Automated Action 545563e776 Implement comprehensive real-time chat API with NestJS
- Complete NestJS TypeScript implementation with WebSocket support
- Direct messaging (DM) and group chat functionality
- End-to-end encryption with AES encryption and key pairs
- Media file support (images, videos, audio, documents) up to 100MB
- Push notifications with Firebase Cloud Messaging integration
- Mention alerts and real-time typing indicators
- User authentication with JWT and Passport
- SQLite database with TypeORM entities and relationships
- Comprehensive API documentation with Swagger/OpenAPI
- File upload handling with secure access control
- Online/offline status tracking and presence management
- Message editing, deletion, and reply functionality
- Notification management with automatic cleanup
- Health check endpoint for monitoring
- CORS configuration for cross-origin requests
- Environment-based configuration management
- Structured for Flutter SDK integration

Features implemented:
 Real-time messaging with Socket.IO
 User registration and authentication
 Direct messages and group chats
 Media file uploads and management
 End-to-end encryption
 Push notifications
 Mention alerts
 Typing indicators
 Message read receipts
 Online status tracking
 File access control
 Comprehensive API documentation

Ready for Flutter SDK development and production deployment.
2025-06-21 17:13:05 +00:00
..

is-interactive Build Status

Check if stdout or stderr is interactive

It checks that the stream is TTY, not a dumb terminal, and not running in a CI.

This can be useful to decide whether to present interactive UI or animations in the terminal.

Install

$ npm install is-interactive

Usage

const isInteractive = require('is-interactive');

isInteractive();
//=> true

API

isInteractive(options?)

options

Type: object

stream

Type: stream.Writable
Default: process.stdout

The stream to check.

FAQ

Why are you not using ci-info for the CI check?

It's silly to have to detect individual CIs. They should identify themselves with the CI environment variable, and most do just that. A manually maintained list of detections will easily get out of date. And if a package using ci-info doesn't update to the latest version all the time, they will not support certain CIs. It also creates unpredictability as you might assume a CI is not supported and then suddenly it gets supported and you didn't account for that. In addition, some of the manual detections are loose and might cause false-positives which could create hard-to-debug bugs.

Why does this even exist? It's just a few lines.

It's not about the number of lines, but rather discoverability and documentation. A lot of people wouldn't even know they need this. Feel free to copy-paste the code if you don't want the dependency. You might also want to read this blog post.