Xceed .NET Libraries Documentation
Xceed.Zip Assembly / Xceed.Zip Namespace / ZipArchive Class / ZipArchive Constructor / ZipArchive Constructor(FileSystemEvents,Object,AbstractFile)
A Xceed.FileSystem.FileSystemEvents object that will be used to raise events. Cannot be a null reference (Nothing in Visual Basic).
Opaque data that will be passed back to the event handler when an event is raised.
An Xceed.FileSystem.AbstractFile object that represents the ZIP file to access. For example, to access/create a zip file in memory use a Xceed.FileSystem.MemoryFile. If the zip file is on disk, then use a Xceed.FileSystem.DiskFile and so on.
Example


In This Topic
    ZipArchive Constructor(FileSystemEvents,Object,AbstractFile)
    In This Topic
    Initializes a new instance of the ZipArchive class enabling event notifications while the object is being created.
    Syntax
    'Declaration
     
    Public Function New( _
       ByVal events As FileSystemEvents, _
       ByVal userData As Object, _
       ByVal zipFile As AbstractFile _
    )
    'Usage
     
    Dim events As FileSystemEvents
    Dim userData As Object
    Dim zipFile As AbstractFile
     
    Dim instance As New ZipArchive(events, userData, zipFile)
    public ZipArchive( 
       FileSystemEvents events,
       object userData,
       AbstractFile zipFile
    )

    Parameters

    events
    A Xceed.FileSystem.FileSystemEvents object that will be used to raise events. Cannot be a null reference (Nothing in Visual Basic).
    userData
    Opaque data that will be passed back to the event handler when an event is raised.
    zipFile
    An Xceed.FileSystem.AbstractFile object that represents the ZIP file to access. For example, to access/create a zip file in memory use a Xceed.FileSystem.MemoryFile. If the zip file is on disk, then use a Xceed.FileSystem.DiskFile and so on.
    Remarks

    Once the ZipArchive object is created, it does not keep a reference on the event object.

    It is important to always use the same instance of the AbstractFile representing the actual zip file when creating new instances of either ZipArchive, ZippedFile or ZippedFolder; otherwise, when updating the zip file through different instances, information can be lost. Instances obtained from calls to GetFile, GetFiles (and all) are safe, and share the same original AbstractFile.

    Example
    The code below shows a possible loss of data:
    DiskFile source1 = new DiskFile( @"D:\First.txt" );
    DiskFile source2 = new DiskFile( @"D:\Second.txt" );
    
    DiskFile file1 = new DiskFile( @"D:\Danger.zip" );
    DiskFile file2 = new DiskFile( @"D:\Danger.zip" );
    
    ZipArchive zip1 = new ZipArchive( file1 );
    ZipArchive zip2 = new ZipArchive( file2 );
    
    zip1.BeginUpdate();
    source1.CopyTo( zip1, true );
    
    zip2.BeginUpdate();
    source2.CopyTo( zip2, true );
    zip2.EndUpdate();  // Zip file updated with "Second.txt"
    zip1.EndUpdate();  // Zip file updated with "First.txt" but "Second.txt" gets lost
                       
    The correct way to deal with many instances of a ZipArchive is:
    
    DiskFile source1 = new DiskFile( @"D:\First.txt" );
    DiskFile source2 = new DiskFile( @"D:\Second.txt" );
    
    DiskFile singleFile = new DiskFile( @"D:\Danger.zip" );
    
    ZipArchive zip1 = new ZipArchive( singleFile );
    ZipArchive zip2 = new ZipArchive( singleFile );
    
    zip1.BeginUpdate();
    source1.CopyTo( zip1, true );
    
    zip2.BeginUpdate();
    source2.CopyTo( zip2, true );
    zip2.EndUpdate();  // Zip file not updated right away
    zip1.EndUpdate();  // Zip file updated with both "First.txt" and "Second.txt"
    Requirements

    Target Platforms: Windows 7, Windows Vista SP1 or later, Windows XP SP3, Windows Server 2008 (Server Core not supported), Windows Server 2008 R2 (Server Core supported with SP1 or later), Windows Server 2003 SP2

    See Also