rfdc
Really Fast Deep Clone
Usage
const clone = require('rfdc')()
clone({a: 1, b: {c: 2}}) // => {a: 1, b: {c: 2}}
API
require('rfdc')(opts = { proto: false, circles: false }) => clone(obj) => obj2
proto
option
Copy prototype properties as well as own properties into the new object.
It's marginally faster to allow enumerable properties on the prototype to be copied into the cloned object (not onto it's prototype, directly onto the object).
To explain by way of code:
require('rfdc')({ proto: false })(Object.create({a: 1})) // => {}
require('rfdc')({ proto: true })(Object.create({a: 1})) // => {a: 1}
Setting proto
to true
will provide an additional 2% performance boost.
circles
option
Keeping track of circular references will slow down performance with an
additional 25% overhead. Even if an object doesn't have any circular references,
the tracking overhead is the cost. By default if an object with a circular
reference is passed to rfdc
, it will throw (similar to how JSON.stringify
would throw).
Use the circles
option to detect and preserve circular references in the
object. If performance is important, try removing the circular reference from
the object (set to undefined
) and then add it back manually after cloning
instead of using this option.
default
import
It is also possible to directly import the clone function with all options set to their default:
const clone = require("rfdc/default")
clone({a: 1, b: {c: 2}}) // => {a: 1, b: {c: 2}}
Types
rfdc
clones all JSON types:
Object
Array
Number
String
null
With additional support for:
Date
(copied)undefined
(copied)Buffer
(copied)TypedArray
(copied)Map
(copied)Set
(copied)Function
(referenced)AsyncFunction
(referenced)GeneratorFunction
(referenced)arguments
(copied to a normal object)
All other types have output values that match the output
of JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(o))
.
For instance:
const rfdc = require('rfdc')()
const err = Error()
err.code = 1
JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(e)) // {code: 1}
rfdc(e) // {code: 1}
JSON.parse(JSON.stringify({rx: /foo/})) // {rx: {}}
rfdc({rx: /foo/}) // {rx: {}}
Benchmarks
npm run bench
benchDeepCopy*100: 671.675ms
benchLodashCloneDeep*100: 1.574s
benchCloneDeep*100: 936.792ms
benchFastCopy*100: 822.668ms
benchFastestJsonCopy*100: 363.898ms // See note below
benchPlainObjectClone*100: 556.635ms
benchNanoCopy*100: 770.234ms
benchRamdaClone*100: 2.695s
benchJsonParseJsonStringify*100: 2.290s // JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(obj))
benchRfdc*100: 412.818ms
benchRfdcProto*100: 424.076ms
benchRfdcCircles*100: 443.357ms
benchRfdcCirclesProto*100: 465.053ms
It is true that fastest-json-copy may be faster, BUT it has such huge limitations that it is rarely useful. For example, it treats things like Date
and Map
instances the same as empty {}
. It can't handle circular references. plain-object-clone is also really limited in capability.
Tests
npm test
169 passing (342.514ms)
Coverage
npm run cov
----------|----------|----------|----------|----------|-------------------|
File | % Stmts | % Branch | % Funcs | % Lines | Uncovered Line #s |
----------|----------|----------|----------|----------|-------------------|
All files | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | |
index.js | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 | |
----------|----------|----------|----------|----------|-------------------|
__proto__
own property copying
rfdc
works the same way as Object.assign
when it comes to copying ['__proto__']
(e.g. when
an object has an own property key called 'proto'). It results in the target object
prototype object being set per the value of the ['__proto__']
own property.
For detailed write-up on how a way to handle this security-wise see https://www.fastify.io/docs/latest/Guides/Prototype-Poisoning/.
License
MIT