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Basic I/O
I/O from the Command Line
A program is often run from the command line and interacts with the user in
the command line environment. The Java platform supports this kind of
interaction in two ways: through the Standard Streams and through the
Console.
Standard Streams
Standard Streams are a feature of many operating systems.
By default, they read input from the keyboard and write output to the
display. They also support I/O on files and between programs, but
that feature is controlled by the command line interpreter, not the
program.
The Java platform supports three Standard Streams: Standard
Input, accessed through System.in; Standard
Output, accessed through System.out; and
Standard Error, accessed through System.err.
These objects are defined automatically and do not need to be opened.
Standard Output and Standard Error are both for output; having error
output separately allows the user to divert regular output to a file
and still be able to read error messages. For more information, refer
to the documentation for your command line interpreter.
You might expect the Standard Streams to be character streams,
but, for historical reasons, they are byte streams.
System.out and System.err are defined as
PrintStream
objects. Although it is technically a byte stream,
PrintStream utilizes an internal character stream object
to emulate many of the features of character streams.
By contrast, System.in is a byte stream with no character
stream features. To use Standard Input as a character stream, wrap
System.in in InputStreamReader.
InputStreamReader cin = new InputStreamReader(System.in);
The Console
A more advanced alternative to the Standard Streams is the Console.
This is a single, predefined object of type
Console
that has most of the features provided
by the Standard Streams, and others besides. The Console is
particularly useful for secure password entry. The Console object also provides
input and output streams that are true character streams, through its
reader and writer methods.
Before a program can use the Console, it must attempt to retrieve the Console
object by invoking System.console(). If the Console
object is available, this method returns it. If
System.console returns NULL, then Console
operations are not permitted, either because the OS doesn't support
them or because the program was launched in a noninteractive
environment.
The Console object supports secure password entry through its
readPassword method. This method helps secure password
entry in two ways. First, it suppresses echoing, so the password is
not visible on the user's screen. Second, readPassword
returns a character array, not a String, so the
password can be overwritten, removing it from memory as soon as it is
no longer needed.
The
Password
example is a prototype program for changing a user's password. It
demonstrates several Console methods.
import java.io.Console;
import java.util.Arrays;
import java.io.IOException;
public class Password {
public static void main (String args[]) throws IOException {
Console c = System.console();
if (c == null) {
System.err.println("No console.");
System.exit(1);
}
String login = c.readLine("Enter your login: ");
char [] oldPassword = c.readPassword("Enter your old password: ");
if (verify(login, oldPassword)) {
boolean noMatch;
do {
char [] newPassword1 =
c.readPassword("Enter your new password: ");
char [] newPassword2 =
c.readPassword("Enter new password again: ");
noMatch = ! Arrays.equals(newPassword1, newPassword2);
if (noMatch) {
c.format("Passwords don't match. Try again.%n");
} else {
change(login, newPassword1);
c.format("Password for %s changed.%n", login);
}
Arrays.fill(newPassword1, ' ');
Arrays.fill(newPassword2, ' ');
} while (noMatch);
}
Arrays.fill(oldPassword, ' ');
}
//Dummy verify method.
static boolean verify(String login, char[] password) {
return true;
}
//Dummy change method.
static void change(String login, char[] password) {}
}
Password follows these steps:
- Attempt to retrieve the Console object. If the object is not
available, abort.
- Invoke
Console.readLine to prompt for and read
the user's login name.
- Invoke
Console.readPassword to prompt for and
read the user's existing password.
- Invoke
verify to confirm that the user is
authorized to change the password. (In this example,
verify is a dummy method that always returns
true.)
- Repeat the following steps until the user enters the same
password twice:
- Invoke
Console.readPassword twice to prompt
for and read a new password.
- If the user entered the same password both times, invoke
change to change it. (Again, change
is a dummy method.)
- Overwrite both passwords with blanks.
- Overwrite the old password with blanks.