I\'m writing a program in Node.js that (in some situations) wants to act as a simple filter: read everything from stdin (up to end of file), do some processing, write the re
I use the following in Node 11+
async function read(stream) {
const chunks = [];
for await (const chunk of stream) chunks.push(chunk);
return Buffer.concat(chunks).toString('utf8');
}
Usage:
const input = await read(process.stdin);
get-stdin will do the trick.
A few notes reading between the lines in your question.
Since you tagged the question "synchronous" I'll just note that stdin is async-only in node.js. The above library is the simplest it gets. It will handle the entire input as either a string or a buffer.
If possible, writing your program in the streaming style is best, but some use cases are feasible for streaming (i.e. word count) and some are not (i.e. reverse the input).
Also the "one line at a time from the console" is an artifact of the terminal buffering your keystrokes. If you want some "I'm sorry I asked" level detail check out the amazing the TTY Demystified.
My boiler-plate for this one is a lot like the solution described in a comment above -- offering it at the top level because it's very much the simplest way to do this and it shouldn't be only in a comment.
var fs = require('fs');
var data = fs.readFileSync(0, 'utf-8');
// Data now points to a buffer containing the file's contents
If you're on linux, there is no need for a 3rd party package for this. of course, consider your performance needs, but these two lines will work:
const fs = require("fs");
const data = fs.readFileSync("/dev/stdin", "utf-8");
Jan points out in the comments below that a more portable solution would be to use 0
, as this is the POSIX standard. So, you may simple use:
const fs = require("fs");
const data = fs.readFileSync(0, "utf-8");
data
is now a string with your data from stdin, interpreted as utf 8