How to use java.nio.channels.FileChannel to read to ByteBuffer achieve similiar behavior like BufferedReader#readLine()

Thang Pham picture Thang Pham · Jun 14, 2011 · Viewed 7.6k times · Source

I want to use java.nio.channels.FileChannel to read from a file, but I want to read line per line like BufferedReader#readLine() does. The reason why I need to use java.nio.channels.FileChannel instead of java.io is because I need to put a lock on a file, and read line by line from that lock file. So I am force to use java.nio.channels.FileChannel. Please help

EDIT Here is my code trying to use FileInputStream to get the FileChannel

public static void main(String[] args){
    File file = new File("C:\\dev\\harry\\data.txt");
    FileInputStream inputStream = null;
    BufferedReader bufferedReader = null;
    FileChannel channel = null;
    FileLock lock = null;
    try{
        inputStream = new FileInputStream(file);
        channel  = inputStream.getChannel();
        lock = channel.lock();
        bufferedReader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(inputStream));
        String data;
        while((data = bufferedReader.readLine()) != null){
            System.out.println(data);
        }
    }catch(IOException e){
        e.printStackTrace();
    }finally{
        try {
            lock.release();
            channel.close();
            if(bufferedReader != null) bufferedReader.close();
            if(inputStream != null) inputStream.close();
        } catch (IOException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        }
    }
}

when the code is here lock = channel.lock();, it is immediately go to the finally and lock is still null, so lock.release() generate NullPointerException. I am not sure why.

Answer

Suraj Chandran picture Suraj Chandran · Jun 14, 2011

The reason is that you need to use FileOutpuStream instead of FileInputStream. Please try this code:

        FileOutputStream outStream = null;
        BufferedWriter bufWriter = null;
        FileChannel channel = null;
        FileLock lock = null;
        try{
            outStream = new FileOutputStream(file);
            channel  = outStream.getChannel();
            lock = channel.lock();
            bufWriter = new BufferedWriter(new OutputStreamWriter(outStream));
        }catch(IOException e){
            e.printStackTrace();
        }

This code works fine for me.

The NUllPointerException is actually hiding the real exception i.e. NotWritableChannelException. For locking i think we need to use OutputStream instead of InputStream.