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					528 lines
				
				27 KiB
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											3 years ago
										 
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								[RFC6265](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6265) Cookies and CookieJar for Node.js
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								[](https://nodei.co/npm/tough-cookie/)
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								[](https://travis-ci.org/salesforce/tough-cookie)
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								# Synopsis
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								``` javascript
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								var tough = require('tough-cookie');
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								var Cookie = tough.Cookie;
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								var cookie = Cookie.parse(header);
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								cookie.value = 'somethingdifferent';
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								header = cookie.toString();
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								var cookiejar = new tough.CookieJar();
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								cookiejar.setCookie(cookie, 'http://currentdomain.example.com/path', cb);
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								// ...
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								cookiejar.getCookies('http://example.com/otherpath',function(err,cookies) {
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								  res.headers['cookie'] = cookies.join('; ');
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								});
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								```
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								# Installation
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								It's _so_ easy!
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								`npm install tough-cookie`
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								Why the name?  NPM modules `cookie`, `cookies` and `cookiejar` were already taken.
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								## Version Support
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								Support for versions of node.js will follow that of the [request](https://www.npmjs.com/package/request) module.
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								# API
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								## tough
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								Functions on the module you get from `require('tough-cookie')`.  All can be used as pure functions and don't need to be "bound".
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								**Note**: prior to 1.0.x, several of these functions took a `strict` parameter. This has since been removed from the API as it was no longer necessary.
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								### `parseDate(string)`
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								Parse a cookie date string into a `Date`.  Parses according to RFC6265 Section 5.1.1, not `Date.parse()`.
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								### `formatDate(date)`
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								Format a Date into a RFC1123 string (the RFC6265-recommended format).
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								### `canonicalDomain(str)`
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								Transforms a domain-name into a canonical domain-name.  The canonical domain-name is a trimmed, lowercased, stripped-of-leading-dot and optionally punycode-encoded domain-name (Section 5.1.2 of RFC6265).  For the most part, this function is idempotent (can be run again on its output without ill effects).
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								### `domainMatch(str,domStr[,canonicalize=true])`
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								Answers "does this real domain match the domain in a cookie?".  The `str` is the "current" domain-name and the `domStr` is the "cookie" domain-name.  Matches according to RFC6265 Section 5.1.3, but it helps to think of it as a "suffix match".
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								The `canonicalize` parameter will run the other two parameters through `canonicalDomain` or not.
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								### `defaultPath(path)`
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								Given a current request/response path, gives the Path apropriate for storing in a cookie.  This is basically the "directory" of a "file" in the path, but is specified by Section 5.1.4 of the RFC.
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								The `path` parameter MUST be _only_ the pathname part of a URI (i.e. excludes the hostname, query, fragment, etc.).  This is the `.pathname` property of node's `uri.parse()` output.
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								### `pathMatch(reqPath,cookiePath)`
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								Answers "does the request-path path-match a given cookie-path?" as per RFC6265 Section 5.1.4.  Returns a boolean.
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								This is essentially a prefix-match where `cookiePath` is a prefix of `reqPath`.
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								### `parse(cookieString[, options])`
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								alias for `Cookie.parse(cookieString[, options])`
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								### `fromJSON(string)`
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								alias for `Cookie.fromJSON(string)`
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								### `getPublicSuffix(hostname)`
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								Returns the public suffix of this hostname.  The public suffix is the shortest domain-name upon which a cookie can be set.  Returns `null` if the hostname cannot have cookies set for it.
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								For example: `www.example.com` and `www.subdomain.example.com` both have public suffix `example.com`.
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								For further information, see http://publicsuffix.org/.  This module derives its list from that site. This call is currently a wrapper around [`psl`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/psl)'s [get() method](https://www.npmjs.com/package/psl#pslgetdomain).
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								### `cookieCompare(a,b)`
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								For use with `.sort()`, sorts a list of cookies into the recommended order given in the RFC (Section 5.4 step 2). The sort algorithm is, in order of precedence:
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								* Longest `.path`
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								* oldest `.creation` (which has a 1ms precision, same as `Date`)
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								* lowest `.creationIndex` (to get beyond the 1ms precision)
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								``` javascript
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								var cookies = [ /* unsorted array of Cookie objects */ ];
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								cookies = cookies.sort(cookieCompare);
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								```
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								**Note**: Since JavaScript's `Date` is limited to a 1ms precision, cookies within the same milisecond are entirely possible. This is especially true when using the `now` option to `.setCookie()`. The `.creationIndex` property is a per-process global counter, assigned during construction with `new Cookie()`. This preserves the spirit of the RFC sorting: older cookies go first. This works great for `MemoryCookieStore`, since `Set-Cookie` headers are parsed in order, but may not be so great for distributed systems. Sophisticated `Store`s may wish to set this to some other _logical clock_ such that if cookies A and B are created in the same millisecond, but cookie A is created before cookie B, then `A.creationIndex < B.creationIndex`. If you want to alter the global counter, which you probably _shouldn't_ do, it's stored in `Cookie.cookiesCreated`.
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								### `permuteDomain(domain)`
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								Generates a list of all possible domains that `domainMatch()` the parameter.  May be handy for implementing cookie stores.
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								### `permutePath(path)`
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								Generates a list of all possible paths that `pathMatch()` the parameter.  May be handy for implementing cookie stores.
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								## Cookie
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								Exported via `tough.Cookie`.
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								### `Cookie.parse(cookieString[, options])`
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								Parses a single Cookie or Set-Cookie HTTP header into a `Cookie` object.  Returns `undefined` if the string can't be parsed.
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								The options parameter is not required and currently has only one property:
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								  * _loose_ - boolean - if `true` enable parsing of key-less cookies like `=abc` and `=`, which are not RFC-compliant.
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								If options is not an object, it is ignored, which means you can use `Array#map` with it.
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								Here's how to process the Set-Cookie header(s) on a node HTTP/HTTPS response:
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								``` javascript
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								if (res.headers['set-cookie'] instanceof Array)
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								  cookies = res.headers['set-cookie'].map(Cookie.parse);
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								else
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								  cookies = [Cookie.parse(res.headers['set-cookie'])];
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								```
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								_Note:_ in version 2.3.3, tough-cookie limited the number of spaces before the `=` to 256 characters. This limitation has since been removed.
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								See [Issue 92](https://github.com/salesforce/tough-cookie/issues/92)
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								### Properties
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								Cookie object properties:
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								  * _key_ - string - the name or key of the cookie (default "")
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								  * _value_ - string - the value of the cookie (default "")
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								  * _expires_ - `Date` - if set, the `Expires=` attribute of the cookie (defaults to the string `"Infinity"`). See `setExpires()`
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								  * _maxAge_ - seconds - if set, the `Max-Age=` attribute _in seconds_ of the cookie.  May also be set to strings `"Infinity"` and `"-Infinity"` for non-expiry and immediate-expiry, respectively.  See `setMaxAge()`
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								  * _domain_ - string - the `Domain=` attribute of the cookie
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								  * _path_ - string - the `Path=` of the cookie
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								  * _secure_ - boolean - the `Secure` cookie flag
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								  * _httpOnly_ - boolean - the `HttpOnly` cookie flag
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								  * _extensions_ - `Array` - any unrecognized cookie attributes as strings (even if equal-signs inside)
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								  * _creation_ - `Date` - when this cookie was constructed
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								  * _creationIndex_ - number - set at construction, used to provide greater sort precision (please see `cookieCompare(a,b)` for a full explanation)
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								After a cookie has been passed through `CookieJar.setCookie()` it will have the following additional attributes:
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								  * _hostOnly_ - boolean - is this a host-only cookie (i.e. no Domain field was set, but was instead implied)
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								  * _pathIsDefault_ - boolean - if true, there was no Path field on the cookie and `defaultPath()` was used to derive one.
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								  * _creation_ - `Date` - **modified** from construction to when the cookie was added to the jar
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								  * _lastAccessed_ - `Date` - last time the cookie got accessed. Will affect cookie cleaning once implemented.  Using `cookiejar.getCookies(...)` will update this attribute.
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								### `Cookie([{properties}])`
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								Receives an options object that can contain any of the above Cookie properties, uses the default for unspecified properties.
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								### `.toString()`
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								encode to a Set-Cookie header value.  The Expires cookie field is set using `formatDate()`, but is omitted entirely if `.expires` is `Infinity`.
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								### `.cookieString()`
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								encode to a Cookie header value (i.e. the `.key` and `.value` properties joined with '=').
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								### `.setExpires(String)`
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								sets the expiry based on a date-string passed through `parseDate()`.  If parseDate returns `null` (i.e. can't parse this date string), `.expires` is set to `"Infinity"` (a string) is set.
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								### `.setMaxAge(number)`
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								sets the maxAge in seconds.  Coerces `-Infinity` to `"-Infinity"` and `Infinity` to `"Infinity"` so it JSON serializes correctly.
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								### `.expiryTime([now=Date.now()])`
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								### `.expiryDate([now=Date.now()])`
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								expiryTime() Computes the absolute unix-epoch milliseconds that this cookie expires. expiryDate() works similarly, except it returns a `Date` object.  Note that in both cases the `now` parameter should be milliseconds.
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								Max-Age takes precedence over Expires (as per the RFC). The `.creation` attribute -- or, by default, the `now` parameter -- is used to offset the `.maxAge` attribute.
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								If Expires (`.expires`) is set, that's returned.
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								Otherwise, `expiryTime()` returns `Infinity` and `expiryDate()` returns a `Date` object for "Tue, 19 Jan 2038 03:14:07 GMT" (latest date that can be expressed by a 32-bit `time_t`; the common limit for most user-agents).
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								### `.TTL([now=Date.now()])`
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								compute the TTL relative to `now` (milliseconds).  The same precedence rules as for `expiryTime`/`expiryDate` apply.
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								The "number" `Infinity` is returned for cookies without an explicit expiry and `0` is returned if the cookie is expired.  Otherwise a time-to-live in milliseconds is returned.
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								### `.canonicalizedDomain()`
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								### `.cdomain()`
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								return the canonicalized `.domain` field.  This is lower-cased and punycode (RFC3490) encoded if the domain has any non-ASCII characters.
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								### `.toJSON()`
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								For convenience in using `JSON.serialize(cookie)`. Returns a plain-old `Object` that can be JSON-serialized.
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								Any `Date` properties (i.e., `.expires`, `.creation`, and `.lastAccessed`) are exported in ISO format (`.toISOString()`).
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								**NOTE**: Custom `Cookie` properties will be discarded. In tough-cookie 1.x, since there was no `.toJSON` method explicitly defined, all enumerable properties were captured. If you want a property to be serialized, add the property name to the `Cookie.serializableProperties` Array.
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								### `Cookie.fromJSON(strOrObj)`
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								Does the reverse of `cookie.toJSON()`. If passed a string, will `JSON.parse()` that first.
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								Any `Date` properties (i.e., `.expires`, `.creation`, and `.lastAccessed`) are parsed via `Date.parse()`, not the tough-cookie `parseDate`, since it's JavaScript/JSON-y timestamps being handled at this layer.
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								Returns `null` upon JSON parsing error.
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								### `.clone()`
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								Does a deep clone of this cookie, exactly implemented as `Cookie.fromJSON(cookie.toJSON())`.
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								### `.validate()`
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								Status: *IN PROGRESS*. Works for a few things, but is by no means comprehensive.
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								validates cookie attributes for semantic correctness.  Useful for "lint" checking any Set-Cookie headers you generate.  For now, it returns a boolean, but eventually could return a reason string -- you can future-proof with this construct:
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						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								``` javascript
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								if (cookie.validate() === true) {
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  // it's tasty
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								} else {
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  // yuck!
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								}
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								```
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								## CookieJar
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Exported via `tough.CookieJar`.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `CookieJar([store],[options])`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Simply use `new CookieJar()`.  If you'd like to use a custom store, pass that to the constructor otherwise a `MemoryCookieStore` will be created and used.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The `options` object can be omitted and can have the following properties:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  * _rejectPublicSuffixes_ - boolean - default `true` - reject cookies with domains like "com" and "co.uk"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  * _looseMode_ - boolean - default `false` - accept malformed cookies like `bar` and `=bar`, which have an implied empty name.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    This is not in the standard, but is used sometimes on the web and is accepted by (most) browsers.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Since eventually this module would like to support database/remote/etc. CookieJars, continuation passing style is used for CookieJar methods.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `.setCookie(cookieOrString, currentUrl, [{options},] cb(err,cookie))`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Attempt to set the cookie in the cookie jar.  If the operation fails, an error will be given to the callback `cb`, otherwise the cookie is passed through.  The cookie will have updated `.creation`, `.lastAccessed` and `.hostOnly` properties.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The `options` object can be omitted and can have the following properties:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  * _http_ - boolean - default `true` - indicates if this is an HTTP or non-HTTP API.  Affects HttpOnly cookies.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  * _secure_ - boolean - autodetect from url - indicates if this is a "Secure" API.  If the currentUrl starts with `https:` or `wss:` then this is defaulted to `true`, otherwise `false`.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  * _now_ - Date - default `new Date()` - what to use for the creation/access time of cookies
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  * _ignoreError_ - boolean - default `false` - silently ignore things like parse errors and invalid domains.  `Store` errors aren't ignored by this option.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								As per the RFC, the `.hostOnly` property is set if there was no "Domain=" parameter in the cookie string (or `.domain` was null on the Cookie object).  The `.domain` property is set to the fully-qualified hostname of `currentUrl` in this case.  Matching this cookie requires an exact hostname match (not a `domainMatch` as per usual).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `.setCookieSync(cookieOrString, currentUrl, [{options}])`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Synchronous version of `setCookie`; only works with synchronous stores (e.g. the default `MemoryCookieStore`).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `.getCookies(currentUrl, [{options},] cb(err,cookies))`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Retrieve the list of cookies that can be sent in a Cookie header for the current url.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								If an error is encountered, that's passed as `err` to the callback, otherwise an `Array` of `Cookie` objects is passed.  The array is sorted with `cookieCompare()` unless the `{sort:false}` option is given.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The `options` object can be omitted and can have the following properties:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  * _http_ - boolean - default `true` - indicates if this is an HTTP or non-HTTP API.  Affects HttpOnly cookies.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  * _secure_ - boolean - autodetect from url - indicates if this is a "Secure" API.  If the currentUrl starts with `https:` or `wss:` then this is defaulted to `true`, otherwise `false`.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  * _now_ - Date - default `new Date()` - what to use for the creation/access time of cookies
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  * _expire_ - boolean - default `true` - perform expiry-time checking of cookies and asynchronously remove expired cookies from the store.  Using `false` will return expired cookies and **not** remove them from the store (which is useful for replaying Set-Cookie headers, potentially).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  * _allPaths_ - boolean - default `false` - if `true`, do not scope cookies by path. The default uses RFC-compliant path scoping. **Note**: may not be supported by the underlying store (the default `MemoryCookieStore` supports it).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The `.lastAccessed` property of the returned cookies will have been updated.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `.getCookiesSync(currentUrl, [{options}])`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Synchronous version of `getCookies`; only works with synchronous stores (e.g. the default `MemoryCookieStore`).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `.getCookieString(...)`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Accepts the same options as `.getCookies()` but passes a string suitable for a Cookie header rather than an array to the callback.  Simply maps the `Cookie` array via `.cookieString()`.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `.getCookieStringSync(...)`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Synchronous version of `getCookieString`; only works with synchronous stores (e.g. the default `MemoryCookieStore`).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `.getSetCookieStrings(...)`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Returns an array of strings suitable for **Set-Cookie** headers. Accepts the same options as `.getCookies()`.  Simply maps the cookie array via `.toString()`.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `.getSetCookieStringsSync(...)`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Synchronous version of `getSetCookieStrings`; only works with synchronous stores (e.g. the default `MemoryCookieStore`).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `.serialize(cb(err,serializedObject))`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Serialize the Jar if the underlying store supports `.getAllCookies`.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								**NOTE**: Custom `Cookie` properties will be discarded. If you want a property to be serialized, add the property name to the `Cookie.serializableProperties` Array.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								See [Serialization Format].
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `.serializeSync()`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Sync version of .serialize
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `.toJSON()`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Alias of .serializeSync() for the convenience of `JSON.stringify(cookiejar)`.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `CookieJar.deserialize(serialized, [store], cb(err,object))`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								A new Jar is created and the serialized Cookies are added to the underlying store. Each `Cookie` is added via `store.putCookie` in the order in which they appear in the serialization.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The `store` argument is optional, but should be an instance of `Store`. By default, a new instance of `MemoryCookieStore` is created.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								As a convenience, if `serialized` is a string, it is passed through `JSON.parse` first. If that throws an error, this is passed to the callback.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `CookieJar.deserializeSync(serialized, [store])`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Sync version of `.deserialize`.  _Note_ that the `store` must be synchronous for this to work.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `CookieJar.fromJSON(string)`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Alias of `.deserializeSync` to provide consistency with `Cookie.fromJSON()`.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `.clone([store,]cb(err,newJar))`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Produces a deep clone of this jar. Modifications to the original won't affect the clone, and vice versa.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The `store` argument is optional, but should be an instance of `Store`. By default, a new instance of `MemoryCookieStore` is created. Transferring between store types is supported so long as the source implements `.getAllCookies()` and the destination implements `.putCookie()`.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `.cloneSync([store])`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Synchronous version of `.clone`, returning a new `CookieJar` instance.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The `store` argument is optional, but must be a _synchronous_ `Store` instance if specified. If not passed, a new instance of `MemoryCookieStore` is used.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The _source_ and _destination_ must both be synchronous `Store`s. If one or both stores are asynchronous, use `.clone` instead. Recall that `MemoryCookieStore` supports both synchronous and asynchronous API calls.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `.removeAllCookies(cb(err))`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Removes all cookies from the jar.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								This is a new backwards-compatible feature of `tough-cookie` version 2.5, so not all Stores will implement it efficiently. For Stores that do not implement `removeAllCookies`, the fallback is to call `removeCookie` after `getAllCookies`. If `getAllCookies` fails or isn't implemented in the Store, that error is returned. If one or more of the `removeCookie` calls fail, only the first error is returned.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `.removeAllCookiesSync()`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Sync version of `.removeAllCookies()`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								## Store
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Base class for CookieJar stores. Available as `tough.Store`.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								## Store API
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The storage model for each `CookieJar` instance can be replaced with a custom implementation.  The default is `MemoryCookieStore` which can be found in the `lib/memstore.js` file.  The API uses continuation-passing-style to allow for asynchronous stores.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Stores should inherit from the base `Store` class, which is available as `require('tough-cookie').Store`.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Stores are asynchronous by default, but if `store.synchronous` is set to `true`, then the `*Sync` methods on the of the containing `CookieJar` can be used (however, the continuation-passing style
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								All `domain` parameters will have been normalized before calling.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The Cookie store must have all of the following methods.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `store.findCookie(domain, path, key, cb(err,cookie))`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Retrieve a cookie with the given domain, path and key (a.k.a. name).  The RFC maintains that exactly one of these cookies should exist in a store.  If the store is using versioning, this means that the latest/newest such cookie should be returned.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Callback takes an error and the resulting `Cookie` object.  If no cookie is found then `null` MUST be passed instead (i.e. not an error).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `store.findCookies(domain, path, cb(err,cookies))`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Locates cookies matching the given domain and path.  This is most often called in the context of `cookiejar.getCookies()` above.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								If no cookies are found, the callback MUST be passed an empty array.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The resulting list will be checked for applicability to the current request according to the RFC (domain-match, path-match, http-only-flag, secure-flag, expiry, etc.), so it's OK to use an optimistic search algorithm when implementing this method.  However, the search algorithm used SHOULD try to find cookies that `domainMatch()` the domain and `pathMatch()` the path in order to limit the amount of checking that needs to be done.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								As of version 0.9.12, the `allPaths` option to `cookiejar.getCookies()` above will cause the path here to be `null`.  If the path is `null`, path-matching MUST NOT be performed (i.e. domain-matching only).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `store.putCookie(cookie, cb(err))`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Adds a new cookie to the store.  The implementation SHOULD replace any existing cookie with the same `.domain`, `.path`, and `.key` properties -- depending on the nature of the implementation, it's possible that between the call to `fetchCookie` and `putCookie` that a duplicate `putCookie` can occur.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The `cookie` object MUST NOT be modified; the caller will have already updated the `.creation` and `.lastAccessed` properties.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Pass an error if the cookie cannot be stored.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `store.updateCookie(oldCookie, newCookie, cb(err))`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Update an existing cookie.  The implementation MUST update the `.value` for a cookie with the same `domain`, `.path` and `.key`.  The implementation SHOULD check that the old value in the store is equivalent to `oldCookie` - how the conflict is resolved is up to the store.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The `.lastAccessed` property will always be different between the two objects (to the precision possible via JavaScript's clock).  Both `.creation` and `.creationIndex` are guaranteed to be the same.  Stores MAY ignore or defer the `.lastAccessed` change at the cost of affecting how cookies are selected for automatic deletion (e.g., least-recently-used, which is up to the store to implement).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Stores may wish to optimize changing the `.value` of the cookie in the store versus storing a new cookie.  If the implementation doesn't define this method a stub that calls `putCookie(newCookie,cb)` will be added to the store object.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The `newCookie` and `oldCookie` objects MUST NOT be modified.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Pass an error if the newCookie cannot be stored.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `store.removeCookie(domain, path, key, cb(err))`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Remove a cookie from the store (see notes on `findCookie` about the uniqueness constraint).
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								The implementation MUST NOT pass an error if the cookie doesn't exist; only pass an error due to the failure to remove an existing cookie.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `store.removeCookies(domain, path, cb(err))`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Removes matching cookies from the store.  The `path` parameter is optional, and if missing means all paths in a domain should be removed.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Pass an error ONLY if removing any existing cookies failed.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `store.removeAllCookies(cb(err))`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								_Optional_. Removes all cookies from the store.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Pass an error if one or more cookies can't be removed.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								**Note**: New method as of `tough-cookie` version 2.5, so not all Stores will implement this, plus some stores may choose not to implement this.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								### `store.getAllCookies(cb(err, cookies))`
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								_Optional_. Produces an `Array` of all cookies during `jar.serialize()`. The items in the array can be true `Cookie` objects or generic `Object`s with the [Serialization Format] data structure.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Cookies SHOULD be returned in creation order to preserve sorting via `compareCookies()`. For reference, `MemoryCookieStore` will sort by `.creationIndex` since it uses true `Cookie` objects internally. If you don't return the cookies in creation order, they'll still be sorted by creation time, but this only has a precision of 1ms.  See `compareCookies` for more detail.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Pass an error if retrieval fails.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								**Note**: not all Stores can implement this due to technical limitations, so it is optional.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								## MemoryCookieStore
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								Inherits from `Store`.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								A just-in-memory CookieJar synchronous store implementation, used by default. Despite being a synchronous implementation, it's usable with both the synchronous and asynchronous forms of the `CookieJar` API. Supports serialization, `getAllCookies`, and `removeAllCookies`.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								## Community Cookie Stores
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								These are some Store implementations authored and maintained by the community. They aren't official and we don't vouch for them but you may be interested to have a look:
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							 | 
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								 | 
							
								- [`db-cookie-store`](https://github.com/JSBizon/db-cookie-store): SQL including SQLite-based databases
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								- [`file-cookie-store`](https://github.com/JSBizon/file-cookie-store): Netscape cookie file format on disk
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								- [`redis-cookie-store`](https://github.com/benkroeger/redis-cookie-store): Redis
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								- [`tough-cookie-filestore`](https://github.com/mitsuru/tough-cookie-filestore): JSON on disk
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								- [`tough-cookie-web-storage-store`](https://github.com/exponentjs/tough-cookie-web-storage-store): DOM localStorage and sessionStorage
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							 | 
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								 | 
							
								
							 | 
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| 
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								# Serialization Format
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								**NOTE**: if you want to have custom `Cookie` properties serialized, add the property name to `Cookie.serializableProperties`.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								```js
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  {
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    // The version of tough-cookie that serialized this jar.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    version: 'tough-cookie@1.x.y',
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    // add the store type, to make humans happy:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    storeType: 'MemoryCookieStore',
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    // CookieJar configuration:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    rejectPublicSuffixes: true,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    // ... future items go here
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    // Gets filled from jar.store.getAllCookies():
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    cookies: [
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								      {
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								        key: 'string',
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								        value: 'string',
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								        // ...
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								        /* other Cookie.serializableProperties go here */
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								      }
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								    ]
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								  }
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								```
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								# Copyright and License
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								BSD-3-Clause:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								```text
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 Copyright (c) 2015, Salesforce.com, Inc.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 All rights reserved.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 3. Neither the name of Salesforce.com nor the names of its contributors may
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software without
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 specific prior written permission.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE)
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								 POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
							 | 
						||
| 
								 | 
							
								```
							 |