Latest Threat Research:SANDWORM_MODE: Shai-Hulud-Style npm Worm Hijacks CI Workflows and Poisons AI Toolchains.Details
Socket
Book a DemoInstallSign in
Socket

eventsource-parser

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Versions
18
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

eventsource-parser

Streaming, source-agnostic EventSource/Server-Sent Events parser

latest
Source
npmnpm
Version
3.0.6
Version published
Weekly downloads
23M
23.03%
Maintainers
1
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

eventsource-parser

npm versionnpm bundle sizenpm weekly downloads

A streaming parser for server-sent events/eventsource, without any assumptions about how the actual stream of data is retrieved. It is intended to be a building block for clients and polyfills in javascript environments such as browsers, node.js and deno.

If you are looking for a modern client implementation, see eventsource-client.

You create an instance of the parser, and feed it chunks of data - partial or complete, and the parse emits parsed messages once it receives a complete message. A TransformStream variant is also available for environments that support it (modern browsers, Node 18 and higher).

Other modules in the EventSource family:

  • eventsource-client: modern, feature rich eventsource client for browsers, node.js, bun, deno and other modern JavaScript environments.
  • eventsource-encoder: encodes messages in the EventSource/Server-Sent Events format.
  • eventsource: Node.js polyfill for the WhatWG EventSource API.

[!NOTE] Migrating from eventsource-parser 1.x/2.x? See the migration guide.

Installation

npm install --save eventsource-parser

Usage

import {createParser, type EventSourceMessage} from 'eventsource-parser'

function onEvent(event: EventSourceMessage) {
  console.log('Received event!')
  console.log('id: %s', event.id || '<none>')
  console.log('event: %s', event.event || '<none>')
  console.log('data: %s', event.data)
}

const parser = createParser({onEvent})
const sseStream = getSomeReadableStream()

for await (const chunk of sseStream) {
  parser.feed(chunk)
}

// If you want to re-use the parser for a new stream of events, make sure to reset it!
parser.reset()
console.log('Done!')

Retry intervals

If the server sends a retry field in the event stream, the parser will call any onRetry callback specified to the createParser function:

const parser = createParser({
  onRetry(retryInterval) {
    console.log('Server requested retry interval of %dms', retryInterval)
  },
  onEvent(event) {
    // …
  },
})

Parse errors

If the parser encounters an error while parsing, it will call any onError callback provided to the createParser function:

import {type ParseError} from 'eventsource-parser'

const parser = createParser({
  onError(error: ParseError) {
    console.error('Error parsing event:', error)
    if (error.type === 'invalid-field') {
      console.error('Field name:', error.field)
      console.error('Field value:', error.value)
      console.error('Line:', error.line)
    } else if (error.type === 'invalid-retry') {
      console.error('Invalid retry interval:', error.value)
    }
  },
  onEvent(event) {
    // …
  },
})

Note that invalid-field errors will usually be called for any invalid data - not only data shaped as field: value. This is because the EventSource specification says to treat anything prior to a : as the field name. Use the error.line property to get the full line that caused the error.

[!NOTE] When encountering the end of a stream, calling .reset({consume: true}) on the parser to flush any remaining data and reset the parser state. This will trigger the onError callback if the pending data is not a valid event.

Comments

The parser will ignore comments (lines starting with :) by default. If you want to handle comments, you can provide an onComment callback to the createParser function:

const parser = createParser({
  onComment(comment) {
    console.log('Received comment:', comment)
  },
  onEvent(event) {
    // …
  },
})

[!NOTE] Leading whitespace is not stripped from comments, eg : comment will give comment as the comment value, not comment (note the leading space).

Stream usage

import {EventSourceParserStream} from 'eventsource-parser/stream'

const eventStream = response.body
  .pipeThrough(new TextDecoderStream())
  .pipeThrough(new EventSourceParserStream())

Note that the TransformStream is exposed under a separate export (eventsource-parser/stream), in order to maximize compatibility with environments that do not have the TransformStream constructor available.

License

MIT © Espen Hovlandsdal

Keywords

sse

FAQs

Package last updated on 29 Aug 2025

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts