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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.
module.exports = Readable;
Readable.ReadableState = ReadableState;
var Stream = require('stream');
var util = require('util');
var StringDecoder;
util.inherits(Readable, Stream);
function ReadableState(options, stream) {
options = options || {};
// the argument passed to this._read(n,cb)
this.bufferSize = options.bufferSize || 16 * 1024;
// the point at which it stops calling _read() to fill the buffer
// Note: 0 is a valid value, means "don't call _read preemptively ever"
var hwm = options.highWaterMark;
this.highWaterMark = (hwm || hwm === 0) ? hwm : 16 * 1024;
// cast to ints.
this.bufferSize = ~~this.bufferSize;
this.highWaterMark = ~~this.highWaterMark;
this.buffer = [];
this.length = 0;
this.pipes = null;
this.pipesCount = 0;
this.flowing = false;
this.ended = false;
this.endEmitted = false;
this.reading = false;
// a flag to be able to tell if the onwrite cb is called immediately,
// or on a later tick. We set this to true at first, becuase any
// actions that shouldn't happen until "later" should generally also
// not happen before the first write call.
this.sync = true;
this.onread = function(er, data) {
onread(stream, er, data);
};
// whenever we return null, then we set a flag to say
// that we're awaiting a 'readable' event emission.
this.needReadable = false;
this.emittedReadable = false;
// object stream flag. Used to make read(n) ignore n and to
// make all the buffer merging and length checks go away
this.objectMode = !!options.objectMode;
// when piping, we only care about 'readable' events that happen
// after read()ing all the bytes and not getting any pushback.
this.ranOut = false;
// the number of writers that are awaiting a drain event in .pipe()s
this.awaitDrain = 0;
this.pipeChunkSize = null;
this.decoder = null;
if (options.encoding) {
if (!StringDecoder)
StringDecoder = require('string_decoder').StringDecoder;
this.decoder = new StringDecoder(options.encoding);
}
}
function Readable(options) {
if (!(this instanceof Readable))
return new Readable(options);
this._readableState = new ReadableState(options, this);
// legacy
this.readable = true;
Stream.call(this);
}
// Manually shove something into the read() buffer.
// This returns true if the highWaterMark has not been hit yet,
// similar to how Writable.write() returns true if you should
// write() some more.
Readable.prototype.push = function(chunk) {
var rs = this._readableState;
rs.onread(null, chunk);
// if it's past the high water mark, we can push in some more.
// Also, if we have no data yet, we can stand some
// more bytes. This is to work around cases where hwm=0,
// such as the repl. Also, if the push() triggered a
// readable event, and the user called read(largeNumber) such that
// needReadable was set, then we ought to push more, so that another
// 'readable' event will be triggered.
return rs.needReadable ||
rs.length < rs.highWaterMark ||
rs.length === 0;
};
// backwards compatibility.
Readable.prototype.setEncoding = function(enc) {
if (!StringDecoder)
StringDecoder = require('string_decoder').StringDecoder;
this._readableState.decoder = new StringDecoder(enc);
};
function howMuchToRead(n, state) {
if (state.length === 0 && state.ended)
return 0;
if (state.objectMode)
return n === 0 ? 0 : 1;
if (isNaN(n) || n === null) {
// only flow one buffer at a time
if (state.flowing && state.buffer.length)
return state.buffer[0].length;
else
return state.length;
}
if (n <= 0)
return 0;
// don't have that much. return null, unless we've ended.
if (n > state.length) {
if (!state.ended) {
state.needReadable = true;
return 0;
} else
return state.length;
}
return n;
}
// you can override either this method, or _read(n, cb) below.
Readable.prototype.read = function(n) {
var state = this._readableState;
var nOrig = n;
if (typeof n !== 'number' || n > 0)
state.emittedReadable = false;
// if we're doing read(0) to trigger a readable event, but we
// already have a bunch of data in the buffer, then just trigger
// the 'readable' event and move on.
if (n === 0 &&
state.needReadable &&
state.length >= state.highWaterMark) {
emitReadable(this);
return null;
}
n = howMuchToRead(n, state);
// if we've ended, and we're now clear, then finish it up.
if (n === 0 && state.ended) {
if (state.length === 0)
endReadable(this);
return null;
}
// All the actual chunk generation logic needs to be
// *below* the call to _read. The reason is that in certain
// synthetic stream cases, such as passthrough streams, _read
// may be a completely synchronous operation which may change
// the state of the read buffer, providing enough data when
// before there was *not* enough.
//
// So, the steps are:
// 1. Figure out what the state of things will be after we do
// a read from the buffer.
//
// 2. If that resulting state will trigger a _read, then call _read.
// Note that this may be asynchronous, or synchronous. Yes, it is
// deeply ugly to write APIs this way, but that still doesn't mean
// that the Readable class should behave improperly, as streams are
// designed to be sync/async agnostic.
// Take note if the _read call is sync or async (ie, if the read call
// has returned yet), so that we know whether or not it's safe to emit
// 'readable' etc.
//
// 3. Actually pull the requested chunks out of the buffer and return.
// if we need a readable event, then we need to do some reading.
var doRead = state.needReadable;
// if we currently have less than the highWaterMark, then also read some
if (state.length - n <= state.highWaterMark)
doRead = true;
// however, if we've ended, then there's no point, and if we're already
// reading, then it's unnecessary.
if (state.ended || state.reading)
doRead = false;
if (doRead) {
state.reading = true;
state.sync = true;
// if the length is currently zero, then we *need* a readable event.
if (state.length === 0)
state.needReadable = true;
// call internal read method
this._read(state.bufferSize, state.onread);
state.sync = false;
}
// If _read called its callback synchronously, then `reading`
// will be false, and we need to re-evaluate how much data we
// can return to the user.
if (doRead && !state.reading)
n = howMuchToRead(nOrig, state);
var ret;
if (n > 0)
ret = fromList(n, state);
else
ret = null;
if (ret === null) {
state.needReadable = true;
n = 0;
}
state.length -= n;
// If we have nothing in the buffer, then we want to know
// as soon as we *do* get something into the buffer.
if (state.length === 0 && !state.ended)
state.needReadable = true;
// If we happened to read() exactly the remaining amount in the
// buffer, and the EOF has been seen at this point, then make sure
// that we emit 'end' on the very next tick.
if (state.ended && !state.endEmitted && state.length === 0)
endReadable(this);
return ret;
};
function onread(stream, er, chunk) {
var state = stream._readableState;
var sync = state.sync;
// If we get something that is not a buffer, string, null, or undefined,
// and we're not in objectMode, then that's an error.
// Otherwise stream chunks are all considered to be of length=1, and the
// watermarks determine how many objects to keep in the buffer, rather than
// how many bytes or characters.
if (!Buffer.isBuffer(chunk) &&
'string' !== typeof chunk &&
chunk !== null &&
chunk !== undefined &&
!state.objectMode &&
!er) {
er = new TypeError('Invalid non-string/buffer chunk');
}
state.reading = false;
if (er)
return stream.emit('error', er);
if (chunk === null || chunk === undefined) {
// eof
state.ended = true;
if (state.decoder) {
chunk = state.decoder.end();
if (chunk && chunk.length) {
state.buffer.push(chunk);
state.length += state.objectMode ? 1 : chunk.length;
}
}
// if we've ended and we have some data left, then emit
// 'readable' now to make sure it gets picked up.
if (state.length > 0)
emitReadable(stream);
else
endReadable(stream);
return;
}
// at this point, if we got a zero-length buffer or string,
// and we're not in object-mode, then there's really no point
// continuing. it means that there is nothing to read right
// now, but as we have not received the EOF-signaling null,
// we're not ended. we've already unset the reading flag,
// so just get out of here.
if (!state.objectMode &&
(chunk || typeof chunk === 'string') &&
0 === chunk.length)
return;
if (state.decoder)
chunk = state.decoder.write(chunk);
// update the buffer info.
state.length += state.objectMode ? 1 : chunk.length;
state.buffer.push(chunk);
// if we haven't gotten any data,
// and we haven't ended, then don't bother telling the user
// that it's time to read more data. Otherwise, emitting 'readable'
// probably will trigger another stream.read(), which can trigger
// another _read(n,cb) before this one returns!
if (state.length === 0) {
state.reading = true;
stream._read(state.bufferSize, state.onread);
return;
}
if (state.needReadable)
emitReadable(stream);
else if (state.sync)
process.nextTick(function() {
maybeReadMore(stream, state);
});
else
maybeReadMore(stream, state);
}
// Don't emit readable right away in sync mode, because this can trigger
// another read() call => stack overflow. This way, it might trigger
// a nextTick recursion warning, but that's not so bad.
function emitReadable(stream) {
var state = stream._readableState;
state.needReadable = false;
if (state.emittedReadable)
return;
state.emittedReadable = true;
if (state.sync)
process.nextTick(function() {
emitReadable_(stream);
});
else
emitReadable_(stream);
}
function emitReadable_(stream) {
var state = stream._readableState;
stream.emit('readable');
maybeReadMore(stream, state);
}
function maybeReadMore(stream, state) {
// at this point, the user has presumably seen the 'readable' event,
// and called read() to consume some data. that may have triggered
// in turn another _read(n,cb) call, in which case reading = true if
// it's in progress.
// However, if we're not ended, or reading, and the length < hwm,
// then go ahead and try to read some more right now preemptively.
if (!state.reading && !state.ending && !state.ended &&
state.length < state.highWaterMark) {
stream.read(0);
}
}
// abstract method. to be overridden in specific implementation classes.
// call cb(er, data) where data is <= n in length.
// for virtual (non-string, non-buffer) streams, "length" is somewhat
// arbitrary, and perhaps not very meaningful.
Readable.prototype._read = function(n, cb) {
process.nextTick(function() {
cb(new Error('not implemented'));
});
};
Readable.prototype.pipe = function(dest, pipeOpts) {
var src = this;
var state = this._readableState;
switch (state.pipesCount) {
case 0:
state.pipes = dest;
break;
case 1:
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state.pipes = [state.pipes, dest];
break;
default:
state.pipes.push(dest);
break;
}
state.pipesCount += 1;
if ((!pipeOpts || pipeOpts.end !== false) &&
dest !== process.stdout &&
dest !== process.stderr) {
src.once('end', onend);
} else {
src.once('end', cleanup);
}
dest.on('unpipe', onunpipe);
function onunpipe(readable) {
if (readable !== src) return;
cleanup();
}
if (pipeOpts && pipeOpts.chunkSize)
state.pipeChunkSize = pipeOpts.chunkSize;
function onend() {
dest.end();
}
// when the dest drains, it reduces the awaitDrain counter
// on the source. This would be more elegant with a .once()
// handler in flow(), but adding and removing repeatedly is
// too slow.
var ondrain = pipeOnDrain(src);
dest.on('drain', ondrain);
function cleanup() {
// cleanup event handlers once the pipe is broken
dest.removeListener('close', onclose);
dest.removeListener('finish', onfinish);
dest.removeListener('drain', ondrain);
dest.removeListener('error', onerror);
dest.removeListener('unpipe', onunpipe);
src.removeListener('end', onend);
src.removeListener('end', cleanup);
// if the reader is waiting for a drain event from this
// specific writer, then it would cause it to never start
// flowing again.
// So, if this is awaiting a drain, then we just call it now.
// If we don't know, then assume that we are waiting for one.
if (!dest._writableState || dest._writableState.needDrain)
ondrain();
}
// if the dest has an error, then stop piping into it.
// however, don't suppress the throwing behavior for this.
function onerror(er) {
unpipe();
if (dest.listeners('error').length === 0)
dest.emit('error', er);
}
dest.once('error', onerror);
// Both close and finish should trigger unpipe, but only once.
function onclose() {
dest.removeListener('finish', onfinish);
unpipe();
}
dest.once('close', onclose);
function onfinish() {
dest.removeListener('close', onclose);
unpipe();
}
dest.once('finish', onfinish);
function unpipe() {
src.unpipe(dest);
}
// tell the dest that it's being piped to
dest.emit('pipe', src);
// start the flow if it hasn't been started already.
if (!state.flowing) {
// the handler that waits for readable events after all
// the data gets sucked out in flow.
// This would be easier to follow with a .once() handler
// in flow(), but that is too slow.
this.on('readable', pipeOnReadable);
state.flowing = true;
process.nextTick(function() {
flow(src);
});
}
return dest;
};
function pipeOnDrain(src) {
return function() {
var dest = this;
var state = src._readableState;
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state.awaitDrain--;
if (state.awaitDrain === 0)
flow(src);
};
}
function flow(src) {
var state = src._readableState;
var chunk;
state.awaitDrain = 0;
function write(dest, i, list) {
var written = dest.write(chunk);
if (false === written) {
state.awaitDrain++;
}
}
while (state.pipesCount &&
null !== (chunk = src.read(state.pipeChunkSize))) {
if (state.pipesCount === 1)
write(state.pipes, 0, null);
else
state.pipes.forEach(write);
src.emit('data', chunk);
// if anyone needs a drain, then we have to wait for that.
if (state.awaitDrain > 0)
return;
}
// if every destination was unpiped, either before entering this
// function, or in the while loop, then stop flowing.
//
// NB: This is a pretty rare edge case.
if (state.pipesCount === 0) {
state.flowing = false;
// if there were data event listeners added, then switch to old mode.
if (src.listeners('data').length)
emitDataEvents(src);
return;
}
// at this point, no one needed a drain, so we just ran out of data
// on the next readable event, start it over again.
state.ranOut = true;
}
function pipeOnReadable() {
if (this._readableState.ranOut) {
this._readableState.ranOut = false;
flow(this);
}
}
Readable.prototype.unpipe = function(dest) {
var state = this._readableState;
// if we're not piping anywhere, then do nothing.
if (state.pipesCount === 0)
return this;
// just one destination. most common case.
if (state.pipesCount === 1) {
// passed in one, but it's not the right one.
if (dest && dest !== state.pipes)
return this;
if (!dest)
dest = state.pipes;
// got a match.
state.pipes = null;
state.pipesCount = 0;
this.removeListener('readable', pipeOnReadable);
state.flowing = false;
if (dest)
dest.emit('unpipe', this);
return this;
}
// slow case. multiple pipe destinations.
if (!dest) {
// remove all.
var dests = state.pipes;
var len = state.pipesCount;
state.pipes = null;
state.pipesCount = 0;
this.removeListener('readable', pipeOnReadable);
state.flowing = false;
for (var i = 0; i < len; i++)
dests[i].emit('unpipe', this);
return this;
}
// try to find the right one.
var i = state.pipes.indexOf(dest);
if (i === -1)
return this;
state.pipes.splice(i, 1);
state.pipesCount -= 1;
if (state.pipesCount === 1)
state.pipes = state.pipes[0];
dest.emit('unpipe', this);
return this;
};
// kludge for on('data', fn) consumers. Sad.
// This is *not* part of the new readable stream interface.
// It is an ugly unfortunate mess of history.
Readable.prototype.on = function(ev, fn) {
var res = Stream.prototype.on.call(this, ev, fn);
// https://github.com/isaacs/readable-stream/issues/16
// if we're already flowing, then no need to set up data events.
if (ev === 'data' && !this._readableState.flowing)
emitDataEvents(this);
return res;
};
Readable.prototype.addListener = Readable.prototype.on;
// pause() and resume() are remnants of the legacy readable stream API
// If the user uses them, then switch into old mode.
Readable.prototype.resume = function() {
emitDataEvents(this);
this.read(0);
this.emit('resume');
};
Readable.prototype.pause = function() {
emitDataEvents(this, true);
this.emit('pause');
};
function emitDataEvents(stream, startPaused) {
var state = stream._readableState;
if (state.flowing) {
// https://github.com/isaacs/readable-stream/issues/16
throw new Error('Cannot switch to old mode now.');
}
var paused = startPaused || false;
var readable = false;
// convert to an old-style stream.
stream.readable = true;
stream.pipe = Stream.prototype.pipe;
stream.on = stream.addListener = Stream.prototype.on;
stream.on('readable', function() {
readable = true;
var c;
while (!paused && (null !== (c = stream.read())))
stream.emit('data', c);
if (c === null) {
readable = false;
stream._readableState.needReadable = true;
}
});
stream.pause = function() {
paused = true;
this.emit('pause');
};
stream.resume = function() {
paused = false;
if (readable)
process.nextTick(function() {
stream.emit('readable');
});
else
this.read(0);
this.emit('resume');
};
// now make it start, just in case it hadn't already.
stream.emit('readable');
}
// wrap an old-style stream as the async data source.
// This is *not* part of the readable stream interface.
// It is an ugly unfortunate mess of history.
Readable.prototype.wrap = function(stream) {
var state = this._readableState;
var paused = false;
var self = this;
stream.on('end', function() {
state.ended = true;
if (state.decoder) {
var chunk = state.decoder.end();
if (chunk && chunk.length)
self.push(chunk);
}
self.push(null);
});
stream.on('data', function(chunk) {
if (state.decoder)
chunk = state.decoder.write(chunk);
if (!chunk || !chunk.length)
return;
var ret = self.push(chunk);
if (!ret) {
paused = true;
stream.pause();
}
});
// proxy all the other methods.
// important when wrapping filters and duplexes.
for (var i in stream) {
if (typeof stream[i] === 'function' &&
typeof this[i] === 'undefined') {
this[i] = function(method) { return function() {
return stream[method].apply(stream, arguments);
}}(i);
}
}
// proxy certain important events.
var events = ['error', 'close', 'destroy', 'pause', 'resume'];
events.forEach(function(ev) {
stream.on(ev, self.emit.bind(self, ev));
});
// when we try to consume some more bytes, simply unpause the
// underlying stream.
self._read = function(n, cb) {
if (paused) {
stream.resume();
paused = false;
}
};
};
// exposed for testing purposes only.
Readable._fromList = fromList;
// Pluck off n bytes from an array of buffers.
// Length is the combined lengths of all the buffers in the list.
function fromList(n, state) {
var list = state.buffer;
var length = state.length;
var stringMode = !!state.decoder;
var objectMode = !!state.objectMode;
var ret;
// nothing in the list, definitely empty.
if (list.length === 0)
return null;
if (length === 0)
ret = null;
else if (objectMode)
ret = list.shift();
else if (!n || n >= length) {
// read it all, truncate the array.
if (stringMode)
ret = list.join('');
else
ret = Buffer.concat(list, length);
list.length = 0;
} else {
// read just some of it.
if (n < list[0].length) {
// just take a part of the first list item.
// slice is the same for buffers and strings.
var buf = list[0];
ret = buf.slice(0, n);
list[0] = buf.slice(n);
} else if (n === list[0].length) {
// first list is a perfect match
ret = list.shift();
} else {
// complex case.
// we have enough to cover it, but it spans past the first buffer.
if (stringMode)
ret = '';
else
ret = new Buffer(n);
var c = 0;
for (var i = 0, l = list.length; i < l && c < n; i++) {
var buf = list[0];
var cpy = Math.min(n - c, buf.length);
if (stringMode)
ret += buf.slice(0, cpy);
else
buf.copy(ret, c, 0, cpy);
if (cpy < buf.length)
list[0] = buf.slice(cpy);
else
list.shift();
c += cpy;
}
}
}
return ret;
}
function endReadable(stream) {
var state = stream._readableState;
// If we get here before consuming all the bytes, then that is a
// bug in node. Should never happen.
if (state.length > 0)
throw new Error('endReadable called on non-empty stream');
if (state.endEmitted)
return;
state.ended = true;
state.endEmitted = true;
process.nextTick(function() {
stream.readable = false;
stream.emit('end');
});
}