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The Standard Library has been moved to JSR. See the blog post for details.
method Buffer.allocUnsafe
import { Buffer } from "https://deno.land/std@0.167.0/node/internal/buffer.d.ts";

Allocates a new Buffer of size bytes. If size is larger than constants.MAX_LENGTH or smaller than 0, ERR_INVALID_ARG_VALUE is thrown.

The underlying memory for Buffer instances created in this way is not initialized. The contents of the newly created Buffer are unknown and_may contain sensitive data_. Use Buffer.alloc() instead to initializeBuffer instances with zeroes.

import { Buffer } from 'buffer';

const buf = Buffer.allocUnsafe(10);

console.log(buf);
// Prints (contents may vary): <Buffer a0 8b 28 3f 01 00 00 00 50 32>

buf.fill(0);

console.log(buf);
// Prints: <Buffer 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00>

A TypeError will be thrown if size is not a number.

The Buffer module pre-allocates an internal Buffer instance of size Buffer.poolSize that is used as a pool for the fast allocation of newBuffer instances created using Buffer.allocUnsafe(),Buffer.from(array), Buffer.concat(), and the deprecatednew Buffer(size) constructor only when size is less than or equal to Buffer.poolSize >> 1 (floor of Buffer.poolSize divided by two).

Use of this pre-allocated internal memory pool is a key difference between calling Buffer.alloc(size, fill) vs. Buffer.allocUnsafe(size).fill(fill). Specifically, Buffer.alloc(size, fill) will never use the internal Bufferpool, while Buffer.allocUnsafe(size).fill(fill)_will_ use the internalBuffer pool if size is less than or equal to half Buffer.poolSize. The difference is subtle but can be important when an application requires the additional performance that Buffer.allocUnsafe() provides.

Parameters

size: number

The desired length of the new Buffer.