package saferio
import "internal/saferio"
Package saferio provides I/O functions that avoid allocating large amounts of memory unnecessarily. This is intended for packages that read data from an io.Reader where the size is part of the input data but the input may be corrupt, or may be provided by an untrustworthy attacker.
Index
- func ReadData(r io.Reader, n uint64) ([]byte, error)
- func ReadDataAt(r io.ReaderAt, n uint64, off int64) ([]byte, error)
- func SliceCap(c uint64) int
- func SliceCapWithSize(size, c uint64) int
Functions
func ReadData
func ReadData(r io.Reader, n uint64) ([]byte, error)
ReadData reads n bytes from the input stream, but avoids allocating all n bytes if n is large. This avoids crashing the program by allocating all n bytes in cases where n is incorrect.
The error is io.EOF only if no bytes were read. If an io.EOF happens after reading some but not all the bytes, ReadData returns io.ErrUnexpectedEOF.
func ReadDataAt
func ReadDataAt(r io.ReaderAt, n uint64, off int64) ([]byte, error)
ReadDataAt reads n bytes from the input stream at off, but avoids allocating all n bytes if n is large. This avoids crashing the program by allocating all n bytes in cases where n is incorrect.
func SliceCap
func SliceCap[E any](c uint64) int
SliceCap is like SliceCapWithSize but using generics.
func SliceCapWithSize
func SliceCapWithSize(size, c uint64) int
SliceCapWithSize returns the capacity to use when allocating a slice. After the slice is allocated with the capacity, it should be built using append. This will avoid allocating too much memory if the capacity is large and incorrect.
A negative result means that the value is always too big.