public interface Sink extends Closeable, Flushable
Most application code shouldn't operate on a sink directly, but rather on a
 BufferedSink which is both more efficient and more convenient. Use
 Okio.buffer(Sink) to wrap any sink with a buffer.
 
Sinks are easy to test: just use a Buffer in your tests, and
 read from it to confirm it received the data that was expected.
 
OutputStream.
 OutputStream requires multiple layers when emitted data is
 heterogeneous: a DataOutputStream for primitive values, a BufferedOutputStream for buffering, and OutputStreamWriter for
 charset encoding. This class uses BufferedSink for all of the above.
 
Sink is also easier to layer: there is no single-byte write method that is awkward to implement efficiently.
Okio.sink(java.io.OutputStream) to adapt an OutputStream to a sink. Use BufferedSink.outputStream() to adapt a sink to an OutputStream.| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
| void | close()Pushes all buffered bytes to their final destination and releases the
 resources held by this sink. | 
| void | flush()Pushes all buffered bytes to their final destination. | 
| Timeout | timeout()Returns the timeout for this sink. | 
| void | write(Buffer source,
     long byteCount)Removes  byteCountbytes fromsourceand appends them to this. | 
void write(Buffer source, long byteCount) throws IOException
byteCount bytes from source and appends them to this.IOExceptionvoid flush()
    throws IOException
flush in interface FlushableIOExceptionTimeout timeout()
void close()
    throws IOException
close in interface AutoCloseableclose in interface CloseableIOExceptionCopyright © 2017. All rights reserved.