How does one show progress of a Java file copy ope

2019-03-21 12:36发布

I have an ICEfaces web application which needs to perform a file copy operation and show user a progress bar.

Currently, the copy is being done by calling 'cpio' which cannot give progress to the Java code until after the operation has completed. While it would be possible to use Java to monitor the number of bytes written vs. number of bytes read for an estimate of the copy progress, I think there might be a simpler solution if I code the actual copy operation in Java. I would still use 'cpio' for archiving purposes, but the actual copy would be performed by a Java class.

Most of the help I found in my searching was related to progressMonitor, which incorporates a swing component, and I'm not sure that it can do what I want. All I need is an integer/double of the progress which I can feed to my JSF progress bar component as a % out of 100.

2条回答
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2楼-- · 2019-03-21 13:09

Basically, you should use a listener pattern. In this example the lsitener has a single method to accept the # of bytes which was just written. It could be pre-populated with the total file size to calculate a percentage to show on the screen.

ReadableByteChannel source = ...;
WritableByteChannel dest = ...;
FileCopyListener listener = ...;


ByteBuffer buf = ByteBuffer.allocateDirect(BUFFER_SIZE);
while (src.read(buf) != -1) {
  buf.flip();
  int writeCount = dest.write(buf);
  listener.bytesWritten(writeCount);
  buf.compact();
}
buf.flip();
while (buffer.hasRemaining()) {
  int writeCount = dest.write(buf);
  listener.bytesWritten(writeCount);
}
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等我变得足够好
3楼-- · 2019-03-21 13:19

I don't know about ICEFaces but here is how to copy a file in java and monitor progress on the commandline:

import java.io.*;

public class FileCopyProgress {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        System.out.println("copying file");
        File filein  = new File("test.big");
        File fileout = new File("test_out.big");
        FileInputStream  fin  = null;
        FileOutputStream fout = null;
        long length  = filein.length();
        long counter = 0;
        int r = 0;
        byte[] b = new byte[1024];
        try {
                fin  = new FileInputStream(filein);
                fout = new FileOutputStream(fileout);
                while( (r = fin.read(b)) != -1) {
                        counter += r;
                        System.out.println( 1.0 * counter / length );
                        fout.write(b, 0, r);
                }
        }
        catch(Exception e){
                System.out.println("foo");
        }
    }
}

You would have to somehow update your progress bar instead of the System.out.println(). I hope this helps, but maybe i did not understand your question.

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