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doc: describe when stdout/err is sync #10884
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Thanks for doing this, it should be really helpful.
I think we typically use doc:
as the subsystem for documentation-only updates, btw.
doc/api/console.md
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it writes to [`process.stdout`][] and [`process.stderr`][] which differ from | ||
other Node.js streams. See the [note on process I/O][] for more information. | ||
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[note on process I/O]: process.html#process_a_note_on_process_i_o |
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Can you move this to the other link definitions at the bottom of the file?
doc/api/process.md
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To check if Node.js is being run in a TTY context, read the `isTTY` property | ||
on `process.stderr`, `process.stdout`, or `process.stdin`: | ||
Note: `process.stderr` differs from other Node.js streams in important ways, | ||
see [XXX][] for more information. |
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Should this be a link to the notes section, too? (ditto for the XXX
below)
2. They cannot be closed ([`end()`][] will throw). | ||
3. They will never emit the [`'finish'`][] event. | ||
4. Writes may be synchronous depending on the what the stream is connected to | ||
and whether the system is Windows or Unix: |
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It might be good to mention that synchronous
writes correspond to blocking behaviour?
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Agreed
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Note that we don't do this in any other place where we wrap system calls synchronously: https://nodejs.org/api/fs.html#fs_fs_writefilesync_file_data_options for example, not sure why its so necessary here, but I'm willing.
Whether a sync call blocks or not depends on the O/S, the write buffer sizes, whether whatever process on the other side of the pipe/pty/whatever is reading data, etc. We can't just say that sync calls block, because that isn't true.
How about
If the write blocks, the synchronous call won't return until it unblocks.
If not, perhaps you can provide some text?
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@addaleax If you are commenting top-to-bottom, you wouldn't notice, but this statement exists already, just a couple lines down:
Warning: Synchronous writes block the event loop until the write has completed.
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@addaleax PTAL |
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@Fishrock123 I'd appreciate a review by you, too, when you have a moment. |
doc/api/process.md
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under high system load, pipes that are not being read at the receiving end, or | ||
with slow terminals or file systems, its possible for the event loop to be | ||
blocked often enough and long enough to have severe negative performance | ||
impacts. This may not e a problem when writing to an interactive terminal |
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typo: may not be
doc/api/process.md
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blocked often enough and long enough to have severe negative performance | ||
impacts. This may not e a problem when writing to an interactive terminal | ||
session, but consider this particularly careful when doing production logging to | ||
the process output streams. |
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This writeup is much more detailed than I hoped for, thanks!
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Left some comments but the overall direction is good @sam-github.
doc/api/console.md
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* A global `console` instance configured to write to `stdout` and `stderr`. | ||
Because this object is global, it can be used without calling | ||
* A global `console` instance configured to write to [`process.stdout`][] and | ||
[`process.stderr`][]. This object is global, it can be used without calling |
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, and it
?
doc/api/console.md
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`require('console')`. | ||
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***Warning***: The global console object's methods may be synchronous, because |
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I think the opposite is more true: they may be asynchronous. This differers more from Node.js streams but would better reflect reality.
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Also, browsers are synchronous for consoles too IIRC so async is even more different.
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How about
Warning: The global console object's methods are neither consistently synchronous like the browser APIs they resemble, nor are they consistently asynchronous like all other Node.js streams. See the note ... etc
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Better yeah, wording reads a bit weird to me but idk how to improve it atm. Something regarding the neither
.
doc/api/process.md
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The `process.exit()` method instructs Node.js to terminate the process as | ||
quickly as possible with the specified exit `code`. If the `code` is omitted, | ||
The `process.exit()` method instructs Node.js to terminate the process | ||
synchronously with the specified exit `code`. If the `code` is omitted, |
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Maybe we should add something like "the exit is immediate except that synchronous code may still be run from the exit
event"?
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added comment about exit event
2. They cannot be closed ([`end()`][] will throw). | ||
3. They will never emit the [`'finish'`][] event. | ||
4. Writes may be synchronous depending on the what the stream is connected to | ||
and whether the system is Windows or Unix: |
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Agreed
doc/api/process.md
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4. Writes may be synchronous depending on the what the stream is connected to | ||
and whether the system is Windows or Unix: | ||
- Files: *synchronous* on Windows and Linux | ||
- Terminals/TTYs: *asynchronous* on Windows, *synchronous* on Unix |
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TTYs (Terminals):
might be better
The `process.stderr` and `process.stdout` streams are blocking when outputting | ||
to TTYs (terminals) on OS X as a workaround for the operating system's small, | ||
1kb buffer size. This is to prevent interleaving between `stdout` and `stderr`. | ||
These behaviours are partly for historical reasons, as changing them would |
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I don't think so. They are the way they are because of factors outside the node process.
Ideally they would all be synchronous I think. That is entirely impossible to implement Windows consoles* and also has other problems with pipes. (But Windows pipes have to block regardless.)
*There is no end-of-message notification IIRC
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@Fishrock123 Your statement above is exactly why the it is partly for historical reasons. In your opinion pipes would be sync on Unix, but they aren't. How would you care to explain this other than "for historical reasons... backwards compat"? Also, note that I covered your point of view in the sentence below the one you comment on: "expected by some users", and that I even elaborated on why its expected with a whole paragraph. Would you like to propose some other explaination of why unix and windows are the exact opposites of each other for consoles and pipes? If one is the right way, the other is the wrong way and we have to say something about why this is.
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Yes. Pipes on both Windows and Unix are wrong but neither is entirely our fault.
Blocking in a pipe means the process may stall forever if the downstream consumer stalls. That is not good and why pipes are (should be) async. @piscisaureus or @bnoordhuis may have more info.
It is my impression that making pipes on windows does not work correctly. See nodejs/node-v0.x-archive#3584 and 20176a9, although after reading some of the comments I am less confident about that. Maybe we could make pipes async on windows... again?
Note of course, that being async in a pipe has most of the caveats that being async in a terminal does, so it's not really good either.
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How would you care to explain this other than "for historical reasons... backwards compat"?
Would you like to propose some other explaination of why unix and windows are the exact opposites of each other for consoles and pipes? If one is the right way, the other is the wrong way and we have to say something about why this is
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Again:
Maybe we could make pipes async on windows... again?
I don't actually have an answer at the current time. I suppose the wording is fine.
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This is a doc PR, I'm not about to change how the system works in it, but I'm 💯 on aligning Windows and *nix platforms.
doc/api/process.md
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Synchronous writes avoid problems such as output written with `console.log()` or | ||
`console.write()` being unexpectedly interleaved, or not written at all if | ||
`process.exit()` is called before an asynchronous write completes. See | ||
[`process.exit()`][] for more discussion. |
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more... discussion information?
doc/api/process.md
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[`process.exit()`][] for more discussion. | ||
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***Warning***: Synchronous writes block the event loop until the write has | ||
completed. This can be near instantaneous in the case of output to a file, but |
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in the case of output to a file due to write-back caching.
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You think our users will know what write-back caching is? Why do you think that referencing that one kind of caching will be helpful to node users? That kind of caching is only one of the things happening deep under the hood of an I/O scheduler.
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Hmmm well I think it would be nice to mention something at least that people can do more research into.
session, but consider this particularly careful when doing production logging to | ||
the process output streams. | ||
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To check if a stream is connected to a [TTY][] context, check the `isTTY` |
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Link to isTTY
?
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I tried, but the TTY docs don't describe it as a property, its only mentioned in the text, so that's the most specific link until the TTY docs get reworked. https://nodejs.org/api/tty.html#tty_tty
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ah, ok
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@Fishrock123 addressed most comments, have a couple open questions for you, PTAL |
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eh, seems good enough to me, definitely better than it was
process.stdout, process.stderr, and console.log() and console.error() which use the process streams, are usually synchronous. Warn about this, and clearly describe the conditions under which they are synchronous. Fix: nodejs#10617 PR-URL: nodejs#10884 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <anna@addaleax.net> Reviewed-By: Jeremiah Senkpiel <fishrock123@rocketmail.com>
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Thanks for the review, @Fishrock123 @italoacasas doc-only change, would be nice to have in 7.x, but not a disaster if it is not |
process.stdout, process.stderr, and console.log() and console.error() which use the process streams, are usually synchronous. Warn about this, and clearly describe the conditions under which they are synchronous. Fix: nodejs#10617 PR-URL: nodejs#10884 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <anna@addaleax.net> Reviewed-By: Jeremiah Senkpiel <fishrock123@rocketmail.com>
process.stdout, process.stderr, and console.log() and console.error() which use the process streams, are usually synchronous. Warn about this, and clearly describe the conditions under which they are synchronous. Fix: #10617 PR-URL: #10884 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <anna@addaleax.net> Reviewed-By: Jeremiah Senkpiel <fishrock123@rocketmail.com>
process.stdout, process.stderr, and console.log() and console.error() which use the process streams, are usually synchronous. Warn about this, and clearly describe the conditions under which they are synchronous. Fix: #10617 PR-URL: #10884 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <anna@addaleax.net> Reviewed-By: Jeremiah Senkpiel <fishrock123@rocketmail.com>
needs a backport PR in order to land on v4 |
process.stdout, process.stderr, and console.log() and console.error() which use the process streams, are usually synchronous. Warn about this, and clearly describe the conditions under which they are synchronous. Fix: #10617 PR-URL: #10884 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <anna@addaleax.net> Reviewed-By: Jeremiah Senkpiel <fishrock123@rocketmail.com>
process.stdout, process.stderr, and console.log() and console.error()
which use the process streams, are usually synchronous. Warn about this,
and clearly describe the conditions under which they are synchronous.
Fix: #10617
Checklist
Affected core subsystem(s)
doc,console,process