import { jsonStringify } from '../utils/slowOperations.js' // JSON.stringify emits U+2028/U+2029 raw (valid per ECMA-404). When the // output is a single NDJSON line, any receiver that uses JavaScript // line-terminator semantics (ECMA-262 §11.3 — \n \r U+2028 U+2029) to // split the stream will cut the JSON mid-string. ProcessTransport now // silently skips non-JSON lines rather than crashing (gh-28405), but // the truncated fragment is still lost — the message is silently dropped. // // The \uXXXX form is equivalent JSON (parses to the same string) but // can never be mistaken for a line terminator by ANY receiver. This is // what ES2019's "Subsume JSON" proposal and Node's util.inspect do. // // Single regex with alternation: the callback's one dispatch per match // is cheaper than two full-string scans. const JS_LINE_TERMINATORS = /\u2028|\u2029/g function escapeJsLineTerminators(json: string): string { return json.replace(JS_LINE_TERMINATORS, c => c === '\u2028' ? '\\u2028' : '\\u2029', ) } /** * JSON.stringify for one-message-per-line transports. Escapes U+2028 * LINE SEPARATOR and U+2029 PARAGRAPH SEPARATOR so the serialized output * cannot be broken by a line-splitting receiver. Output is still valid * JSON and parses to the same value. */ export function ndjsonSafeStringify(value: unknown): string { return escapeJsLineTerminators(jsonStringify(value)) }