
- 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.
2.0 KiB
yocto-queue 
Tiny queue data structure
You should use this package instead of an array if you do a lot of Array#push()
and Array#shift()
on large arrays, since Array#shift()
has linear time complexity O(n) while Queue#dequeue()
has constant time complexity O(1). That makes a huge difference for large arrays.
A queue is an ordered list of elements where an element is inserted at the end of the queue and is removed from the front of the queue. A queue works based on the first-in, first-out (FIFO) principle.
Install
$ npm install yocto-queue
Usage
const Queue = require('yocto-queue');
const queue = new Queue();
queue.enqueue('🦄');
queue.enqueue('🌈');
console.log(queue.size);
//=> 2
console.log(...queue);
//=> '🦄 🌈'
console.log(queue.dequeue());
//=> '🦄'
console.log(queue.dequeue());
//=> '🌈'
API
queue = new Queue()
The instance is an Iterable
, which means you can iterate over the queue front to back with a “for…of” loop, or use spreading to convert the queue to an array. Don't do this unless you really need to though, since it's slow.
.enqueue(value)
Add a value to the queue.
.dequeue()
Remove the next value in the queue.
Returns the removed value or undefined
if the queue is empty.
.clear()
Clear the queue.
.size
The size of the queue.
Related
- quick-lru - Simple “Least Recently Used” (LRU) cache