Streaming cross-platform unzip tool written in node.js.
This package is based on unzip (and its fork unzipper) and provides simple APIs for parsing and extracting zip files. It uses new streaming engine which allows it to process also files which would fail with unzip. There are no added compiled dependencies - inflation is handled by node.js's built in zlib support.
Please note that the zip file format isn't really meant to be processed by streaming, though this library should succeed in most cases, if you do have complete zip file available, you should consider using other libraries which read zip files from the end - as originally intended (for example yauzl or decompress-zip).
$ npm install https://github.com/xJeneKx/unzip --save
Process each zip file entry or pipe entries to another stream.
Important: If you do not intend to consume an entry stream's raw data, call autodrain() to dispose of the entry's contents. Otherwise the stream will get stuck.
fs.createReadStream('path/to/archive.zip')
.pipe(unzip.Parse())
.on('entry', function (entry) {
var filePath = entry.path;
var type = entry.type; // 'Directory' or 'File'
var size = entry.size; // might be undefined in some archives
if (filePath === "this IS the file I'm looking for") {
entry.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('output/path'));
} else {
entry.autodrain();
}
});
If you pipe
from unzip-stream the downstream components will receive each entry
for further processing. This allows for clean pipelines transforming zipfiles into unzipped data.
Example using stream.Transform
:
fs.createReadStream('path/to/archive.zip')
.pipe(unzipper.Parse())
.pipe(stream.Transform({
objectMode: true,
transform: function(entry,e,cb) {
var filePath = entry.path;
var type = entry.type; // 'Directory' or 'File'
var size = entry.size;
if (filePath === "this IS the file I'm looking for") {
entry.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('output/path'))
.on('finish',cb);
} else {
entry.autodrain();
cb();
}
}
}
}));
fs.createReadStream('path/to/archive.zip').pipe(unzip.Extract({ path: 'output/path' }));
Extract emits the 'finish' (also 'close' for compatibility with unzip) event once the zip's contents have been fully extracted to disk.