BackupDataInput


public class BackupDataInput
extends Object

java.lang.Object
   ↳ android.app.backup.BackupDataInput


Provides the structured interface through which a BackupAgent reads information from the backup data set, via its onRestore() method. The data is presented as a set of "entities," each representing one named record as previously stored by the agent's onBackup() implementation. An entity is composed of a descriptive header plus a byte array that holds the raw data saved in the remote backup.

The agent must consume every entity in the data stream, otherwise the restored state of the application will be incomplete.

Example

A typical onRestore() implementation might be structured something like this:

 public void onRestore(BackupDataInput data, int appVersionCode,
                       ParcelFileDescriptor newState) {
     while (data.readNextHeader()) {
         String key = data.getKey();
         int dataSize = data.getDataSize();

         if (key.equals(MY_BACKUP_KEY_ONE)) {
             // process this kind of record here
             byte[] buffer = new byte[dataSize];
             data.readEntityData(buffer, 0, dataSize); // reads the entire entity at once

             // now 'buffer' holds the raw data and can be processed however
             // the agent wishes
             processBackupKeyOne(buffer);
         } else if (key.equals(MY_BACKUP_KEY_TO_IGNORE) {
             // a key we recognize but wish to discard
             data.skipEntityData();
         } // ... etc.
    }
 }

Summary

Public methods

int getDataSize()

Report the size in bytes of the data associated with the current entity in the restore stream.

String getKey()

Report the key associated with the current entity in the restore stream

int readEntityData(byte[] data, int offset, int size)

Read a record's raw data from the restore stream.

boolean readNextHeader()

Extract the next entity header from the restore stream.

void skipEntityData()

Consume the current entity's data without extracting it into a buffer for further processing.

Protected methods

void finalize()

Called by the garbage collector on an object when garbage collection determines that there are no more references to the object.

Inherited methods

Public methods

getDataSize

Added in API level 8
public int getDataSize ()

Report the size in bytes of the data associated with the current entity in the restore stream.

Returns
int The size of the record's raw data, in bytes

Throws
IllegalStateException if the next record header has not yet been read

getKey

Added in API level 8
public String getKey ()

Report the key associated with the current entity in the restore stream

Returns
String the current entity's key string

Throws
IllegalStateException if the next record header has not yet been read

readEntityData

Added in API level 8
public int readEntityData (byte[] data, 
                int offset, 
                int size)

Read a record's raw data from the restore stream. The record's header must first have been processed by the readNextHeader() method. Multiple calls to this method may be made in order to process the data in chunks; not all of it must be read in a single call. Once all of the raw data for the current entity has been read, further calls to this method will simply return zero.

Parameters
data byte: An allocated byte array of at least 'size' bytes

offset int: Offset within the 'data' array at which the data will be placed when read from the stream

size int: The number of bytes to read in this pass

Returns
int The number of bytes of data read. Once all of the data for this entity has been read, further calls to this method will return zero.

Throws
IOException if an error occurred when trying to read the restore data stream

readNextHeader

Added in API level 8
public boolean readNextHeader ()

Extract the next entity header from the restore stream. After this method return success, the getKey() and getDataSize() methods can be used to inspect the entity that is now available for processing.

Returns
boolean true when there is an entity ready for consumption from the restore stream, false if the restore stream has been fully consumed.

Throws
IOException if an error occurred while reading the restore stream

skipEntityData

Added in API level 8
public void skipEntityData ()

Consume the current entity's data without extracting it into a buffer for further processing. This allows a BackupAgent to efficiently discard obsolete or otherwise uninteresting records during the restore operation.

Throws
IOException if an error occurred when trying to read the restore data stream

Protected methods

finalize

protected void finalize ()

Called by the garbage collector on an object when garbage collection determines that there are no more references to the object. A subclass overrides the finalize method to dispose of system resources or to perform other cleanup.

The general contract of finalize is that it is invoked if and when the Java virtual machine has determined that there is no longer any means by which this object can be accessed by any thread that has not yet died, except as a result of an action taken by the finalization of some other object or class which is ready to be finalized. The finalize method may take any action, including making this object available again to other threads; the usual purpose of finalize, however, is to perform cleanup actions before the object is irrevocably discarded. For example, the finalize method for an object that represents an input/output connection might perform explicit I/O transactions to break the connection before the object is permanently discarded.

The finalize method of class Object performs no special action; it simply returns normally. Subclasses of Object may override this definition.

The Java programming language does not guarantee which thread will invoke the finalize method for any given object. It is guaranteed, however, that the thread that invokes finalize will not be holding any user-visible synchronization locks when finalize is invoked. If an uncaught exception is thrown by the finalize method, the exception is ignored and finalization of that object terminates.

After the finalize method has been invoked for an object, no further action is taken until the Java virtual machine has again determined that there is no longer any means by which this object can be accessed by any thread that has not yet died, including possible actions by other objects or classes which are ready to be finalized, at which point the object may be discarded.

The finalize method is never invoked more than once by a Java virtual machine for any given object.

Any exception thrown by the finalize method causes the finalization of this object to be halted, but is otherwise ignored.

Throws
Throwable