574a16d9fa
Snapshot of the working tree before cleanup. Captures: - Keysat licensing: server/license.js, /api/license/* endpoints in server/index.js, activation modal in public/index.html, embedded Ed25519 issuer key (assets/issuer.pub). - StartOS 0.4 expansion: setApiKey action, version files v0.1.1 through v0.1.15, file-models/config.json.ts, manifest updates. - Self-hosted registry server (startos-registry/). - Build/deploy scripts (bin/bump-version.sh, bin/deploy.sh, vendored yt-dlp binary), .gitignore, .deploy.env.example. - Recent design docs (KEYSAT_INTEGRATION.md, UPGRADE-DESIGN.md) — retained here so they remain recoverable when removed in the follow-up cleanup commit.
destroy
Destroy a stream.
This module is meant to ensure a stream gets destroyed, handling different APIs and Node.js bugs.
API
var destroy = require('destroy')
destroy(stream [, suppress])
Destroy the given stream, and optionally suppress any future error events.
In most cases, this is identical to a simple stream.destroy() call. The rules
are as follows for a given stream:
- If the
streamis an instance ofReadStream, then callstream.destroy()and add a listener to theopenevent to callstream.close()if it is fired. This is for a Node.js bug that will leak a file descriptor if.destroy()is called beforeopen. - If the
streamis an instance of a zlib stream, then callstream.destroy()and close the underlying zlib handle if open, otherwise callstream.close(). This is for consistency across Node.js versions and a Node.js bug that will leak a native zlib handle. - If the
streamis not an instance ofStream, then nothing happens. - If the
streamhas a.destroy()method, then call it.
The function returns the stream passed in as the argument.
Example
var destroy = require('destroy')
var fs = require('fs')
var stream = fs.createReadStream('package.json')
// ... and later
destroy(stream)