Express_Crud_Example/node_modules/lru-cache
2022-01-28 22:33:42 +01:00
..
index.js init 2022-01-28 22:33:42 +01:00
LICENSE init 2022-01-28 22:33:42 +01:00
package.json init 2022-01-28 22:33:42 +01:00
README.md init 2022-01-28 22:33:42 +01:00

lru cache

A cache object that deletes the least-recently-used items.

Build Status Coverage Status

Installation:

npm install lru-cache --save

Usage:

var LRU = require("lru-cache")
  , options = { max: 500
              , length: function (n, key) { return n * 2 + key.length }
              , dispose: function (key, n) { n.close() }
              , maxAge: 1000 * 60 * 60 }
  , cache = new LRU(options)
  , otherCache = new LRU(50) // sets just the max size

cache.set("key", "value")
cache.get("key") // "value"

// non-string keys ARE fully supported
// but note that it must be THE SAME object, not
// just a JSON-equivalent object.
var someObject = { a: 1 }
cache.set(someObject, 'a value')
// Object keys are not toString()-ed
cache.set('[object Object]', 'a different value')
assert.equal(cache.get(someObject), 'a value')
// A similar object with same keys/values won't work,
// because it's a different object identity
assert.equal(cache.get({ a: 1 }), undefined)

cache.reset()    // empty the cache

If you put more stuff in it, then items will fall out.

If you try to put an oversized thing in it, then it'll fall out right away.

Options

  • max The maximum size of the cache, checked by applying the length function to all values in the cache. Not setting this is kind of silly, since that's the whole purpose of this lib, but it defaults to Infinity. Setting it to a non-number or negative number will throw a TypeError. Setting it to 0 makes it be Infinity.
  • maxAge Maximum age in ms. Items are not pro-actively pruned out as they age, but if you try to get an item that is too old, it'll drop it and return undefined instead of giving it to you. Setting this to a negative value will make everything seem old! Setting it to a non-number will throw a TypeError.
  • length Function that is used to calculate the length of stored items. If you're storing strings or buffers, then you probably want to do something like function(n, key){return n.length}. The default is function(){return 1}, which is fine if you want to store max like-sized things. The item is passed as the first argument, and the key is passed as the second argumnet.
  • dispose Function that is called on items when they are dropped from the cache. This can be handy if you want to close file descriptors or do other cleanup tasks when items are no longer accessible. Called with key, value. It's called before actually removing the item from the internal cache, so if you want to immediately put it back in, you'll have to do that in a nextTick or setTimeout callback or it won't do anything.
  • stale By default, if you set a maxAge, it'll only actually pull stale items out of the cache when you get(key). (That is, it's not pre-emptively doing a setTimeout or anything.) If you set stale:true, it'll return the stale value before deleting it. If you don't set this, then it'll return undefined when you try to get a stale entry, as if it had already been deleted.
  • noDisposeOnSet By default, if you set a dispose() method, then it'll be called whenever a set() operation overwrites an existing key. If you set this option, dispose() will only be called when a key falls out of the cache, not when it is overwritten.
  • updateAgeOnGet When using time-expiring entries with maxAge, setting this to true will make each item's effective time update to the current time whenever it is retrieved from cache, causing it to not expire. (It can still fall out of cache based on recency of use, of course.)

API

  • set(key, value, maxAge)

  • get(key) => value

    Both of these will update the "recently used"-ness of the key. They do what you think. maxAge is optional and overrides the cache maxAge option if provided.

    If the key is not found, get() will return undefined.

    The key and val can be any value.

  • peek(key)

    Returns the key value (or undefined if not found) without updating the "recently used"-ness of the key.

    (If you find yourself using this a lot, you might be using the wrong sort of data structure, but there are some use cases where it's handy.)

  • del(key)

    Deletes a key out of the cache.

  • reset()

    Clear the cache entirely, throwing away all values.

  • has(key)

    Check if a key is in the cache, without updating the recent-ness or deleting it for being stale.

  • forEach(function(value,key,cache), [thisp])

    Just like Array.prototype.forEach. Iterates over all the keys in the cache, in order of recent-ness. (Ie, more recently used items are iterated over first.)

  • rforEach(function(value,key,cache), [thisp])

    The same as cache.forEach(...) but items are iterated over in reverse order. (ie, less recently used items are iterated over first.)

  • keys()

    Return an array of the keys in the cache.

  • values()

    Return an array of the values in the cache.

  • length

    Return total length of objects in cache taking into account length options function.

  • itemCount

    Return total quantity of objects currently in cache. Note, that stale (see options) items are returned as part of this item count.

  • dump()

    Return an array of the cache entries ready for serialization and usage with 'destinationCache.load(arr)`.

  • load(cacheEntriesArray)

    Loads another cache entries array, obtained with sourceCache.dump(), into the cache. The destination cache is reset before loading new entries

  • prune()

    Manually iterates over the entire cache proactively pruning old entries