What does InputStream.available() do in Java?

Albus Dumbledore picture Albus Dumbledore · Sep 12, 2010 · Viewed 59.8k times · Source

What does InputStream.available() do in Java? I read the documentation, but I still cannot make it out.

The doc says:

Returns the number of bytes that can be read (or skipped over) from this input stream without blocking by the next caller of a method for this input stream. The next caller might be the same thread or or another thread.

The available method for class InputStream always returns 0.

What do they mean by blocking? Does it just mean a synchronized call?

And most of all, what is the purpose of the available() method?

Answer

Vivien Barousse picture Vivien Barousse · Sep 12, 2010

In InputStreams, read() calls are said to be "blocking" method calls. That means that if no data is available at the time of the method call, the method will wait for data to be made available.

The available() method tells you how many bytes can be read until the read() call will block the execution flow of your program. On most of the input streams, all call to read() are blocking, that's why available returns 0 by default.

However, on some streams (such as BufferedInputStream, that have an internal buffer), some bytes are read and kept in memory, so you can read them without blocking the program flow. In this case, the available() method tells you how many bytes are kept in the buffer.