Skip to content

icewind1991/bitbuffer

master
Switch branches/tags

Name already in use

A tag already exists with the provided branch name. Many Git commands accept both tag and branch names, so creating this branch may cause unexpected behavior. Are you sure you want to create this branch?
Code

Latest commit

 

Git stats

Files

Permalink
Failed to load latest commit information.
Type
Name
Latest commit message
Commit time
 
 
src
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Crates.io Documentation Dependency status

bitbuffer

Tools for reading and writing data types of arbitrary bit length and might not be byte-aligned in the source data

The main way of reading the binary data is to first create a BitReadBuffer ,wrap it into a BitReadStream and then read from the stream.

Once you have a BitStream, there are 2 different approaches of reading data

  • read primitives, Strings and byte arrays, using read_bool, read_int, read_float, read_bytes and read_string
  • read any type implementing the BitRead or BitReadSized traits using read and read_sized
    • BitRead is for types that can be read without requiring any size info (e.g. null-terminal strings, floats, whole integers, etc)
    • BitReadSized is for types that require external sizing information to be read (fixed length strings, arbitrary length integers

The BitRead and BitReadSized traits can be used with #[derive] if all fields implement BitRead or BitReadSized.

For writing the data you wrap the output Vec into a BitWriteStream which can then be used in a manner similar to the BitReadStream

  • write primitives, Strings and byte arrays, using write_bool, write_int, write_float, write_bytes and write_string
  • write any type implementing the BitWrite or BitWriteSized traits using write and write_sized
    • BitWrite is for types that can be written without requiring any size info (e.g. null-terminal strings, floats, whole integers, etc)
    • BitWriteSized is for types that require external sizing information to be written (fixed length strings, arbitrary length integers

Just like the read counterparts, BitWrite and BitWriteSized traits can be used with #[derive] if all fields implement BitWrite or BitWriteSized.

Examples

use bitbuffer::{BitReadBuffer, LittleEndian, BitReadStream, BitRead, BitWrite, BitWriteStream};

#[derive(BitRead, BitWrite)]
struct ComplexType {
    first: u8,
    #[size = 15]
    second: u16,
    third: bool,
}

let bytes = vec![
    0b1011_0101, 0b0110_1010, 0b1010_1100, 0b1001_1001,
    0b1001_1001, 0b1001_1001, 0b1001_1001, 0b1110_0111
];
let buffer = BitReadBuffer::new(&bytes, LittleEndian);
let mut stream = BitReadStream::new(buffer);
let value: u8 = stream.read_int(7)?;
let complex: ComplexType = stream.read()?;

let mut write_bytes = vec![];
let mut write_stream = BitWriteStream::new(&mut write_bytes, LittleEndian);
write_stream.write_int(12, 7)?;
write_stream.write(&ComplexType {
    first: 55,
    second: 12,
    third: true
})?;

License

Licensed under either of

at your option.

Contribution

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.

About

Reading and writing data types of arbitrary bit length that might not be byte-aligned

Resources

License

Apache-2.0, MIT licenses found

Licenses found

Apache-2.0
LICENSE-APACHE
MIT
LICENSE-MIT

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published