EOL Property
The EOL property is used to define boundaries in the input stream using the value of the property.
Syntax
ipdaemon.getEOL(index, [callback]) ipdaemon.setEOL(index, EOL_Buffer, [callback])
Default Value
""
Callback
The 'callback' parameter specifies a function which will be called when the operation completes (or an error is encountered). If the 'callback' parameter is not specified, then the method will block and will not return until the operation completes (or an error is encountered).
The callback for the getEOL([callback]) method is defined as:
function(err, buffer){ }
'err' is the error that occurred. If there was no error, then 'err' is 'null'.
'buffer' is the value returned by the method.
The callback for the setEOL([callback]) method is defined as:
function(err){ }
'err' is the error that occurred. If there was no error, then 'err' is 'null'.
'err' has 2 properties which hold detailed information:
err.code err.message
Remarks
The EOL property is used to define boundaries in the input stream using the value of the property.
The EOL property is especially useful with ASCII files. Setting it to CRLF ("\r\ n") enables splitting of the incoming ASCII text stream into lines. In this case, one event is fired for each line received (as well as in packet boundaries). The CRLF ("\r\ n") . bytes are discarded.
The EOL property is a binary string. In particular, this means that it can be more than one byte long, and it can contain NULL bytes.
When reading the value of the property, if ConnectionId does not belong to a valid connection, then NULL will be returned, and the LastError property will contain a corresponding error message. If no error is encountered, then LastError will contain NULL.
The size of the array is controlled by the ConnectionCount property.
This property is not available at design time.
Data Type
Buffer