Awesome
web-streams-adapter
Adapters for converting between different implementations of WHATWG Streams.
Why?
When you've got a ReadableStream
from a native web API, you might be disappointed to find out
that not all browser support the latest and greatest features from the streams spec yet:
const response = await fetch('http://example.com/data.txt');
const readable = response.body;
const writable = new WritableStream({ write(chunk) { console.log(chunk) } });
await readable.pipeTo(writable); // TypeError: Object doesn't support property or method 'pipeTo'
This is because although many browsers have already started implementing streams, most of them are not yet fully up-to-date with the latest specification:
- Chrome 67 supports
ReadableStream
,WritableStream
andTransformStream
. Readable byte streams are supported as of Chrome 89. However, async iteration is not yet supported. - Edge 89 has the same support as Chrome 89.
- Firefox 65 supports
ReadableStream
, but no readable byte streams or writable streams yet. As such, methods likepipeTo()
andpipeThrough()
that take aWritableStream
are not yet supported either. - Safari supports
ReadableStream
, but no readable byte streams or writable streams.
For up-to-date information, check caniuse.com
and the browser compatibility tables on MDN for ReadableStream
and WritableStream
.
What?
web-streams-adapter
provides adapter functions that take any readable/writable/transform stream
and wraps it into a different readable/writable/stream with a different (more complete) implementation of your choice,
for example web-streams-polyfill.
// setup
import { ReadableStream as PolyfillReadableStream } from 'web-streams-polyfill';
import { createReadableStreamWrapper } from '@mattiasbuelens/web-streams-adapter';
const toPolyfillReadable = createReadableStreamWrapper(PolyfillReadableStream);
// when handling a fetch response
const response = await fetch('http://example.com/data.txt');
const readable = toPolyfillReadable(response.body);
console.log(readable instanceof PolyfillReadableStream); // -> true
await readable.pipeTo(writable); // works!
You can also use an adapter to convert from your polyfilled stream back to a native stream:
// setup
const toNativeReadable = createReadableStreamWrapper(self.ReadableStream);
// when starting a fetch with a streaming POST body
const readable = new PolyfillReadableStream({ /* amazingness */ });
const response = await fetch(url, {
method: 'POST',
body: toNativeReadable(readable) // works!
});
How?
For readable streams, web-streams-adapter
creates an underlying source that pulls from the given readable stream
using the primitive reader API. This source can then be used by any other readable stream implementation,
both native and polyfilled ones.
For writable and transform streams, it uses a very similar approach to create an underlying sink or transformer using primitive reader and writer APIs on the given stream.