From c01201be4ec8a81da350f2c4c1f8b818309a2f1a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: JC Brand Date: Fri, 21 Sep 2012 16:05:19 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Add burry.js and remove store.js --- store.js/.gitignore | 1 - store.js/Changelog | 27 -- store.js/README.md | 141 ----------- store.js/build.js | 22 -- store.js/json.js | 482 ------------------------------------ store.js/package.json | 46 ---- store.js/store+json2.min.js | 2 - store.js/store.js | 195 --------------- store.js/store.min.js | 2 - store.js/test.html | 134 ---------- 10 files changed, 1052 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 store.js/.gitignore delete mode 100644 store.js/Changelog delete mode 100644 store.js/README.md delete mode 100755 store.js/build.js delete mode 100644 store.js/json.js delete mode 100644 store.js/package.json delete mode 100644 store.js/store+json2.min.js delete mode 100644 store.js/store.js delete mode 100644 store.js/store.min.js delete mode 100644 store.js/test.html diff --git a/store.js/.gitignore b/store.js/.gitignore deleted file mode 100644 index 3c3629e64..000000000 --- a/store.js/.gitignore +++ /dev/null @@ -1 +0,0 @@ -node_modules diff --git a/store.js/Changelog b/store.js/Changelog deleted file mode 100644 index 274292dda..000000000 --- a/store.js/Changelog +++ /dev/null @@ -1,27 +0,0 @@ -v1.3.3 -+ Fix IE keys beginning with numeric characters (nice find @pauldwaite) - -v1.3.2 -+ Implement store.getAll() (patch by @blq) - -v1.3.0 -+ Use uglify.js for minifying store.min.js and store+json.min.js -+ Add build script - -v1.2.0 -+ Remove same-path restrictions in IE6/7! (Thanks @mjpizz!) -+ Support CommonJS and AMD module systems (Thanks @pereckerdal!) -+ Fix: store.set('foo', undefined); store.get('foo') no longer throws (Thanks @buger!) - -v1.1.1 -+ Publish in npm as "store" rather than "store.js" -+ Add commonjs export for require support -+ Add supported browsers Chrome 6-11, Firefox 4.0 - -v1.1.0 -+ First versioned version. -+ API: store.set, store.get, store.remove, store.clear, store.transact -+ Minified versions are included: store.min.js for store.js only, and store+json2.min.js for store.js and json2.js - -TODO -- Get around IE6/7 per-directory restrition. @lrbabe/@louis_remi had the idea of putting the store.js API in an anonymous iframe a la https://github.com/meebo/embed-code and see what directory restriction that would fall under diff --git a/store.js/README.md b/store.js/README.md deleted file mode 100644 index 60736433f..000000000 --- a/store.js/README.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,141 +0,0 @@ -store.js -======== - -store.js exposes a simple API for cross browser local storage - - // Store 'marcus' at 'username' - store.set('username', 'marcus') - - // Get 'username' - store.get('username') - - // Remove 'username' - store.remove('username') - - // Clear all keys - store.clear() - - // Store an object literal - store.js uses JSON.stringify under the hood - store.set('user', { name: 'marcus', likes: 'javascript' }) - - // Get the stored object - store.js uses JSON.parse under the hood - var user = store.get('user') - alert(user.name + ' likes ' + user.likes) - -store.js depends on JSON for serialization. - -How does it work? ------------------- -store.js uses localStorage when available, and falls back on globalStorage for earlier versions of Firefox and the userData behavior in IE6 and IE7. No flash to slow down your page load. No cookies to fatten your network requests. - -Screencast ------------ -[Introductory Screencast to Store.js](http://javascriptplayground.com/blog/2012/06/javascript-local-storage-store-js-tutorial) by Jack Franklin. - - -`store.enabled` - check that localStorage is available -------------------------------------------------------- -To check that persistance is available, you can use the `store.enabled` flag: - - if( store.enabled ) { - console.log("localStorage is available"); - } else { - //time to fallback - } - -Please note that `store.disabled` does exist but is deprecated in favour of `store.enabled`. - -There are conditions where localStorage may appear to be available but will throw an error when used. For example, Safari's private browsing mode does this, and some browser allow the user to temporarily disable localStorage. Store.js detects these conditions and sets the `store.enabled` flag accordingly. - - - -Serialization -------------- -localStorage, when used without store.js, calls toString on all stored values. This means that you can't conveniently store and retrieve numbers, objects or arrays: - - localStorage.myage = 24 - localStorage.myage !== 24 - localStorage.myage === '24' - - localStorage.user = { name: 'marcus', likes: 'javascript' } - localStorage.user === "[object Object]" - - localStorage.tags = ['javascript', 'localStorage', 'store.js'] - localStorage.tags.length === 32 - localStorage.tags === "javascript,localStorage,store.js" - -What we want (and get with store.js) is - - store.set('myage', 24) - store.get('myage') === 24 - - store.set('user', { name: 'marcus', likes: 'javascript' }) - alert("Hi my name is " + store.get('user').name + "!") - - store.set('tags', ['javascript', 'localStorage', 'store.js']) - alert("We've got " + store.get('tags').length + " tags here") - -The native serialization engine of javascript is JSON. Rather than leaving it up to you to serialize and deserialize your values, store.js uses JSON.stringify() and JSON.parse() on each call to store.set() and store.get(), respectively. - -Some browsers do not have native support for JSON. For those browsers you should include [JSON.js] (non-minified copy is included in this repo). - -Tests ------ -Go to test.html in your browser. - -(Note that test.html must be served over http:// or https://. This is because localStore does not work in some browsers when using the file:// protocol) - -Supported browsers ------------------- - - Tested in Firefox 2.0 - - Tested in Firefox 3.0 - - Tested in Firefox 3.5 - - Tested in Firefox 3.6 - - Tested in Firefox 4.0 - - Tested in Chrome 5 - - Tested in Chrome 6 - - Tested in Chrome 7 - - Tested in Chrome 8 - - Tested in Chrome 10 - - Tested in Chrome 11 - - Tested in Safari 4 - - Tested in Safari 5 - - Tested in IE6 - - Tested in IE7 - - Tested in IE8 - - Tested in Opera 10 - - Opera 10.54 - -Storage limits --------------- - - IE6: 1MB - - IE7: 1MB - -Supported but broken (please help fix) --------------------------------------- - - Chrome 4 - - Opera 10.10 - -Unsupported browsers -------------------- - - Firefox 1.0: no means (beside cookies and flash) - - Safari 2: no means (beside cookies and flash) - - Safari 3: no synchronous api (has asynch sqlite api, but store.js is synch) - - Opera 9: don't know if there is synchronous api for storing data locally - - Firefox 1.5: don't know if there is synchronous api for storing data locally - -Forks ----- - - Original: https://github.com/marcuswestin/store.js - - Sans JSON support (simple key/values only): https://github.com/cloudhead/store.js - - jQueryfied version: https://github.com/whitmer/store.js - - Lint.js passing version (with semi-colons): https://github.com/StevenBlack/store.js - -TODO ----- - - What are the storage capacities/restrictions per browser? - - I believe underlying APIs can throw under certain conditions. Where do we need try/catch? - - Test different versions of Opera 10.X explicitly - - - [JSON.js]: http://www.json.org/json2.js diff --git a/store.js/build.js b/store.js/build.js deleted file mode 100755 index 22d95f480..000000000 --- a/store.js/build.js +++ /dev/null @@ -1,22 +0,0 @@ -#!/usr/local/bin/node - -var fs = require('fs'), - uglify = require('uglify-js') - -var storeJS = fs.readFileSync(__dirname + '/store.js').toString(), - jsonJS = fs.readFileSync(__dirname + '/json.js').toString(), - copy = '/* Copyright (c) 2010-2012 Marcus Westin */' - -console.log('building and minifying...') -buildFile(storeJS, 'store.min.js') -buildFile(jsonJS + '\n\n' + storeJS, 'store+json2.min.js') -console.log('done') - -function buildFile(js, name) { - var ast = uglify.parser.parse(js) - ast = uglify.uglify.ast_mangle(ast) - ast = uglify.uglify.ast_squeeze(ast) - var minifiedJS = uglify.uglify.gen_code(ast) - fs.writeFile(__dirname + '/' + name, copy + '\n' + minifiedJS) -} - diff --git a/store.js/json.js b/store.js/json.js deleted file mode 100644 index c52b92aa6..000000000 --- a/store.js/json.js +++ /dev/null @@ -1,482 +0,0 @@ -/* - http://www.JSON.org/json2.js - 2010-03-20 - - Public Domain. - - NO WARRANTY EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED. USE AT YOUR OWN RISK. - - See http://www.JSON.org/js.html - - - This code should be minified before deployment. - See http://javascript.crockford.com/jsmin.html - - USE YOUR OWN COPY. IT IS EXTREMELY UNWISE TO LOAD CODE FROM SERVERS YOU DO - NOT CONTROL. - - - This file creates a global JSON object containing two methods: stringify - and parse. - - JSON.stringify(value, replacer, space) - value any JavaScript value, usually an object or array. - - replacer an optional parameter that determines how object - values are stringified for objects. It can be a - function or an array of strings. - - space an optional parameter that specifies the indentation - of nested structures. If it is omitted, the text will - be packed without extra whitespace. If it is a number, - it will specify the number of spaces to indent at each - level. If it is a string (such as '\t' or ' '), - it contains the characters used to indent at each level. - - This method produces a JSON text from a JavaScript value. - - When an object value is found, if the object contains a toJSON - method, its toJSON method will be called and the result will be - stringified. A toJSON method does not serialize: it returns the - value represented by the name/value pair that should be serialized, - or undefined if nothing should be serialized. The toJSON method - will be passed the key associated with the value, and this will be - bound to the value - - For example, this would serialize Dates as ISO strings. - - Date.prototype.toJSON = function (key) { - function f(n) { - // Format integers to have at least two digits. - return n < 10 ? '0' + n : n; - } - - return this.getUTCFullYear() + '-' + - f(this.getUTCMonth() + 1) + '-' + - f(this.getUTCDate()) + 'T' + - f(this.getUTCHours()) + ':' + - f(this.getUTCMinutes()) + ':' + - f(this.getUTCSeconds()) + 'Z'; - }; - - You can provide an optional replacer method. It will be passed the - key and value of each member, with this bound to the containing - object. The value that is returned from your method will be - serialized. If your method returns undefined, then the member will - be excluded from the serialization. - - If the replacer parameter is an array of strings, then it will be - used to select the members to be serialized. It filters the results - such that only members with keys listed in the replacer array are - stringified. - - Values that do not have JSON representations, such as undefined or - functions, will not be serialized. Such values in objects will be - dropped; in arrays they will be replaced with null. You can use - a replacer function to replace those with JSON values. - JSON.stringify(undefined) returns undefined. - - The optional space parameter produces a stringification of the - value that is filled with line breaks and indentation to make it - easier to read. - - If the space parameter is a non-empty string, then that string will - be used for indentation. If the space parameter is a number, then - the indentation will be that many spaces. - - Example: - - text = JSON.stringify(['e', {pluribus: 'unum'}]); - // text is '["e",{"pluribus":"unum"}]' - - - text = JSON.stringify(['e', {pluribus: 'unum'}], null, '\t'); - // text is '[\n\t"e",\n\t{\n\t\t"pluribus": "unum"\n\t}\n]' - - text = JSON.stringify([new Date()], function (key, value) { - return this[key] instanceof Date ? - 'Date(' + this[key] + ')' : value; - }); - // text is '["Date(---current time---)"]' - - - JSON.parse(text, reviver) - This method parses a JSON text to produce an object or array. - It can throw a SyntaxError exception. - - The optional reviver parameter is a function that can filter and - transform the results. It receives each of the keys and values, - and its return value is used instead of the original value. - If it returns what it received, then the structure is not modified. - If it returns undefined then the member is deleted. - - Example: - - // Parse the text. Values that look like ISO date strings will - // be converted to Date objects. - - myData = JSON.parse(text, function (key, value) { - var a; - if (typeof value === 'string') { - a = -/^(\d{4})-(\d{2})-(\d{2})T(\d{2}):(\d{2}):(\d{2}(?:\.\d*)?)Z$/.exec(value); - if (a) { - return new Date(Date.UTC(+a[1], +a[2] - 1, +a[3], +a[4], - +a[5], +a[6])); - } - } - return value; - }); - - myData = JSON.parse('["Date(09/09/2001)"]', function (key, value) { - var d; - if (typeof value === 'string' && - value.slice(0, 5) === 'Date(' && - value.slice(-1) === ')') { - d = new Date(value.slice(5, -1)); - if (d) { - return d; - } - } - return value; - }); - - - This is a reference implementation. You are free to copy, modify, or - redistribute. -*/ - -/*jslint evil: true, strict: false */ - -/*members "", "\b", "\t", "\n", "\f", "\r", "\"", JSON, "\\", apply, - call, charCodeAt, getUTCDate, getUTCFullYear, getUTCHours, - getUTCMinutes, getUTCMonth, getUTCSeconds, hasOwnProperty, join, - lastIndex, length, parse, prototype, push, replace, slice, stringify, - test, toJSON, toString, valueOf -*/ - - -// Create a JSON object only if one does not already exist. We create the -// methods in a closure to avoid creating global variables. - -if (!this.JSON) { - this.JSON = {}; -} - -(function () { - - function f(n) { - // Format integers to have at least two digits. - return n < 10 ? '0' + n : n; - } - - if (typeof Date.prototype.toJSON !== 'function') { - - Date.prototype.toJSON = function (key) { - - return isFinite(this.valueOf()) ? - this.getUTCFullYear() + '-' + - f(this.getUTCMonth() + 1) + '-' + - f(this.getUTCDate()) + 'T' + - f(this.getUTCHours()) + ':' + - f(this.getUTCMinutes()) + ':' + - f(this.getUTCSeconds()) + 'Z' : null; - }; - - String.prototype.toJSON = - Number.prototype.toJSON = - Boolean.prototype.toJSON = function (key) { - return this.valueOf(); - }; - } - - var cx = /[\u0000\u00ad\u0600-\u0604\u070f\u17b4\u17b5\u200c-\u200f\u2028-\u202f\u2060-\u206f\ufeff\ufff0-\uffff]/g, - escapable = /[\\\"\x00-\x1f\x7f-\x9f\u00ad\u0600-\u0604\u070f\u17b4\u17b5\u200c-\u200f\u2028-\u202f\u2060-\u206f\ufeff\ufff0-\uffff]/g, - gap, - indent, - meta = { // table of character substitutions - '\b': '\\b', - '\t': '\\t', - '\n': '\\n', - '\f': '\\f', - '\r': '\\r', - '"' : '\\"', - '\\': '\\\\' - }, - rep; - - - function quote(string) { - -// If the string contains no control characters, no quote characters, and no -// backslash characters, then we can safely slap some quotes around it. -// Otherwise we must also replace the offending characters with safe escape -// sequences. - - escapable.lastIndex = 0; - return escapable.test(string) ? - '"' + string.replace(escapable, function (a) { - var c = meta[a]; - return typeof c === 'string' ? c : - '\\u' + ('0000' + a.charCodeAt(0).toString(16)).slice(-4); - }) + '"' : - '"' + string + '"'; - } - - - function str(key, holder) { - -// Produce a string from holder[key]. - - var i, // The loop counter. - k, // The member key. - v, // The member value. - length, - mind = gap, - partial, - value = holder[key]; - -// If the value has a toJSON method, call it to obtain a replacement value. - - if (value && typeof value === 'object' && - typeof value.toJSON === 'function') { - value = value.toJSON(key); - } - -// If we were called with a replacer function, then call the replacer to -// obtain a replacement value. - - if (typeof rep === 'function') { - value = rep.call(holder, key, value); - } - -// What happens next depends on the value's type. - - switch (typeof value) { - case 'string': - return quote(value); - - case 'number': - -// JSON numbers must be finite. Encode non-finite numbers as null. - - return isFinite(value) ? String(value) : 'null'; - - case 'boolean': - case 'null': - -// If the value is a boolean or null, convert it to a string. Note: -// typeof null does not produce 'null'. The case is included here in -// the remote chance that this gets fixed someday. - - return String(value); - -// If the type is 'object', we might be dealing with an object or an array or -// null. - - case 'object': - -// Due to a specification blunder in ECMAScript, typeof null is 'object', -// so watch out for that case. - - if (!value) { - return 'null'; - } - -// Make an array to hold the partial results of stringifying this object value. - - gap += indent; - partial = []; - -// Is the value an array? - - if (Object.prototype.toString.apply(value) === '[object Array]') { - -// The value is an array. Stringify every element. Use null as a placeholder -// for non-JSON values. - - length = value.length; - for (i = 0; i < length; i += 1) { - partial[i] = str(i, value) || 'null'; - } - -// Join all of the elements together, separated with commas, and wrap them in -// brackets. - - v = partial.length === 0 ? '[]' : - gap ? '[\n' + gap + - partial.join(',\n' + gap) + '\n' + - mind + ']' : - '[' + partial.join(',') + ']'; - gap = mind; - return v; - } - -// If the replacer is an array, use it to select the members to be stringified. - - if (rep && typeof rep === 'object') { - length = rep.length; - for (i = 0; i < length; i += 1) { - k = rep[i]; - if (typeof k === 'string') { - v = str(k, value); - if (v) { - partial.push(quote(k) + (gap ? ': ' : ':') + v); - } - } - } - } else { - -// Otherwise, iterate through all of the keys in the object. - - for (k in value) { - if (Object.hasOwnProperty.call(value, k)) { - v = str(k, value); - if (v) { - partial.push(quote(k) + (gap ? ': ' : ':') + v); - } - } - } - } - -// Join all of the member texts together, separated with commas, -// and wrap them in braces. - - v = partial.length === 0 ? '{}' : - gap ? '{\n' + gap + partial.join(',\n' + gap) + '\n' + - mind + '}' : '{' + partial.join(',') + '}'; - gap = mind; - return v; - } - } - -// If the JSON object does not yet have a stringify method, give it one. - - if (typeof JSON.stringify !== 'function') { - JSON.stringify = function (value, replacer, space) { - -// The stringify method takes a value and an optional replacer, and an optional -// space parameter, and returns a JSON text. The replacer can be a function -// that can replace values, or an array of strings that will select the keys. -// A default replacer method can be provided. Use of the space parameter can -// produce text that is more easily readable. - - var i; - gap = ''; - indent = ''; - -// If the space parameter is a number, make an indent string containing that -// many spaces. - - if (typeof space === 'number') { - for (i = 0; i < space; i += 1) { - indent += ' '; - } - -// If the space parameter is a string, it will be used as the indent string. - - } else if (typeof space === 'string') { - indent = space; - } - -// If there is a replacer, it must be a function or an array. -// Otherwise, throw an error. - - rep = replacer; - if (replacer && typeof replacer !== 'function' && - (typeof replacer !== 'object' || - typeof replacer.length !== 'number')) { - throw new Error('JSON.stringify'); - } - -// Make a fake root object containing our value under the key of ''. -// Return the result of stringifying the value. - - return str('', {'': value}); - }; - } - - -// If the JSON object does not yet have a parse method, give it one. - - if (typeof JSON.parse !== 'function') { - JSON.parse = function (text, reviver) { - -// The parse method takes a text and an optional reviver function, and returns -// a JavaScript value if the text is a valid JSON text. - - var j; - - function walk(holder, key) { - -// The walk method is used to recursively walk the resulting structure so -// that modifications can be made. - - var k, v, value = holder[key]; - if (value && typeof value === 'object') { - for (k in value) { - if (Object.hasOwnProperty.call(value, k)) { - v = walk(value, k); - if (v !== undefined) { - value[k] = v; - } else { - delete value[k]; - } - } - } - } - return reviver.call(holder, key, value); - } - - -// Parsing happens in four stages. In the first stage, we replace certain -// Unicode characters with escape sequences. JavaScript handles many characters -// incorrectly, either silently deleting them, or treating them as line endings. - - text = String(text); - cx.lastIndex = 0; - if (cx.test(text)) { - text = text.replace(cx, function (a) { - return '\\u' + - ('0000' + a.charCodeAt(0).toString(16)).slice(-4); - }); - } - -// In the second stage, we run the text against regular expressions that look -// for non-JSON patterns. We are especially concerned with '()' and 'new' -// because they can cause invocation, and '=' because it can cause mutation. -// But just to be safe, we want to reject all unexpected forms. - -// We split the second stage into 4 regexp operations in order to work around -// crippling inefficiencies in IE's and Safari's regexp engines. First we -// replace the JSON backslash pairs with '@' (a non-JSON character). Second, we -// replace all simple value tokens with ']' characters. Third, we delete all -// open brackets that follow a colon or comma or that begin the text. Finally, -// we look to see that the remaining characters are only whitespace or ']' or -// ',' or ':' or '{' or '}'. If that is so, then the text is safe for eval. - - if (/^[\],:{}\s]*$/. -test(text.replace(/\\(?:["\\\/bfnrt]|u[0-9a-fA-F]{4})/g, '@'). -replace(/"[^"\\\n\r]*"|true|false|null|-?\d+(?:\.\d*)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?/g, ']'). -replace(/(?:^|:|,)(?:\s*\[)+/g, ''))) { - -// In the third stage we use the eval function to compile the text into a -// JavaScript structure. The '{' operator is subject to a syntactic ambiguity -// in JavaScript: it can begin a block or an object literal. We wrap the text -// in parens to eliminate the ambiguity. - - j = eval('(' + text + ')'); - -// In the optional fourth stage, we recursively walk the new structure, passing -// each name/value pair to a reviver function for possible transformation. - - return typeof reviver === 'function' ? - walk({'': j}, '') : j; - } - -// If the text is not JSON parseable, then a SyntaxError is thrown. - - throw new SyntaxError('JSON.parse'); - }; - } -}()); \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/store.js/package.json b/store.js/package.json deleted file mode 100644 index 9d75d9d9f..000000000 --- a/store.js/package.json +++ /dev/null @@ -1,46 +0,0 @@ -{ - "name": "store", - "description": "A localStorage wrapper for all browsers without using cookies or flash. Uses localStorage, globalStorage, and userData behavior under the hood", - "version": "1.3.3", - "homepage": "https://github.com/marcuswestin/store.js", - "author": "Marcus Westin (http://marcuswest.in)", - "contributors": [ - "Matt Pizzimenti (http://mjpizz.com)", - "Long Ouyang (https://github.com/longouyang)", - "Paul Irish (http://paulirish.com)", - "Guillermo Rauch (https://github.com/guille)", - "whitmer (https://github.com/whitmer)", - "Steven Black (https://github.com/StevenBlack)", - "Marcus Tucker (https://github.com/MarcusJT)", - "Leonid Bugaev (https://github.com/buger)", - "Per Eckerdal (https://github.com/pereckerdal)", - "Fredrik Blomqvist (https://github.com/blq)" - ], - "repository": { - "type": "git", - "url": "git://github.com/marcuswestin/store.js.git" - }, - "bugs": { - "url": "http://github.com/marcuswestin/store.js/issues" - }, - "engines": { - "browser": "*", - "node": "*" - }, - "licenses": [ - { - "type": "MIT", - "url": "https://raw.github.com/marcuswestin/store.js/master/store.js" - } - ], - "main": "store", - "directories": { - "lib": "." - }, - "devDependencies": { - "uglify-js": "v1.2.5" - }, - "files": [ - "" - ] -} diff --git a/store.js/store+json2.min.js b/store.js/store+json2.min.js deleted file mode 100644 index f9f4f8cca..000000000 --- a/store.js/store+json2.min.js +++ /dev/null @@ -1,2 +0,0 @@ -/* Copyright (c) 2010-2012 Marcus Westin */ -this.JSON||(this.JSON={}),function(){function f(a){return a<10?"0"+a:a}function quote(a){return escapable.lastIndex=0,escapable.test(a)?'"'+a.replace(escapable,function(a){var b=meta[a];return typeof b=="string"?b:"\\u"+("0000"+a.charCodeAt(0).toString(16)).slice(-4)})+'"':'"'+a+'"'}function str(a,b){var c,d,e,f,g=gap,h,i=b[a];i&&typeof i=="object"&&typeof i.toJSON=="function"&&(i=i.toJSON(a)),typeof rep=="function"&&(i=rep.call(b,a,i));switch(typeof i){case"string":return quote(i);case"number":return isFinite(i)?String(i):"null";case"boolean":case"null":return String(i);case"object":if(!i)return"null";gap+=indent,h=[];if(Object.prototype.toString.apply(i)==="[object Array]"){f=i.length;for(c=0;cdocument.w=window