Node.js

Node.js
Original author(s) Ryan Dahl
Developer(s) Node.js Developers, Joyent, contributors
Initial release May 27, 2009 (2009-05-27)[1]
Stable release 6.1.0 / May 5, 2016 (2016-05-05)[2]
Development status Active
Written in C, C++, JavaScript
Operating system OS X, Linux, Solaris, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Microsoft Windows (older versions require Cygwin), webOS, NonStop OS
Type Event-driven networking
License MIT
Website nodejs.org

In software development, Node.js is an open-source, cross-platform runtime environment for developing server-side Web applications. Although Node.js is not a JavaScript framework,[3] many of its basic modules are written in JavaScript, and developers can write new modules in JavaScript. The runtime environment interprets JavaScript using Google's V8 JavaScript engine.

Node.js has an event-driven architecture capable of asynchronous I/O. These design choices aim to optimize throughput and scalability in Web applications with many input/output operations, as well as for real-time Web applications (e.g., real-time communication programs and browser games).[4]

The Node.js distributed development project, governed by the Node.js Foundation,[5] is facilitated by the Linux Foundation's Collaborative Projects program.[6]

Corporate users of Node.js software include GoDaddy,[7] Groupon,[8] IBM,[9] LinkedIn,[10][11] Microsoft,[12][13] Netflix,[14] PayPal,[15][16] Rakuten, SAP,[17] Voxer,[18] Walmart,[19] and Yahoo!.[20]

History

Ryan Dahl, creator of Node.js

Node.js was originally written in 2009 by Ryan Dahl. The initial release supported only Linux. Its development and maintenance was led by Dahl and later sponsored by Joyent.[21]

Dahl was inspired to create Node.js after seeing a file upload progress bar on Flickr. The browser did not know how much of the file had been uploaded and had to query the Web server. Dahl desired an easier way.[4][22]

Dahl demonstrated the project at the inaugural European JSConf on November 8, 2009.[23][24][25] Node.js combined Google's V8 JavaScript engine, an event loop and a low-level I/O API.[26] The project received a standing ovation.[27]

In 2011, a package manager was introduced for the Node.js environment called npm. The package manager makes it easier for programmers to publish and share source code of Node.js libraries and is designed to simplify installation, updating and uninstallation of libraries.[26]

In June 2011, Microsoft and Joyent implemented a native Windows version of Node.js.[28] The first Node.js build supporting Windows was released in July 2011.

In January 2012, Dahl stepped aside, promoting coworker and npm creator Isaac Schlueter to manage the project.[29] In January 2014, Schlueter announced that Timothy J. Fontaine would lead the project.[30]

In December 2014, Fedor Indutny started io.js, a fork of Node.js. Due to internal conflict over Joyent's governance, io.js was created as an open governance alternative with a separate technical committee.[31][32] Unlike Node.js,[33] the authors planned to keep io.js up-to-date with the latest releases of the Google V8 JavaScript engine.[34]

In February 2015, the intent to form a neutral Node.js Foundation was announced. By June 2015, the Node.js and io.js communities voted to work together under the Node.js Foundation.[35]

In September 2015, Node.js v0.12 and io.js v3.3 were merged back together into Node v4.0.[36] This brought V8 ES6 features into Node.js, and a long-term support release cycle.[37] As of 2016, the io.js website recommends that developers switch back to Node.js.[38]

Overview

Node.js allows the creation of Web servers and networking tools using JavaScript and a collection of "modules" that handle various core functionality [26][23][39] and other core functions.[26][40][41] Node.js's modules use an API designed to reduce the complexity of writing server applications. Common frameworks include Connect, Express.js, Socket.IO, Koa.js, Hapi.js, Sails, Meteor, Derby, and many others.[26][42]

Modern desktop IDEs provide editing and debugging features specifically for Node.js applications. Such IDEs include Atom, Brackets, JetBrains WebStorm,[43][44] Microsoft Visual Studio (with Node.js Tools for Visual Studio,[45] or TypeScript with Node definitions[46][47][48][49]), NetBeans,[50] Nodeclipse Enide Studio[51] (Eclipse-based) and Visual Studio Code.[52][53] Certain online web-based IDEs also support Node.js, such as Codeanywhere, Cloud9 IDE and Koding. Regardless, any text editor such as Notepad++ may also be used in place of a IDE, albeit without code completion or debugging support.

Technical details

At its core, Node.js is a “proto-server” that processes incoming requests in a loop, called the event loop, and does nothing out-of-the-box.[3]

Threading

Node.js operates on a single thread, using non-blocking I/O calls, allowing it to support tens of thousands of concurrent connections without incurring the cost of thread context switching.[54] The design of sharing a single thread between all the requests that uses the observer pattern is intended for building highly concurrent applications, where any function performing I/O must use a callback. In order to accommodate the single-threaded event loop, Node.js utilizes the libuv library that in turn uses a fixed-sized threadpool that is responsible for all non-blocking asynchronous I/O operations.[4]

A downside of this single-threaded approach is that Node.js doesn't allow vertical scaling by increasing the number of CPU cores of the machine it is running on without using an additional module, such as cluster,[55] StrongLoop Process Manager[56] or pm2.[57] However, developers can increase the default number of threads in the libuv threadpool; these threads are likely to be distributed across multiple cores by the server operating system.[58]

Execution of parallel tasks in Node.js is handled by a thread pool. The main thread call functions post tasks to the shared task queue that threads in the thread pool pull and execute. Inherently non-blocking system functions like networking translates to kernel-side non-blocking sockets, while inherently blocking system functions like file I/O run in a blocking way on its own thread. When a thread in the thread pool completes a task, it informs the main thread of this that in turn wakes up and execute the registered callback. Since callbacks are handled in serial on the main thread, long lasting computations and other CPU-bound tasks will freeze the entire event-loop until completion.

V8

V8 is the JavaScript execution engine built for Google Chrome and open-sourced by Google in 2008. Written in C++, V8 compiles JavaScript source code to native machine code instead of interpreting it in real time.[4]

Node.js uses libuv to handle asynchronous events. Libuv is an abstraction layer for network and file system functionality on both Windows and POSIX-based systems like Linux, Mac OS X, OSS on NonStop and Unix.

The core functionality of Node.js resides in a JavaScript library. The Node.js bindings, written in C++, connect these technologies to each other and to the operating system.

Package management

npm is the pre-installed package manager for the Node.js server platform. It is used to install Node.js programs from the npm registry, organizing the installation and management of third-party Node.js programs. npm is not to be confused with the CommonJS require() statement. It is not used to load code; instead, it is used to install code and manage code dependencies from the command line. The packages found in the npm registry can range from simple helper libraries like Underscore.js to task runners like Grunt.[59]

Unified API

Node.js can be combined with a browser, a document database (such as MongoDB or CouchDB) and JSON for a unified JavaScript development stack. With the adaptation of what were essentially server-side development patterns like MVC, MVP, MVVM, etc., Node.js allows the reuse of the same model and service interface between client-side and server-side.

Event loop

Node.js registers itself with the operating system so that it is notified when a connection is made, and the operating system will issue a callback. Within the Node.js runtime, each connection is a small heap allocation. Traditionally, relatively heavyweight OS processes or threads handled each connection. Node.js uses an event loop for scalability, instead of processes or threads.[60] In contrast to other event-driven servers, Node.js's event loop does not need to be called explicitly. Instead callbacks are defined, and the server automatically enters the event loop at the end of the callback definition. Node.js exits the event loop when there are no further callbacks to be performed.

Alternatives

JXcore

JXcore is a fork of Node.js targeting mobile devices and IoTs. Its first beta was released in January 2014. It was open sourced[61] on February 13, 2015 and made available through a GitHub repository.[62] JXcore can use either of the Google V8 or Mozilla SpiderMonkey JavaScript engines. As a result, JXcore can run Node applications on iOS devices using SpiderMonkey. As of March 25, 2016, active development on JXcore has been halted.[63]

Other languages

Similar open source event-driven server frameworks for other platforms include:

Node.js may utilize code written in other programming languages using:

See also

References

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  2. "Node.js Previous Releases". Retrieved 9 February 2016.
  3. 1 2 Wen, Ben (2013-12-12). "6 things you should know about Node.js". JAVAWORLD. Archived from the original on 2013-12-12. Retrieved 2016-01-22.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Laurent Orsini (2013-11-07). "What You Need To Know About Node.js". readwrite. Archived from the original on 2013-11-07. Retrieved 2016-01-22.
  5. "Node.js Foundation - Node.js". Retrieved 4 July 2015.
  6. "Linux Foundation Collaborative Projects". Retrieved 4 July 2015.
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  20. "Yahoo! Announces Cocktails Shaken, Not Stirred". Retrieved 7 April 2015.
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  22. Harris, Amber (April 1, 2012). "The Birth of Node: Where Did it Come From? Creator Ryan Dahl Shares the History". Devops Angle. Retrieved 26 October 2013.
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  25. "Ryan Dahl at JSConf EU 2009 Video".
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  36. "Node.js Foundation Combines Node.js and io.js Into Single Codebase in New Release". Retrieved 28 Jan 2016.
  37. "io.js and Node.js merge". Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  38. Io.js, JavaScript I/O, "io.js has merged with the Node.js project again. There won't be any further io.js releases. All of the features in io.js are available in Node.js v4 and above."
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  41. Modules, Nodejs Website
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  46. soywiz/typescript-node-definitions TypeScript's typings for some popular node.js modules, Github
  47. DefinitelyTyped, Github
  48. , The repository for high quality TypeScript type definitions
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  68. "cobol".

Further reading

External links

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