Transform stream factory to unmarshal TCP transmitted data.
$ npm install flow-tcp-unmarshal
For use in the browser, use browserify.
To create a stream factory,
var flowFactory = require( 'flow-tcp-unmarshal' );
// Create a new factory:
var flowStream = flowFactory();
The factory has the following methods...
This method is a setter/getter. If no delimiter
is provided, returns the delimiter
used when delineating streamed data. To set the data delimiter
,
// String:
flow.delimiter( ' | ' );
// Regular expression:
flow.delimiter( /\r?\n/ );
The default delimiter
is a line feed: /\r?\n/
.
This method is a setter/getter. If no format
is provided, returns the unmarshal format
. To set the format
,
flow.unmarshal( 'number' );
Available formats include: json
, number
, string
, and boolean
. The default unmarshal format is json
.
To create a new stream,
var stream = flowStream.stream();
When used as setters, all setter/getter methods are chainable. For example,
var flowFactory = require( 'flow-tcp-unmarshal' );
var stream = flowFactory()
.delimiter( ' | ' )
.unmarshal( 'number' )
.stream();
var eventStream = require( 'event-stream' ),
streamBuffers = require( 'stream-buffers' ),
flowFactory = require( 'flow-tcp-unmarshal' );
// Create a readable buffer stream:
var source = new streamBuffers.ReadableStreamBuffer({
'frequency': 0 // ms; pipe data immediately
});
// Create a stream to unmarshal data:
var unmarshal = flowFactory()
.delimiter( ' | ' )
.unmarshal( 'number' )
.stream();
// Create the pipeline:
source
.pipe( unmarshal )
.pipe( eventStream.map( function( d, clbk ){
clbk( null, d.toString()+'\n' );
}))
.pipe( process.stdout );
// Write some data...
var data;
for ( var i = 0; i < 20; i++ ) {
data = Math.random().toString();
if ( i < 20-1 ) {
data += ' | ';
}
source.put( data, 'utf8' );
}
To run the example code from the top-level application directory,
$ node ./examples/index.js
Unit tests use the Mocha test framework with Chai assertions. To run the tests, execute the following command in the top-level application directory:
$ make test
All new feature development should have corresponding unit tests to validate correct functionality.
This repository uses Istanbul as its code coverage tool. To generate a test coverage report, execute the following command in the top-level application directory:
$ make test-cov
Istanbul creates a ./reports/coverage
directory. To access an HTML version of the report,
$ open reports/coverage/lcov-report/index.html
Copyright © 2014. Athan Reines.