Bit-level IO utilities for Rust, inspired by std::io patterns but designed for working with bits instead of bytes.
Built on top of bitvec
for bit-level abstractions,
nsw-types for non-standard-width types
and bytes for efficient
storage.
bits-io
provides:
BitCursor
- Likestd::io::Cursor
, but for bits.BitRead
/BitWrite
- Likestd::io::Read
andWrite
, but for bits.Bits
/BitsMut
- Likebytes::Bytes
andBytesMut
but with bit-level APIsBitBuf
/BitBufMt
- Likebytes::Buf
andBufMut
BitSlice
- A type alias for&BitSlice<u8, Msb0>
(all APIs here use u8 storage and Msb0 ordering).- Helpful macros for defining bits and bitvecs with u8 storage and Msb0 order.
Mimics std::io::Cursor
but tracks a bit-level position instead of a
byte-level position. In addition to the standard Seek
implementation which
allows seeking by a number of bytes, it also provides BitSeek
which allows
seeking by a number of bits.
BitRead
mimics the
std::io::Read
trait, but
its API is defined in terms of reading into "bit slices" instead of u8
slices
(&[u8]
) like std::io::Read
. It leverages the BitSlice
type defined in
the bitvec crate.
BitWrite
mimics the
std::io::Write
trait,
but its API is defined in terms of writing from "bit slices" instead of u8
slices (&[u8]
). It leverages the BitSlice
type defined in the
bitvec crate.
let data: Vec<u8> = vec![0b11100000, 0b11101111];
let mut cursor = BitCursor::from_vec(data);
// Read any non-standard-width type from the cursor
let u3_val = cursor.read_u3().unwrap();
assert_eq!(u3_val, nsw_types::u3::new(0b111));
// Sizes larger than 8 bits require a byte order argument
let u13_val = cursor
.read_u13::<crate::byte_order::NetworkOrder>()
.unwrap();
assert_eq!(u13_val, nsw_types::u13::new(0b0000011101111));