stream-compare
Compare the output of two Readable streams using a caller-provided
comparison/assertion function.
Introductory Example
var assert = require('assert');
var fs = require('fs');
var streamCompare = require('stream-compare');
var stream1 = fs.createReadStream(file);
var stream2 = fs.createReadStream(file);
streamCompare(stream1, stream2, assert.deepStrictEqual).catch(function(err) {
console.log(err);
});
Features
This package is similar to the
stream-equal package with several
additional features:
- Support for caller-defined comparisons, which can return errors or values
not limited to equality.
- Support for both incremental and one-shot comparisons.
- Support for caller-defined data reduction to avoid storing the entire stream
history in memory before comparison.
- Makes no assumptions about the type of values read beyond whether they
should be treated as objects (
objectMode
) or a stream of Buffers or
strings. - Does not do any coercion of the values read.
- Support for comparing (caller-configurable) events emitted by the streams.
- Support reading in flowing or non-flowing mode.
- Support for optionally aborting comparison on stream errors.
- Support for catching multiple end/error events (within one tick by default,
or an optional configurable delay).
- Utility function for creating an incremental comparison and data-reduction
function from a standard data comparison function (e.g.
assert.deepEqual
).
Installation
This package can be installed
using npm, either globally or locally, by running:
npm install stream-compare
Recipes
Compare Incrementally
In order to avoid unnecessary memory use for streams with large amounts of
data and avoid unnecessary delays for streams which produce data slowly, the
output can be compared incrementally and inconclusive output can be removed.
This is done by the incremental function. To make this easier, the utility
function makeIncremental
creates such a function from a data comparison
function and/or an events comparison function:
var options = {
incremental: streamCompare.makeIncremental(
assert.deepStrictEqual,
assert.deepStrictEqual
)
};
streamCompare(stream1, stream2, options).catch(function(err) {
console.log(err);
});
Compare Data Values Separately
Sometimes it may be desirable to compare the values returned by .read()
or
'data'
events separately, rather than concatenated together. This can be
done by setting objectMode: true
(even if the values aren't Object
s):
var options = {
compare: assert.deepStrictEqual,
objectMode: true
};
streamCompare(stream1, stream2, options).catch(function(err) {
console.log(err);
});
Compare Data and Event Interleaving
In order to compare the ordering of 'data'
events with other events, add
'data'
to the events
option and set readPolicy
to 'flowing'
or
'none'
. Any 'data'
events and their arguments will appear with any other
matching events in the events
property of the state object.
var options = {
compare: assert.deepStrictEqual,
events: ['close', 'data', 'end', 'error'],
readPolicy: 'none'
};
streamCompare(stream1, stream2, options).catch(function(err) {
console.log(err);
});
Control comparison checkpoints
The returned Promise includes additional methods for controlling the
comparison. A non-incremental compare can be run before both streams end
using .checkpoint()
. Additionally, the comparison can be concluded before
both streams end using .end()
. The full details are available in the API
Documentation.
var PassThrough = require('stream').PassThrough;
var stream1 = new PassThrough();
var stream2 = new PassThrough();
var comparison = streamCompare(stream1, stream2, assert.deepStrictEqual);
comparison.then(
function() { console.log('streams are equal'); },
function(err) { console.log('streams differ: ' + err); }
);
stream1.write('Hello');
stream2.write('Hello');
process.nextTick(function() {
comparison.checkpoint();
stream1.write(' world!');
stream2.write(' world!');
process.nextTick(function() {
comparison.end();
});
});
More examples can be found in the test
specifications.
API Docs
For the details of using this module as a library, see the API
Documentation.
Contributing
Contributions are appreciated. Contributors agree to abide by the Contributor
Covenant Code of
Conduct.
If this is your first time contributing to a Free and Open Source Software
project, consider reading How to Contribute to Open
Source
in the Open Source Guides.
If the desired change is large, complex, backwards-incompatible, can have
significantly differing implementations, or may not be in scope for this
project, opening an issue before writing the code can avoid frustration and
save a lot of time and effort.
License
This project is available under the terms of the MIT License.
See the summary at TLDRLegal.
The template upon which
this project is based is available under the terms of
CC0 1.0 Universal.