BufferStreams
bufferstreams
abstracts streams to allow you to deal with their whole content
in a single buffer when it becomes necessary (by example: a legacy library that
do not support streams).
It is not a good practice, just some glue. Using bufferstreams
means:
- there is no library dealing with streams for your needs
- you filled an issue to the wrapped library to support streams
bufferstreams
can also be used to control the whole stream content in a single
point of a streaming pipeline for testing purposes.
## Usage
Install the npm module:
npm install bufferstreams --save
Then, in your scripts:
var fs = require('fs');
var bufferstreams = require('bufferstreams');
fs.createReadStream('input.txt')
.pipe(new bufferstreams(function(err, buf, cb) {
if(err) {
throw err;
}
buf = Buffer(buf.toString('utf-8').replace('foo', 'bar'));
cb(null, buf);
}))
.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('output.txt'));
Note that you can use bufferstreams
with the objectMode option. In this case,
the given buffer will be an array containing the streamed objects:
new BufferStreams({objectMode: true}, myCallback);
API
Stream : BufferStreams([options], callback)
options
options.objectMode
Type: Boolean
Default value: false
Use if piped in streams are in object mode. In this case, an array of the
buffered will be transmitted to the callback
function.
options.*
bufferstreams
inherits of Stream.Duplex, the options are passed to the
parent constructor so you can use it's options too.
callback(err, buf, cb)
Type: Function
, required.
A function to handle the buffered content.
Stats
Contributing
Feel free to pull your code if you agree with publishing it under the MIT license.