lib/node_modules/npm/node_modules/deep-extend/README.md 0000644 00000002412 15173056450 0016724 0 ustar 00 Deep Extend
===========
Recursive object extending.
[](https://travis-ci.org/unclechu/node-deep-extend)
[](https://nodei.co/npm/deep-extend/)
Install
-------
```bash
$ npm install deep-extend
```
Usage
-----
```javascript
var deepExtend = require('deep-extend');
var obj1 = {
a: 1,
b: 2,
d: {
a: 1,
b: [],
c: { test1: 123, test2: 321 }
},
f: 5,
g: 123,
i: 321,
j: [1, 2]
};
var obj2 = {
b: 3,
c: 5,
d: {
b: { first: 'one', second: 'two' },
c: { test2: 222 }
},
e: { one: 1, two: 2 },
f: [],
g: (void 0),
h: /abc/g,
i: null,
j: [3, 4]
};
deepExtend(obj1, obj2);
console.log(obj1);
/*
{ a: 1,
b: 3,
d:
{ a: 1,
b: { first: 'one', second: 'two' },
c: { test1: 123, test2: 222 } },
f: [],
g: undefined,
c: 5,
e: { one: 1, two: 2 },
h: /abc/g,
i: null,
j: [3, 4] }
*/
```
Unit testing
------------
```bash
$ npm test
```
Changelog
---------
[CHANGELOG.md](./CHANGELOG.md)
Any issues?
-----------
Please, report about issues
[here](https://github.com/unclechu/node-deep-extend/issues).
License
-------
[MIT](./LICENSE)
lib/node_modules/npm/node_modules/lru-cache/README.md 0000644 00000013543 15173073051 0016370 0 ustar 00 # lru cache
A cache object that deletes the least-recently-used items.
[](https://travis-ci.org/isaacs/node-lru-cache) [](https://coveralls.io/github/isaacs/node-lru-cache)
## Installation:
```javascript
npm install lru-cache --save
```
## Usage:
```javascript
var LRU = require("lru-cache")
, options = { max: 500
, length: function (n, key) { return n * 2 + key.length }
, dispose: function (key, n) { n.close() }
, maxAge: 1000 * 60 * 60 }
, cache = new LRU(options)
, otherCache = new LRU(50) // sets just the max size
cache.set("key", "value")
cache.get("key") // "value"
// non-string keys ARE fully supported
// but note that it must be THE SAME object, not
// just a JSON-equivalent object.
var someObject = { a: 1 }
cache.set(someObject, 'a value')
// Object keys are not toString()-ed
cache.set('[object Object]', 'a different value')
assert.equal(cache.get(someObject), 'a value')
// A similar object with same keys/values won't work,
// because it's a different object identity
assert.equal(cache.get({ a: 1 }), undefined)
cache.reset() // empty the cache
```
If you put more stuff in it, then items will fall out.
If you try to put an oversized thing in it, then it'll fall out right
away.
## Options
* `max` The maximum size of the cache, checked by applying the length
function to all values in the cache. Not setting this is kind of
silly, since that's the whole purpose of this lib, but it defaults
to `Infinity`. Setting it to a non-number or negative number will
throw a `TypeError`. Setting it to 0 makes it be `Infinity`.
* `maxAge` Maximum age in ms. Items are not pro-actively pruned out
as they age, but if you try to get an item that is too old, it'll
drop it and return undefined instead of giving it to you.
Setting this to a negative value will make everything seem old!
Setting it to a non-number will throw a `TypeError`.
* `length` Function that is used to calculate the length of stored
items. If you're storing strings or buffers, then you probably want
to do something like `function(n, key){return n.length}`. The default is
`function(){return 1}`, which is fine if you want to store `max`
like-sized things. The item is passed as the first argument, and
the key is passed as the second argumnet.
* `dispose` Function that is called on items when they are dropped
from the cache. This can be handy if you want to close file
descriptors or do other cleanup tasks when items are no longer
accessible. Called with `key, value`. It's called *before*
actually removing the item from the internal cache, so if you want
to immediately put it back in, you'll have to do that in a
`nextTick` or `setTimeout` callback or it won't do anything.
* `stale` By default, if you set a `maxAge`, it'll only actually pull
stale items out of the cache when you `get(key)`. (That is, it's
not pre-emptively doing a `setTimeout` or anything.) If you set
`stale:true`, it'll return the stale value before deleting it. If
you don't set this, then it'll return `undefined` when you try to
get a stale entry, as if it had already been deleted.
* `noDisposeOnSet` By default, if you set a `dispose()` method, then
it'll be called whenever a `set()` operation overwrites an existing
key. If you set this option, `dispose()` will only be called when a
key falls out of the cache, not when it is overwritten.
* `updateAgeOnGet` When using time-expiring entries with `maxAge`,
setting this to `true` will make each item's effective time update
to the current time whenever it is retrieved from cache, causing it
to not expire. (It can still fall out of cache based on recency of
use, of course.)
## API
* `set(key, value, maxAge)`
* `get(key) => value`
Both of these will update the "recently used"-ness of the key.
They do what you think. `maxAge` is optional and overrides the
cache `maxAge` option if provided.
If the key is not found, `get()` will return `undefined`.
The key and val can be any value.
* `peek(key)`
Returns the key value (or `undefined` if not found) without
updating the "recently used"-ness of the key.
(If you find yourself using this a lot, you *might* be using the
wrong sort of data structure, but there are some use cases where
it's handy.)
* `del(key)`
Deletes a key out of the cache.
* `reset()`
Clear the cache entirely, throwing away all values.
* `has(key)`
Check if a key is in the cache, without updating the recent-ness
or deleting it for being stale.
* `forEach(function(value,key,cache), [thisp])`
Just like `Array.prototype.forEach`. Iterates over all the keys
in the cache, in order of recent-ness. (Ie, more recently used
items are iterated over first.)
* `rforEach(function(value,key,cache), [thisp])`
The same as `cache.forEach(...)` but items are iterated over in
reverse order. (ie, less recently used items are iterated over
first.)
* `keys()`
Return an array of the keys in the cache.
* `values()`
Return an array of the values in the cache.
* `length`
Return total length of objects in cache taking into account
`length` options function.
* `itemCount`
Return total quantity of objects currently in cache. Note, that
`stale` (see options) items are returned as part of this item
count.
* `dump()`
Return an array of the cache entries ready for serialization and usage
with 'destinationCache.load(arr)`.
* `load(cacheEntriesArray)`
Loads another cache entries array, obtained with `sourceCache.dump()`,
into the cache. The destination cache is reset before loading new entries
* `prune()`
Manually iterates over the entire cache proactively pruning old entries
lib/node_modules/npm/node_modules/has-unicode/README.md 0000644 00000002554 15173074232 0016726 0 ustar 00 has-unicode
===========
Try to guess if your terminal supports unicode
```javascript
var hasUnicode = require("has-unicode")
if (hasUnicode()) {
// the terminal probably has unicode support
}
```
```javascript
var hasUnicode = require("has-unicode").tryHarder
hasUnicode(function(unicodeSupported) {
if (unicodeSupported) {
// the terminal probably has unicode support
}
})
```
## Detecting Unicode
What we actually detect is UTF-8 support, as that's what Node itself supports.
If you have a UTF-16 locale then you won't be detected as unicode capable.
### Windows
Since at least Windows 7, `cmd` and `powershell` have been unicode capable,
but unfortunately even then it's not guaranteed. In many localizations it
still uses legacy code pages and there's no facility short of running
programs or linking C++ that will let us detect this. As such, we
report any Windows installation as NOT unicode capable, and recommend
that you encourage your users to override this via config.
### Unix Like Operating Systems
We look at the environment variables `LC_ALL`, `LC_CTYPE`, and `LANG` in
that order. For `LC_ALL` and `LANG`, it looks for `.UTF-8` in the value.
For `LC_CTYPE` it looks to see if the value is `UTF-8`. This is sufficient
for most POSIX systems. While locale data can be put in `/etc/locale.conf`
as well, AFAIK it's always copied into the environment.
lib/node_modules/npm/node_modules/sha/README.md 0000644 00000003321 15173117167 0015300 0 ustar 00 # sha
Check and get file hashes (using any algorithm)
[](https://travis-ci.org/ForbesLindesay/sha)
[](https://david-dm.org/ForbesLindesay/sha)
[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/sha)
## Installation
$ npm install sha
## API
### check(fileName, expected, [options,] cb) / checkSync(filename, expected, [options])
Asynchronously check that `fileName` has a "hash" of `expected`. The callback will be called with either `null` or an error (indicating that they did not match).
Options:
- algorithm: defaults to `sha1` and can be any of the algorithms supported by `crypto.createHash`
### get(fileName, [options,] cb) / getSync(filename, [options])
Asynchronously get the "hash" of `fileName`. The callback will be called with an optional `error` object and the (lower cased) hex digest of the hash.
Options:
- algorithm: defaults to `sha1` and can be any of the algorithms supported by `crypto.createHash`
### stream(expected, [options])
Check the hash of a stream without ever buffering it. This is a pass through stream so you can do things like:
```js
fs.createReadStream('src')
.pipe(sha.stream('expected'))
.pipe(fs.createWriteStream('dest'))
```
`dest` will be a complete copy of `src` and an error will be emitted if the hash did not match `'expected'`.
Options:
- algorithm: defaults to `sha1` and can be any of the algorithms supported by `crypto.createHash`
## License
You may use this software under the BSD or MIT. Take your pick. If you want me to release it under another license, open a pull request. lib/node_modules/npm/node_modules/copy-concurrently/README.md 0000644 00000014010 15173146257 0020223 0 ustar 00 # copy-concurrently
Copy files, directories and symlinks
```
const copy = require('copy-concurrently')
copy('/path/to/thing', '/new/path/thing').then(() => {
// this is now copied
}).catch(err => {
// oh noooo
})
```
Copies files, directories and symlinks. Ownership is maintained when
running as root, permissions are always maintained. On Windows, if symlinks
are unavailable then junctions will be used.
## PUBLIC INTERFACE
### copy(from, to, [options]) → Promise
Recursively copies `from` to `to` and resolves its promise when finished.
If `to` already exists then the promise will be rejected with an `EEXIST`
error.
Options are:
* maxConcurrency – (Default: `1`) The maximum number of concurrent copies to do at once.
* recurseWith - (Default: `copy.item`) The function to call on each file after recursing into a directory.
* isWindows - (Default: `process.platform === 'win32'`) If true enables Windows symlink semantics. This requires
an extra `stat` to determine if the destination of a symlink is a file or directory. If symlinking a directory
fails then we'll try making a junction instead.
Options can also include dependency injection:
* Promise - (Default: `global.Promise`) The promise implementation to use, defaults to Node's.
* fs - (Default: `require('fs')`) The filesystem module to use. Can be used
to use `graceful-fs` or to inject a mock.
* writeStreamAtomic - (Default: `require('fs-write-stream-atomic')`) The
implementation of `writeStreamAtomic` to use. Used to inject a mock.
* getuid - (Default: `process.getuid`) A function that returns the current UID. Used to inject a mock.
## EXTENSION INTERFACE
Ordinarily you'd only call `copy` above. But it's possible to use it's
component functions directly. This is useful if, say, you're writing
[move-concurently](https://npmjs.com/package/move-concurrently).
### copy.file(from, to, options) → Promise
Copies an ordinary file `from` to destination `to`. Uses
`fs-write-stream-atomic` to ensure that the file is either entirely copied
or not at all.
Options are:
* uid, gid - (Optional) If `getuid()` is `0` then this and gid will be used to
set the user and group of `to`. If uid is present then gid must be too.
* mode - (Optional) If set then `to` will have its perms set to `mode`.
* fs - (Default: `require('fs')`) The filesystem module to use. Can be used
to use `graceful-fs` or to inject a mock.
* Promise - (Default: `global.Promise`) The promise implementation to use, defaults to Node's.
* writeStreamAtomic - (Default `require('fs-write-stream-atomic')`) The
implementation of `writeStreamAtomic` to use. Used to inject a mock.
### copy.symlink(from, to, options) → Promise
Copies a symlink `from` to destination `to`. If you're using Windows and
symlinking fails and what you're linking is a directory then junctions will
be tried instead.
Options are:
* top - The top level the copy is being run from. This is used to determine
if the symlink destination is within the set of files we're copying or
outside it.
* fs - (Default: `require('fs')`) The filesystem module to use. Can be used
to use `graceful-fs` or to inject a mock.
* Promise - (Default: `global.Promise`) The promise implementation to use, defaults to Node's.
* isWindows - (Default: `process.platform === 'win32'`) If true enables Windows symlink semantics. This requires
an extra `stat` to determine if the destination of a symlink is a file or directory. If symlinking a directory
fails then we'll try making a junction instead.
### copy.recurse(from, to, options) → Promise
Reads all of the files in directory `from` and adds them to the `queue`
using `recurseWith` (by default `copy.item`).
Options are:
* queue - A [`run-queue`](https://npmjs.com/package/run-queue) object to add files found inside `from` to.
* recurseWith - (Default: `copy.item`) The function to call on each file after recursing into a directory.
* uid, gid - (Optional) If `getuid()` is `0` then this and gid will be used to
set the user and group of `to`. If uid is present then gid must be too.
* mode - (Optional) If set then `to` will have its perms set to `mode`.
* fs - (Default: `require('fs')`) The filesystem module to use. Can be used
to use `graceful-fs` or to inject a mock.
* getuid - (Default: `process.getuid`) A function that returns the current UID. Used to inject a mock.
### copy.item(from, to, options) → Promise
Copies some kind of `from` to destination `to`. This looks at the filetype
and calls `copy.file`, `copy.symlink` or `copy.recurse` as appropriate.
Symlink copies are queued with a priority such that they happen after all
file and directory copies as you can't create a junction on windows to a
file that doesn't exist yet.
Options are:
* top - The top level the copy is being run from. This is used to determine
if the symlink destination is within the set of files we're copying or
outside it.
* queue - The [`run-queue`](https://npmjs.com/package/run-queue) object to
pass to `copy.recurse` if `from` is a directory.
* recurseWith - (Default: `copy.item`) The function to call on each file after recursing into a directory.
* uid, gid - (Optional) If `getuid()` is `0` then this and gid will be used to
set the user and group of `to`. If uid is present then gid must be too.
* mode - (Optional) If set then `to` will have its perms set to `mode`.
* fs - (Default: `require('fs')`) The filesystem module to use. Can be used
to use `graceful-fs` or to inject a mock.
* getuid - (Default: `process.getuid`) A function that returns the current UID. Used to inject a mock.
* isWindows - (Default: `process.platform === 'win32'`) If true enables Windows symlink semantics. This requires
an extra `stat` to determine if the destination of a symlink is a file or directory. If symlinking a directory
fails then we'll try making a junction instead.
* Promise - (Default: `global.Promise`) The promise implementation to use, defaults to Node's.
* writeStreamAtomic - (Default `require('fs-write-stream-atomic')`) The
implementation of `writeStreamAtomic` to use. Used to inject a mock.
lib/node_modules/npm/node_modules/tweetnacl/README.md 0000644 00000031556 15173171020 0016512 0 ustar 00 TweetNaCl.js
============
Port of [TweetNaCl](http://tweetnacl.cr.yp.to) / [NaCl](http://nacl.cr.yp.to/)
to JavaScript for modern browsers and Node.js. Public domain.
[
](https://travis-ci.org/dchest/tweetnacl-js)
Demo: <https://tweetnacl.js.org>
**:warning: The library is stable and API is frozen, however it has not been
independently reviewed. If you can help reviewing it, please [contact
me](mailto:dmitry@codingrobots.com).**
Documentation
=============
* [Overview](#overview)
* [Installation](#installation)
* [Usage](#usage)
* [Public-key authenticated encryption (box)](#public-key-authenticated-encryption-box)
* [Secret-key authenticated encryption (secretbox)](#secret-key-authenticated-encryption-secretbox)
* [Scalar multiplication](#scalar-multiplication)
* [Signatures](#signatures)
* [Hashing](#hashing)
* [Random bytes generation](#random-bytes-generation)
* [Constant-time comparison](#constant-time-comparison)
* [System requirements](#system-requirements)
* [Development and testing](#development-and-testing)
* [Benchmarks](#benchmarks)
* [Contributors](#contributors)
* [Who uses it](#who-uses-it)
Overview
--------
The primary goal of this project is to produce a translation of TweetNaCl to
JavaScript which is as close as possible to the original C implementation, plus
a thin layer of idiomatic high-level API on top of it.
There are two versions, you can use either of them:
* `nacl.js` is the port of TweetNaCl with minimum differences from the
original + high-level API.
* `nacl-fast.js` is like `nacl.js`, but with some functions replaced with
faster versions.
Installation
------------
You can install TweetNaCl.js via a package manager:
[Bower](http://bower.io):
$ bower install tweetnacl
[NPM](https://www.npmjs.org/):
$ npm install tweetnacl
or [download source code](https://github.com/dchest/tweetnacl-js/releases).
Usage
-----
All API functions accept and return bytes as `Uint8Array`s. If you need to
encode or decode strings, use functions from
<https://github.com/dchest/tweetnacl-util-js> or one of the more robust codec
packages.
In Node.js v4 and later `Buffer` objects are backed by `Uint8Array`s, so you
can freely pass them to TweetNaCl.js functions as arguments. The returned
objects are still `Uint8Array`s, so if you need `Buffer`s, you'll have to
convert them manually; make sure to convert using copying: `new Buffer(array)`,
instead of sharing: `new Buffer(array.buffer)`, because some functions return
subarrays of their buffers.
### Public-key authenticated encryption (box)
Implements *curve25519-xsalsa20-poly1305*.
#### nacl.box.keyPair()
Generates a new random key pair for box and returns it as an object with
`publicKey` and `secretKey` members:
{
publicKey: ..., // Uint8Array with 32-byte public key
secretKey: ... // Uint8Array with 32-byte secret key
}
#### nacl.box.keyPair.fromSecretKey(secretKey)
Returns a key pair for box with public key corresponding to the given secret
key.
#### nacl.box(message, nonce, theirPublicKey, mySecretKey)
Encrypt and authenticates message using peer's public key, our secret key, and
the given nonce, which must be unique for each distinct message for a key pair.
Returns an encrypted and authenticated message, which is
`nacl.box.overheadLength` longer than the original message.
#### nacl.box.open(box, nonce, theirPublicKey, mySecretKey)
Authenticates and decrypts the given box with peer's public key, our secret
key, and the given nonce.
Returns the original message, or `false` if authentication fails.
#### nacl.box.before(theirPublicKey, mySecretKey)
Returns a precomputed shared key which can be used in `nacl.box.after` and
`nacl.box.open.after`.
#### nacl.box.after(message, nonce, sharedKey)
Same as `nacl.box`, but uses a shared key precomputed with `nacl.box.before`.
#### nacl.box.open.after(box, nonce, sharedKey)
Same as `nacl.box.open`, but uses a shared key precomputed with `nacl.box.before`.
#### nacl.box.publicKeyLength = 32
Length of public key in bytes.
#### nacl.box.secretKeyLength = 32
Length of secret key in bytes.
#### nacl.box.sharedKeyLength = 32
Length of precomputed shared key in bytes.
#### nacl.box.nonceLength = 24
Length of nonce in bytes.
#### nacl.box.overheadLength = 16
Length of overhead added to box compared to original message.
### Secret-key authenticated encryption (secretbox)
Implements *xsalsa20-poly1305*.
#### nacl.secretbox(message, nonce, key)
Encrypt and authenticates message using the key and the nonce. The nonce must
be unique for each distinct message for this key.
Returns an encrypted and authenticated message, which is
`nacl.secretbox.overheadLength` longer than the original message.
#### nacl.secretbox.open(box, nonce, key)
Authenticates and decrypts the given secret box using the key and the nonce.
Returns the original message, or `false` if authentication fails.
#### nacl.secretbox.keyLength = 32
Length of key in bytes.
#### nacl.secretbox.nonceLength = 24
Length of nonce in bytes.
#### nacl.secretbox.overheadLength = 16
Length of overhead added to secret box compared to original message.
### Scalar multiplication
Implements *curve25519*.
#### nacl.scalarMult(n, p)
Multiplies an integer `n` by a group element `p` and returns the resulting
group element.
#### nacl.scalarMult.base(n)
Multiplies an integer `n` by a standard group element and returns the resulting
group element.
#### nacl.scalarMult.scalarLength = 32
Length of scalar in bytes.
#### nacl.scalarMult.groupElementLength = 32
Length of group element in bytes.
### Signatures
Implements [ed25519](http://ed25519.cr.yp.to).
#### nacl.sign.keyPair()
Generates new random key pair for signing and returns it as an object with
`publicKey` and `secretKey` members:
{
publicKey: ..., // Uint8Array with 32-byte public key
secretKey: ... // Uint8Array with 64-byte secret key
}
#### nacl.sign.keyPair.fromSecretKey(secretKey)
Returns a signing key pair with public key corresponding to the given
64-byte secret key. The secret key must have been generated by
`nacl.sign.keyPair` or `nacl.sign.keyPair.fromSeed`.
#### nacl.sign.keyPair.fromSeed(seed)
Returns a new signing key pair generated deterministically from a 32-byte seed.
The seed must contain enough entropy to be secure. This method is not
recommended for general use: instead, use `nacl.sign.keyPair` to generate a new
key pair from a random seed.
#### nacl.sign(message, secretKey)
Signs the message using the secret key and returns a signed message.
#### nacl.sign.open(signedMessage, publicKey)
Verifies the signed message and returns the message without signature.
Returns `null` if verification failed.
#### nacl.sign.detached(message, secretKey)
Signs the message using the secret key and returns a signature.
#### nacl.sign.detached.verify(message, signature, publicKey)
Verifies the signature for the message and returns `true` if verification
succeeded or `false` if it failed.
#### nacl.sign.publicKeyLength = 32
Length of signing public key in bytes.
#### nacl.sign.secretKeyLength = 64
Length of signing secret key in bytes.
#### nacl.sign.seedLength = 32
Length of seed for `nacl.sign.keyPair.fromSeed` in bytes.
#### nacl.sign.signatureLength = 64
Length of signature in bytes.
### Hashing
Implements *SHA-512*.
#### nacl.hash(message)
Returns SHA-512 hash of the message.
#### nacl.hash.hashLength = 64
Length of hash in bytes.
### Random bytes generation
#### nacl.randomBytes(length)
Returns a `Uint8Array` of the given length containing random bytes of
cryptographic quality.
**Implementation note**
TweetNaCl.js uses the following methods to generate random bytes,
depending on the platform it runs on:
* `window.crypto.getRandomValues` (WebCrypto standard)
* `window.msCrypto.getRandomValues` (Internet Explorer 11)
* `crypto.randomBytes` (Node.js)
If the platform doesn't provide a suitable PRNG, the following functions,
which require random numbers, will throw exception:
* `nacl.randomBytes`
* `nacl.box.keyPair`
* `nacl.sign.keyPair`
Other functions are deterministic and will continue working.
If a platform you are targeting doesn't implement secure random number
generator, but you somehow have a cryptographically-strong source of entropy
(not `Math.random`!), and you know what you are doing, you can plug it into
TweetNaCl.js like this:
nacl.setPRNG(function(x, n) {
// ... copy n random bytes into x ...
});
Note that `nacl.setPRNG` *completely replaces* internal random byte generator
with the one provided.
### Constant-time comparison
#### nacl.verify(x, y)
Compares `x` and `y` in constant time and returns `true` if their lengths are
non-zero and equal, and their contents are equal.
Returns `false` if either of the arguments has zero length, or arguments have
different lengths, or their contents differ.
System requirements
-------------------
TweetNaCl.js supports modern browsers that have a cryptographically secure
pseudorandom number generator and typed arrays, including the latest versions
of:
* Chrome
* Firefox
* Safari (Mac, iOS)
* Internet Explorer 11
Other systems:
* Node.js
Development and testing
------------------------
Install NPM modules needed for development:
$ npm install
To build minified versions:
$ npm run build
Tests use minified version, so make sure to rebuild it every time you change
`nacl.js` or `nacl-fast.js`.
### Testing
To run tests in Node.js:
$ npm run test-node
By default all tests described here work on `nacl.min.js`. To test other
versions, set environment variable `NACL_SRC` to the file name you want to test.
For example, the following command will test fast minified version:
$ NACL_SRC=nacl-fast.min.js npm run test-node
To run full suite of tests in Node.js, including comparing outputs of
JavaScript port to outputs of the original C version:
$ npm run test-node-all
To prepare tests for browsers:
$ npm run build-test-browser
and then open `test/browser/test.html` (or `test/browser/test-fast.html`) to
run them.
To run headless browser tests with `tape-run` (powered by Electron):
$ npm run test-browser
(If you get `Error: spawn ENOENT`, install *xvfb*: `sudo apt-get install xvfb`.)
To run tests in both Node and Electron:
$ npm test
### Benchmarking
To run benchmarks in Node.js:
$ npm run bench
$ NACL_SRC=nacl-fast.min.js npm run bench
To run benchmarks in a browser, open `test/benchmark/bench.html` (or
`test/benchmark/bench-fast.html`).
Benchmarks
----------
For reference, here are benchmarks from MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Mid 2014)
laptop with 2.6 GHz Intel Core i5 CPU (Intel) in Chrome 53/OS X and Xiaomi Redmi
Note 3 smartphone with 1.8 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon 650 64-bit CPU (ARM) in
Chrome 52/Android:
| | nacl.js Intel | nacl-fast.js Intel | nacl.js ARM | nacl-fast.js ARM |
| ------------- |:-------------:|:-------------------:|:-------------:|:-----------------:|
| salsa20 | 1.3 MB/s | 128 MB/s | 0.4 MB/s | 43 MB/s |
| poly1305 | 13 MB/s | 171 MB/s | 4 MB/s | 52 MB/s |
| hash | 4 MB/s | 34 MB/s | 0.9 MB/s | 12 MB/s |
| secretbox 1K | 1113 op/s | 57583 op/s | 334 op/s | 14227 op/s |
| box 1K | 145 op/s | 718 op/s | 37 op/s | 368 op/s |
| scalarMult | 171 op/s | 733 op/s | 56 op/s | 380 op/s |
| sign | 77 op/s | 200 op/s | 20 op/s | 61 op/s |
| sign.open | 39 op/s | 102 op/s | 11 op/s | 31 op/s |
(You can run benchmarks on your devices by clicking on the links at the bottom
of the [home page](https://tweetnacl.js.org)).
In short, with *nacl-fast.js* and 1024-byte messages you can expect to encrypt and
authenticate more than 57000 messages per second on a typical laptop or more than
14000 messages per second on a $170 smartphone, sign about 200 and verify 100
messages per second on a laptop or 60 and 30 messages per second on a smartphone,
per CPU core (with Web Workers you can do these operations in parallel),
which is good enough for most applications.
Contributors
------------
See AUTHORS.md file.
Third-party libraries based on TweetNaCl.js
-------------------------------------------
* [forward-secrecy](https://github.com/alax/forward-secrecy) — Axolotl ratchet implementation
* [nacl-stream](https://github.com/dchest/nacl-stream-js) - streaming encryption
* [tweetnacl-auth-js](https://github.com/dchest/tweetnacl-auth-js) — implementation of [`crypto_auth`](http://nacl.cr.yp.to/auth.html)
* [chloride](https://github.com/dominictarr/chloride) - unified API for various NaCl modules
Who uses it
-----------
Some notable users of TweetNaCl.js:
* [miniLock](http://minilock.io/)
* [Stellar](https://www.stellar.org/)