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| index.js | 5 years ago | |
| license | 5 years ago | |
| package.json | 5 years ago | |
| readme.md | 5 years ago | |
| rxjs-all.js | 5 years ago | |
| rxjs.js | 5 years ago | |
| zen.js | 5 years ago | |
Convert Node Streams into ECMAScript-Observables
Observables are rapidly gaining popularity. They have much in common with Streams, in that they both represent data that arrives over time. Most Observable implementations provide expressive methods for filtering and mutating incoming data. Methods like .map(), .filter(), and .forEach behave very similarly to their Array counterparts, so using Observables can be very intuitive.
$ npm install --save stream-to-observable
# You also need to install an Observable implementation (pick one):
$ npm install --save zen-observable rxjs
const fs = require('fs');
const split = require('split');
// You provide the Observable implmentation
const Observable = require('zen-observable')
const streamToObservable = require('stream-to-observable')(Observable);
const readStream = fs
.createReadStream('./hello-world.txt', {encoding: 'utf8'})
.pipe(split()); // chunks a stream into individual lines
streamToObservable(readStream)
.filter(chunk => /hello/i.test(chunk))
.map(chunk => chunk.toUpperCase())
.forEach(chunk => {
console.log(chunk); // only the lines containing "hello" - and they will be capitalized
});
There are convenience imports for rxjs observables and zen-observables:
const streamToObservable = require('stream-to-observable/zen'); // zen-observables
// or
const streamToObservable = require('stream-to-observable/rxjs-all'); // full rxjs implementation
// or
const streamToObservable = require('stream-to-observable/rxjs'); // minimal rxjs implementation
// you can patch the minimal rxjs.
require('rxjs/add/operator/map');
None of the above implementations are included as dependencies of this package, so you still need to install them yourself using npm install. If using the minimal rxjs import, be sure to see the documentation regarding patching it with additional convenience methods.
Type: ReadableStream
Note:
stream can technically be any EventEmitter instance. By default the stream-to-observable listens to the standard Stream events (data, error, and end), but those are configurable via the options parameter. If you are using this with a standard Stream, you likely won't need the options parameter.
Type: Promies
If provided, the Observable will not "complete" until await is resolved. If await is rejected, the Observable will immediately emit an error event and disconnect from the stream. This is mostly useful when attaching to the stdin or stdout streams of a child_process. Those streams usually do not emit error events, even if the underlying process exits with an error. This provides a means to reject the Observable if the child process exits with an unexpected error code.
Type: String or false
Default: "end"
If you are using an EventEmitter or non-standard Stream, you can change which event signals that the Observable should be completed.
Setting this to false will avoid listening for any end events.
Setting this to false and providing an await Promise will cause the Observable to resolve immediately with the await Promise (the Observable will remove all it's data event listeners from the stream once the Promise is resolved).
Type: String or false
Default: "error"
If you are using an EventEmitter or non-standard Stream, you can change which event signals that the Observable should be closed with an error.
Setting this to false will avoid listening for any error events.
Type: String
Default: "data"
If you are using an EventEmitter or non-standard Stream, you can change which event causes data to be emitted to the Observable.
rxjs observables - Observables Implementationzen-observables - Observables Implementationdata events on the stream will be emitted as events in the Observable. Since most native streams emit chunks of binary data, you will likely want to use a TransformStream to convert those chunks of binary data into an object stream. split is just one popular TransformStream that splits streams into individual lines of text.
It is important Note that using this module disables back-pressure controls on the stream. As such it should not be used where back-pressure throttling is required (i.e. high volume web servers). It still has value for larger projects, as it can make unit testing streams much cleaner.
MIT © James Talmage