import { Writable } from "https://dotland.deno.dev/std@0.177.0/node/stream.ts";
The writable.write()
method writes some data to the stream, and calls the
supplied callback
once the data has been fully handled. If an error
occurs, the callback
will be called with the error as its
first argument. The callback
is called asynchronously and before 'error'
is
emitted.
The return value is true
if the internal buffer is less than thehighWaterMark
configured when the stream was created after admitting chunk
.
If false
is returned, further attempts to write data to the stream should
stop until the 'drain'
event is emitted.
While a stream is not draining, calls to write()
will buffer chunk
, and
return false. Once all currently buffered chunks are drained (accepted for
delivery by the operating system), the 'drain'
event will be emitted.
It is recommended that once write()
returns false, no more chunks be written
until the 'drain'
event is emitted. While calling write()
on a stream that
is not draining is allowed, Node.js will buffer all written chunks until
maximum memory usage occurs, at which point it will abort unconditionally.
Even before it aborts, high memory usage will cause poor garbage collector
performance and high RSS (which is not typically released back to the system,
even after the memory is no longer required). Since TCP sockets may never
drain if the remote peer does not read the data, writing a socket that is
not draining may lead to a remotely exploitable vulnerability.
Writing data while the stream is not draining is particularly
problematic for a Transform
, because the Transform
streams are paused
by default until they are piped or a 'data'
or 'readable'
event handler
is added.
If the data to be written can be generated or fetched on demand, it is
recommended to encapsulate the logic into a Readable
and use {@link pipe}. However, if calling write()
is preferred, it is
possible to respect backpressure and avoid memory issues using the 'drain'
event:
function write(data, cb) {
if (!stream.write(data)) {
stream.once('drain', cb);
} else {
process.nextTick(cb);
}
}
// Wait for cb to be called before doing any other write.
write('hello', () => {
console.log('Write completed, do more writes now.');
});
A Writable
stream in object mode will always ignore the encoding
argument.