Native Abstractions for Node.js
A header file filled with macro and utility goodness for making add-on development for Node.js easier across versions 0.8, 0.10 and 0.11, and eventually 0.12.
Current version: 1.4.1
(See CHANGELOG.md for complete ChangeLog)
Thanks to the crazy changes in V8 (and some in Node core), keeping native addons compiling happily across versions, particularly 0.10 to 0.11/0.12, is a minor nightmare. The goal of this project is to store all logic necessary to develop native Node.js addons without having to inspect NODE_MODULE_VERSION
and get yourself into a macro-tangle.
This project also contains some helper utilities that make addon development a bit more pleasant.
News & Updates
Aug-2014: 1.3.0 release
NanCString()
and NanRawString()
have been deprecated in favour of new NanAsciiString
, NanUtf8String
and NanUcs2String
. These classes manage the underlying memory for you in a safer way than just handing off an allocated array. You should now *NanAsciiString(handle)
to access the raw char
data, you can also allocate on the heap if you need to keep a reference.- Two more
NanMakeCallback
overloads have been added to for parity with Node core. - You can now
NanNew(std::string)
(use NanNew<std::string&>(std::string&)
to pass by reference) NanSetTemplate
, NanSetPrototypeTemplate
and NanSetInstanceTemplate
have been added.
May-2014: 1.1.0 release
- We've deprecated
NanSymbol()
, you should just use NanNew<String>()
now. NanNull()
, NanUndefined()
, NanTrue()
, NanFalse()
all return Local
s now.nan_isolate
is gone, it was intended to be internal-only but if you were using it then you should switch to v8::Isolate::GetCurrent()
.NanNew()
has received some additional overload-love so you should be able to give it many kinds of values without specifying the <Type>
.- Lots of small fixes and additions to expand the V8 API coverage, use the source, Luke.
May-2014: Major changes for V8 3.25 / Node 0.11.13
Node 0.11.11 and 0.11.12 were both broken releases for native add-ons, you simply can't properly compile against either of them for different reasons. But we now have a 0.11.13 release that jumps a couple of versions of V8 ahead and includes some more, major (traumatic) API changes.
Because we are now nearing Node 0.12 and estimate that the version of V8 we are using in Node 0.11.13 will be close to the API we get for 0.12, we have taken the opportunity to not only fix NAN for 0.11.13 but make some major changes to improve the NAN API.
We have removed support for Node 0.11 versions prior to 0.11.13. As usual, our tests are run against (and pass) the last 5 versions of Node 0.8 and Node 0.10. We also include Node 0.11.13 obviously.
The major change is something that Benjamin Byholm has put many hours in to. We now have a fantastic new NanNew<T>(args)
interface for creating new Local
s, this replaces NanNewLocal()
and much more. If you look in ./nan.h you'll see a large number of overloaded versions of this method. In general you should be able to NanNew<Type>(arguments)
for any type you want to make a Local
from. This includes Persistent
types, so we now have a Local<T> NanNew(const Persistent<T> arg)
to replace NanPersistentToLocal()
.
We also now have NanUndefined()
, NanNull()
, NanTrue()
and NanFalse()
. Mainly because of the new requirement for an Isolate
argument for each of the native V8 versions of this.
V8 has now introduced an EscapableHandleScope
from which you scope.Escape(Local<T> value)
to return a value from a one scope to another. This replaces the standard HandleScope
and scope.Close(Local<T> value)
, although HandleScope
still exists for when you don't need to return a handle to the caller. For NAN we are exposing it as NanEscapableScope()
and NanEscapeScope()
, while NanScope()
is still how you create a new scope that doesn't need to return handles. For older versions of Node/V8, it'll still map to the older HandleScope
functionality.
NanFromV8String()
was deprecated and has now been removed. You should use NanCString()
or NanRawString()
instead.
Because node::MakeCallback()
now takes an Isolate
, and because it doesn't exist in older versions of Node, we've introduced NanMakeCallback()
. You should always use this when calling a JavaScript function from C++.
There's lots more, check out the Changelog in nan.h or look through #86 for all the gory details.
Dec-2013: NanCString and NanRawString
Two new functions have been introduced to replace the functionality that's been provided by NanFromV8String
until now. NanCString has sensible defaults so it's super easy to fetch a null-terminated c-style string out of a v8::String
. NanFromV8String
is still around and has defaults that allow you to pass a single handle to fetch a char*
while NanRawString
requires a little more attention to arguments.
Nov-2013: Node 0.11.9+ breaking V8 change
The version of V8 that's shipping with Node 0.11.9+ has changed the signature for new Local
s to: v8::Local<T>::New(isolate, value)
, i.e. introducing the isolate
argument and therefore breaking all new Local
declarations for previous versions. NAN 0.6+ now includes a NanNewLocal<T>(value)
that can be used in place to work around this incompatibility and maintain compatibility with 0.8->0.11.9+ (minus a few early 0.11 releases).
For example, if you wanted to return a null
on a callback you will have to change the argument from v8::Local<v8::Value>::New(v8::Null())
to NanNewLocal<v8::Value>(v8::Null())
.
Nov-2013: Change to binding.gyp "include_dirs"
for NAN
Inclusion of NAN in a project's binding.gyp is now greatly simplified. You can now just use "<!(node -e \"require('nan')\")"
in your "include_dirs"
, see example below (note Windows needs the quoting around require
to be just right: "require('nan')"
with appropriate \
escaping).
Usage
Simply add NAN as a dependency in the package.json of your Node addon:
$ npm install --save nan
Pull in the path to NAN in your binding.gyp so that you can use #include <nan.h>
in your .cpp files:
"include_dirs" : [
"<!(node -e \"require('nan')\")"
]
This works like a -I<path-to-NAN>
when compiling your addon.
Example
See LevelDOWN for a full example of NAN in use.
For a simpler example, see the async pi estimation example in the examples directory for full code and an explanation of what this Monte Carlo Pi estimation example does. Below are just some parts of the full example that illustrate the use of NAN.
For another example, see nan-example-eol. It shows newline detection implemented as a native addon.
Compare to the current 0.10 version of this example, found in the node-addon-examples repository and also a 0.11 version of the same found here.
Note that there is no embedded version sniffing going on here and also the async work is made much simpler, see below for details on the NanAsyncWorker
class.
#include <node.h>
#include <nan.h>
using v8::FunctionTemplate;
using v8::Handle;
using v8::Object;
using v8::String;
void InitAll(Handle<Object> exports) {
exports->Set(NanNew<String>("calculateSync"),
NanNew<FunctionTemplate>(CalculateSync)->GetFunction());
exports->Set(NanNew<String>("calculateAsync"),
NanNew<FunctionTemplate>(CalculateAsync)->GetFunction());
}
NODE_MODULE(addon, InitAll)
#include <node.h>
#include <nan.h>
NAN_METHOD(CalculateSync);
#include <node.h>
#include <nan.h>
#include "./sync.h"
using v8::Number;
NAN_METHOD(CalculateSync) {
NanScope();
int points = args[0]->Uint32Value();
double est = Estimate(points);
NanReturnValue(NanNew<Number>(est));
}
#include <node.h>
#include <nan.h>
NAN_METHOD(CalculateAsync);
#include <node.h>
#include <nan.h>
#include "./async.h"
using v8::Function;
using v8::Local;
using v8::Null;
using v8::Number;
using v8::Value;
class PiWorker : public NanAsyncWorker {
public:
PiWorker(NanCallback *callback, int points)
: NanAsyncWorker(callback), points(points) {}
~PiWorker() {}
void Execute () {
estimate = Estimate(points);
}
void HandleOKCallback () {
NanScope();
Local<Value> argv[] = {
NanNull()
, NanNew<Number>(estimate)
};
callback->Call(2, argv);
};
private:
int points;
double estimate;
};
NAN_METHOD(CalculateAsync) {
NanScope();
int points = args[0]->Uint32Value();
NanCallback *callback = new NanCallback(args[1].As<Function>());
NanAsyncQueueWorker(new PiWorker(callback, points));
NanReturnUndefined();
}
API
NAN_METHOD
NAN_GETTER
NAN_SETTER
NAN_PROPERTY_GETTER
NAN_PROPERTY_SETTER
NAN_PROPERTY_ENUMERATOR
NAN_PROPERTY_DELETER
NAN_PROPERTY_QUERY
NAN_INDEX_GETTER
NAN_INDEX_SETTER
NAN_INDEX_ENUMERATOR
NAN_INDEX_DELETER
NAN_INDEX_QUERY
NAN_GC_CALLBACK
NAN_WEAK_CALLBACK
NAN_DEPRECATED
NAN_INLINE
NanNew
NanUndefined
NanNull
NanTrue
NanFalse
NanReturnValue
NanReturnUndefined
NanReturnNull
NanReturnEmptyString
NanReturnThis
NanReturnHolder
NanScope
NanEscapableScope
NanEscapeScope
NanLocker
NanUnlocker
NanGetInternalFieldPointer
NanSetInternalFieldPointer
NanObjectWrapHandle
NanSymbol
NanGetPointerSafe
NanSetPointerSafe
NanRawString
NanCString
NanAsciiString
NanUtf8String
NanUcs2String
NanBooleanOptionValue
NanUInt32OptionValue
NanError
, NanTypeError
, NanRangeError
NanThrowError
, NanThrowTypeError
, NanThrowRangeError
, NanThrowError(Handle)
, NanThrowError(Handle, int)
NanNewBufferHandle(char *, size_t, FreeCallback, void *)
, NanNewBufferHandle(char *, uint32_t)
, NanNewBufferHandle(uint32_t)
NanBufferUse(char *, uint32_t)
NanNewContextHandle
NanGetCurrentContext
NanHasInstance
NanDisposePersistent
NanAssignPersistent
NanMakeWeakPersistent
NanSetTemplate
NanSetPrototypeTemplate
NanSetInstanceTemplate
NanMakeCallback
NanCompileScript
NanRunScript
NanAdjustExternalMemory
NanAddGCEpilogueCallback
NanAddGCPrologueCallback
NanRemoveGCEpilogueCallback
NanRemoveGCPrologueCallback
NanGetHeapStatistics
NanCallback
NanAsyncWorker
NanAsyncQueueWorker
NAN_METHOD(methodname)
Use NAN_METHOD
to define your V8 accessible methods:
class Foo : public node::ObjectWrap {
...
static NAN_METHOD(Bar);
static NAN_METHOD(Baz);
}
NAN_METHOD(Foo::Bar) {
...
}
NAN_METHOD(Foo::Baz) {
...
}
The reason for this macro is because of the method signature change in 0.11:
Handle<Value> name(const Arguments& args)
void name(const FunctionCallbackInfo<Value>& args)
The introduction of FunctionCallbackInfo
brings additional complications:
NAN_GETTER(methodname)
Use NAN_GETTER
to declare your V8 accessible getters. You get a Local<String>
property
and an appropriately typed args
object that can act like the args
argument to a NAN_METHOD
call.
You can use NanReturnNull()
, NanReturnEmptyString()
, NanReturnUndefined()
and NanReturnValue()
in a NAN_GETTER
.
NAN_SETTER(methodname)
Use NAN_SETTER
to declare your V8 accessible setters. Same as NAN_GETTER
but you also get a Local<Value>
value
object to work with.
NAN_PROPERTY_GETTER(cbname)
Use NAN_PROPERTY_GETTER
to declare your V8 accessible property getters. You get a Local<String>
property
and an appropriately typed args
object that can act similar to the args
argument to a NAN_METHOD
call.
You can use NanReturnNull()
, NanReturnEmptyString()
, NanReturnUndefined()
and NanReturnValue()
in a NAN_PROPERTY_GETTER
.
NAN_PROPERTY_SETTER(cbname)
Use NAN_PROPERTY_SETTER
to declare your V8 accessible property setters. Same as NAN_PROPERTY_GETTER
but you also get a Local<Value>
value
object to work with.
NAN_PROPERTY_ENUMERATOR(cbname)
Use NAN_PROPERTY_ENUMERATOR
to declare your V8 accessible property enumerators. You get an appropriately typed args
object like the args
argument to a NAN_PROPERTY_GETTER
call.
You can use NanReturnNull()
, NanReturnEmptyString()
, NanReturnUndefined()
and NanReturnValue()
in a NAN_PROPERTY_ENUMERATOR
.
NAN_PROPERTY_DELETER(cbname)
Use NAN_PROPERTY_DELETER
to declare your V8 accessible property deleters. Same as NAN_PROPERTY_GETTER
.
You can use NanReturnNull()
, NanReturnEmptyString()
, NanReturnUndefined()
and NanReturnValue()
in a NAN_PROPERTY_DELETER
.
NAN_PROPERTY_QUERY(cbname)
Use NAN_PROPERTY_QUERY
to declare your V8 accessible property queries. Same as NAN_PROPERTY_GETTER
.
You can use NanReturnNull()
, NanReturnEmptyString()
, NanReturnUndefined()
and NanReturnValue()
in a NAN_PROPERTY_QUERY
.
NAN_INDEX_GETTER(cbname)
Use NAN_INDEX_GETTER
to declare your V8 accessible index getters. You get a uint32_t
index
and an appropriately typed args
object that can act similar to the args
argument to a NAN_METHOD
call.
You can use NanReturnNull()
, NanReturnEmptyString()
, NanReturnUndefined()
and NanReturnValue()
in a NAN_INDEX_GETTER
.
NAN_INDEX_SETTER(cbname)
Use NAN_INDEX_SETTER
to declare your V8 accessible index setters. Same as NAN_INDEX_GETTER
but you also get a Local<Value>
value
object to work with.
NAN_INDEX_ENUMERATOR(cbname)
Use NAN_INDEX_ENUMERATOR
to declare your V8 accessible index enumerators. You get an appropriately typed args
object like the args
argument to a NAN_INDEX_GETTER
call.
You can use NanReturnNull()
, NanReturnEmptyString()
, NanReturnUndefined()
and NanReturnValue()
in a NAN_INDEX_ENUMERATOR
.
NAN_INDEX_DELETER(cbname)
Use NAN_INDEX_DELETER
to declare your V8 accessible index deleters. Same as NAN_INDEX_GETTER
.
You can use NanReturnNull()
, NanReturnEmptyString()
, NanReturnUndefined()
and NanReturnValue()
in a NAN_INDEX_DELETER
.
NAN_INDEX_QUERY(cbname)
Use NAN_INDEX_QUERY
to declare your V8 accessible index queries. Same as NAN_INDEX_GETTER
.
You can use NanReturnNull()
, NanReturnEmptyString()
, NanReturnUndefined()
and NanReturnValue()
in a NAN_INDEX_QUERY
.
NAN_GC_CALLBACK(cbname)
Use NAN_GC_CALLBACK
to declare your callbacks for NanAddGCEpilogueCallback
and NanAddGCPrologueCallback
. You get arguments GCType type
and GCCallbackFlags flags
.
static Persistent<Function> callback;
NAN_GC_CALLBACK(gcPrologueCallback) {
Local<Value> argv[] = {NanNew("prologue")};
NanMakeCallback(NanGetCurrentContext()->Global(), NanNew(callback), 1, argv);
}
NAN_METHOD(Hook) {
NanScope();
NanAssignPersistent(callback, args[0].As<Function>());
NanAddGCPrologueCallback(gcPrologueCallback);
NanReturnValue(args.Holder());
}
NAN_WEAK_CALLBACK(cbname)
Use NAN_WEAK_CALLBACK
to define your V8 WeakReference callbacks. There is an argument object const _NanWeakCallbackData<T, P> &data
allowing access to the weak object and the supplied parameter through its GetValue
and GetParameter
methods. You can even access the weak callback info object through the GetCallbackInfo()
method, but you probably should not. Revive()
keeps the weak object alive until the next GC round.
NAN_WEAK_CALLBACK(weakCallback) {
int *parameter = data.GetParameter();
NanMakeCallback(NanGetCurrentContext()->Global(), data.GetValue(), 0, NULL);
if ((*parameter)++ == 0) {
data.Revive();
} else {
delete parameter;
}
}
NAN_DEPRECATED
Declares a function as deprecated.
static NAN_DEPRECATED NAN_METHOD(foo) {
...
}
NAN_INLINE
Inlines a function.
NAN_INLINE int foo(int bar) {
...
}
Local<T> NanNew<T>( ... )
Use NanNew
to construct almost all v8 objects and make new local handles.
Note: Using NanNew with an std::string is possible, however, you should ensure
to use the overload version (NanNew(stdString)
) rather than the template
version (NanNew<v8::String>(stdString)
) as there is an unnecessary
performance penalty to using the template version because of the inability for
compilers to appropriately deduce to reference types on template specialization.
Local<String> s = NanNew<String>("value");
...
Persistent<Object> o;
...
Local<Object> lo = NanNew(o);
Local<Primitive> NanUndefined()
Use instead of Undefined()
Local<Primitive> NanNull()
Use instead of Null()
Local<Boolean> NanTrue()
Use instead of True()
Local<Boolean> NanFalse()
Use instead of False()
NanReturnValue(Handle<Value>)
Use NanReturnValue
when you want to return a value from your V8 accessible method:
NAN_METHOD(Foo::Bar) {
...
NanReturnValue(NanNew<String>("FooBar!"));
}
No return
statement required.
NanReturnUndefined()
Use NanReturnUndefined
when you don't want to return anything from your V8 accessible method:
NAN_METHOD(Foo::Baz) {
...
NanReturnUndefined();
}
NanReturnNull()
Use NanReturnNull
when you want to return Null
from your V8 accessible method:
NAN_METHOD(Foo::Baz) {
...
NanReturnNull();
}
NanReturnEmptyString()
Use NanReturnEmptyString
when you want to return an empty String
from your V8 accessible method:
NAN_METHOD(Foo::Baz) {
...
NanReturnEmptyString();
}
NanReturnThis()
Use NanReturnThis
when you want to return This
from your V8 accessible method:
NAN_METHOD(Foo::Baz) {
...
NanReturnThis();
}
NanReturnHolder()
Use NanReturnHolder
when you want to return Holder
from your V8 accessible method:
NAN_METHOD(Foo::Baz) {
...
NanReturnHolder();
}
NanScope()
The introduction of isolate
references for many V8 calls in Node 0.11 makes NanScope()
necessary, use it in place of HandleScope scope
when you do not wish to return handles (Handle
or Local
) to the surrounding scope (or in functions directly exposed to V8, as they do not return values in the normal sense):
NAN_METHOD(Foo::Bar) {
NanScope();
NanReturnValue(NanNew<String>("FooBar!"));
}
This method is not directly exposed to V8, nor does it return a handle, so it uses an unescapable scope:
bool Foo::Bar() {
NanScope();
Local<Boolean> val = NanFalse();
...
return val->Value();
}
NanEscapableScope()
The separation of handle scopes into escapable and inescapable scopes makes NanEscapableScope()
necessary, use it in place of HandleScope scope
when you later wish to return a handle (Handle
or Local
) from the scope, this is for internal functions not directly exposed to V8:
Handle<String> Foo::Bar() {
NanEscapableScope();
return NanEscapeScope(NanNew<String>("FooBar!"));
}
Local<T> NanEscapeScope(Handle<T> value);
Use together with NanEscapableScope
to escape the scope. Corresponds to HandleScope::Close
or EscapableHandleScope::Escape
.
NanLocker()
The introduction of isolate
references for many V8 calls in Node 0.11 makes NanLocker()
necessary, use it in place of Locker locker
:
NAN_METHOD(Foo::Bar) {
NanLocker();
...
NanUnlocker();
}
NanUnlocker()
The introduction of isolate
references for many V8 calls in Node 0.11 makes NanUnlocker()
necessary, use it in place of Unlocker unlocker
:
NAN_METHOD(Foo::Bar) {
NanLocker();
...
NanUnlocker();
}
void * NanGetInternalFieldPointer(Handle<Object>, int)
Gets a pointer to the internal field with at index
from a V8 Object
handle.
Local<Object> obj;
...
NanGetInternalFieldPointer(obj, 0);
void NanSetInternalFieldPointer(Handle<Object>, int, void *)
Sets the value of the internal field at index
on a V8 Object
handle.
static Persistent<Function> dataWrapperCtor;
...
Local<Object> wrapper = NanNew(dataWrapperCtor)->NewInstance();
NanSetInternalFieldPointer(wrapper, 0, this);
Local<Object> NanObjectWrapHandle(Object)
When you want to fetch the V8 object handle from a native object you've wrapped with Node's ObjectWrap
, you should use NanObjectWrapHandle
:
NanObjectWrapHandle(iterator)->Get(NanNew<String>("end"))
Local<String> NanSymbol(const char *)
Deprecated. Use NanNew<String>
instead.
Use to create string symbol objects (i.e. v8::String::NewSymbol(x)
), for getting and setting object properties, or names of objects.
bool foo = false;
if (obj->Has(NanNew<String>("foo")))
foo = optionsObj->Get(NanNew<String>("foo"))->BooleanValue()
Type NanGetPointerSafe(Type *[, Type])
A helper for getting values from optional pointers. If the pointer is NULL
, the function returns the optional default value, which defaults to 0
. Otherwise, the function returns the value the pointer points to.
char *plugh(uint32_t *optional) {
char res[] = "xyzzy";
uint32_t param = NanGetPointerSafe<uint32_t>(optional, 0x1337);
switch (param) {
...
}
NanSetPointerSafe<uint32_t>(optional, 0xDEADBEEF);
}
bool NanSetPointerSafe(Type *, Type)
A helper for setting optional argument pointers. If the pointer is NULL
, the function simply returns false
. Otherwise, the value is assigned to the variable the pointer points to.
const char *plugh(size_t *outputsize) {
char res[] = "xyzzy";
if !(NanSetPointerSafe<size_t>(outputsize, strlen(res) + 1)) {
...
}
...
}
void* NanRawString(Handle<Value>, enum Nan::Encoding, size_t *, void *, size_t, int)
Deprecated. Use something else.
When you want to convert a V8 String
to a char*
buffer, use NanRawString
. You have to supply an encoding as well as a pointer to a variable that will be assigned the number of bytes in the returned string. It is also possible to supply a buffer and its length to the function in order not to have a new buffer allocated. The final argument allows setting String::WriteOptions
.
Just remember that you'll end up with an object that you'll need to delete[]
at some point unless you supply your own buffer:
size_t count;
void* decoded = NanRawString(args[1], Nan::BASE64, &count, NULL, 0, String::HINT_MANY_WRITES_EXPECTED);
...
delete[] reinterpret_cast<char*>(decoded);
char* NanCString(Handle<Value>, size_t *[, char *, size_t, int])
Deprecated. Use String::Utf8Value
or NanUtf8String
instead.
When you want to convert a V8 String
to a null-terminated C char*
use NanCString
. The resulting char*
will be UTF-8-encoded, and you need to supply a pointer to a variable that will be assigned the number of bytes in the returned string. It is also possible to supply a buffer and its length to the function in order not to have a new buffer allocated. The final argument allows optionally setting String::WriteOptions
, which default to v8::String::NO_OPTIONS
.
Just remember that you'll end up with an object that you'll need to delete[]
at some point unless you supply your own buffer:
size_t count;
char* name = NanCString(args[0], &count);
...
delete[] name;
NanAsciiString
Contrary to the name, this is not actually an ASCII string, it is a one-byte string with no particular encoding. Do not use unless you actually need this incorrect legacy behavior. Consider fixing your broken code instead. If you actually have a proper ASCII-string, use UTF-8, which is a proper superset of ASCII.
Convert a String
to zero-terminated, sort-of Ascii-encoded char *
. The underlying buffer is freed when the owner object goes out of scope, so make a copy or heap allocation if you need it to stick around.
NAN_METHOD(foo) {
NanScope();
NanReturnValue(NanNew(*NanAsciiString(arg[0])));
}
####WRONG:
the buffer str
points to has been freed when baz
was destroyed:
static char *str;
NAN_METHOD(bar) {
NanScope();
NanAsciiString baz(arg[0]);
str = *baz;
NanReturnUndefined();
}
...
printf(str);
####RIGHT:
static NanAsciiString *str;
NAN_METHOD(bar) {
NanScope();
str = new NanAsciiString(arg[0]);
NanReturnUndefined();
}
...
printf(**str);
NanUtf8String
Equivalent to String::Utf8Value
, it only exists for the sake of completeness.
Convert a String
to zero-terminated, Utf8-encoded char *
. The underlying buffer is freed when the owner object goes out of scope, so make a copy or heap allocation if you need it to stick around.
NAN_METHOD(foo) {
NanScope();
NanReturnValue(NanNew(*NanUtf8String(arg[0])));
}
####WRONG:
the buffer str
points to has been freed when baz
was destroyed:
static char *str;
NAN_METHOD(bar) {
NanScope();
NanUtf8String baz(arg[0]);
str = *baz;
NanReturnUndefined();
}
...
printf(str);
####RIGHT:
static NanUtf8String *str;
NAN_METHOD(bar) {
NanScope();
str = new NanUtf8String(arg[0]);
NanReturnUndefined();
}
...
printf(**str);
NanUcs2String
Equivalent to String::Value
, it only exists for the sake of completeness.
Convert a String
to zero-terminated, Ucs2-encoded uint16_t *
. The underlying buffer is freed when the owner object goes out of scope, so make a copy or heap allocation if you need it to stick around.
NAN_METHOD(foo) {
NanScope();
NanReturnValue(NanNew(*NanUcs2String(arg[0])));
}
####WRONG:
the buffer str
points to has been freed when baz
was destroyed:
static char *str;
NAN_METHOD(bar) {
NanScope();
NanUcs2String baz(arg[0]);
str = *baz;
NanReturnUndefined();
}
...
printf(str);
####RIGHT:
static NanUcs2String *str;
NAN_METHOD(bar) {
NanScope();
str = new NanUcs2String(arg[0]);
NanReturnUndefined();
}
...
printf(**str);
bool NanBooleanOptionValue(Handle<Value>, Handle<String>[, bool])
When you have an "options" object that you need to fetch properties from, boolean options can be fetched with this pair. They check first if the object exists (IsEmpty
), then if the object has the given property (Has
) then they get and convert/coerce the property to a bool
.
The optional last parameter is the default value, which is false
if left off:
bool foo = NanBooleanOptionValue(optionsObj, NanNew<String>("foo"));
bool bar = NanBooleanOptionValueDefTrue(optionsObj, NanNew<String>("bar"), true);
uint32_t NanUInt32OptionValue(Handle<Value>, Handle<String>, uint32_t)
Similar to NanBooleanOptionValue
, use NanUInt32OptionValue
to fetch an integer option from your options object. Can be any kind of JavaScript Number
and it will be coerced to an unsigned 32-bit integer.
Requires all 3 arguments as a default is not optional:
uint32_t count = NanUInt32OptionValue(optionsObj, NanNew<String>("count"), 1024);
NanError(message), NanTypeError(message), NanRangeError(message)
For making Error
, TypeError
and RangeError
objects.
Local<Value> res = NanError("you must supply a callback argument");
NanThrowError(message), NanThrowTypeError(message), NanThrowRangeError(message), NanThrowError(Local<Value>), NanThrowError(Local<Value>, int)
For throwing Error
, TypeError
and RangeError
objects.
NanThrowError("you must supply a callback argument");
Can also handle any custom object you may want to throw. If used with the error code argument, it will add the supplied error code to the error object as a property called code
.
Local<Object> NanNewBufferHandle(char *, uint32_t), Local<Object> NanNewBufferHandle(uint32_t)
The Buffer
API has changed a little in Node 0.11, this helper provides consistent access to Buffer
creation:
NanNewBufferHandle((char*)value.data(), value.size());
Can also be used to initialize a Buffer
with just a size
argument.
Can also be supplied with a NanFreeCallback
and a hint for the garbage collector.
Local<Object> NanBufferUse(char*, uint32_t)
Buffer::New(char*, uint32_t)
prior to 0.11 would make a copy of the data.
While it was possible to get around this, it required a shim by passing a
callback. So the new API Buffer::Use(char*, uint32_t)
was introduced to remove
needing to use this shim.
NanBufferUse
uses the char*
passed as the backing data, and will free the
memory automatically when the weak callback is called. Keep this in mind, as
careless use can lead to "double free or corruption" and other cryptic failures.
bool NanHasInstance(Persistent<FunctionTemplate>&, Handle<Value>)
Can be used to check the type of an object to determine it is of a particular class you have already defined and have a Persistent<FunctionTemplate>
handle for.
Local<Context> NanNewContextHandle([ExtensionConfiguration*, Handle<ObjectTemplate>, Handle<Value>])
Creates a new Local<Context>
handle.
Local<FunctionTemplate> ftmpl = NanNew<FunctionTemplate>();
Local<ObjectTemplate> otmpl = ftmpl->InstanceTemplate();
Local<Context> ctx = NanNewContextHandle(NULL, otmpl);
Local<Context> NanGetCurrentContext()
Gets the current context.
Local<Context> ctx = NanGetCurrentContext();
void NanDisposePersistent(Persistent<T> &)
Use NanDisposePersistent
to dispose a Persistent
handle.
NanDisposePersistent(persistentHandle);
NanAssignPersistent(handle, object)
Use NanAssignPersistent
to assign a non-Persistent
handle to a Persistent
one. You can no longer just declare a Persistent
handle and assign directly to it later, you have to Reset
it in Node 0.11, so this makes it easier.
In general it is now better to place anything you want to protect from V8's garbage collector as properties of a generic Object
and then assign that to a Persistent
. This works in older versions of Node also if you use NanAssignPersistent
:
Persistent<Object> persistentHandle;
...
Local<Object> obj = NanNew<Object>();
obj->Set(NanNew<String>("key"), keyHandle);
NanAssignPersistent(persistentHandle, obj)
_NanWeakCallbackInfo<T, P>* NanMakeWeakPersistent(Handle<T>, P*, _NanWeakCallbackInfo<T, P>::Callback)
Creates a weak persistent handle with the supplied parameter and NAN_WEAK_CALLBACK
.
NAN_WEAK_CALLBACK(weakCallback) {
...
}
Local<Function> func;
...
int *parameter = new int(0);
NanMakeWeakPersistent(func, parameter, &weakCallback);
NanSetTemplate(templ, name, value [, attributes])
Use to add properties on object and function templates.
NanSetPrototypeTemplate(templ, name, value [, attributes])
Use to add prototype properties on function templates.
NanSetInstanceTemplate(templ, name, value [, attributes])
Use to add instance properties on function templates.
NanMakeCallback(target, func, argc, argv)
Use instead of node::MakeCallback
to call javascript functions. This (or NanCallback
) is the only proper way of calling functions. You must never, ever directly use Function::Call
, it will lead to run-time failures.
NanCompileScript(Handle s [, const ScriptOrigin& origin])
Use to create new scripts bound to the current context.
NanRunScript(script)
Use to run both bound and unbound scripts.
NanAdjustExternalMemory(int change_in_bytes)
Simply does AdjustAmountOfExternalAllocatedMemory
, note that the argument and returned value have type int
.
NanAddGCEpilogueCallback(GCEpilogueCallback callback, GCType gc_type_filter=kGCTypeAll)
Simply does AddGCEpilogueCallback
NanAddGCPrologueCallback(GCPrologueCallback callback, GCType gc_type_filter=kGCTypeAll)
Simply does AddGCPrologueCallback
NanRemoveGCEpilogueCallback(GCEpilogueCallback callback)
Simply does RemoveGCEpilogueCallback
NanRemoveGCPrologueCallback(GCPrologueCallback callback)
Simply does RemoveGCPrologueCallback
NanGetHeapStatistics(HeapStatistics *heap_statistics)
Simply does GetHeapStatistics
NanCallback
Because of the difficulties imposed by the changes to Persistent
handles in V8 in Node 0.11, creating Persistent
versions of your Handle<Function>
is annoyingly tricky. NanCallback
makes it easier by taking your handle, making it persistent until the NanCallback
is deleted and even providing a handy Call()
method to fetch and execute the callback Function
.
Local<Function> callbackHandle = args[0].As<Function>();
NanCallback *callback = new NanCallback(callbackHandle);
delete callback;
You can execute the callback like so:
callback->Call(0, NULL);
Handle<Value> argv[] = {
NanError(NanNew<String>("fail!"))
};
callback->Call(1, argv);
Handle<Value> argv[] = {
NanNull(),
NanNew<String>("w00t!")
};
callback->Call(2, argv);
NanCallback
also has a Local<Function> GetFunction()
method that you can use
to fetch a local handle to the underlying callback function, as well as a
void SetFunction(Handle<Function>)
for setting the callback on the
NanCallback
. You can check if a NanCallback
is empty with the bool IsEmpty()
method. Additionally a generic constructor is available for using
NanCallback
without performing heap allocations.
NanAsyncWorker
NanAsyncWorker
is an abstract class that you can subclass to have much of the annoying async queuing and handling taken care of for you. It can even store arbitrary V8 objects for you and have them persist while the async work is in progress.
See a rough outline of the implementation:
class NanAsyncWorker {
public:
NanAsyncWorker (NanCallback *callback);
virtual ~NanAsyncWorker ();
virtual void WorkComplete ();
virtual void Execute ();
void SaveToPersistent(const char *key, Local<Object> &obj);
Local<Object> GetFromPersistent(const char *key);
const char *ErrorMessage();
void SetErrorMessage(const char *msg);
protected:
virtual void HandleOKCallback ();
virtual void HandleErrorCallback ();
};
NanAsyncQueueWorker(NanAsyncWorker *)
NanAsyncQueueWorker
will run a NanAsyncWorker
asynchronously via libuv. Both the execute and after_work steps are taken care of for you—most of the logic for this is embedded in NanAsyncWorker
.
Contributors
NAN is only possible due to the excellent work of the following contributors:
Licence & copyright
Copyright (c) 2014 NAN contributors (listed above).
Native Abstractions for Node.js is licensed under an MIT license. All rights not explicitly granted in the MIT license are reserved. See the included LICENSE file for more details.