dauria v2.0.0
This Node.js module for Data URI applications is called Dauria (after a part of Transbaikal).
Dauria performs conversions between Node.js Buffers and RFC2397-compliant Data URIs, or vice versa.
Dauria is written in JavaScript and requires Node.js to run.
- Starting from v2.0.0, Dauria requires Node.js version 5.10.0 or newer because it is rewritten in ECMAScript 2015 (ES6) and also uses the
Buffer.frommethod. - You may run older versions of Dauria (that precede v2.0.0) with older Node.js versions (0.10.x or 0.12.x). However, those older versions of Node.js are themselves not maintained by their developers after 2016-12-31.
Dauria is tested against Node.js v5, Node.js v6, Node.js v7 and the latest stable version of Node.js.
Installing Dauria
Latest packaged version:
npm install dauriaLatest githubbed version:
npm install https://github.com/Mithgol/dauria/tarball/master
The npm package does not contain the tests, they're published on GitHub only.
You may visit https://github.com/Mithgol/dauria#readme occasionally to read the latest README because the package's version is not planned to grow after changes when they happen in README only. (And npm publish --force is forbidden nowadays.)
Using Dauria
When you require() the installed module, you get an object that has the following methods:
getBase64DataURI(sourceBuffer, MIME)
Returns a string containing the data:... URI that represent the given source Buffer in the base64-encoded form.
An optional second parameter (MIME) suggests the MIME type of the given Buffer. If the parameter is not given, 'application/octet-stream' is used.
Example:

parseDataURI(dataURI)
Parses the given Data URI and returns an object with the following properties:
MIME— MIME content type in the formtype/subtypeas explained in RFC2045 Section 5.2. If not given in the URI,MIMEbecomes'text/plain'by default (as recommended by RFC2397 in section 2).mediaType— MIME content type with the semicolon-separated list of parameters (if any) in the formparameter=value(some values may appear urlencoded, and Dauria does not decode them). If not given in the URI,mediaTypebecomes'text/plain;charset=US-ASCII'by default (as recommended by RFC2397 in section 2).buffer— Node.js Buffer containing the data decoded from the given Data URI. Hexadecimal URL encoding (such as'%20'for a whitespace) and base64 encoding are both supported (the latter must be indicated by the string';base64'before the first comma in the given Data URI).charset— the value of the first'charset=...'parameter encountered inmediaType. IfmediaTypedoes not contain any charset parameters,charsetbecomes'US-ASCII'. However, ifMIMEdoes not start with'text/', thencharsetbecomesnullregardless of any parameters.text— a JavaScript string containing the text decoded frombufferusingcharset. However, ifMIMEdoes not start with'text/', thentextbecomesnull. It also becomesnullif the iconv-lite module does not know the encounteredcharset.
If the given dataURI is not in fact a Data URI (does not start with 'data:' or does not contain a comma), an error is thrown.
Example:

Testing Dauria
The tests are not included in the npm package of the module (to keep it small). Use the version from GitHub.
It is necessary to install Mocha and JSHint for testing.
You may install Mocha globally (
npm install mocha -g) or locally (npm install mochain the directory of Dauria).You may install JSHint globally (
npm install jshint -g) or locally (npm install jshintin the directory of Dauria).
After that you may run npm test (in the directory of Dauria).
License
MIT license (see the LICENSE file), with the following exceptions:
The file
test/red-dot-5px.pngis taken from Wikipedia where it has been released into the public domain by Johan Elisson.The file
test/larry.gifis decoded from RFC2397 where it was given as an example. (RFC2397's Full Copyright Statement permits publishing and distribution of derivative works that assist in its implementation.)

