**Motivations:** - Ensure all application directories have systemd services enabled at boot - Complete service installation for api-relay, filigrane-api, and clamav-api - Fix dependencies and import issues preventing clamav-api from starting **Root causes:** - Three services (api-relay, filigrane-api, clamav-api) had service files but were not installed in systemd - api-clamav had incorrect node-clamav version (0.12.1) that doesn't exist - api-clamav dependencies were not installed (node_modules missing) - ES module import syntax incompatible with CommonJS node-clamav package **Correctifs:** - Installed api-relay.service, filigrane-api.service, and clamav-api.service in /etc/systemd/system/ - Enabled all three services for automatic startup at boot - Updated api-clamav/package.json: changed node-clamav version from ^0.12.1 to ^1.0.11 - Installed npm dependencies for api-clamav - Fixed ES module import in api-clamav/src/routes/scan.js to use CommonJS-compatible syntax **Evolutions:** - All 7 application services now have systemd services enabled at boot - Complete service coverage: anchorage-api, faucet-api, signet-dashboard, userwallet, api-relay, filigrane-api, clamav-api - All services verified active and listening on their respective ports **Pages affectées:** - api-clamav/package.json - api-clamav/src/routes/scan.js - api-clamav/node_modules/ (new) - api-clamav/package-lock.json (new) - /etc/systemd/system/api-relay.service (new) - /etc/systemd/system/filigrane-api.service (new) - /etc/systemd/system/clamav-api.service (new)
destroy
Destroy a stream.
This module is meant to ensure a stream gets destroyed, handling different APIs and Node.js bugs.
API
var destroy = require('destroy')
destroy(stream [, suppress])
Destroy the given stream, and optionally suppress any future error events.
In most cases, this is identical to a simple stream.destroy() call. The rules
are as follows for a given stream:
- If the
streamis an instance ofReadStream, then callstream.destroy()and add a listener to theopenevent to callstream.close()if it is fired. This is for a Node.js bug that will leak a file descriptor if.destroy()is called beforeopen. - If the
streamis an instance of a zlib stream, then callstream.destroy()and close the underlying zlib handle if open, otherwise callstream.close(). This is for consistency across Node.js versions and a Node.js bug that will leak a native zlib handle. - If the
streamis not an instance ofStream, then nothing happens. - If the
streamhas a.destroy()method, then call it.
The function returns the stream passed in as the argument.
Example
var destroy = require('destroy')
var fs = require('fs')
var stream = fs.createReadStream('package.json')
// ... and later
destroy(stream)