refactor: moving types and functions from libweb
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// errTracker.ts defines an 'ErrTracker' type which keeps track of historical
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// errors. When the number of errors gets too large, it randomly starts pruning
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// errors. It always keeps 250 of the most recent errors, and then keeps up to
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// 500 historic errors, where the first few errors after runtime are always
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// kept, and the ones in the middle are increasingly likely to be omitted from
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// the history.
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import { Err } from "./types.js";
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// MAX_ERRORS defines the maximum number of errors that will be held in the
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// HistoricErr object.
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const MAX_ERRORS = 1000;
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// HistoricErr is a wrapper that adds a date to the Err type.
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interface HistoricErr {
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err: Err;
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date: Date;
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}
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// ErrTracker keeps track of errors that have happened, randomly dropping
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// errors to prevent the tracker from using too much memory if there happen to
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// be a large number of errors.
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interface ErrTracker {
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recentErrs: HistoricErr[];
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oldErrs: HistoricErr[];
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addErr: (err: Err) => void;
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viewErrs: () => HistoricErr[];
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}
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// newErrTracker returns an ErrTracker object that is ready to have errors
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// added to it.
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function newErrTracker(): ErrTracker {
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const et: ErrTracker = {
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recentErrs: [],
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oldErrs: [],
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addErr: function (err: Err): void {
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addHistoricErr(et, err);
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},
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viewErrs: function (): HistoricErr[] {
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return viewErrs(et);
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},
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};
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return et;
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}
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// addHistoricErr is a function that will add an error to a set of historic
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// errors. It uses randomness to prune errors once the error object is too
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// large.
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function addHistoricErr(et: ErrTracker, err: Err): void {
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// Add this error to the set of most recent errors.
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et.recentErrs.push({
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err,
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date: new Date(),
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});
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// Determine whether some of the most recent errors need to be moved into
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// logTermErrs. If the length of the mostRecentErrs is not at least half of
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// the MAX_ERRORS, we don't need to do anything.
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if (et.recentErrs.length < MAX_ERRORS / 2) {
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return;
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}
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// Iterate through the recentErrs. For the first half of the recentErrs, we
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// will use randomness to either toss them or move them to oldErrs. The
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// second half of the recentErrs will be kept as the new recentErrs array.
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const newRecentErrs : HistoricErr[] = [];
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for (let i = 0; i < et.recentErrs.length; i++) {
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// If we are in the second half of the array, add the element to
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// newRecentErrs.
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if (i > et.recentErrs.length / 2) {
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newRecentErrs.push(et.recentErrs[i]);
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continue;
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}
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// We are in the first half of the array, use a random number to add the
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// error oldErrs probabilistically.
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const rand = Math.random();
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const target = et.oldErrs.length / (MAX_ERRORS / 2);
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if (rand > target || et.oldErrs.length < 25) {
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et.oldErrs.push(et.recentErrs[i]);
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}
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}
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et.recentErrs = newRecentErrs;
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}
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// viewErrs returns the list of errors that have been retained by the
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// HistoricErr object.
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function viewErrs(et: ErrTracker): HistoricErr[] {
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const finalErrs: HistoricErr[] = [];
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for (let i = 0; i < et.oldErrs.length; i++) {
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finalErrs.push(et.oldErrs[i]);
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}
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for (let i = 0; i < et.recentErrs.length; i++) {
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finalErrs.push(et.recentErrs[i]);
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}
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return finalErrs;
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}
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export { ErrTracker, HistoricErr, newErrTracker };
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// DataFn can take any object as input and has no return value. The input is
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// allowed to be undefined.
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type DataFn = (data?: any) => void;
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// Err is an error type that is either a string or a null. If the value is
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// null, that indicates that there was no error. If the value is a string, it
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// indicates that there was an error and the string contains the error message.
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//
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// The skynet libraries prefer this error type to the standard Error type
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// because many times skynet libraries need to pass errors over postMessage,
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// and the 'Error' type is not able to be sent over postMessage.
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type Err = string | null;
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// ErrFn must take an error message as input. The input is not allowed to be
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// undefined or null, there must be an error.
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type ErrFn = (errMsg: string) => void;
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// ErrTuple is a type that pairs a 'data' field with an 'err' field. Skynet
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// libraries typically prefer returning ErrTuples to throwing or rejecting,
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// because it allows upstream code to avoid the try/catch/throw pattern. Though
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// the pattern is much celebrated in javascript, it encourages relaxed error
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// handling, and often makes error handling much more difficult because the try
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// and the catch are in different scopes.
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//
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// Most of the Skynet core libraries do not have any `throws` anywhere in their
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// API.
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//
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// Typically, an ErrTuple will have only one field filled out. If data is
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// returned, the err should be 'null'. If an error is returned, the data field
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// should generally be empty. Callers are expected to check the error before
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// they access any part of the data field.
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type ErrTuple<T = any> = [data: T, err: Err];
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// KernelAuthStatus is the structure of a message that gets sent by the kernel
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// containing its auth status. Auth occurs in 5 stages.
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//
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// Stage 0; no auth updates
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// Stage 1: bootloader is loaded, user is not yet logged in
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// Stage 2: bootloader is loaded, user is logged in
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// Stage 3: kernel is loaded, user is logged in
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// Stage 4: kernel is loaded, user is logging out (refresh iminent)
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//
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// 'kernelLoaded' is initially set to "not yet" and will be updated when the
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// kernel has loaded. If it is set to "success", it means the kernel loaded
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// without issues. If it is set to anything else, it means that there was an
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// error, and the new value is the error.
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//
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// 'kernelLoaded' will not be changed until 'loginComplete' has been set to
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// true. 'loginComplete' can be set to true immediately if the user is already
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// logged in.
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//
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// 'logoutComplete' can be set to 'true' at any point, which indicates that the
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// auth cycle needs to reset.
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interface KernelAuthStatus {
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loginComplete: boolean;
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kernelLoaded: "not yet" | "success" | string;
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logoutComplete: boolean;
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}
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interface Portal {
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id: string;
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name: string;
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url: string;
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}
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// RequestOverrideResponse defines the type that the kernel returns as a
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// response to a requestOverride call.
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interface RequestOverrideResponse {
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override: boolean;
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headers?: any; // TODO: I don't know how to do an array of types.
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body?: Uint8Array;
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}
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export interface KeyPair {
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publicKey: Uint8Array;
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privateKey: Uint8Array;
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}
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export {
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DataFn,
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ErrFn,
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Err,
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ErrTuple,
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KernelAuthStatus,
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RequestOverrideResponse,
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Portal,
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};
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// addContextToErr is a helper function that standardizes the formatting of
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// adding context to an error.
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//
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// NOTE: To protect against accidental situations where an Error type or some
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// other type is provided instead of a string, we wrap both of the inputs with
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// objAsString before returning them. This prevents runtime failures.
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function addContextToErr(err: any, context: string): string {
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if (err === null || err === undefined) {
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err = "[no error provided]";
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}
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return objAsString(context) + ": " + objAsString(err);
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}
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// objAsString will try to return the provided object as a string. If the
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// object is already a string, it will be returned without modification. If the
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// object is an 'Error', the message of the error will be returned. If the object
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// has a toString method, the toString method will be called and the result
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// will be returned. If the object is null or undefined, a special string will
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// be returned indicating that the undefined/null object cannot be converted to
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// a string. In all other cases, JSON.stringify is used. If JSON.stringify
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// throws an exception, a message "[could not provide object as string]" will
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// be returned.
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//
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// NOTE: objAsString is intended to produce human readable output. It is lossy,
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// and it is not intended to be used for serialization.
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function objAsString(obj: any): string {
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// Check for undefined input.
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if (obj === undefined) {
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return "[cannot convert undefined to string]";
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}
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if (obj === null) {
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return "[cannot convert null to string]";
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}
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// Parse the error into a string.
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if (typeof obj === "string") {
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return obj;
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}
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// Check if the object is an error, and return the message of the error if
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// so.
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if (obj instanceof Error) {
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return obj.message;
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}
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// Check if the object has a 'toString' method defined on it. To ensure
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// that we don't crash or throw, check that the toString is a function, and
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// also that the return value of toString is a string.
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if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call(obj, "toString")) {
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if (typeof obj.toString === "function") {
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const str = obj.toString();
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if (typeof str === "string") {
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return str;
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}
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}
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}
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// If the object does not have a custom toString, attempt to perform a
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// JSON.stringify. We use a lot of bigints in libskynet, and calling
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// JSON.stringify on an object with a bigint will cause a throw, so we add
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// some custom handling to allow bigint objects to still be encoded.
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try {
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return JSON.stringify(obj, (_, v) => {
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if (typeof v === "bigint") {
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return v.toString();
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}
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return v;
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});
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} catch (err: any) {
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if (err !== undefined && typeof err.message === "string") {
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return `[stringify failed]: ${err.message}`;
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}
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return "[stringify failed]";
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}
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}
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export { objAsString };
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export { addContextToErr };
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