Node API
    Conventions: Callbacks are object members which are prefixed with
    on. All methods and members are camel cased. Constructors
    always have a capital first letter.
  
    Node supports 3 byte-string encodings: ASCII ("ascii"), 
    UTF-8 ("utf8"), and raw binary ("raw").
    It uses strings to represent ASCII and UTF-8 encoded data. For
    the moment, arrays of integers are used to represent raw binary
    data—this representation is rather inefficient. This will
    change in the future, when
    
      V8 supports Blob objects
    .
  
The following are global functions:
- puts(string, callback)
- 
      Alias for stdout.puts(). Outputs thestringand a trailing new-line tostdout.The callbackargument is optional and mostly useless: it will notify the user when the operation has completed. Everything in node is asynchronous;puts()is no exception. This might seem ridiculous but, if for example, one is pipingstdoutinto an NFS file,printf()will block from network latency. There is an internal queue forputs()output, so you can be assured that output will be displayed in the order it was called.
- print(string, callback)
- Like puts()but without the trailing new-line.
- node.debug(string)
- A synchronous output function. Will block the process and output the string immediately to stdout. Use with care.
- node.exit(code)
- Immediately ends the process with the specified code.
- ARGV
- An array containing the command line arguments.
- stdout,- stderr, and- stdin
- Objects of type node.fs.File. (See below)
Timers
- setTimeout(callback, delay)
- 
      To schedule execution of callbackafterdelaymilliseconds. Returns atimeoutIdfor possible use withclearTimeout().
- clearTimeout(timeoutId)
- Prevents said timeout from triggering.
- setInterval(callback, delay)
- 
      To schedule the repeated execution of callbackeverydelaymilliseconds. Returns aintervalIdfor possible use withclearInterval().
- clearInterval(intervalId)
- Stops a interval from triggering.
Processes and IPC
    Node provides a tridirectional popen(3) facility.
    It is possible to stream data through the child's stdin,
    stdout, and stderr in a fully non-blocking
    way.
  
- new node.Process(command)
- Launches a new process with the given command. For example:var ls = new Process("ls -lh /usr");
- process.pid
- The PID of the child process.
- process.onOutput = function (chunk) { };
- A callback to receive output from the process's stdout. At the moment the received data is always a string and utf8 encoded. (More encodings will be supported in the future.)If the process closes its stdout, this callback will be issued withnullas an argument. Be prepared for this possibility.
- process.onError = function (chunk) { };
- A callback to receive output from the process's stderr. At the moment the received data is always a string and utf8 encoded. (More encodings will be supported in the future.)If the process closes its stderr, this callback will be issued withnullas an argument. Be prepared for this possibility.
- process.onExit = function (exit_code) { };
- A callback which is called when the child process terminates. The argument is the exit status of the child.
- process.write(data, encoding="ascii");
- Write data to the child process's stdin. The second argument is optional and specifies the encoding: possible values are"utf8","ascii", and"raw".
- process.close();
- Closes the process's stdinstream.
- process.kill(signal=node.SIGTERM);
- Kills the child process with the given signal. If no argument is
    given, the process will be sent node.SIGTERM. The standard POSIX signals are defined under thenodenamespace (e.g.node.SIGINT,node.SIGUSR1).
node.fs
  File I/O is tricky because there are not simple non-blocking ways to do it. Node handles file I/O by employing an internal thread pool to execute file system calls.
    This part of the API is split into two parts: simple wrappers
    around standard POSIX file I/O functions and a user-friendly
    File object.
  
POSIX Wrappers
    All POSIX wrappers have a similar form. They return
    undefined and have a callback called
    on_completion as their last argument. The
    on_completion callback may be passed many parameters,
    but the first parameter is always an integer indicating the error
    status. If the status integer is zero, then the call was successful.
    Example:
  
node.fs.unlink("/tmp/hello", function (status) {
  if (status == 0) 
    puts("successfully deleted /tmp/hello");
});
  There is no guaranteed ordering to the POSIX wrappers. The following is very much prone to error
node.fs.rename("/tmp/hello", "/tmp/world");
node.fs.stat("/tmp/world", function (status, stats) {
  puts("stats: " + JSON.stringify(stats));
});
  
    because it could be that stat() is executed before
    the rename(). The correct way to do this, is use the
    on_completion callback for rename()
  
node.fs.rename("/tmp/hello", "/tmp/world", function (status) {
  if (status != 0) return;
  node.fs.stat("/tmp/world", function (status, stats) {
    puts("stats: " + JSON.stringify(stats));
  });
});
  - node.fs.rename(path1, path2, on_completion(status))
- rename(2)
- node.fs.stat(path, on_completion(status, stats))
- stat(2)
- node.fs.unlink(path, on_completion(status))
- unlink(2)
- node.fs.rmdir(path, on_completion(status))
- rmdir(2)
- node.fs.close(fd, on_completion(status))
- close(2)
- node.fs.open(path, flags, mode, on_completion(status, fd))
- 
      open(2) 
      The constants like O_CREATare defined atnode.O_CREAT.
- node.fs.write(fd, data, position, on_completion(status, written))
- 
      Write data to the file specified by fd.datais either an array of integer (for raw data) or a string for UTF-8 encoded characters.positionrefers to the offset from the beginning of the file where this data should be written. Ifnull, the data will be written at the current position.See also pwrite(2) 
- node.fs.read(fd, length, position, encoding, on_completion(status, data))
- 
      Read data from the file specified by fd.lengthis an integer specifying the number of bytes to read.positionis an integer specifying where to begin reading from in the file.encodingis eithernode.UTF8ornode.RAW.
node.fs.File
  Easy buffered file object.
Internal request queues exist for each file object so that multiple commands can be issued at once without worry that they will be executed out-of-order. Thus the following is safe:
var file = new node.fs.File();
file.open("/tmp/blah", "w+");
file.write("hello");
file.write("world");
file.close();
  Request queues are local to a single file. If one does
fileA.write("hello");
fileB.write("world");
  
    it could be that fileB gets written to before
    fileA is written to.  If a certain operation order
    is needed involving multiple files, use the completion callbacks:
  
fileA.write("hello", function () {
  fileB.write("world");
});
  - new node.fs.File(options={})
- 
      Creates a new file object. 
      The optionsargument is optional. It can contain the following fields- fd— a file descriptor for the file.
- 
          encoding— howfile.read()should return data. Either"raw"or"utf8". Defaults to raw.
 
- file.onError = function (method, errno, msg) { }
- 
      Callback. This is called internally anytime an error occurs with
      this file. There are three arguments: the method name, the POSIX
      errno, and a string describing the error.
      Example var path = "/some/path/that/doesnt/exist"; var file = new node.fs.File(); file.onError = function (method, errno, msg) { stderr.puts("An error occurred calling " + method); stderr.puts(msg); node.exit(1); } file.open(path, "w+")
- file.open(path, mode, on_completion())
- 
      Opens the file at path.modeis a string:"r"open for reading and writing."r+"open for only reading."w"create a new file for reading and writing; if it already exists truncate it."w+"create a new file for writing only; if it already exists truncate it."a"create a new file for writing and reading. Writes append to the end of the file."a+"The on_completionis a callback that is made without arguments when the operation completes. It is optional. If an error occurred theon_completioncallback will not be called, but thefile.onErrorwill be called.
- file.read(length, position, on_completion(data))
- file.write(data, position, on_completion(written))
- file.close(on_completion())
node.tcp
  node.tcp.Server
  Here is an example of a echo server which listens for connections on port 7000
function Echo (socket) {
  socket.setEncoding("utf8");
  socket.onConnect = function () {
    socket.send("hello\r\n");
  };
  socket.onReceive = function (data) {
    socket.send(data);
  };
  socket.onEOF = function () {
    socket.send("goodbye\r\n");
    socket.close();
  };
}
var server = new node.tcp.Server(Echo, {backlog: 1024});
server.listen(7000, "localhost");
  - new node.tcp.Server(connection_handler(socket), options={});
- 
      Creates a new TCP server.
      connection_handleris a callback which is called on each connection. It is given one argument: an instance ofnode.tcp.Connection.optionsfor now only supports one option:backlogwhich should be an integer and describes how large of a connection backlog the operating system should maintain for this server. Thebacklogdefaults to 1024.
- server.listen(port, host=null)
- 
      Tells the server to listen for TCP connections to portandhost. Note,hostis optional. Ifhostis not specified the server will accept connections to any IP address on the specified port.
- server.close()
- Stops the server from accepting new connections.
node.tcp.Connection
  
    This object is used as a TCP client and also as a server-side
    socket for node.tcp.Servers.
  
- new node.tcp.Connection()
- Creates a new connection object.
- connection.connect(port, host="127.0.0.1")
- 
      Opens a connection to the specified portandhost. If the second parameter is omitted, localhost is assumed.
- connection.remoteAddress
- 
      The string representation of the remote IP address.  For example, 
      "74.125.127.100"or"2001:4860:a005::68".This member is only present in server-side connections. 
- connection.readyState
- 
      Either "closed","open","opening""readOnly", or"writeOnly".
- connection.setEncoding(encoding)
- 
      Sets the encoding (either "utf8"or"raw") for data that is received.
- connection.send(data, encoding="ascii")
- Sends data on the connection. The data should be eithre an array of integers (for raw binary) or a string (for utf8 or ascii). The second parameter specifies the encoding in the case of a string—it defaults to ASCII because encoding to UTF8 is rather slow.
- connection.close()
- 
      Half-closes the connection. I.E. sends a FIN packet. It is
      possible the server will still send some data. After calling
      this readyStatewill be"readOnly".
- connection.fullClose()
- 
      Close both ends of the connection. Data that is received
      after this call is responded to with RST packets. If you don't
      know about this, just use close().
- connection.forceClose()
- Ensures that no more I/O activity happens on this socket. Only necessary in case of errors (parse error or so).
- connection.onConnect = function () { };
- Call once the connection is established.
- connection.onReceive = function (data) { };
- 
      Called when data is received on the connection. Encoding of data
      is set by connection.setEncoding().datawill either be a string, in the case of utf8, or an array of integer in the case of raw encoding.
- connection.onEOF = function () { };
- 
      Called when the other end of the connection sends a FIN packet.
      onReceivewill not be called after this. After receiving thisreadyStatewill be"writeOnly". You should probably just callconnection.close()in this callback.
- connection.onDisconnect = function (had_error) { };
- 
      Called once the connection is fully disconnected.
      The callback is passed one boolean argument had_error. This lets one know if the connect was closed due to an error. (TODO: look up error codes.)
- connection.onError = function () { };
- Called on an error.
node.http
  The HTTP interfaces here are designed to support many features of the protocol which have been traditionally difficult to handle. In particular, large, possibly chunked, messages. The interface is careful to never buffer entire requests or responses—the user is able to stream data.
HTTP message headers are represented by an array of 2-element arrays like this
[ ["Content-Length", "123"] , ["Content-Type", "text/plain"] , ["Connection", "keep-alive"] , ["Accept", "*/*"] ]
    Dictionary-like objects are popularly used to represent HTTP
    headers but they are an incorrect abstraction. It is rare, but
    possible, to have multiple header lines with the same field.
    Setting multiple cookies in a single response, for example, can
    only be done with multiple Cookie lines.
  
node.http.Server
  - new node.http.Server(request_handler, options);
-  
      Creates a new web server. The optionsargument is optional. Theoptionsargument accepts the same values as the options argument fornode.tcp.Serverdoes.The request_handleris a callback which is made on each request with aServerRequestandServerResponsearguments.
- server.listen(port, hostname)
- 
      Begin accepting connections on the specified port and hostname. If the hostname is omitted, the server will accept connections directed to any address. 
- server.close()
- 
      Stops the server from accepting new connections. 
node.http.ServerRequest
  
    This object is created internally by a HTTP server—not by
    the user. It is passed to the user as the first argument to the
    request_handler callback. 
  
- req.method
- The request method as a string. Read only. Example:
      "GET","DELETE".
- req.uri
- Request URI. (Object.)
- req.uri.anchor
- req.uri.query
- req.uri.file
- req.uri.directory
- req.uri.path
- req.uri.relative
- req.uri.port
- req.uri.host
- req.uri.password
- req.uri.user
- req.uri.authority
- req.uri.protocol
- req.uri.params
- 
      req.uri.toString(),req.uri.source
- The original URI found in the status line.
- req.headers
- The request headers expressed as an array of 2-element arrays. Read only.
- req.httpVersion
- 
      The HTTP protocol version as a string. Read only. Examples:
      "1.1","1.0"
- req.onBody = function (chunk) { };
- 
      Callback. Should be set by the user to be informed of when a
      piece of the message body is received. Example:
      req.onBody = function (chunk) { puts("part of the body: " + chunk); };A chunk of the body is given as the single argument. The transfer-encoding has been decoded.The body chunk is either a String in the case of UTF-8 encoding or an array of numbers in the case of raw encoding. The body encoding is set with req.setBodyEncoding().
- req.onBodyComplete = function () { };
- 
      Callback. Made exactly once for each message. No arguments.
      After onBodyCompleteis executedonBodywill no longer be called.
- req.setBodyEncoding(encoding)
- 
      Set the encoding for the request body. Either "utf8"or"raw". Defaults to raw.
- req.interrupt()
- Interrupt the request. You will not receive anymore callbacks. This is useful if, for example someone is streaming up a file but it is too large and neesd to be stopped. The connection to the client will be closed immediately.
node.http.ServerResponse
  
    This object is created internally by a HTTP server—not by
    the user. It is passed to the user as the second argument to the
    request_handler callback.
  
- res.sendHeader(statusCode, headers)
- 
      Sends a response header to the request. The status code is a
      3-digit HTTP status code, like 404. The second argument,headers, should be an array of 2-element arrays, representing the response headers.Example: var body = "hello world"; res.sendHeader(200, [ ["Content-Length", body.length] , ["Content-Type", "text/plain"] ]);This method must only be called once on a message and it must be called before res.finish()is called.
- res.sendBody(chunk, encoding="ascii")
- 
      This method must be called after sendHeaderwas called. It sends a chunk of the response body. This method may be called multiple times to provide successive parts of the body.If chunkis a string, the second parameter specifies how to encode it into a byte stream. By default theencodingis"ascii".
- res.finish()
- 
      This method signals that all of the response headers and body
      has been sent; that server should consider this message complete. 
      The method, res.finish(), MUST be called on each response.
node.http.Client
  An HTTP client is constructed with a server address as its argument, the returned handle is then used to issue one or more requests. Depending on the server connected to, the client might pipeline the requests or reestablish the connection after each connection. Currently the implementation does not pipeline requests.
 Example of connecting to google.com
var google = new node.http.Client(80, "google.com");
var req = google.get("/");
req.finish(function (res) {
  puts("STATUS: " + res.statusCode);
  puts("HEADERS: " + JSON.stringify(res.headers));
  res.setBodyEncoding("utf8");
  res.onBody = function (chunk) {
    puts("BODY: " + chunk);
  };
});
  - new node.http.Client(port, host);
- 
      Constructs a new HTTP client. portandhostrefer to the server to be connected to. A connection is not established until a request is issued.
- client.get(path, request_headers);
- client.head(path, request_headers);
- client.post(path, request_headers);
- client.del(path, request_headers);
- client.put(path, request_headers);
- 
      Issues a request; if necessary establishes connection. 
      request_headersis optional.request_headersshould be an array of 2-element arrays. Additional request headers might be added internally by Node. Returns aClientRequestobject.Do remember to include the Content-Lengthheader if you plan on sending a body. If you plan on streaming the body, perhaps setTransfer-Encoding: chunked.Important: the request is not complete. This method only sends the header of the request. One needs to call req.finish()to finalize the request and retrieve the response. (This sounds convoluted but it provides a chance for the user to stream a body to the server withreq.sendBody().)GETandHEADrequests normally are without bodies but HTTP does not forbid it, so neither do we.
node.http.ClientRequest
  
    This object is created internally and returned from the request
    methods of a node.http.Client. It represents an
    in-progress request whose header has already been sent. 
  
- req.sendBody(chunk, encoding="ascii")
- 
      Sends a sucessive peice of the body.  By calling this method
      many times, the user can stream a request body to a
      server—in that case it is suggested to use the
      ["Transfer-Encoding", "chunked"]header line when creating the request.The chunkargument should be an array of integers or a string.The encodingargument is optional and only applies whenchunkis a string. The encoding argument should be either"utf8"or"ascii". By default the body uses ASCII encoding, as it is faster.
- req.finish(response_handler)
- 
      Finishes sending the request. If any parts of the body are
      unsent, it will flush them to the socket. If the request is
      chunked, this will send the terminating "0\r\n\r\n".The parameter response_handleris a user-supplied callback which will be executed exactly once when the server response headers have been received. Theresponse_handlercallback is executed with one argument: aClientResponseobject.
node.http.ClientResponse
  
    This object is created internally and passed to the
    response_handler callback (is given to the client in
    req.finish function). The response object appears
    exactly as the header is completely received but before any part
    of the response body has been read. 
  
- res.statusCode
- The 3-digit HTTP response status code. E.G. 404.
- res.httpVersion
- 
      The HTTP version of the connected-to server. Probably either 
      "1.1"or"1.0".
- res.headers
- The response headers. An Array of 2-element arrays.
- res.onBody
- 
      Callback. Should be set by the user to be informed of when a
      piece of the response body is received. A chunk of the body is
      given as the single argument. The transfer-encoding has been
      removed. 
      The body chunk is either a Stringin the case of UTF-8 encoding or an array of numbers in the case of raw encoding. The body encoding is set withres.setBodyEncoding().
- res.onBodyComplete
- 
      Callback. Made exactly once for each message. No arguments.
      After onBodyCompleteis executedonBodywill no longer be called.
- res.setBodyEncoding(encoding)
- 
      Set the encoding for the response body. Either
      "utf8"or"raw". Defaults to raw.
Modules
    Node has a simple module loading system.  In Node, files and
    modules are in one-to-one correspondence.  As an example, 
    foo.js loads the module mjsunit.js.
  
The contents of foo.js:
include("mjsunit.js");
function onLoad () {
  assertEquals(1, 2);
}
  The contents of mjsunit.js:
function fail (expected, found, name_opt) {
  // ...
}
function deepEquals (a, b) {
  // ...
}
exports.assertEquals = function (expected, found, name_opt) {
  if (!deepEquals(found, expected)) {
    fail(expected, found, name_opt);
  }
};
  
    The module mjsunit.js has exported a function
    assertEquals().  mjsunit.js must be
    in the same directory as foo.js for
    include() to find it. The module path is relative
    to the file calling include(). 
  
Alternatively one can use HTTP URLs to load modules. For example,
include("http://tinyclouds.org/node/mjsunit.js");
  
    include() inserts the exported objects from the
    specified module into the global namespace.
  
onLoad
  
    Because module loading does not happen instantaneously, and
    because Node has a policy of never blocking, a callback
    onLoad can be set that will notify the user when the
    included modules are loaded.  Each file/module can have an
    onLoad callback.
  
    To export an object, add to the special exports
    object. 
    The functions fail and
    deepEquals are not exported and remain private to
    the module.
    Alternatively, one can use this instead of
    exports.
  
    require() is like include() except
    does not polute the global namespace. It returns a namespace
    object. The exported objects can only be guaranteed to exist
    after the onLoad() callback is made. For example:
  
var mjsunit = require("mjsunit.js");
function onLoad () {
  mjsunit.assertEquals(1, 2);
}
  
    include() and require() cannot be
    used after onLoad() is called. 
  
onExit
  
    When the program exits a callback onExit() will be
    called for each module (children first).
  
    The onExit() callback cannot perform I/O as the process is
    going to forcably exit in several microseconds, however it is a good
    hook to perform some constant time checks of the module's state. 
    It's useful for unit tests.
  
include("mjsunit.js");
var timer_executed = false;
setTimeout(function () {
  timer_executed = true
}, 1000);
function onExit () {
  assertTrue(timer_executed);
}
  
    Just to reiterate: onExit(), is not the place to close
    files or shutdown servers. The process will exit before they get
    performed.