trough
trough /trôf/ — a channel used to convey a liquid.
trough is like ware with less
sugar, and middleware functions can change the input of the next.
Install
npm:
npm install troughUse
var fs = require('fs')
var path = require('path')
var trough = require('trough')
var pipeline = trough()
.use(function(fileName) {
console.log('Checking… ' + fileName)
})
.use(function(fileName) {
return path.join(process.cwd(), fileName)
})
.use(function(filePath, next) {
fs.stat(filePath, function(err, stats) {
next(err, {filePath, stats})
})
})
.use(function(ctx, next) {
if (ctx.stats.isFile()) {
fs.readFile(ctx.filePath, next)
} else {
next(new Error('Expected file'))
}
})
pipeline.run('readme.md', console.log)
pipeline.run('node_modules', console.log)Yields:
Checking… readme.md
Checking… node_modules
Error: Expected file
at ~/example.js:21:12
at wrapped (~/node_modules/trough/index.js:93:19)
at next (~/node_modules/trough/index.js:56:24)
at done (~/node_modules/trough/index.js:124:12)
at ~/node_modules/example.js:14:7
at FSReqWrap.oncomplete (fs.js:153:5)
null <Buffer 23 20 74 72 6f 75 67 68 20 5b 21 5b 42 75 69 6c 64 20 53 74 61 74 75 73 5d 5b 74 72 61 76 69 73 2d 62 61 64 67 65 5d 5d 5b 74 72 61 76 69 73 5d 20 5b ... >API
trough()
Create a new Trough.
trough.wrap(middleware, callback[, …input])
Call middleware with all input. If
middleware accepts more arguments than given in input, and
extra done function is passed in after the input when
calling it. It must be called.
The first value in input is called the main input value.
All other input values are called the rest input values. The values
given to callback are the input values, merged with every
non-nully output value.
- If
middlewarethrows an error, returns a promise that is rejected, or calls the givendonefunction with an error,callbackis invoked with that error - If
middlewarereturns a value or returns a promise that is resolved, that value is the main output value - If
middlewarecallsdone, all non-nully values except for the first one (the error) overwrite the output values
Trough
A pipeline.
Trough#run([input…, ]done)
Run the pipeline (all use()d
middleware). Invokes done on completion with
either an error or the output of the last middleware.
Note! as the length of input defines whether async functions get a
nextfunction, it’s recommended to keepinputat one value normally.
function done(err?, [output…])
The final handler passed to run(), invoked with an
error if a middleware function
rejected, passed, or threw one, or the output of the last middleware
function.
Trough#use(fn)
Add fn, a middleware
function, to the pipeline.
function fn([input…, ][next])
A middleware function invoked with the output of its predecessor.
Synchronous
If fn returns or throws an error, the pipeline fails and
done is invoked with that error.
If fn returns a value (neither null nor
undefined), the first input of the next
function is set to that value (all other input is passed
through).
The following example shows how returning an error stops the pipeline:
var trough = require('trough')
trough()
.use(function(val) {
return new Error('Got: ' + val)
})
.run('some value', console.log)Yields:
Error: Got: some value
at ~/example.js:5:12
…The following example shows how throwing an error stops the pipeline:
var trough = require('trough')
trough()
.use(function(val) {
throw new Error('Got: ' + val)
})
.run('more value', console.log)Yields:
Error: Got: more value
at ~/example.js:5:11
…The following example shows how the first output can be modified:
var trough = require('trough')
trough()
.use(function(val) {
return 'even ' + val
})
.run('more value', 'untouched', console.log)Yields:
null 'even more value' 'untouched'Promise
If fn returns a promise, and that promise rejects, the
pipeline fails and done is invoked with the rejected
value.
If fn returns a promise, and that promise resolves with
a value (neither null nor undefined), the
first input of the next function is set to that value (all
other input is passed through).
The following example shows how rejecting a promise stops the pipeline:
var trough = require('trough')
trough()
.use(function(val) {
return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
reject('Got: ' + val)
})
})
.run('val', console.log)Yields:
Got: valThe following example shows how the input isn’t touched by resolving
to null.
var trough = require('trough')
trough()
.use(function() {
return new Promise(function(resolve) {
setTimeout(function() {
resolve(null)
}, 100)
})
})
.run('Input', console.log)Yields:
null 'Input'Asynchronous
If fn accepts one more argument than the given
input, a next function is given (after the
input). next must be called, but doesn’t have to be called
async.
If next is given a value (neither null nor
undefined) as its first argument, the pipeline fails and
done is invoked with that value.
If next is given no value (either null or
undefined) as the first argument, all following non-nully
values change the input of the following function, and all nully values
default to the input.
The following example shows how passing a first argument stops the pipeline:
var trough = require('trough')
trough()
.use(function(val, next) {
next(new Error('Got: ' + val))
})
.run('val', console.log)Yields:
Error: Got: val
at ~/example.js:5:10The following example shows how more values than the input are passed.
var trough = require('trough')
trough()
.use(function(val, next) {
setTimeout(function() {
next(null, null, 'values')
}, 100)
})
.run('some', console.log)Yields:
null 'some' 'values'