// Copyright © 2018 Inanc Gumus // Learn Go Programming Course // License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ // // For more tutorials : https://learngoprogramming.com // In-person training : https://www.linkedin.com/in/inancgumus/ // Follow me on twitter: https://twitter.com/inancgumus package main import ( "fmt" "io" "os" ) func main() { n, err := transfer() if err != nil { fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, err) return } fmt.Printf("%d bytes transferred.\n", n) } func transfer() (n int64, err error) { // stream from the standard input to the in-memory buffer in 32KB data chunks. // os.Stdin.Read(...) -> os.Stdout.Write(...) if n, err = io.Copy(os.Stdout, os.Stdin); err != nil { return n, err } return n, err } // ioCopy streams from a file to another file. // we use it to stream from the standard input to ouput. func ioCopy(dst, src *os.File) error { // Use a fixed-length buffer to efficiently read from src stream in chunks. buf := make([]byte, 32768) // read over and over again to read all the data. for { // read can read only up to the buffer length. nr, er := src.Read(buf) // only write data if there is something to write. if nr > 0 { _, ew := dst.Write(buf[:nr]) if ew != nil { return ew } } // io.EOF = there is nothing left to read—close the loop. if er == io.EOF { return nil } // Only return an error if the reading really fails. if er != nil { return er } } return nil }