On Wed, 09 Mar 2011 21:34:29 -0800, Jonathan M Davis wrote: > On Wednesday 09 March 2011 21:10:59 Daniel Gibson wrote: >> Am 10.03.2011 05:53, schrieb dsimcha: >> > I noticed last night that Phobos actually has all the machinations >> > required for reading gzipped files, buried in etc.c.zlib. I've wanted >> > a high-level D interface for reading and writing compressed files >> > with an API similar to "normal" file I/O for a while. I'm thinking >> > about what the easiest/best design would be. At a high level there >> > are two designs: >> > >> > 1. Hack std.stdio.file to support gzipped formats. This would allow >> > an identical interface for "normal" and compressed I/O. It would also >> > allow reuse of things like ByLine. However, it would require major >> > refactoring of File to decouple it from the C file I/O routines so >> > that it could call either the C or GZip ones depending on how it's >> > configured. Probably, it would make sense to make an interface that >> > wraps I/O functions and make an instance for C and one for gzip, with >> > bzip2 and other goodies possibly being added later. >> > >> > 2. Write something completely separate. This would keep >> > std.stdio.File doing one thing well (wrapping C file I/O) but would >> > be more of a PITA for the user and possibly result in code >> > duplication. >> > >> > I'd like to get some comments on what an appropriate API design and >> > implementation for writing gzipped files would be. Two key >> > requirements are that it must be as easy to use as std.stdio.File and >> > it must be easy to extend to support other single-file compression >> > formats like bz2. >> >> Maybe a proper stream API would help. It could provide ByLine etc, >> could be used for any kind of compression format (as long as an >> appropriate input-stream is provided), ... >> (analogous for writing) > > That was my thought. We really need proper streams... > > The other potential issue with compressed files is that they can contain > directories and such.
Not gzip and bzip2 compressed files. They only contain a single file. -Lars
