.Example options:
GZIP: gzip-compresses object before encoding it. DO_BREAK_LINES: break lines at 76 characters Note: Technically, this makes your encoding non-compliant.
Example:
encodeBytes( myData, Base64.GZIP )
orExample:
encodeBytes( myData, Base64.GZIP | Base64.DO_BREAK_LINES )
As of v 2.3, if there is an error with the GZIP stream, the method will throw an java.io.IOException. This is new to v2.3! In earlier versions, it just returned a null value, but in retrospect that's a pretty poor way to handle it.
- Parameters:
source
- The data to convertoff
- Offset in array where conversion should beginlen
- Length of data to convertoptions
- Specified options- Returns:
- The Base64-encoded data as a String
- Throws:
IOException
- if there is an errorIllegalArgumentException
- if source array is null, if source array, offset, or length are invalid- Since:
- 2.0
- See Also:
GZIP
,DO_BREAK_LINES
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encodeBytesToBytes
public static byte[] encodeBytesToBytes(byte[] source, int off, int len, int options) throws IOException
Similar toencodeBytes(byte[], int, int, int)
but returns a byte array instead of instantiating a String. This is more efficient if you're working with I/O streams and have large data sets to encode.- Parameters:
source
- The data to convertoff
- Offset in array where conversion should beginlen
- Length of data to convertoptions
- Specified options- Returns:
- The Base64-encoded data as a String
- Throws:
IOException
- if there is an errorIllegalArgumentException
- if source array is null, if source array, offset, or length are invalid- Since:
- 2.3.1
- See Also:
GZIP
,DO_BREAK_LINES
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decode
public static byte[] decode(byte[] source) throws IOException
Low-level access to decoding ASCII characters in the form of a byte array. Ignores GUNZIP option, if it's set. This is not generally a recommended method, although it is used internally as part of the decoding process. Special case: if len = 0, an empty array is returned. Still, if you need more speed and reduced memory footprint (and aren't gzipping), consider this method.- Parameters:
source
- The Base64 encoded data- Returns:
- decoded data
- Throws:
IOException
- If bogus characters exist in source data- Since:
- 2.3.1
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decode
public static byte[] decode(byte[] source, int off, int len, int options) throws IOException
Low-level access to decoding ASCII characters in the form of a byte array. Ignores GUNZIP option, if it's set. This is not generally a recommended method, although it is used internally as part of the decoding process. Special case: if len = 0, an empty array is returned. Still, if you need more speed and reduced memory footprint (and aren't gzipping), consider this method.- Parameters:
source
- The Base64 encoded dataoff
- The offset of where to begin decodinglen
- The length of characters to decodeoptions
- Can specify options such as alphabet type to use- Returns:
- decoded data
- Throws:
IOException
- If bogus characters exist in source data- Since:
- 1.3
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decode
public static byte[] decode(String s) throws IOException
Decodes data from Base64 notation, automatically detecting gzip-compressed data and decompressing it.- Parameters:
s
- the string to decode- Returns:
- the decoded data
- Throws:
IOException
- If there is a problem- Since:
- 1.4
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decode
public static byte[] decode(String s, int options) throws IOException
Decodes data from Base64 notation, automatically detecting gzip-compressed data and decompressing it.- Parameters:
s
- the string to decodeoptions
- encode options such as URL_SAFE- Returns:
- the decoded data
- Throws:
IOException
- if there is an errorIllegalArgumentException
- if s is null- Since:
- 1.4
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decodeFromFile
public static byte[] decodeFromFile(String filename) throws IOException
Convenience method for reading a base64-encoded file and decoding it.As of v 2.3, if there is a error, the method will throw an java.io.IOException. This is new to v2.3! In earlier versions, it just returned false, but in retrospect that's a pretty poor way to handle it.
- Parameters:
filename
- Filename for reading encoded data- Returns:
- decoded byte array
- Throws:
IOException
- if there is an error- Since:
- 2.1
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encodeFromFile
public static String encodeFromFile(String filename) throws IOException
Convenience method for reading a binary file and base64-encoding it.As of v 2.3, if there is a error, the method will throw an java.io.IOException. This is new to v2.3! In earlier versions, it just returned false, but in retrospect that's a pretty poor way to handle it.
- Parameters:
filename
- Filename for reading binary data- Returns:
- base64-encoded string
- Throws:
IOException
- if there is an error- Since:
- 2.1
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