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10 月之前 | |
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| .travis.yml | 10 月之前 | |
| LICENSE | 10 月之前 | |
| README.md | 10 月之前 | |
| index.js | 10 月之前 | |
| package.json | 10 月之前 | |
| test.js | 10 月之前 | |
Access memory using small fixed sized buffers instead of allocating a huge buffer. Useful if you are implementing sparse data structures (such as large bitfield).
npm install memory-pager
var pager = require('paged-memory')
var pages = pager(1024) // use 1kb per page
var page = pages.get(10) // get page #10
console.log(page.offset) // 10240
console.log(page.buffer) // a blank 1kb buffer
var pages = pager(pageSize)Create a new pager. pageSize defaults to 1024.
var page = pages.get(pageNumber, [noAllocate])Get a page. The page will be allocated at first access.
Optionally you can set the noAllocate flag which will make the
method return undefined if no page has been allocated already
A page looks like this
{
offset: byteOffset,
buffer: bufferWithPageSize
}
pages.set(pageNumber, buffer)Explicitly set the buffer for a page.
pages.updated(page)Mark a page as updated.
pages.lastUpdate()Get the last page that was updated.
var buf = pages.toBuffer()Concat all pages allocated pages into a single buffer
MIT