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// Copyright Joyent, Inc. and other Node contributors.
//
// Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a
// copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
// "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
// without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
// distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit
// persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the
// following conditions:
//
// The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
// in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
//
// THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS
// OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
// MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN
// NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM,
// DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR
// OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE
// USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I'd like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it's easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under "smalloc" instead of "Buffer". ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
var buffer = process.binding('buffer');
var smalloc = process.binding('smalloc');
var util = require('util');
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I'd like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it's easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under "smalloc" instead of "Buffer". ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
var alloc = smalloc.alloc;
var sliceOnto = smalloc.sliceOnto;
var kMaxLength = smalloc.kMaxLength;
var internal = {};
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I'd like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it's easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under "smalloc" instead of "Buffer". ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
exports.Buffer = Buffer;
exports.SlowBuffer = SlowBuffer;
exports.INSPECT_MAX_BYTES = 50;
Buffer.poolSize = 8 * 1024;
var poolSize, poolOffset, allocPool;
function createPool() {
poolSize = Buffer.poolSize;
allocPool = alloc({}, poolSize);
poolOffset = 0;
}
createPool();
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I'd like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it's easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under "smalloc" instead of "Buffer". ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
function Buffer(subject, encoding) {
if (!util.isBuffer(this))
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I'd like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it's easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under "smalloc" instead of "Buffer". ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
return new Buffer(subject, encoding);
if (util.isNumber(subject))
this.length = subject > 0 ? subject >>> 0 : 0;
else if (util.isString(subject))
this.length = Buffer.byteLength(subject, encoding = encoding || 'utf8');
else if (util.isObject(subject))
this.length = +subject.length > 0 ? Math.floor(+subject.length) : 0;
else
throw new TypeError('must start with number, buffer, array or string');
if (this.length > kMaxLength) {
throw new RangeError('Attempt to allocate Buffer larger than maximum ' +
'size: 0x' + kMaxLength.toString(16) + ' bytes');
}
if (this.length <= (Buffer.poolSize >>> 1) && this.length > 0) {
if (this.length > poolSize - poolOffset)
createPool();
this.parent = sliceOnto(allocPool,
this,
poolOffset,
poolOffset + this.length);
poolOffset += this.length;
} else {
alloc(this, this.length);
}
if (!util.isNumber(subject)) {
if (util.isString(subject)) {
// In the case of base64 it's possible that the size of the buffer
// allocated was slightly too large. In this case we need to rewrite
// the length to the actual length written.
this.length = this.write(subject, encoding);
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
} else {
if (util.isBuffer(subject))
subject.copy(this, 0, 0, this.length);
else if (util.isNumber(subject.length) || util.isArray(subject))
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
for (var i = 0; i < this.length; i++)
this[i] = subject[i];
}
}
}
function SlowBuffer(length) {
length = length >>> 0;
if (length > kMaxLength) {
throw new RangeError('Attempt to allocate Buffer larger than maximum ' +
'size: 0x' + kMaxLength.toString(16) + ' bytes');
}
var b = new NativeBuffer(length);
alloc(b, length);
return b;
}
// Bypass all checks for instantiating unallocated Buffer required for
// Objects created in C++. Significantly faster than calling the Buffer
// function.
function NativeBuffer(length) {
this.length = length;
}
NativeBuffer.prototype = Buffer.prototype;
// add methods to Buffer prototype
buffer.setupBufferJS(NativeBuffer, internal);
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
// Static methods
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
Buffer.isBuffer = function isBuffer(b) {
return util.isBuffer(b);
};
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
Buffer.isEncoding = function(encoding) {
switch ((encoding + '').toLowerCase()) {
case 'hex':
case 'utf8':
case 'utf-8':
case 'ascii':
case 'binary':
case 'base64':
case 'ucs2':
case 'ucs-2':
case 'utf16le':
case 'utf-16le':
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
case 'raw':
return true;
default:
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
return false;
}
};
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
Buffer.concat = function(list, length) {
if (!util.isArray(list))
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
throw new TypeError('Usage: Buffer.concat(list[, length])');
if (util.isUndefined(length)) {
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
length = 0;
for (var i = 0; i < list.length; i++)
length += list[i].length;
} else {
length = length >>> 0;
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
}
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
if (list.length === 0)
return new Buffer(0);
else if (list.length === 1)
return list[0];
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
var buffer = new Buffer(length);
var pos = 0;
for (var i = 0; i < list.length; i++) {
var buf = list[i];
buf.copy(buffer, pos);
pos += buf.length;
}
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
return buffer;
};
Buffer.byteLength = function(str, enc) {
var ret;
str = str + '';
switch (enc) {
case 'ascii':
case 'binary':
case 'raw':
ret = str.length;
break;
case 'ucs2':
case 'ucs-2':
case 'utf16le':
case 'utf-16le':
ret = str.length * 2;
break;
case 'hex':
ret = str.length >>> 1;
break;
default:
ret = internal.byteLength(str, enc);
}
return ret;
11 years ago
};
// pre-set for values that may exist in the future
Buffer.prototype.length = undefined;
Buffer.prototype.parent = undefined;
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
// toString(encoding, start=0, end=buffer.length)
Buffer.prototype.toString = function(encoding, start, end) {
var loweredCase = false;
start = start >>> 0;
end = util.isUndefined(end) || end === Infinity ? this.length : end >>> 0;
if (!encoding) encoding = 'utf8';
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
if (start < 0) start = 0;
if (end > this.length) end = this.length;
if (end <= start) return '';
while (true) {
switch (encoding) {
case 'hex':
return this.hexSlice(start, end);
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
case 'utf8':
case 'utf-8':
return this.utf8Slice(start, end);
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
case 'ascii':
return this.asciiSlice(start, end);
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
case 'binary':
return this.binarySlice(start, end);
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
case 'base64':
return this.base64Slice(start, end);
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
case 'ucs2':
case 'ucs-2':
case 'utf16le':
case 'utf-16le':
return this.ucs2Slice(start, end);
default:
if (loweredCase)
throw new TypeError('Unknown encoding: ' + encoding);
encoding = (encoding + '').toLowerCase();
loweredCase = true;
}
}
};
// Inspect
Buffer.prototype.inspect = function inspect() {
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
var str = '';
var max = exports.INSPECT_MAX_BYTES;
if (this.length > 0) {
str = this.toString('hex', 0, max).match(/.{2}/g).join(' ');
if (this.length > max)
str += ' ... ';
}
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
return '<' + this.constructor.name + ' ' + str + '>';
};
// XXX remove in v0.13
Buffer.prototype.get = util.deprecate(function get(offset) {
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
offset = ~~offset;
if (offset < 0 || offset >= this.length)
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
throw new RangeError('index out of range');
return this[offset];
}, '.get() is deprecated. Access using array indexes instead.');
// XXX remove in v0.13
Buffer.prototype.set = util.deprecate(function set(offset, v) {
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
offset = ~~offset;
if (offset < 0 || offset >= this.length)
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
throw new RangeError('index out of range');
return this[offset] = v;
}, '.set() is deprecated. Set using array indexes instead.');
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
// TODO(trevnorris): fix these checks to follow new standard
// write(string, offset = 0, length = buffer.length, encoding = 'utf8')
var writeWarned = false;
var writeMsg = '.write(string, encoding, offset, length) is deprecated.' +
' Use write(string[, offset[, length]][, encoding]) instead.';
Buffer.prototype.write = function(string, offset, length, encoding) {
// Buffer#write(string);
if (util.isUndefined(offset)) {
encoding = 'utf8';
length = this.length;
offset = 0;
// Buffer#write(string, encoding)
} else if (util.isUndefined(length) && util.isString(offset)) {
encoding = offset;
length = this.length;
offset = 0;
// Buffer#write(string, offset[, length][, encoding])
} else if (isFinite(offset)) {
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (isFinite(length)) {
length = length >>> 0;
if (util.isUndefined(encoding))
encoding = 'utf8';
} else {
encoding = length;
length = undefined;
}
// XXX legacy write(string, encoding, offset, length) - remove in v0.13
} else {
if (!writeWarned) {
if (process.throwDeprecation)
throw new Error(writeMsg);
else if (process.traceDeprecation)
console.trace(writeMsg);
else
console.error(writeMsg);
writeWarned = true;
}
var swap = encoding;
encoding = offset;
offset = length >>> 0;
length = swap;
}
var remaining = this.length - offset;
if (util.isUndefined(length) || length > remaining)
length = remaining;
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
encoding = !!encoding ? (encoding + '').toLowerCase() : 'utf8';
if (string.length > 0 && (length < 0 || offset < 0))
throw new RangeError('attempt to write outside buffer bounds');
var ret;
switch (encoding) {
case 'hex':
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
ret = this.hexWrite(string, offset, length);
break;
case 'utf8':
case 'utf-8':
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
ret = this.utf8Write(string, offset, length);
break;
case 'ascii':
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
ret = this.asciiWrite(string, offset, length);
break;
case 'binary':
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
ret = this.binaryWrite(string, offset, length);
break;
case 'base64':
// Warning: maxLength not taken into account in base64Write
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
ret = this.base64Write(string, offset, length);
break;
case 'ucs2':
case 'ucs-2':
case 'utf16le':
case 'utf-16le':
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
ret = this.ucs2Write(string, offset, length);
break;
default:
throw new TypeError('Unknown encoding: ' + encoding);
}
return ret;
};
Buffer.prototype.toJSON = function() {
return {
type: 'Buffer',
data: Array.prototype.slice.call(this, 0)
};
};
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
// TODO(trevnorris): currently works like Array.prototype.slice(), which
// doesn't follow the new standard for throwing on out of range indexes.
Buffer.prototype.slice = function(start, end) {
var len = this.length;
start = ~~start;
end = util.isUndefined(end) ? len : ~~end;
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
if (start < 0) {
start += len;
if (start < 0)
start = 0;
} else if (start > len) {
start = len;
}
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
if (end < 0) {
end += len;
if (end < 0)
end = 0;
} else if (end > len) {
end = len;
}
if (end < start)
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
end = start;
var buf = new NativeBuffer();
sliceOnto(this, buf, start, end);
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
buf.length = end - start;
if (buf.length > 0)
buf.parent = util.isUndefined(this.parent) ? this : this.parent;
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
return buf;
};
function checkOffset(offset, ext, length) {
if (offset + ext > length)
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
throw new RangeError('index out of range');
}
Buffer.prototype.readUInt8 = function(offset, noAssert) {
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkOffset(offset, 1, this.length);
return this[offset];
};
function readUInt16(buffer, offset, isBigEndian) {
var val = 0;
if (isBigEndian) {
val = buffer[offset] << 8;
val |= buffer[offset + 1];
} else {
val = buffer[offset];
val |= buffer[offset + 1] << 8;
}
return val;
}
Buffer.prototype.readUInt16LE = function(offset, noAssert) {
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkOffset(offset, 2, this.length);
return readUInt16(this, offset, false, noAssert);
};
Buffer.prototype.readUInt16BE = function(offset, noAssert) {
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkOffset(offset, 2, this.length);
return readUInt16(this, offset, true, noAssert);
};
function readUInt32(buffer, offset, isBigEndian) {
var val = 0;
if (isBigEndian) {
val = buffer[offset + 1] << 16;
val |= buffer[offset + 2] << 8;
val |= buffer[offset + 3];
val = val + (buffer[offset] << 24 >>> 0);
} else {
val = buffer[offset + 2] << 16;
val |= buffer[offset + 1] << 8;
val |= buffer[offset];
val = val + (buffer[offset + 3] << 24 >>> 0);
}
return val;
}
Buffer.prototype.readUInt32LE = function(offset, noAssert) {
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkOffset(offset, 4, this.length);
return readUInt32(this, offset, false);
};
Buffer.prototype.readUInt32BE = function(offset, noAssert) {
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkOffset(offset, 4, this.length);
return readUInt32(this, offset, true);
};
/*
* Signed integer types, yay team! A reminder on how two's complement actually
* works. The first bit is the signed bit, i.e. tells us whether or not the
* number should be positive or negative. If the two's complement value is
* positive, then we're done, as it's equivalent to the unsigned representation.
*
* Now if the number is positive, you're pretty much done, you can just leverage
* the unsigned translations and return those. Unfortunately, negative numbers
* aren't quite that straightforward.
*
* At first glance, one might be inclined to use the traditional formula to
* translate binary numbers between the positive and negative values in two's
* complement. (Though it doesn't quite work for the most negative value)
* Mainly:
* - invert all the bits
* - add one to the result
*
* Of course, this doesn't quite work in Javascript. Take for example the value
* of -128. This could be represented in 16 bits (big-endian) as 0xff80. But of
* course, Javascript will do the following:
*
* > ~0xff80
* -65409
*
* Whoh there, Javascript, that's not quite right. But wait, according to
* Javascript that's perfectly correct. When Javascript ends up seeing the
* constant 0xff80, it has no notion that it is actually a signed number. It
* assumes that we've input the unsigned value 0xff80. Thus, when it does the
* binary negation, it casts it into a signed value, (positive 0xff80). Then
* when you perform binary negation on that, it turns it into a negative number.
*
* Instead, we're going to have to use the following general formula, that works
* in a rather Javascript friendly way. I'm glad we don't support this kind of
* weird numbering scheme in the kernel.
*
* (BIT-MAX - (unsigned)val + 1) * -1
*
* The astute observer, may think that this doesn't make sense for 8-bit numbers
* (really it isn't necessary for them). However, when you get 16-bit numbers,
* you do. Let's go back to our prior example and see how this will look:
*
* (0xffff - 0xff80 + 1) * -1
* (0x007f + 1) * -1
* (0x0080) * -1
*/
Buffer.prototype.readInt8 = function(offset, noAssert) {
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkOffset(offset, 1, this.length);
var val = this[offset];
return !(val & 0x80) ? val : (0xff - val + 1) * -1;
};
function readInt16(buffer, offset, isBigEndian) {
var val = readUInt16(buffer, offset, isBigEndian);
return !(val & 0x8000) ? val : (0xffff - val + 1) * -1;
}
Buffer.prototype.readInt16LE = function(offset, noAssert) {
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkOffset(offset, 2, this.length);
return readInt16(this, offset, false);
};
Buffer.prototype.readInt16BE = function(offset, noAssert) {
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkOffset(offset, 2, this.length);
return readInt16(this, offset, true);
};
function readInt32(buffer, offset, isBigEndian) {
var val = readUInt32(buffer, offset, isBigEndian);
return !(val & 0x80000000) ? val : (0xffffffff - val + 1) * -1;
}
Buffer.prototype.readInt32LE = function(offset, noAssert) {
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkOffset(offset, 4, this.length);
return readInt32(this, offset, false);
};
Buffer.prototype.readInt32BE = function(offset, noAssert) {
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkOffset(offset, 4, this.length);
return readInt32(this, offset, true);
};
function checkInt(buffer, value, offset, ext, max, min) {
if (!(buffer instanceof Buffer))
throw new TypeError('buffer must be a Buffer instance');
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
if (value > max || value < min)
throw new TypeError('value is out of bounds');
if (offset + ext > buffer.length)
throw new RangeError('index out of range');
}
Buffer.prototype.writeUInt8 = function(value, offset, noAssert) {
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
value = +value;
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkInt(this, value, offset, 1, 0xff, 0);
this[offset] = value;
return offset + 1;
};
function writeUInt16(buffer, value, offset, isBigEndian) {
if (isBigEndian) {
buffer[offset] = (value & 0xff00) >>> 8;
buffer[offset + 1] = value & 0x00ff;
} else {
buffer[offset + 1] = (value & 0xff00) >>> 8;
buffer[offset] = value & 0x00ff;
}
return offset + 2;
}
Buffer.prototype.writeUInt16LE = function(value, offset, noAssert) {
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
value = +value;
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkInt(this, value, offset, 2, 0xffff, 0);
return writeUInt16(this, value, offset, false);
};
Buffer.prototype.writeUInt16BE = function(value, offset, noAssert) {
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
value = +value;
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkInt(this, value, offset, 2, 0xffff, 0);
return writeUInt16(this, value, offset, true);
};
function writeUInt32(buffer, value, offset, isBigEndian) {
if (isBigEndian) {
buffer[offset] = (value >>> 24) & 0xff;
buffer[offset + 1] = (value >>> 16) & 0xff;
buffer[offset + 2] = (value >>> 8) & 0xff;
buffer[offset + 3] = value & 0xff;
} else {
buffer[offset + 3] = (value >>> 24) & 0xff;
buffer[offset + 2] = (value >>> 16) & 0xff;
buffer[offset + 1] = (value >>> 8) & 0xff;
buffer[offset] = value & 0xff;
}
return offset + 4;
}
Buffer.prototype.writeUInt32LE = function(value, offset, noAssert) {
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
value = +value;
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkInt(this, value, offset, 4, 0xffffffff, 0);
return writeUInt32(this, value, offset, false);
};
Buffer.prototype.writeUInt32BE = function(value, offset, noAssert) {
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
value = +value;
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkInt(this, value, offset, 4, 0xffffffff, 0);
return writeUInt32(this, value, offset, true);
};
Buffer.prototype.writeInt8 = function(value, offset, noAssert) {
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
value = +value;
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkInt(this, value, offset, 1, 0x7f, -0x80);
this[offset] = value;
return offset + 1;
};
Buffer.prototype.writeInt16LE = function(value, offset, noAssert) {
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
value = +value;
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkInt(this, value, offset, 2, 0x7fff, -0x8000);
return writeUInt16(this, value, offset, false);
};
Buffer.prototype.writeInt16BE = function(value, offset, noAssert) {
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
value = +value;
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkInt(this, value, offset, 2, 0x7fff, -0x8000);
return writeUInt16(this, value, offset, true);
};
Buffer.prototype.writeInt32LE = function(value, offset, noAssert) {
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
value = +value;
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkInt(this, value, offset, 4, 0x7fffffff, -0x80000000);
return writeUInt32(this, value, offset, false);
};
Buffer.prototype.writeInt32BE = function(value, offset, noAssert) {
buffer: use smalloc as backing data store Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the namespace as Buffer. The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer). The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards compatibility. I&#39;d like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0). A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values, and (most) all out of range index requests will throw. The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future. The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that it&#39;s easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds. Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed. Heapdumps will now show usage under &#34;smalloc&#34; instead of &#34;Buffer&#34;. ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes. SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
12 years ago
value = +value;
offset = offset >>> 0;
if (!noAssert)
checkInt(this, value, offset, 4, 0x7fffffff, -0x80000000);
return writeUInt32(this, value, offset, true);
};