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18:00
@BenFortune omg that one gave it a stroke lol
so natural
Anyone know?
i still don't understand what your goal is
"polymorhphicsally" is even better
you can't kill one request from another,
18:01
it just chokes in the middle
I wish people tried to hex my servers
@KevinB
I want to kill them polymorthically
clearly I need to explore polymorphystitialism
with the same function
there's that word again
that i still dont understand
18:01
How I see @Tobiq trying to solve his problem cdn.shopify.com/s/files/1/0271/3585/products/…
@Tobiq can you provide an example in pseudo-code?
polymorphism means that they share a common function / value or what ever so u can use the same thing on them
i already provided pseudocode THAT YOU TRASHED
but what does that have to dowith your problem...
@Tobiq ask a question on main.
That's what it's there for.
18:02
freelancer → freelancing
contractor → contracting
? → consulting
@BenFortune Perfect.
    I want this:

https.get(URL, killConnection)

http.get(URL, killConnection)

http.createServer((req,res)=>killConnection(req) )

killConnection = req => {

    /// how polymorhphicsally kill conection?

}
@towc contractor...
@towc consultant
18:02
@towc consultant 😋 ^
req.end
oh! right! Thanks
I read those in the wrong order dammit
@KendallFrey a Consultant could be a Contractor though!
18:03
@KendallFrey I actually had a hard time writing it out because I confused the two as well
in the metapolymorphicism world even.
req.end isnt a functoin @KevinB
@Loktar You know I'm copying every one of these into TTS
18:04
lol
@KendallFrey floccinaucinihilipilification
functoin - "funkt-win"
lol
@BenFortune It nailed it
glorious
function, is that like bitcoin?
18:05
Its a function that you call to end complete your request, not kill connection
and thats http request only
not polymorhphistic
@Tobiq Both
@Tobiq Wrong
@BenFortune I've never seen someone misspell functoin before
@Tobiq Polymorphic
@KendallFrey i do it like twice a day
lol it really has a problem with "hph"
18:06
you use req.write and req.end to form request, not kill the connection
The HTTPS docs talk about how most classes have the same contract as HTTP.
it's almost as if you're trying to find two different functions that happen to have the same name that do two very different things.
@BenFortune You use the word functoin twice a day?
No
@Tobiq Both.
18:06
in our work chat, probably
but it's not even a word
Req.end finishes your request, and then you start receiving the response, I want to KILLL the connection so i NO Longer get the response
Dec 14 '12 at 15:49, by rlemon
function functoin(argumnets) {
    var argmunets = argumnets || arguments,
    retunr = argmunets[0+1-2+1]+(arguments.length>0?arguments[1]:argmunets[argumnets.length]);
    return retunr;
}
@Tobiq But you said you wanted to respond with 413
no i said in the case of 413
not i want to respond with 413
18:08
in the case of a 413, the connection is already ended...
no
retunr - retune-ver
I see
No, he's right, req.end() doesn't help there
I told you
.abort() then
18:09
your application firewall should be handling that
That ^
Use req.abort()
nginx and most others have sensible (10MBish) defaults
Thats http request only
@Tobiq Are you sure?
yes i read docs
i dont just randomly ask
3
withhout research
18:10
clearly
The HTTPS docs only describe how it differs from HTTP
The two are almost the same
omfg.
Im not READING HTTPS DOECS
user1596138
lol
So I say again, try it in actual code
we know
18:11
IM REading http docs
to have a clue about how it works, you need to read all the networking RFCs
the HTTPS docs note that most of the classes have the same contract
why r they continuing to say https is the same
the HTTP docs may as well
because it's mostly the same API
18:12
yes but the question is nothing to do with https
@Tobiq Because you keep saying that req.abort() is http only
request*
theres http.get and http.createserver
And we're telling you that https is similar to http so that there's a good chance that both have the .abort() method
@MadaraUchiha 99% working, I just am trying to figure out how to push params back to response and im done
I already knew that... I said http request only
18:12
that's a lively friday
@Tobiq Did you?
10 mins ago, by Tobiq
    I want this:

https.get(URL, killConnection)

http.get(URL, killConnection)

http.createServer((req,res)=>killConnection(req) )

killConnection = req => {

    /// how polymorhphicsally kill conection?

}
as in it wont work in server, only http.get
@Tobiq That's definitely not what you said.
@BenFortune ????
I ran out of time, ttyl
18:13
wait
@Tobiq You don't understand what you wrote?
before you go, how polymorhphicsally kill conection?
req.abort is only request
18:14
!!riot
╯°□°)╯┻━┻
not sure if troll or not
not server
@KamilSolecki watch your fingers
I'm pretty sure he's trolling...
18:14
why would i waste my time trollking
@KamilSolecki not, unfortunately
@Tobiq For starters, we corrected your use of the word "polymorphicsally" at least thrice now
@Tobiq if you're not trolling, please explain your question, clearly and concisely.
all im tryingh to do is kill both http REQUEST and http SERVER request
@ssube i still have 6 more than 007 says he has.
18:15
So here's what you're going to do
16
Q: node.js: how to stop an already started http request

Michael MoellerWe use request to make http requests with node.js. We would like to give the user an opportunity to abort the request when he decides. That means we have to trigger the abort() from outside the request function. Maybe we can check an outside variable from inside the function. (We already tried to...

You're going to write a piece of code that we can run and see an error on unexpected behavior
@MadaraUchiha meet below my place in 8?
(minutes)
Or you can stop wasting all our times asking.
@BenjaminGruenbaum ill be there fam
18:15
@BenjaminGruenbaum Aye.
Sterling r u trolling
thats the request library....
@SterlingArcher 2.9
@Tobiq response.socket.destroy()
@BenjaminGruenbaum Are we getting drinks?
@Trasiva And some fine burgers, too.
18:16
@KendallFrey is that in the HTTP.GET(res) and HTTP.CREATESERVER(req) ??????
are they kosher
@BenjaminGruenbaum I prefer beers if you guys are ok with that
@SterlingArcher Nope.
glorious beer
18:17
@Tobiq Read the docs on it
yasss gurl
i read the docs
I need that beer around here
it's right there in the docs
18:17
@Tobiq Just try it and see
request.abort
@MadaraUchiha Really? Well, if you guys end up in the midwest ever again, you should holler. I'll spoil y'all with some amazeballs home made burgers.
It's like 5 lines of code
request being what http.get returns
@Trasiva if you come to my place? Sure
I'll have a beer with any of you
18:18
@BenjaminGruenbaum I wanted to come to Chi-Town when you were there, but it didn't pan out with work.
@BenjaminGruenbaum Having said that, Joel didn't respond to my ping 😬 I'll try again via other routes soon-ish
socket.end may be what you want as well, depending on how forcefully you want to kill it
@MadaraUchiha please do
@KendallFrey with fire
much force
Right, I'm heading out now, see you soon @BenjaminGruenbaum
18:18
wow
I'm debugging a Java memory leak
Cool, need to put pants
oh my god.

http.get returns a (res).

http.createServer returns (req,res)

I want to kill get.res and createserver.req with same function.

get.res.abort is an option . CREATESERVER.REQ.ABORT IS NOT A FUCNTION
Should probably do that
very orbitly destroyed
Not willing to read docs, check
18:19
@BenjaminGruenbaum Just do the no pants dance
@Tobiq Why are you so obsessed with it being the same function?
I use orbital satellites to kill my servers. Once and for all.
polymorphism!
@Tobiq you're mis-interpreting what i'm telling you.
oh my god
18:19
K, have pants, heading out
var request = http.get(...);
request.abort();
fucntion - "fuckin' chin"
that's how you abort a request.
18:20
@Tobiq createServer's req has nothing to do with the http.get req.
@Tobiq Yes, that's what it's called, but why?
@KevinB yes but i also want to kill the server quest.... u cant do that with it
you can't abort a request in the callback that gets called after it's done.
no...
@KevinB At that point it becomes infanticide
18:21
because you can do req.on("data") inside the http server
the request isnt done.
yes it is
the response isn't
i want to kill it as soon as i get too much data
the request is done
what r u talking about
there are two parts to a reqeust
18:21
@KamilSolecki I don't kill my servers, I want my food served within two hours
the request, and the response
welp request is done, its just that the response hasn't come fully
http.createServer((req,res)=>//req is not completeed because you can do req.on(data))
Yes, but if you kill the http.get request, it wont go through. If the request does go through, you need to measure the packet and then kill it in req.on
A killed request yields no response
18:22
maybe you just wanna partition your requests in packets?
So idk why you want to kill http.get, since once the request is fired, it's fired. You want to throttle the response
I guess maybe the idea is DoS protection?
I dont think you understand
aborting the request is one of the two things you'd need to do to kill all processing of a request. the second would be killing the request within the callback to createServer. these two things can't be done with a single function, that doesn't make sense.
@Tobiq I'm not convinced you do either
18:24
4
Q: How to get byte size of request?

Cort3zI am making an API in Node.js Express which might get large requests coming in. I would really like to see how big the request are. //.... router.post('/apiendpoint', function(req, res, next) { console.log("The size of incoming request in bytes is"); console.log(req.????????????); //How to ...

We don't understand because you don't know how to explain anything
This might help, but it looks like it requires sockets
This is all i want to do. in both scenarios, i want to KILL CONNECTION
I already told him to use sockets
There's a header that shows the packet size, but apparently it's unreliable to an extent
18:25
we've told you how to accomplish that in both scenarios
req.abort is only in http/s.get
Right
not on the server
@KevinB but he wants it polymorphiscallsyleri!
Stop typing in caps, it's not gonna make you sound more sensible lol
18:25
and you use a different method to do it within the reqeust callback.
how?
and thats not polymorthistic
@SterlingArcher I BEG TO DIFFER SIR
thats very rude
but he wants it along came polly
i falgged moderator
i have to leave
18:26
@SterlingArcher I can't CONTROL THE ᴠᴏʟᴜᴍᴇ ᴏғ my VOICE!
@KevinB hahah TTS really butchers that one
@Tobiq don't waste their time
bye eevryeone
18:27
o/
bye
@Tobiq Again, why does that matter?
0121do1
Don't come back, byeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
o/ bye i need 1
18:27
you know something happened when the whole chat is going haywire
i only need
bye bye
While we're on the topic, all I'm finding is packages on how to measure a variable or request object's size. How does that work, in theory?
The whole TCP packet thing throws me for a loop
There are a few ways. Packets aren't involved, luckily.
Ideally, you send the size ahead of time as a header, so the server can verify they've gotten the whole body.
ideally
18:29
Same on the returning side.
That means never.
so the request already knows the payload size
and it's not always accurate
It might.
18:29
you can set the header when you send the request
So.. the client can send a request size that you shouldn't trust. :)
in http, like html, nothing is certain
by having the control to do so, you can set it incorrectly
That's just as bad as playing "guess how much I weigh now" on Tinder
is that a thing? like in the app?
18:30
should be.
minigames should be a thing
Right, the socs said it isn't reliable. So what is a reliable way to get a response size in bytes/kb etc?
lol socks
docs
if you guess correctly, and its more than it was, it should swipe left automatically
Solve this sudoku if you want to netflix and chill with me
waiting for the whole response, then measuring it
18:31
@SterlingArcher you count up the bytes as they go
I'm bad at sepukus
lol part of that polymythical practice eh @SterlingArcher, ask the socks for their wisdom.
@Luggage deal breaker, I'm not interested in sudoku-doers
I was just trying to think of a test for minimal intelligence.
@ssube I assume that's reading the bytestream?
18:31
@SterlingArcher Content-Length is the only way to know ahead of time, and anyone can lie about it.
seppuku is my favourite past time
@Luggage exactly
@Loktar lmao there's gonna be so many poly words for the next day or so
pastime
Slitherlink (also known as Fences, Takegaki, Loop the Loop, Loopy, Ouroboros, Suriza and Dotty Dilemma) is a logic puzzle developed by publisher Nikoli. == Rules == Slitherlink is played on a rectangular lattice of dots. Some of the squares formed by the dots have numbers inside them. The objective is to connect horizontally and vertically adjacent dots so that the lines form a simple loop with no loose ends. In addition, the number inside a square represents how many of its four sides are segments in the loop. Other types of planar graphs can be used in lieu of the standard grid, with varying...
18:32
@KendallFrey yeah they said that already, but you can get a reliable read as it comes, right?
whatever
1 min ago, by ssube
@SterlingArcher you count up the bytes as they go
@SterlingArcher sure, but there are risks with that.
You just read the bytes in a polystreamific manner
Also there may not be a Content-Length available, for example with chunked transfer
18:33
If you have a 10MB cutoff, you might have to read 10MB of data before you can cut off an attacker.
@SterlingArcher You can polysuckmyass
@ssube is that how overflows and shit work?
@BenFortune not overflows, that's just an OOM DOS
18:34
overflows are when you try to put 10MB of data into a 5MB bucket and accidentally stomp on 5MB of code
that happens to be in the next bucket over
//i haz a bukkit
jokes on them, that sea clearly has waves
@SterlingArcher innocent eyes but why, what's the problem?
@SterlingArcher Hey. HEY. That man's a national treasure. He's a doctor, a soldier, a fireman, and countless other life saving jobs.

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