A tiny wrapper around Node streams.Transform (Streams2) to avoid explicit subclassing noise
Inspired by Dominic Tarr's through in that it's so much easier to make a stream out of a function than it is to set up the prototype chain properly: through(function (chunk) { ... })
.
Note: As 2.x.x this module starts using Streams3 instead of Stream2. To continue using a Streams2 version use npm install through2@0
to fetch the latest version of 0.x.x. More information about Streams2 vs Streams3 and recommendations see the article Why I don't use Node's core 'stream' module.
fs.createReadStream('ex.txt')
.pipe(through2(function (chunk, enc, callback) {
for (var i = 0; i < chunk.length; i++)
if (chunk[i] == 97)
chunk[i] = 122 // swap 'a' for 'z'
this.push(chunk)
callback()
}))
.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('out.txt'))
Or object streams:
var all = []
fs.createReadStream('data.csv')
.pipe(csv2())
.pipe(through2.obj(function (chunk, enc, callback) {
var data = {
name : chunk[0]
, address : chunk[3]
, phone : chunk[10]
}
this.push(data)
callback()
}))
.on('data', function (data) {
all.push(data)
})
.on('end', function () {
doSomethingSpecial(all)
})
Note that through2.obj(fn)
is a convenience wrapper around through2({ objectMode: true }, fn)
.
<b><code>through2([ options, ] [ transformFunction ] [, flushFunction ])</code></b>
Consult the stream.Transform documentation for the exact rules of the transformFunction
(i.e. this._transform
) and the optional flushFunction
(i.e. this._flush
).
The options argument is optional and is passed straight through to stream.Transform
. So you can use objectMode:true
if you are processing non-binary streams (or just use through2.obj()
).
The options
argument is first, unlike standard convention, because if I'm passing in an anonymous function then I'd prefer for the options argument to not get lost at the end of the call:
fs.createReadStream('/tmp/important.dat')
.pipe(through2({ objectMode: true, allowHalfOpen: false },
function (chunk, enc, cb) {
cb(null, 'wut?') // note we can use the second argument on the callback
// to provide data as an alternative to this.push('wut?')
}
)
.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('/tmp/wut.txt'))
The transformFunction
must have the following signature: function (chunk, encoding, callback) {}
. A minimal implementation should call the callback
function to indicate that the transformation is done, even if that transformation means discarding the chunk.
To queue a new chunk, call this.push(chunk)
—this can be called as many times as required before the callback()
if you have multiple pieces to send on.
Alternatively, you may use callback(err, chunk)
as shorthand for emitting a single chunk or an error.
If you do not provide a transformFunction
then you will get a simple pass-through stream.
The optional flushFunction
is provided as the last argument (2nd or 3rd, depending on whether you've supplied options) is called just prior to the stream ending. Can be used to finish up any processing that may be in progress.
fs.createReadStream('/tmp/important.dat')
.pipe(through2(
function (chunk, enc, cb) { cb(null, chunk) }, // transform is a noop
function (cb) { // flush function
this.push('tacking on an extra buffer to the end');
cb();
}
))
.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('/tmp/wut.txt'));
<b><code>through2.ctor([ options, ] transformFunction[, flushFunction ])</code></b>
Instead of returning a stream.Transform
instance, through2.ctor()
returns a constructor for a custom Transform. This is useful when you want to use the same transform logic in multiple instances.
var FToC = through2.ctor({objectMode: true}, function (record, encoding, callback) {
if (record.temp != null && record.unit == "F") {
record.temp = ( ( record.temp - 32 ) * 5 ) / 9
record.unit = "C"
}
this.push(record)
callback()
})
// Create instances of FToC like so:
var converter = new FToC()
// Or:
var converter = FToC()
// Or specify/override options when you instantiate, if you prefer:
var converter = FToC({objectMode: true})
through2
as well as many more useful stream modules similar to this onethrough2 is Copyright (c) 2013 Rod Vagg @rvagg and licensed under the MIT license. All rights not explicitly granted in the MIT license are reserved. See the included LICENSE file for more details.
# through2 [![NPM](https://nodei.co/npm/through2.png?downloads&downloadRank)](https://nodei.co/npm/through2/) **A tiny wrapper around Node streams.Transform (Streams2) to avoid explicit subclassing noise** Inspired by [Dominic Tarr](https://github.com/dominictarr)'s [through](https://github.com/dominictarr/through) in that it's so much easier to make a stream out of a function than it is to set up the prototype chain properly: `through(function (chunk) { ... })`. Note: As 2.x.x this module starts using **Streams3** instead of Stream2. To continue using a Streams2 version use `npm install through2@0` to fetch the latest version of 0.x.x. More information about Streams2 vs Streams3 and recommendations see the article **[Why I don't use Node's core 'stream' module](http://r.va.gg/2014/06/why-i-dont-use-nodes-core-stream-module.html)**. ```js fs.createReadStream('ex.txt') .pipe(through2(function (chunk, enc, callback) { for (var i = 0; i < chunk.length; i++) if (chunk[i] == 97) chunk[i] = 122 // swap 'a' for 'z' this.push(chunk) callback() })) .pipe(fs.createWriteStream('out.txt')) ``` Or object streams: ```js var all = [] fs.createReadStream('data.csv') .pipe(csv2()) .pipe(through2.obj(function (chunk, enc, callback) { var data = { name : chunk[0] , address : chunk[3] , phone : chunk[10] } this.push(data) callback() })) .on('data', function (data) { all.push(data) }) .on('end', function () { doSomethingSpecial(all) }) ``` Note that `through2.obj(fn)` is a convenience wrapper around `through2({ objectMode: true }, fn)`. ## API <b><code>through2([ options, ] [ transformFunction ] [, flushFunction ])</code></b> Consult the **[stream.Transform](http://nodejs.org/docs/latest/api/stream.html#stream_class_stream_transform)** documentation for the exact rules of the `transformFunction` (i.e. `this._transform`) and the optional `flushFunction` (i.e. `this._flush`). ### options The options argument is optional and is passed straight through to `stream.Transform`. So you can use `objectMode:true` if you are processing non-binary streams (or just use `through2.obj()`). The `options` argument is first, unlike standard convention, because if I'm passing in an anonymous function then I'd prefer for the options argument to not get lost at the end of the call: ```js fs.createReadStream('/tmp/important.dat') .pipe(through2({ objectMode: true, allowHalfOpen: false }, function (chunk, enc, cb) { cb(null, 'wut?') // note we can use the second argument on the callback // to provide data as an alternative to this.push('wut?') } ) .pipe(fs.createWriteStream('/tmp/wut.txt')) ``` ### transformFunction The `transformFunction` must have the following signature: `function (chunk, encoding, callback) {}`. A minimal implementation should call the `callback` function to indicate that the transformation is done, even if that transformation means discarding the chunk. To queue a new chunk, call `this.push(chunk)`—this can be called as many times as required before the `callback()` if you have multiple pieces to send on. Alternatively, you may use `callback(err, chunk)` as shorthand for emitting a single chunk or an error. If you **do not provide a `transformFunction`** then you will get a simple pass-through stream. ### flushFunction The optional `flushFunction` is provided as the last argument (2nd or 3rd, depending on whether you've supplied options) is called just prior to the stream ending. Can be used to finish up any processing that may be in progress. ```js fs.createReadStream('/tmp/important.dat') .pipe(through2( function (chunk, enc, cb) { cb(null, chunk) }, // transform is a noop function (cb) { // flush function this.push('tacking on an extra buffer to the end'); cb(); } )) .pipe(fs.createWriteStream('/tmp/wut.txt')); ``` <b><code>through2.ctor([ options, ] transformFunction[, flushFunction ])</code></b> Instead of returning a `stream.Transform` instance, `through2.ctor()` returns a **constructor** for a custom Transform. This is useful when you want to use the same transform logic in multiple instances. ```js var FToC = through2.ctor({objectMode: true}, function (record, encoding, callback) { if (record.temp != null && record.unit == "F") { record.temp = ( ( record.temp - 32 ) * 5 ) / 9 record.unit = "C" } this.push(record) callback() }) // Create instances of FToC like so: var converter = new FToC() // Or: var converter = FToC() // Or specify/override options when you instantiate, if you prefer: var converter = FToC({objectMode: true}) ``` ## See Also - [through2-map](https://github.com/brycebaril/through2-map) - Array.prototype.map analog for streams. - [through2-filter](https://github.com/brycebaril/through2-filter) - Array.prototype.filter analog for streams. - [through2-reduce](https://github.com/brycebaril/through2-reduce) - Array.prototype.reduce analog for streams. - [through2-spy](https://github.com/brycebaril/through2-spy) - Wrapper for simple stream.PassThrough spies. - the [mississippi stream utility collection](https://github.com/maxogden/mississippi) includes `through2` as well as many more useful stream modules similar to this one ## License **through2** is Copyright (c) 2013 Rod Vagg [@rvagg](https://twitter.com/rvagg) and licensed under the MIT license. All rights not explicitly granted in the MIT license are reserved. See the included LICENSE file for more details.
# | Change | User | Description | Committed | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
#1 | 19553 | swellard | Move and rename clients | ||
//guest/perforce_software/helix-web-services/main/source/clients/2016.1.0/javascript/node_modules/through2/README.md | |||||
#1 | 18810 | tjuricek |
First-pass at JavaScript client SDK. JavaScript requires Node with Gulp to "browserfy" the library. It's the easiest way I found to use the swagger-js project; bundle up a wrapping method. There is no JavaScript reference guide. The swagger-js doesn't really document what they do very well, actually. Overall I'm not particularly impressed by swagger-js, it was hard to even figure out what the right method syntax was. We may want to invest time in doing it better. This required setting CORS response headers, which are currently defaulted to a fairly insecure setting. |