Add a goodbye handshake to a duplex async iterable
Add a goodbye handshake to a duplex async iterable.
In a uniplex stream, the end event signifies the end of the stream. But a duplex stream, it's a little more complicated - there are two paired streams that may end independently.
node's net module has an allowHalfOpen mode, but support for this method is patchy - more often, by default duplex streams are like a telephone - when one side hangs up, both streams are terminated. Humans deal with this problem by moving stream termination into the "application" layer - it's polite to say "goodbye", and to wait to receive "goodbye" before call termination.
Given another duplex stream, wrap it with it-goodbye
.
goodbye(stream, goodbye_message)
takes a duplex stream and a message (by default, the string "GOODBYE"
), this must be encodable whatever codec the stream uses. The codec should probably be applied outside of it-goodbye
.
import { goodbye } from 'it-goodbye'
// a duplex stream from somewhere...
var duplex = whatever.createStream()
return goodbye(duplex, 'GoodBye')
$ npm i it-goodbye
Loading this module through a script tag will make it's exports available as ItGoodbye
in the global namespace.
<script src="https://unpkg.com/it-goodbye/dist/index.min.js"></script>
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