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@handy-common-utils/misc-utils
Advanced tools
Miscellaneous utilities
First add it as a dependency:
npm install @handy-common-utils/misc-utils
Then you can use it in the code:
import { shortBase64UrlFromUInt32 } from '@handy-common-utils/misc-utils';
const urlSafeBase64 = shortBase64UrlFromUInt32(12345);
// use chalk (chalk is not a dependency of this package, you need to add chalk as a dependency separately)
import chalk from 'chalk';
import { LineLogger } from '@handy-common-utils/misc-utils';
// this.flags is an object with properties "debug" and "quiet"
this.output = LineLogger.consoleWithColour(this.flags, chalk);
this.output.warn('Configuration file not found, default configuration would be used.'); // it would be printed out in yellow
import { mask, maskAll, maskEmail, maskFullName, pathBasedReplacer } from '@handy-common-utils/misc-utils';
const masked = JSON.stringify(obj, pathBasedReplacer([
[/.*\.x-api-key$/, maskAll],
[/.*customer\.name$/, maskFullName],
[/.*customer\..*[eE]mail$/, maskEmail],
[/.*\.zip$/, (value: string) => value.slice(0, 3) + 'XX'],
[/.*\.cc$/, () => undefined],
[/.*\.ssn$/, mask],
]));
In software development, it's often necessary to hide sensitive information to protect user privacy or comply with regulations. Masking is a common technique used to replace part of a sensitive value with a different, non-sensitive value. For example, you might mask credit card numbers, passwords, or email addresses.
The mask(input, keepLeft = 1, keepRight = 0, minLength = 3, maskLengthOrMaskString = null, maskPattern = '*')
function
can be used to mask the content of a string, replacing a part of the input string with a mask string.
It takes several optional parameters, including the number of characters to keep on the left and right sides of the string,
a minimum length for the input string to have unmask characters kept, and the mask pattern to use.
The maskEmail(input)
and maskFullName(input)
functions are specific variations of the mask function
that target email addresses and full names, respectively.
The maskAll(input)
function masks all characters.
expect(mask(undefined)).to.be.undefined;
expect(mask(null)).to.be.null;
expect(mask('')).to.equal('');
expect(mask('abcde')).to.equal('a****');
expect(mask('abc')).to.equal('a**');
expect(mask('ab')).to.equal('**');
expect(maskEmail('james.hu@address.com')).to.equal('j****.**@address.com');
expect(maskEmail('her@here.com')).to.equal('h**@here.com');
expect(maskEmail('me@here.com')).to.equal('**@here.com');
expect(maskEmail('my.new.email.address@example.com')).to.equal('**.n**.e****.a******@example.com');
expect(maskFullName('James Hu')).to.equal('J**** **');
expect(maskFullName('John Smith')).to.equal('J*** S****');
expect(maskFullName('Mike')).to.equal('M***');
expect(maskFullName('Mia')).to.equal('M**');
expect(maskFullName('Me')).to.equal('**');
expect(maskFullName('John von Neumann')).to.equal('J*** v** N******');
expect(maskFullName('Two Spaces')).to.equal('T** S*****');
expect(maskFullName('张三丰')).to.equal('张**');
expect(maskFullName('张三')).to.equal('**');
The pathAwareReplacer(replacer, options)
function allows you to build a replacer function that can be passed to JSON.stringify(input, replacer, space)
.
Besides the key, value, and owning object, it also exposes more information to your callback function,
such like the full property path as both a dot (.
) separated string and as an array, and an array of ancestor objects.
This can be useful when you need to replace specific values in an object, but you also want to know where those values were located in the object.
pathBasedReplacer
is a function that takes an array of path-based masking rules and returns a function
that can be used as the second parameter in the JSON.stringify
function.
This function allows you to mask sensitive information during JSON.stringify
in a very flexible way.
Each element in the rules array contains two parts: a regular expression that matches the full paths to the values you want to mask or replace, and a masking or replacing function that takes the original value as input and returns the masked or replaced value.
For example, you could use pathBasedReplacer
to replace all credit card numbers in an object with masked versions of the numbers:
const maskCreditCard = (value: any) => "****-****-****-" + value.slice(-4);
const replacer = pathBasedReplacer([
[/.*billing\.cc$/, maskCreditCard]
]);
const json = JSON.stringify({
to: 'auditor@example.com',
cc: 'auditing-trail@example.com',
year: 2023,
month: 2,
orders: [
{
id: 123,
billing: {
address: '19 High Street',
cc: '1234-5678-2222-3333',
},
},
{
id: 124,
billing: {
address: '88 Main Street',
cc: '3435-8933-0009-2241',
},
},
],
}, replacer, 2);
The substituteAll(input, searchPattern, substitute)
function allows you to perform substitutions on an input string
by matching a specified pattern and replacing the matches with substitution strings built by a function.
It provides flexibility in handling complex substitution scenarios through the substitute
callback function.
{name}
with the value "John" and {me}
with value "James".const input = 'Hello, {name}! How are you, {name}? I am {me}.';
const searchPattern = /{([^{}]+)}/g;
const dict: Record<string, string> = {
name: 'John',
me: 'James',
};
const substitute: Parameters<typeof substituteAll>[2] = (_match, result) => {
const key = result[1];
return dict[key] ?? `{NOT FOUND: ${key}}`;
};
const result = substituteAll(input, searchPattern, substitute);
const input = 'Event date: 12/31/21';
const searchPattern = / ((\d{2})\/(\d{2})\/(\d{2}))/g;
const substitute = (_: string, result: any) => {
const [match, date, month, day, year] = result;
const formattedDate = `20${year}-${month}-${day}`;
return match.replace(date, formattedDate);
};
const result = substituteAll(input, searchPattern, substitute);
line-logger.LineLogger
A LineLogger logs/prints one entire line of text before advancing to another line. This class is useful for encapsulating console.log/info/warn/error functions. By having an abstraction layer, your code can switching to a different output with nearly no change.
Please note that although the name contains "Logger", this class is not intended to be used as a generic logger. It is intended for "logging for humans to read" scenario.
LineLogger.console()
and LineLogger.consoleWithColour()
are ready to use convenient functions.
Or you can use the constructor to build your own wrappers.
Example
// Just a wrapper of console.log/info/warn/error
const consoleLogger = LineLogger.console();
// Wrapper of console.log/info/warn/error but it mutes console.log
const lessVerboseConsoleLogger = LineLogger.console({debug: false});
// Wrapper of console.log/info/warn/error but it mutes console.log and console.info
const lessVerboseConsoleLogger = LineLogger.console({quiet: true});
// use chalk (chalk is not a dependency of this package, you need to add chalk as a dependency separately)
import chalk from 'chalk';
// this.flags is an object with properties "debug" and "quiet"
this.output = LineLogger.consoleWithColour(this.flags, chalk);
this.output.warn('Configuration file not found, default configuration would be used.'); // it would be printed out in yellow
Name | Type |
---|---|
DEBUG_FUNC | extends Function |
INFO_FUNC | extends Function |
WARN_FUNC | extends Function |
ERROR_FUNC | extends Function |
• new LineLogger<DEBUG_FUNC
, INFO_FUNC
, WARN_FUNC
, ERROR_FUNC
>(debugFunction
, infoFunction
, warnFunction
, errorFunction
, isDebug?
, isQuiet?
)
Constructor
Name | Type |
---|---|
DEBUG_FUNC | extends Function |
INFO_FUNC | extends Function |
WARN_FUNC | extends Function |
ERROR_FUNC | extends Function |
Name | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
debugFunction | DEBUG_FUNC | undefined | function for outputting debug information |
infoFunction | INFO_FUNC | undefined | function for outputting info information |
warnFunction | WARN_FUNC | undefined | function for outputting warn information |
errorFunction | ERROR_FUNC | undefined | function for outputting error information |
isDebug | boolean | false | is debug output enabled or not, it could be overriden by isQuiet |
isQuiet | boolean | false | is quiet mode enabled or not. When quiet mode is enabled, both debug and info output would be discarded. |
Property | Description |
---|---|
debug: DEBUG_FUNC | |
error: ERROR_FUNC | |
info: INFO_FUNC | |
isDebug: boolean = false | is debug output enabled or not, it could be overriden by isQuiet |
isQuiet: boolean = false | is quiet mode enabled or not. When quiet mode is enabled, both debug and info output would be discarded. |
warn: WARN_FUNC | |
Static Protected NO_OP_FUNC: () => void |
▸ Static
console<FLAGS
>(flags?
, debugFlagName?
, quietFlagName?
): LineLogger
<(message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
>
Build an instance with console.log/info/warn/error.
Name | Type |
---|---|
FLAGS | extends Record <string , any > |
Name | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
flags | FLAGS | undefined | The flag object that contains fields for knowning whether debug is enabled and whether quiet mode is enabled. Values of those fields are evaluated only once within this function. They are not evaluated when debug/info/warn/error functions are called. |
debugFlagName | keyof FLAGS | 'debug' | Name of the debug field in the flags object |
quietFlagName | keyof FLAGS | 'quiet' | Name of the quiet field in the flags object |
LineLogger
<(message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
>
An instance that uses console.log/info/warn/error.
▸ Static
consoleLike(log
): LineLogger
<(message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
>
Build an instance from 'log' (https://github.com/medikoo/log).
info
of the LineLogger is mapped to notice
of the medikoo log.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
log | MedikooLogger | instance of the logger |
LineLogger
<(message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
>
instance of LineLogger that is actually ConsoleLineLogger type
▸ Static
consoleWithColour<FLAGS
, COLOURER
>(flags
, colourer
, debugColourFuncName?
, infoColourFuncName?
, warnColourFuncName?
, errorColourFuncName?
, debugFlagName?
, quietFlagName?
): LineLogger
<(message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
>
Build an instance with console.log/info/warn/error and chalk/colors/cli-color. This package does not depend on chalk or colors or cli-color, you need to add them as dependencies separately.
Name | Type |
---|---|
FLAGS | extends Record <string , any > |
COLOURER | extends Record <string , any > |
Name | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
flags | FLAGS | undefined | The flag object that contains fields for knowning whether debug is enabled and whether quiet mode is enabled. Values of those fields are evaluated only once within this function. They are not evaluated when debug/info/warn/error functions are called. |
colourer | COLOURER | undefined | Supplier of the colouring function, such as chalk or colors or cli-color |
debugColourFuncName | keyof COLOURER | 'grey' | Name of the function within colourer that will be used to add colour to debug messages, or null if colouring is not desired. |
infoColourFuncName? | keyof COLOURER | undefined | Name of the function within colourer that will be used to add colour to info messages, or null if colouring is not desired. |
warnColourFuncName | keyof COLOURER | 'yellow' | Name of the function within colourer that will be used to add colour to warn messages, or null if colouring is not desired. |
errorColourFuncName | keyof COLOURER | 'red' | Name of the function within colourer that will be used to add colour to error messages, or null if colouring is not desired. |
debugFlagName | keyof FLAGS | 'debug' | Name of the debug field in the flags object |
quietFlagName | keyof FLAGS | 'quiet' | Name of the quiet field in the flags object |
LineLogger
<(message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
>
An instance that uses console.log/info/warn/error and also adds colour to the messages using chalk/colors/cli-color.
http-status.HttpStatusCode
Some (not all) well known HTTP status codes
• ACCEPTED202 = 202
The request has been received but not yet acted upon. It is non-committal, meaning that there is no way in HTTP to later send an asynchronous response indicating the outcome of processing the request. It is intended for cases where another process or server handles the request, or for batch processing.
• BAD_GATEWAY502 = 502
This error response means that the server, while working as a gateway to get a response needed to handle the request, got an invalid response.
• BAD_REQUEST400 = 400
This response means that server could not understand the request due to invalid syntax.
• CONFLICT409 = 409
This response is sent when a request conflicts with the current state of the server.
• CREATED201 = 201
The request has succeeded and a new resource has been created as a result of it. This is typically the response sent after a PUT request.
• FORBIDDEN403 = 403
The client does not have access rights to the content, i.e. they are unauthorized, so server is rejecting to give proper response. Unlike 401, the client's identity is known to the server.
• GATEWAY_TIMEOUT504 = 504
This error response is given when the server is acting as a gateway and cannot get a response in time.
• INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR500 = 500
The server encountered an unexpected condition that prevented it from fulfilling the request.
• METHOD_NOT_ALLOWED405 = 405
The request method is known by the server but has been disabled and cannot be used. For example, an API may forbid DELETE-ing a resource. The two mandatory methods, GET and HEAD, must never be disabled and should not return this error code.
• MOVED_PERMANENTLY301 = 301
This response code means that URI of requested resource has been changed. Probably, new URI would be given in the response.
• MOVED_TEMPORARILY302 = 302
This response code means that URI of requested resource has been changed temporarily. New changes in the URI might be made in the future. Therefore, this same URI should be used by the client in future requests.
• NOT_FOUND404 = 404
The server can not find requested resource. In the browser, this means the URL is not recognized. In an API, this can also mean that the endpoint is valid but the resource itself does not exist. Servers may also send this response instead of 403 to hide the existence of a resource from an unauthorized client. This response code is probably the most famous one due to its frequent occurence on the web.
• NOT_IMPLEMENTED501 = 501
The request method is not supported by the server and cannot be handled. The only methods that servers are required to support (and therefore that must not return this code) are GET and HEAD.
• NO_CONTENT204 = 204
There is no content to send for this request, but the headers may be useful. The user-agent may update its cached headers for this resource with the new ones.
• OK200 = 200
The request has succeeded. The meaning of a success varies depending on the HTTP method: GET: The resource has been fetched and is transmitted in the message body. HEAD: The entity headers are in the message body. POST: The resource describing the result of the action is transmitted in the message body. TRACE: The message body contains the request message as received by the server
• PERMANENT_REDIRECT308 = 308
This means that the resource is now permanently located at another URI, specified by the Location: HTTP Response header. This has the same semantics as the 301 Moved Permanently HTTP response code, with the exception that the user agent must not change the HTTP method used: if a POST was used in the first request, a POST must be used in the second request.
• REQUEST_TIMEOUT408 = 408
This response is sent on an idle connection by some servers, even without any previous request by the client. It means that the server would like to shut down this unused connection. This response is used much more since some browsers, like Chrome, Firefox 27+, or IE9, use HTTP pre-connection mechanisms to speed up surfing. Also note that some servers merely shut down the connection without sending this message.
• SEE_OTHER303 = 303
Server sent this response to directing client to get requested resource to another URI with an GET request.
• SERVICE_UNAVAILABLE503 = 503
The server is not ready to handle the request. Common causes are a server that is down for maintenance or that is overloaded. Note that together with this response, a user-friendly page explaining the problem should be sent. This responses should be used for temporary conditions and the Retry-After: HTTP header should, if possible, contain the estimated time before the recovery of the service. The webmaster must also take care about the caching-related headers that are sent along with this response, as these temporary condition responses should usually not be cached.
• TEMPORARY_REDIRECT307 = 307
Server sent this response to directing client to get requested resource to another URI with same method that used prior request. This has the same semantic than the 302 Found HTTP response code, with the exception that the user agent must not change the HTTP method used: if a POST was used in the first request, a POST must be used in the second request.
• TOO_MANY_REQUESTS429 = 429
The user has sent too many requests in a given amount of time ("rate limiting").
• UNAUTHORIZED401 = 401
Although the HTTP standard specifies "unauthorized", semantically this response means "unauthenticated". That is, the client must authenticate itself to get the requested response.
▸ distributeRoundRobin<T
>(array
, groups
): T
[][]
Distributes an array into a number of groups in a round robin fashion. This function has been tuned for performance.
Name |
---|
T |
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
array | T [] | The input array |
groups | number | Number of groups the elements in the input array need to be distributed into. |
T
[][]
The result as an array of arrays which each represents a group
▸ base64FromUInt32<T
>(ui32
): Exclude
<T
, number
> | string
Encode an unsigned 32-bit integer into BASE64 string.
Name | Type |
---|---|
T | extends undefined | null | number |
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
ui32 | T | A 32-bit integer number which could also be null or undefined. It must be a valid unsigned 32-bit integer. Behavior is undefined when valueis anything other than an unsigned 32-bit integer. If you don't care about loosing precision, you can convert a number by doing n >>> 0 (See https://stackoverflow.com/questions/22335853/hack-to-convert-javascript-number-to-uint32) |
Exclude
<T
, number
> | string
BASE64 string representing the integer input, or the original input if it is null or undefined.
▸ base64UrlFromUInt32<T
>(ui32
, replacements?
): Exclude
<T
, number
> | string
Encode an unsigned 32-bit integer into URL/path safe BASE64 string.
Name | Type |
---|---|
T | extends undefined | null | number |
Name | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
ui32 | T | undefined | A 32-bit integer number which could also be null or undefined. It must be a valid unsigned 32-bit integer. Behavior is undefined when valueis anything other than an unsigned 32-bit integer. If you don't care about loosing precision, you can convert a number by doing n >>> 0 (See https://stackoverflow.com/questions/22335853/hack-to-convert-javascript-number-to-uint32) |
replacements | string | '_-=' | A string containing replacement characters for "/", "+", and "=". If omitted, default value of '_-=' would be used. |
Exclude
<T
, number
> | string
URL/path safe BASE64 string representing the integer input, or the original input if it is null or undefined.
▸ shortBase64FromUInt32<T
>(ui32
): Exclude
<T
, number
> | string
Encode an unsigned 32-bit integer into BASE64 string without trailing '='.
Name | Type |
---|---|
T | extends undefined | null | number |
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
ui32 | T | A 32-bit integer number which could also be null or undefined. It must be a valid unsigned 32-bit integer. Behavior is undefined when valueis anything other than an unsigned 32-bit integer. If you don't care about loosing precision, you can convert a number by doing n >>> 0 (See https://stackoverflow.com/questions/22335853/hack-to-convert-javascript-number-to-uint32) |
Exclude
<T
, number
> | string
BASE64 string without trailing '=' representing the integer input, or the original input if it is null or undefined.
▸ shortBase64UrlFromUInt32<T
>(ui32
, replacements?
): Exclude
<T
, number
> | string
Encode an unsigned 32-bit integer into URL/path safe BASE64 string without trailling '='.
Name | Type |
---|---|
T | extends undefined | null | number |
Name | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
ui32 | T | undefined | A 32-bit integer number which could also be null or undefined. It must be a valid unsigned 32-bit integer. Behavior is undefined when valueis anything other than an unsigned 32-bit integer. If you don't care about loosing precision, you can convert a number by doing n >>> 0 (See https://stackoverflow.com/questions/22335853/hack-to-convert-javascript-number-to-uint32) |
replacements | string | '_-' | A string containing replacement characters for "/" and "+". If omitted, default value of '_-' would be used. |
Exclude
<T
, number
> | string
URL/path safe BASE64 string without trailing '=' representing the integer input, or the original input if it is null or undefined.
▸ urlSafe<T
>(base64Input
, replacements?
): T
Make a "normal" (BASE64) string URL/path safe.
Name | Type |
---|---|
T | extends undefined | null | string |
Name | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
base64Input | T | undefined | A (BASE64) string which could be null or undefined. |
replacements | string | '_-=' | A string containing replacement characters for "/", "+", and "=". If omitted, default value of '_-=' would be used. |
T
URL/path safe version of the (BASE64) input string, or the original input if it is null or undefined.
• Const
HttpStatusMessage: Object
Some (not all) HTTP status messages matching their codes
Name | Type |
---|---|
200 | string |
201 | string |
202 | string |
204 | string |
301 | string |
302 | string |
303 | string |
307 | string |
308 | string |
400 | string |
401 | string |
403 | string |
404 | string |
405 | string |
408 | string |
409 | string |
429 | string |
500 | string |
501 | string |
502 | string |
503 | string |
504 | string |
Re-exports ConsoleLineLogger
Re-exports HttpStatusCode
Re-exports HttpStatusMessage
Re-exports LineLogger
Re-exports PathAwareReplacer
Re-exports base64FromUInt32
Re-exports base64UrlFromUInt32
Re-exports consoleLike
Re-exports consoleWithColour
Re-exports consoleWithoutColour
Re-exports distributeRoundRobin
Re-exports mask
Re-exports maskAll
Re-exports maskEmail
Re-exports maskFullName
Re-exports pathAwareReplacer
Re-exports pathBasedReplacer
Re-exports shortBase64FromUInt32
Re-exports shortBase64UrlFromUInt32
Re-exports substituteAll
Re-exports urlSafe
Ƭ ConsoleLineLogger: ReturnType
<typeof console
>
Type of the object returned by LineLogger.console()
or LineLogger.consoleWithColour()
.
It has the same function signatures as console.log/info/warn/error.
▸ consoleLike(log
): LineLogger
<(message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
>
Build an instance from 'log' (https://github.com/medikoo/log).
info
of the LineLogger is mapped to notice
of the medikoo log.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
log | MedikooLogger | instance of the logger |
LineLogger
<(message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
>
instance of LineLogger that is actually ConsoleLineLogger type
▸ consoleWithColour<FLAGS
, COLOURER
>(flags
, colourer
, debugColourFuncName?
, infoColourFuncName?
, warnColourFuncName?
, errorColourFuncName?
, debugFlagName?
, quietFlagName?
): LineLogger
<(message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
>
Build an encapsulation of console output functions with console.log/info/warn/error and chalk/colors/cli-color.
Name | Type |
---|---|
FLAGS | extends Record <string , any > |
COLOURER | extends Record <string , any > |
Name | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
flags | FLAGS | undefined | The flag object that contains fields for knowning whether debug is enabled and whether quiet mode is enabled. Values of those fields are evaluated only once within this function. They are not evaluated when debug/info/warn/error functions are called. |
colourer | COLOURER | undefined | Supplier of the colouring function, such as chalk or colors or cli-color |
debugColourFuncName | keyof COLOURER | 'grey' | Name of the function within colourer that will be used to add colour to debug messages, or null if colouring is not desired. |
infoColourFuncName? | keyof COLOURER | undefined | Name of the function within colourer that will be used to add colour to info messages, or null if colouring is not desired. |
warnColourFuncName | keyof COLOURER | 'yellow' | Name of the function within colourer that will be used to add colour to warn messages, or null if colouring is not desired. |
errorColourFuncName | keyof COLOURER | 'red' | Name of the function within colourer that will be used to add colour to error messages, or null if colouring is not desired. |
debugFlagName | keyof FLAGS | 'debug' | Name of the debug field in the flags object |
quietFlagName | keyof FLAGS | 'quiet' | Name of the quiet field in the flags object. Quiet flag can override debug flag. |
LineLogger
<(message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
>
An LineLogger instance that uses console.log/info/warn/error and also adds colour to the messages using chalk/colors/cli-color.
▸ consoleWithoutColour<FLAGS
>(flags?
, debugFlagName?
, quietFlagName?
): LineLogger
<(message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
>
Build an encapsulation of console output functions with console.log/info/warn/error.
Name | Type |
---|---|
FLAGS | extends Record <string , any > |
Name | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
flags | FLAGS | undefined | The flag object that contains fields for knowning whether debug is enabled and whether quiet mode is enabled. Values of those fields are evaluated only once within this function. They are not evaluated when debug/info/warn/error functions are called. |
debugFlagName | keyof FLAGS | 'debug' | Name of the debug field in the flags object |
quietFlagName | keyof FLAGS | 'quiet' | Name of the quiet field in the flags object. Quiet flag can override debug flag. |
LineLogger
<(message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
, (message?
: any
, ...optionalParams
: any
[]) => void
>
An LineLogger instance that uses console.log/info/warn/error.
▸ mask<T
>(input
, keepLeft?
, keepRight?
, minLength?
, maskLengthOrMaskString?
, maskPattern?
): T
Mask the content of a string
Name | Type |
---|---|
T | extends undefined | null | string |
Name | Type | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
input | T | undefined | The input which could also be null or undefined |
keepLeft | number | 1 | Number of characters on the left to be kept in the output without masking. Default value is 1. |
keepRight | number | 0 | Number of characters on the right to be kept in the output without masking. Default value is 0. |
minLength | number | 3 | Minimal length of the string for keepLeft and keepRight to be effective. If the input string is shorter than this length, the whole string would be masked. Default value is 3. |
maskLengthOrMaskString | undefined | null | string | number | null | The string to be used for replacing the part in the input that needs to be masked, or the length of the mask string if a fixed length is desired, or null/undefined if the mask string should have the same length as the part to be masked. Default value is null. |
maskPattern | string | '*' | The pattern to be repeated as the mask. Default value is '*'. |
T
String with masked content
▸ maskAll<T
>(input
): T
Replace each character of the input with '*'
Name | Type |
---|---|
T | extends undefined | null | string |
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
input | T | a string or null or undefined |
T
masked string or null or undefined
▸ maskEmail<T
>(email
): T
Mask sensitive information in an email address while keeping some information for troubleshooting
Name | Type |
---|---|
T | extends undefined | null | string |
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
email | T | the email address which could also be null or undefined |
T
masked email address
▸ maskFullName<T
>(name
): T
Mask sensitive information in the full name while keeping useful information for troubleshooting
Name | Type |
---|---|
T | extends undefined | null | string |
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
name | T | the full name which could also be null or undefined |
T
masked full name
Ƭ PathAwareReplacer: (key
: string
, value
: any
, path
: string
, parent
: Parent
, pathArray
: string
[], ancestors
: Parent
[]) => any
▸ (key
, value
, path
, parent
, pathArray
, ancestors
): any
The replacer that can potentially utilise the full path of the property in the object.
####### Parameters
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
key | string | Name of the property, or the index in the parent array. |
value | any | Value of the property or the object in the parent array. |
path | string | The full path of the property in the object, such like "access.visitor.location" or "request.x-forwarded-for.0". Please note that the special characters (including ".") in property names are not escaped, for example, "order.billing address.first line". |
parent | Parent | The object that the property or the element belongs to. It could be { '': <the original object> } when this replacer function is called the first time. |
pathArray | string [] | The full path as an array. It is more useful than path in case special characters exist in property names. When this replacer function is called the first time, pathArray array would have a zero length. |
ancestors | Parent [] | All the ancestor objects/arrays of the property. When this replacer function is called the first time, ancestors array would have a zero length. |
####### Returns
any
▸ pathAwareReplacer(replacer
, options?
): JsonStringifyReplacer
Build a replacer function that can be passed to JSON.stringify(...).
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
replacer | PathAwareReplacer | The actual replacer function which could utilise additional information. |
options? | Object | Options to control whether the pathArray and ancestors parameters would have values populated. By default all information available would be populated. There is no need to specify options unless you are extremely concerned about performance, for example if you need to frequently stringify 500MB objects. |
options.ancestors? | boolean | - |
options.pathArray? | boolean | - |
JsonStringifyReplacer
The replacer function that can be passed to JSON.stringify(...).
▸ pathBasedReplacer(rules
): JsonStringifyReplacer
Create a replacer function for JSON.stringify(...) from an array of path based rules. This function is useful for creating masking replacers which can apply masking based on the path of the property.
Example
import { mask, maskAll, maskEmail, maskFullName, pathBasedReplacer } from '@handy-common-utils/misc-utils';
console.log(JSON.stringify(obj, pathBasedReplacer([
[/.*\.x-api-key$/, maskAll],
[/.*customer\.name$/, maskFullName],
[/.*customer\..*[eE]mail$/, maskEmail],
[/.*\.zip$/, (value: string) => value.slice(0, 3) + 'XX'],
[/.*\.cc$/, () => undefined],
[/.*\.ssn$/, mask],
])));
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
rules | [RegExp , (input : any ) => any ][] | Array of rules: if the regular expression tests true with the property path, the replacer function will be applied on the value |
JsonStringifyReplacer
the replacer function built from those path based rules
▸ substituteAll<T
>(input
, searchPattern
, substitute
): T
Substitute all occurrences of a pattern in a string.
Name | Type |
---|---|
T | extends undefined | null | string |
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
input | T | The input string on which the substitutions will be performed. |
searchPattern | RegExp | The regular expression pattern used to search for segments that should be substituted. It must have the g flag set. If the beginning part of the input should be skipped, set the lastIndex of the searchPattern before calling this function. After all the substitution are done, the lastIndex of the searchPattern will be reset to zero. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/RegExp/lastIndex |
substitute | (match : string , matchResult : RegExpExecArray ) => null | string | TThe function that builds the substitution string. It is called with the matched substring and the result of RegExp.exec() . See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/RegExp/exec#examples. The function can return null to indicate that no further substitution is desired. In such case, the lastIndex of the searchPattern will not be reset to zero. |
T
The resulting string after performing all substitutions.
FAQs
Miscellaneous utilities
The npm package @handy-common-utils/misc-utils receives a total of 142 weekly downloads. As such, @handy-common-utils/misc-utils popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @handy-common-utils/misc-utils demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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