EventIterator: convert any JS event emitter to async iterators
Deno Usage
import { stream, subscribe, EventIterator } from "event-iterator"
Highlights
EventIterator
is a small module that greatly simplifies converting event
emitters, event targets, and similar objects into EcmaScript async iterators. It
works in browser and Node.js environments.
As a bonus you get utility functions:
subscribe
to subscribe to events on a DOM event target with an async iteratorstream
to consume data from a Node.js readable stream as an async iterator
Basic examples
For client-side browser events:
import "core-js/es7/symbol" /* If necessary */
import {subscribe} from "event-iterator"
const element = document.querySelector("a.example")
for await (const click of subscribe.call(element, "click")) {
/* Asynchronously iterate over click events on the element. */
}
For server-side Node.js events:
import "core-js/es7/symbol" /* If necessary */
import {stream} from "event-iterator"
const file = require("fs").createReadStream("example-file")
for await (const chunk of stream.call(file)) {
/* Asynchronously iterate over buffer chunks read from file. */
}
Advanced examples
Let’s look at how subscribe()
and stream()
are implemented.
For client-side browser events:
import "core-js/es7/symbol" /* If necessary */
import {EventIterator} from "event-iterator"
export function subscribe(event, options) {
/* "this" refers to a DOM event target. */
return new EventIterator(
({push}) => {
this.addEventListener(event, push, options)
return () => this.removeEventListener(event, push, options)
}
)
}
For server-side Node.js events:
import "core-js/es7/symbol" /* If necessary */
import {EventIterator} from "event-iterator"
export function stream() {
/* "this" refers to a Node.js readable stream. */
return new EventIterator(
queue => {
this.addListener("data", queue.push)
this.addListener("close", queue.stop)
this.addListener("error", queue.fail)
queue.on("highWater", () => this.pause())
queue.on("lowWater", () => this.resume())
return () => {
this.removeListener("data", queue.push)
this.removeListener("close", queue.stop)
this.removeListener("error", queue.fail)
this.destroy()
}
}
)
}
Backpressure
If you cannot reasonably consume all emitted events with your async iterator;
the internal EventIterator
queue can fill up indefinitely.
A warning will be emitted when the queue reaches the high water mark (100 items by default).
However, if you are able to control the event stream then you can listen to the
highWater
, and lowWater
events to exert backpressure.
When these events are emitted can be changed or disabled by setting
highWaterMark
and lowWaterMark
in the options of the EventIterator
constructor.
import {EventIterator} from "event-iterator"
const eventIterator = new EventIterator(
({push, on}) => {
const file = require("fs").createReadStream("example-file")
file.on("data", push)
on("highWater", () => file.pause())
on("lowWater", () => file.resume())
return () => file.removeListener("data", push)
},
{highWaterMark: 10, lowWaterMark: 5}
)
API specification
Create a new event iterator with new EventIterator(listen)
. This
object implements the async iterator protocol by having a Symbol.asyncIterator
property.
Note: you must set up any Symbol.asyncIterator
polyfills before importing
EventIterator
.
The listen
handler is called every time a new iterator is created to set up
your event listeners. The optional remove
handler is called when the event
listeners need to be removed. The listen
handler returns the remove
handler, making it easy to call addListener
/removeListener
or similar
functions.
Type definitions:
export interface Queue<T> {
push(value: T): void
stop(): void
fail(error: Error): void
on(event: "highWater" | "lowWater", fn: () => void)
}
export type RemoveHandler = () => void
export type ListenHandler<T> = (queue: Queue<T>) => void | RemoveHandler
/* High water mark defaults to 100. Set to undefined to disable warnings. */
interface EventIteratorOptions = {
highWaterMark?: number,
lowWaterMark?: number,
}
class EventIterator<T> {
constructor(ListenHandler<T>, options?: EventIteratorOptions)
[Symbol.asyncIterator](): AsyncIterator<T>
}
Background
The EventIterator
class is an adapter to transform any browser or Node.js
event emitter into an async iterator that iterates over events.
Imagine you have a bunch of text files and in Node.js and you want to decide whether they are longer or shorter than a certain number of lines. The files should not be binary to avoid cluttering the results. To be more specific, we want a function that will:
- return
true
if the number of lines is 1000 or greater - return
false
if the number of lines is less than 1000 - throw an exception if the file appears to be binary (contains NULL bytes)
- returns as quickly as possible
- conserves memory by not reading entire files at once
A naive solution would look like this:
function countLines(buffer) {
const str = buffer.toString()
if (str.match("\0")) throw new Error("Binary file!")
return (str.match(/\n/g) || []).length
}
function isLongTextFile(file) {
let lines = 1
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
file.on("data", chunk => {
lines += countLines(chunk)
})
file.on("end", () => {
resolve(lines >= 1000)
})
file.on("error", err => {
reject(err)
})
})
}
isLongTextFile(fs.createReadStream("...")).then(console.log)
Unfortunately, this solution has some problems:
- the entire file is read even if the file is way longer than 1000 lines
- the entire file is read even if an exception occurs (a NULL byte was found)
- multiple exceptions can be thrown if NULL bytes are found in multiple chunks
So we improve our solution, and we arrive at something like this:
function isLongTextFile(file) {
let lines = 1
const isLong = n => n >= 1000
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
file.on("data", chunk => {
try {
lines += countLines(chunk)
if (isLong(lines)) {
file.close()
resolve(true)
}
} catch (err) {
file.destroy()
reject(err)
}
})
file.on("end", () => {
resolve(isLong(lines))
})
file.on("error", err => {
reject(err)
})
})
}
isLongTextFile(fs.createReadStream("...")).then(console.log)
This works and we’re happy to have solved the problem!
But what if there were a nicer way to do this? Async iterators sure seem like a nice fit for this problem. They are a stage 3 EcmaScript proposal and can be used by using TypeScript or Babel.
A similar solution using async iterators could look like this:
function async isLongTextFile(file) {
let lines = 1
for await (const chunk of stream.call(file)) { // or file::stream()
lines += countLines(chunk)
if (lines > 1000) return true
}
return false
}
isLongTextFile(fs.createReadStream("...")).then(console.log)
The question is: how do you create an async iterator from a readable stream? Conceptually they are very similar; they both:
- can signal that a next value is available
- can signal when the end has been reached
- can emit an error, after which no new values will become available
Async iterators have a few additional advantages that translate in simpler code:
- early returns and exceptions will stop the iterator and release resources
- exceptions in the iterator and in calling code can be handled without additional boilerplate
So how do you transform a readble stream into an async iterator? With an EventIterator
.
We can define the stream
function above as:
import {EventIterator} from "event-iterator"
function stream() {
return new EventIterator(
({ push, stop, fail }) => {
this.addListener("data", push)
this.addListener("end", stop)
this.addListener("error", fail)
return () => {
this.removeListener("data", push)
this.removeListener("end", stop)
this.removeListener("error", fail)
this.destroy()
}
}
)
}
The EventIterator
takes care of:
- conforming to the async iterator spec
- returning placeholder promises to the async iterator if no value is available
- queueing values when more data is ready than consumed by the iterator
- installing callbacks to release resources so you can remove any listener handlers or do other cleanup
Why create an abstract EventIterator
that requires you to define your own
integration code? Several reasons:
- the event emitters as defined by Node.js have a different API than the event targets as defined in the DOM
- the events that you are interested in may have different names depending on your use case
- you may want to specify custom behaviour when the iterator throws or returns early
Licensed under MIT license
Copyright (c) 2017-2020 Rolf Timmermans
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