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Socket researchers discovered nine malicious NuGet packages that use time-delayed payloads to crash applications and corrupt industrial control systems.
fetch-readablestream
Advanced tools
Compatibility layer for efficient streaming of binary data using [WHATWG Streams](https://streams.spec.whatwg.org/)
Compatibility layer for efficient streaming of binary data using WHATWG Streams
This library provides a consistent, cross browser API for streaming a response from an HTTP server based on the WHATWG Streams specification. At the time of writing, Chrome is the only browser to nativley support returning a ReadableStream from it's fetch implementation - all other browsers need to fall back to XMLHttpRequest.
FireFox does provide the ability to efficiently retrieve a byte-stream from a server; however only via it's XMLHttpRequest implementation (when using responsetype=moz-chunked-arraybuffer). Other browsers do not provide access to the underlying byte-stream and must therefore fall-back to concatenating the response string and then encoding it into it's UTF-8 byte representation using the TextEncoder API.
Nb: If you are happy using a node-style API (using callbacks and events) I would suggest taking a look at stream-http.
This package can be installed with npm:
$ npm install fetch-readablestream --save
Once installed you can import it directly:
import fetchStream from 'fetch-readablestream';
Or you can add a script tag pointing to the dist/fetch-readablestream.js bundle and use the fetchStream global:
<script src="./node_modules/fetch-readablestream/dist/fetch-readablestream.js"></script>
<script>
window.fetchStream('...')
</script>
The fetchStream api provides a subset of the fetch API; in particular, the ability to get a ReadableStream back from the Response object which can be used to efficiently stream a chunked-transfer encoded response from the server.
function readAllChunks(readableStream) {
const reader = readableStream.getReader();
const chunks = [];
function pump() {
return reader.read().then(({ value, done }) => {
if (done) {
return chunks;
}
chunks.push(value);
return pump();
});
}
return pump();
}
fetchStream('/endpoint')
.then(response => readAllChunks(response.body))
.then(chunks => console.dir(chunks))
AbortController is supported in many environments, and allows you to abort ongoing requests. This is fully supported in any environment that supports both ReadableStreams & AbortController directly (e.g. Chrome 66+), and has basic support in most other environments, though you may need a polyfill in your own code to use it. To abort a request:
const controller = new AbortController();
fetchStream('/endpoint', {
signal: controller.signal
}).then(() => {
// ...
});
// To abort the ongoing request:
controller.abort();
fetch-readablestream makes the following assumptions on the environment; legacy browsers will need to provide Polyfills for this functionality:
| Feature | Browsers | Polyfill |
|---|---|---|
| ReadableStream | Firefox, Safari, IE11, PhantomJS | web-streams-polyfill |
| TextEncoder | Safari, IE11, PhantomJS | text-encoding |
| Promise, Symbol, Object.assign | IE11, PhantomJS | babel-polyfill |
Use npm run watch to fire up karma with live-reloading. Visit http://localhost:9876/ in a bunch of browsers to capture them - the test suite will run automatically and report any failures.
FAQs
Compatibility layer for efficient streaming of binary data using [WHATWG Streams](https://streams.spec.whatwg.org/)
We found that fetch-readablestream demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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