I\'m wondering if it\'s possible to count and print the number of bytes downloaded while the file is being downloaded.
out, err := os.Create(\"file.txt\")
d
If I understand you correctly, you wish to display the number of bytes read, while the data is transferring. Presumably to maintain some kind of a progress bar or something.
In which case, you can use Go's compositional data structures to wrap the reader or writer in a custom io.Reader
or io.Writer
implementation.
It simply forwards the respective Read
or Write
call to the underlying stream, while doing some additional work with the (int, error)
values returned by them. Here is an example you can run on the Go playground.
package main
import (
"bytes"
"fmt"
"io"
"os"
"strings"
)
// PassThru wraps an existing io.Reader.
//
// It simply forwards the Read() call, while displaying
// the results from individual calls to it.
type PassThru struct {
io.Reader
total int64 // Total # of bytes transferred
}
// Read 'overrides' the underlying io.Reader's Read method.
// This is the one that will be called by io.Copy(). We simply
// use it to keep track of byte counts and then forward the call.
func (pt *PassThru) Read(p []byte) (int, error) {
n, err := pt.Reader.Read(p)
pt.total += int64(n)
if err == nil {
fmt.Println("Read", n, "bytes for a total of", pt.total)
}
return n, err
}
func main() {
var src io.Reader // Source file/url/etc
var dst bytes.Buffer // Destination file/buffer/etc
// Create some random input data.
src = bytes.NewBufferString(strings.Repeat("Some random input data", 1000))
// Wrap it with our custom io.Reader.
src = &PassThru{Reader: src}
count, err := io.Copy(&dst, src)
if err != nil {
fmt.Println(err)
os.Exit(1)
}
fmt.Println("Transferred", count, "bytes")
}
The output it generates is this:
Read 512 bytes for a total of 512
Read 1024 bytes for a total of 1536
Read 2048 bytes for a total of 3584
Read 4096 bytes for a total of 7680
Read 8192 bytes for a total of 15872
Read 6128 bytes for a total of 22000
Transferred 22000 bytes
The stdlib now provides something like jimt's PassThru
: io.TeeReader. It helps simplify things a bit:
// WriteCounter counts the number of bytes written to it.
type WriteCounter struct {
Total int64 // Total # of bytes transferred
}
// Write implements the io.Writer interface.
//
// Always completes and never returns an error.
func (wc *WriteCounter) Write(p []byte) (int, error) {
n := len(p)
wc.Total += int64(n)
fmt.Printf("Read %d bytes for a total of %d\n", n, wc.Total)
return n, nil
}
func main() {
// ...
// Wrap it with our custom io.Reader.
src = io.TeeReader(src, &WriteCounter{})
// ...
}
playground
The grab Go package implements progress updates (and many other features) for file downloads.
An example of printing progress updates while a download is in process is included in the following walkthrough: http://cavaliercoder.com/blog/downloading-large-files-in-go.html
You can basically call grab.GetAsync
which downloads in a new Go routine and then monitor the BytesTransferred
or Progress
of the returned grab.Response
from the calling thread.
Other answers have explained about PassThru
. Just provide a full example with callback function base on Dave Jack's answer.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"io"
"net/http"
"os"
"strconv"
)
// writeCounter counts the number of bytes written to it.
type writeCounter struct {
total int64 // total size
downloaded int64 // downloaded # of bytes transferred
onProgress func(downloaded int64, total int64)
}
// Write implements the io.Writer interface.
//
// Always completes and never returns an error.
func (wc *writeCounter) Write(p []byte) (n int, e error) {
n = len(p)
wc.downloaded += int64(n)
wc.onProgress(wc.downloaded, wc.total)
return
}
func newWriter(size int64, onProgress func(downloaded, total int64)) io.Writer {
return &writeCounter{total: size, onProgress: onProgress}
}
func main() {
client := http.DefaultClient
url := "http://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/gtv-videos-bucket/sample/ForBiggerFun.mp4"
saveTo := "/Users/tin/Desktop/ForBiggerFun.mp4"
download(client, url, saveTo, func(downloaded, total int64) {
fmt.Printf("Downloaded %d bytes for a total of %d\n", downloaded, total)
})
}
func download(client *http.Client, url, filePath string, onProgress func(downloaded, total int64)) (err error) {
// Create file writer
file, err := os.Create(filePath)
if err != nil {
return
}
defer file.Close()
// Determinate the file size
resp, err := client.Head(url)
if err != nil {
return
}
contentLength := resp.Header.Get("content-length")
length, err := strconv.Atoi(contentLength)
if err != nil {
return
}
// Make request
resp, err = client.Get(url)
if err != nil {
return
}
defer resp.Body.Close()
// pipe stream
body := io.TeeReader(resp.Body, newWriter(int64(length), onProgress))
_, err = io.Copy(file, body)
return err
}