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streams: event clarification and improvements #20096
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/cc @nodejs/streams |
I'd say.. go for it. |
I am strongly in favour of this. Is there any way we can enforce/assert this behavior in the |
Can I understand then that
This seems to be related to an HTTP logging bug that I now have in glebec/volleyball#28 which is now logging (incorrectly) that there was an ungraceful end to every single HTTP response. What is the correct way to detect this state now? |
@glebec this is a proposal, it is not implemented yet. |
@mcollina — something did change recently in Node w.r.t. the |
I believe all of the items discussed in this issue has been resolved. There are still some minor inconsistencies and edge cases here and there in core where events are emitted out of order or not at all but we are slowly ironing these out. Given this I'm closing this issues. Please re-open of you feel that something has not been addressed. |
This is more of a discussion issue, but have some thoughts on streams and the stream events we currently support that I wanted to write down.
On the issue tracker there are various issues where people are confused about stream events (such as #6083) but it would be good to get some clarification and perhaps improving the flow
Readable events
A readable stream has the following (confusing) events
end
error
close
I continue to see confusion around the
end
event, even in Node core code. Theend
event simply means that the stream has gracefully ended AND there is not more data left in the buffer. The last part can be especially confusing that that means thatend
can fire way after a stream has actually closed down, or not at all, if there is data waiting in the buffer.Your stream should not be emitting
end
if it had an error because it didn't close gracefully.Both
close
anderror
used to be more or less unspecified in terms of core streams but we recently cleaned that up with the addeddestroy
method (thanks for @mcollina and @calvinmetcalf for taking the lead on that).Now when a stream is destroyed it will set a flag internally that will make it never call
_read
again and emiterror
(if there was an error passed) and aclose
event.In terms of streams this means that a
close
event will only be emitted when a stream is destroyed.I suggest the following. After the stream has fully ended and emitted
end
we should call.destroy
internally to help users more easily control the life-cycle around streams.That way the last event emitted is always
close
and ifclose
is emitted with noend
that is considered a non graceful end.To help stream consumers, we should always be emitting errors on a stream using the
.destroy(err)
method, including in node core. That makes sure the correct error handling logic is called and events are emitted in an deterministic fashion.Writable events
For writable streams the situation is similar. We have the following confusing events
finish
error
close
Similar to readable streams
finish
means a graceful end and is emitted after all writes are flushed and the_final
handler has been run (if there is one). Again I suggest we make the stream call.destroy()
afterfinish
to make sureclose
is always emitted and make it very clear thatfinish
might not be emitted in non-graceful end scenarios.Duplex streams
For duplex streams
destroy()
would only be called internally after bothend
andfinish
.TL;DR
Use
.destroy(err)
in node core to signal stream errors instead of emitted an error, that makes error handling easy. Let's always emitclose
afterend
andfinish
to make userland error handling a lot easier.Noting that as the author of most of the stream error-handling helpers on npm this
close
event change will have close to no userland regressions as that's how we expect streams to work anyway most of the time.The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: