An automatically resizing storage size buffer type for Node.js that is based on Node.js builtin Buffer
.
You can install this library by npm with the following command:
npm install dynamic-buffer
You can also install by yarn or other npm alternative package managers:
yarn add dynamic-buffer
- Imports
DynamicBuffer
fromdynamic-buffer
package:
import { DynamicBuffer } from 'dynamic-buffer';
- Creates
DynamicBuffer
instance with default initial size or the specific size:
const buffer = new DynamicBuffer();
- Appends data into buffer:
buffer.append('Hello ');
buffer.append('world!');
- Exports data to string or builtin buffer object without unused bytes:
console.log(buffer.length);
// 12
const buf = buffer.toBuffer();
console.log(buf.toString());
// Hello world!
const str = buffer.toString();
console.log(str);
// Hello world!
You can write a string into a buffer by append
method, it'll add the string to the end of the buffer:
buf.append('Hello');
buf.append(' ');
buf.append('world');
console.log(buf.toString());
// Hello world
And you can also set the string length to write. Like the second line of the following example, it'll write 'Script!'
into buffer and without the last two '!'
symbols:
buf.append('Java');
buf.append('Script!!!', 7);
console.log(buf.toString());
// JavaScript!
You can also use write
method to write data to the specified position in the buffer:
buf.append('Hello world!');
buf.write('Node.js', 6);
console.log(buf.toString());
// Hello Node.js
You can access the byte at the specified position in the buffer by read
or at
methods:
const buf = new DynamicBuffer('Hello world');
buf.at(0); // 72
buf.read(1); // 101
DynamicBuffer
provides three ways to iterate data from the specified buffer, you can use them with for...of
statement.
-
entries()
returns an iterator of key-value pair (index and byte) from the buffer.buf.append('Hello'); for (const pair of buf.entries()) { console.log(pair); } // [ 0, 72 ] // [ 1, 101 ] // [ 2, 108 ] // [ 3, 108 ] // [ 4, 111 ]
-
values()
returns an iterator of data(byte) from the buffer.buf.append('Hello'); for (const value of buf.values()) { console.log(value); } // 72 // 101 // 108 // 108 // 111
-
keys()
returns an iterator of buffer keys (indices).
You can search a value in the buffer by indexOf
or lastIndexOf
, and get the position of the first/last occurrence in the buffer. The searching value can be a string, a number, a Buffer
, an Uint8Array
, or another DynamicBuffer
.
buf.append('ABCABCABC');
buf.indexOf('ABC'); // 0
buf.lastIndexOf('ABC'); // 6
buf.indexOf('abc'); // -1
You can compare DynamicBuffer
object with another DynamicBuffer
object, Node.js builtin Buffer
object, or an Uint8Array
by compare
or equals
methods.
For compare
method, it returns a number to indicate whether the buffer comes before, after, or is the same as another buffer in sort order.
buf.append('ABC');
console.log(buf.compare(Buffer.from('ABC')));
// 0
console.log(buf.compare(Buffer.from('BCD')));
// -1
For equals
method, it returns a boolean value to indicate whether the buffer is the same as the target buffer.
buf.append('ABC');
console.log(buf.equals(Buffer.from('ABC')));
// true
console.log(buf.equals(Buffer.from('BCD')));
// false
You can export buffer content (without unused parts) to string, Buffer
object, or JSON representation object.
buf.append('Hello');
console.log(buf.toString());
// Hello
const dataBuffer = buf.toBuffer();
console.log(buf.length, dataBuffer.toString());
// 5 Hello
console.log(JSON.stringify(buf)); // JSON.stringify implicitly calls toJSON method.
// {"type":"Buffer","data":[72,101,108,108,111]}
For toString
and toBuffer
methods, you can also set the start and end offsets to export the subset of written data.
buf.append('Hello world!!!');
console.log(buf.toString('utf8', 6, 11));
// world
We provided isDynamicBuffer
function to indicating an object is a DynamicBuffer object or not.
import { isDynamicBuffer } from 'dynamic-buffer';
const buf1 = Buffer.alloc(8);
const buf2 = new DynamicBuffer();
isDynamicBuffer(buf1); // false
isDynamicBuffer(buf2); // true
All of test cases are written with mocha
, assert
, and nyc
. They can be run with the following commands:
npm test
# or
yarn test
This project was published under MIT license, you can see more detail in LICENSE file.