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Kevin Alemán
Kevin Alemán

Posted on • Originally published at kaleman.netlify.app

The beauty of Streams in Node

Probably you have heard of them, probably you don't. But they have been around for a while. We're talking about streams, an interesting and often ignored functionality of Node.JS.

What are streams?

a river, or stream?

To make things easier, we will define a stream as a sequence of data that flows freely. Think of streams like rivers. Rivers flow from one point to another in a constant way. The receiver doesn't know when the river will stop flowing but it's always there for receiving more water.

In Node, streams are very similar. They are a constant sequence of data. They flow from one point (emitter) to another (receiver).

The receiver can decide if it wants to receive data or not. Also it decides what to do with the data received. It can ignore the data, pipe it to another receiver, parse it before receiving...

Why are streams useful?

This is a really good question. If you have lived without streams your whole life, you will think that you don't need them. And, depending on your use case, this could be true.

But the reality is that we need to use streams for some operations that otherwise will kill us. Let's put an example

Dealing with files

Let's say we want to create a compressed copy of a file on our disk with a Node application. Usually, we will end up with something like this:

fs.readFile(file, (err, buffer) => {
  zlib.gzip(buffer, (err, buffer) => {
    fs.writeFile(file + '.gz', buffer, err => {
      console.log('Done!!');
    });
  });
});

Imports removed for brevity

Here, we're doing 4 things:

  1. We're reading the entire file and saving the data to a variable called buffer
  2. We're using the zlib.gzip to compress the file into a gzip. We're passing the buffer to the function call. This will return a new compressed buffer
  3. We write the compressed buffer to a new location
  4. A console.log indicating that the operation finished

Well, this works. What's the problem with this approach? You may be wondering. Well, look again at the first 2 steps. In this approach, we're reading the whole file before starting to process it. Additionally, we're storing the contents of that file in memory. This is not a problem if the file size is in MB. But, if the file size is in the order of GB? Hundreds of GB? Will your computer have all that RAM available to hold the file in it? Probably no.

So, this approach, even when enough for more simple tasks, represents a problem when we're looking for performance and scalability, or simply we want to support larger files.

The problem can be solved by using streams. Let's see how:

fs.createReadStream(file)
  .pipe(zlib.createGzip())
  .pipe(fs.createWriteStream(file + '.gz'))
  .on('finish', () => console.log('wooh!'));

We're doing some things different here:

  1. We're creating a read stream. This will return us chunks of the file until it reaches the end.
  2. We're piping the chunks to zlib for compression. What's important here is that we are not waiting for the whole file to be read before starting the compression.
  3. We're creating a write stream in which we're passing chunks of data so Node can write them to the file.
  4. After all, we listen for the finish event, which will be triggered when there's nothing more to do.

There's a vast set of details & quirks & functions related to streams which will be covered in other blog posts.

Hope you liked it!

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