1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://github.com/actions/setup-python.git synced 2024-11-23 00:49:39 +00:00
setup-python/node_modules/pump
Danny McCormick 39c08a0eaa Initial pass
2019-06-26 21:12:00 -04:00
..
.travis.yml Initial pass 2019-06-26 21:12:00 -04:00
index.js Initial pass 2019-06-26 21:12:00 -04:00
LICENSE Initial pass 2019-06-26 21:12:00 -04:00
package.json Initial pass 2019-06-26 21:12:00 -04:00
README.md Initial pass 2019-06-26 21:12:00 -04:00
test-browser.js Initial pass 2019-06-26 21:12:00 -04:00
test-node.js Initial pass 2019-06-26 21:12:00 -04:00

pump

pump is a small node module that pipes streams together and destroys all of them if one of them closes.

npm install pump

build status

What problem does it solve?

When using standard source.pipe(dest) source will not be destroyed if dest emits close or an error. You are also not able to provide a callback to tell when then pipe has finished.

pump does these two things for you

Usage

Simply pass the streams you want to pipe together to pump and add an optional callback

var pump = require('pump')
var fs = require('fs')

var source = fs.createReadStream('/dev/random')
var dest = fs.createWriteStream('/dev/null')

pump(source, dest, function(err) {
  console.log('pipe finished', err)
})

setTimeout(function() {
  dest.destroy() // when dest is closed pump will destroy source
}, 1000)

You can use pump to pipe more than two streams together as well

var transform = someTransformStream()

pump(source, transform, anotherTransform, dest, function(err) {
  console.log('pipe finished', err)
})

If source, transform, anotherTransform or dest closes all of them will be destroyed.

Similarly to stream.pipe(), pump() returns the last stream passed in, so you can do:

return pump(s1, s2) // returns s2

If you want to return a stream that combines both s1 and s2 to a single stream use pumpify instead.

License

MIT

pump is part of the mississippi stream utility collection which includes more useful stream modules similar to this one.