I'm needing to create a zip file containing documents that exist on the server. I am using the .Net Package class to do so, and to create a new Package (which is the zip file) I have to have either a path to a physical file or a stream. I am trying to not create an actual file that would be the zip file, instead just create a stream that would exist in memory or something.
My question is how do you instantiate a new Stream (i.e. FileStream, MemoryStream, etc) without having a physical file to instantiate from.
MemoryStream has several constructor overloads, none of which require a file.
There is an example of how to do this on the MSDN page for MemoryStream:
using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Text;
class MemStream
{
static void Main()
{
int count;
byte[] byteArray;
char[] charArray;
UnicodeEncoding uniEncoding = new UnicodeEncoding();
// Create the data to write to the stream.
byte[] firstString = uniEncoding.GetBytes(
"Invalid file path characters are: ");
byte[] secondString = uniEncoding.GetBytes(
Path.GetInvalidPathChars());
using(MemoryStream memStream = new MemoryStream(100))
{
// Write the first string to the stream.
memStream.Write(firstString, 0 , firstString.Length);
// Write the second string to the stream, byte by byte.
count = 0;
while(count < secondString.Length)
{
memStream.WriteByte(secondString[count++]);
}
// Write the stream properties to the console.
Console.WriteLine(
"Capacity = {0}, Length = {1}, Position = {2}\n",
memStream.Capacity.ToString(),
memStream.Length.ToString(),
memStream.Position.ToString());
// Set the position to the beginning of the stream.
memStream.Seek(0, SeekOrigin.Begin);
// Read the first 20 bytes from the stream.
byteArray = new byte[memStream.Length];
count = memStream.Read(byteArray, 0, 20);
// Read the remaining bytes, byte by byte.
while(count < memStream.Length)
{
byteArray[count++] =
Convert.ToByte(memStream.ReadByte());
}
// Decode the byte array into a char array
// and write it to the console.
charArray = new char[uniEncoding.GetCharCount(
byteArray, 0, count)];
uniEncoding.GetDecoder().GetChars(
byteArray, 0, count, charArray, 0);
Console.WriteLine(charArray);
}
}
}
Is this what you are looking for?
You can create a new stream and write to it. You don't need a file to construct the object.
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.io.memorystream.aspx
Write Method:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.io.memorystream.write.aspx
Constructors for Memory Stream:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.io.memorystream.memorystream.aspx