TransformStream creates a readable/writable pair with processing logic in between. The transform() function executes on write, not on read. Processing of the transform happens eagerly as data arrives, regardless of whether any consumer is ready. This causes unnecessary work when consumers are slow, and the backpressure signaling between the two sides has gaps that can cause unbounded buffering under load. The expectation in the spec is that the producer of the data being transformed is paying attention to the writer.ready signal on the writable side of the transform but quite often producers just simply ignore it.
"360" by Charli xcx (Episode 5)
,这一点在服务器推荐中也有详细论述
The spec does not mandate buffer limits for tee(). And to be fair, the spec allows implementations to implement the actual internal mechanisms for tee()and other APIs in any way they see fit so long as the observable normative requirements of the specification are met. But if an implementation chooses to implement tee() in the specific way described by the streams specification, then tee() will come with a built-in memory management issue that is difficult to work around.
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