Files
aitbc/dev/env/node_modules/ws/lib/stream.js
aitbc 816e258d4c refactor: move brother_node development artifact to dev/test-nodes subdirectory
Development Artifact Cleanup:
 BROTHER_NODE REORGANIZATION: Moved development test node to appropriate location
- dev/test-nodes/brother_node/: Moved from root directory for better organization
- Contains development configuration, test logs, and test chain data
- No impact on production systems - purely development/testing artifact

 DEVELOPMENT ARTIFACTS IDENTIFIED:
- Chain ID: aitbc-brother-chain (test/development chain)
- Ports: 8010 (P2P) and 8011 (RPC) - different from production
- Environment: .env file with test configuration
- Logs: rpc.log and node.log from development testing session (March 15, 2026)

 ROOT DIRECTORY CLEANUP: Removed development clutter from production directory
- brother_node/ moved to dev/test-nodes/brother_node/
- Root directory now contains only production-ready components
- Development artifacts properly organized in dev/ subdirectory

DIRECTORY STRUCTURE IMPROVEMENT:
📁 dev/test-nodes/: Development and testing node configurations
🏗️ Root Directory: Clean production structure with only essential components
🧪 Development Isolation: Test environments separated from production

BENEFITS:
 Clean Production Directory: No development artifacts in root
 Better Organization: Development nodes grouped in dev/ subdirectory
 Clear Separation: Production vs development environments clearly distinguished
 Maintainability: Easier to identify and manage development components

RESULT: Successfully moved brother_node development artifact to dev/test-nodes/ subdirectory, cleaning up the root directory while preserving development testing environment for future use.
2026-03-30 17:09:06 +02:00

160 lines
4.0 KiB
JavaScript
Executable File

'use strict';
const { Duplex } = require('stream');
/**
* Emits the `'close'` event on a stream.
*
* @param {Duplex} stream The stream.
* @private
*/
function emitClose(stream) {
stream.emit('close');
}
/**
* The listener of the `'end'` event.
*
* @private
*/
function duplexOnEnd() {
if (!this.destroyed && this._writableState.finished) {
this.destroy();
}
}
/**
* The listener of the `'error'` event.
*
* @param {Error} err The error
* @private
*/
function duplexOnError(err) {
this.removeListener('error', duplexOnError);
this.destroy();
if (this.listenerCount('error') === 0) {
// Do not suppress the throwing behavior.
this.emit('error', err);
}
}
/**
* Wraps a `WebSocket` in a duplex stream.
*
* @param {WebSocket} ws The `WebSocket` to wrap
* @param {Object} [options] The options for the `Duplex` constructor
* @return {Duplex} The duplex stream
* @public
*/
function createWebSocketStream(ws, options) {
let terminateOnDestroy = true;
const duplex = new Duplex({
...options,
autoDestroy: false,
emitClose: false,
objectMode: false,
writableObjectMode: false
});
ws.on('message', function message(msg, isBinary) {
const data =
!isBinary && duplex._readableState.objectMode ? msg.toString() : msg;
if (!duplex.push(data)) ws.pause();
});
ws.once('error', function error(err) {
if (duplex.destroyed) return;
// Prevent `ws.terminate()` from being called by `duplex._destroy()`.
//
// - If the `'error'` event is emitted before the `'open'` event, then
// `ws.terminate()` is a noop as no socket is assigned.
// - Otherwise, the error is re-emitted by the listener of the `'error'`
// event of the `Receiver` object. The listener already closes the
// connection by calling `ws.close()`. This allows a close frame to be
// sent to the other peer. If `ws.terminate()` is called right after this,
// then the close frame might not be sent.
terminateOnDestroy = false;
duplex.destroy(err);
});
ws.once('close', function close() {
if (duplex.destroyed) return;
duplex.push(null);
});
duplex._destroy = function (err, callback) {
if (ws.readyState === ws.CLOSED) {
callback(err);
process.nextTick(emitClose, duplex);
return;
}
let called = false;
ws.once('error', function error(err) {
called = true;
callback(err);
});
ws.once('close', function close() {
if (!called) callback(err);
process.nextTick(emitClose, duplex);
});
if (terminateOnDestroy) ws.terminate();
};
duplex._final = function (callback) {
if (ws.readyState === ws.CONNECTING) {
ws.once('open', function open() {
duplex._final(callback);
});
return;
}
// If the value of the `_socket` property is `null` it means that `ws` is a
// client websocket and the handshake failed. In fact, when this happens, a
// socket is never assigned to the websocket. Wait for the `'error'` event
// that will be emitted by the websocket.
if (ws._socket === null) return;
if (ws._socket._writableState.finished) {
callback();
if (duplex._readableState.endEmitted) duplex.destroy();
} else {
ws._socket.once('finish', function finish() {
// `duplex` is not destroyed here because the `'end'` event will be
// emitted on `duplex` after this `'finish'` event. The EOF signaling
// `null` chunk is, in fact, pushed when the websocket emits `'close'`.
callback();
});
ws.close();
}
};
duplex._read = function () {
if (ws.isPaused) ws.resume();
};
duplex._write = function (chunk, encoding, callback) {
if (ws.readyState === ws.CONNECTING) {
ws.once('open', function open() {
duplex._write(chunk, encoding, callback);
});
return;
}
ws.send(chunk, callback);
};
duplex.on('end', duplexOnEnd);
duplex.on('error', duplexOnError);
return duplex;
}
module.exports = createWebSocketStream;