Viewing File: /home/ubuntu/misabloom-frontend-base/node_modules/abortcontroller-polyfill/src/abortableFetch.js

import { polyfillNeeded } from './utils.js';
/**
 * Note: the "fetch.Request" default value is available for fetch imported from
 * the "node-fetch" package and not in browsers. This is OK since browsers
 * will be importing umd-polyfill.js from that path "self" is passed the
 * decorator so the default value will not be used (because browsers that define
 * fetch also has Request). One quirky setup where self.fetch exists but
 * self.Request does not is when the "unfetch" minimal fetch polyfill is used
 * on top of IE11; for this case the browser will try to use the fetch.Request
 * default value which in turn will be undefined but then then "if (Request)"
 * will ensure that you get a patched fetch but still no Request (as expected).
 * @param {fetch, Request = fetch.Request}
 * @returns {fetch: abortableFetch, Request: AbortableRequest}
 */
export default function abortableFetchDecorator(patchTargets) {
  if ('function' === typeof patchTargets) {
    patchTargets = { fetch: patchTargets };
  }
  const {
    fetch,
    Request: NativeRequest = fetch.Request,
    AbortController: NativeAbortController,
    __FORCE_INSTALL_ABORTCONTROLLER_POLYFILL = false,
  } = patchTargets;

  if (
    !polyfillNeeded({
      fetch,
      Request: NativeRequest,
      AbortController: NativeAbortController,
      __FORCE_INSTALL_ABORTCONTROLLER_POLYFILL,
    })
  ) {
    return { fetch, Request };
  }

  let Request = NativeRequest;
  // Note that the "unfetch" minimal fetch polyfill defines fetch() without
  // defining window.Request, and this polyfill need to work on top of unfetch
  // hence we only patch it if it's available. Also we don't patch it if signal
  // is already available on the Request prototype because in this case support
  // is present and the patching below can cause a crash since it assigns to
  // request.signal which is technically a read-only property. This latter error
  // happens when you run the main5.js node-fetch example in the repo
  // "abortcontroller-polyfill-examples". The exact error is:
  //   request.signal = init.signal;
  //   ^
  // TypeError: Cannot set property signal of #<Request> which has only a getter
  if ((Request && !Request.prototype.hasOwnProperty('signal')) || __FORCE_INSTALL_ABORTCONTROLLER_POLYFILL) {
    Request = function Request(input, init) {
      let signal;
      if (init && init.signal) {
        signal = init.signal;
        // Never pass init.signal to the native Request implementation when the polyfill has
        // been installed because if we're running on top of a browser with a
        // working native AbortController (i.e. the polyfill was installed due to
        // __FORCE_INSTALL_ABORTCONTROLLER_POLYFILL being set), then passing our
        // fake AbortSignal to the native fetch will trigger:
        // TypeError: Failed to construct 'Request': member signal is not of type AbortSignal.
        delete init.signal;
      }
      const request = new NativeRequest(input, init);
      if (signal) {
        Object.defineProperty(request, 'signal', {
          writable: false,
          enumerable: false,
          configurable: true,
          value: signal,
        });
      }
      return request;
    };
    Request.prototype = NativeRequest.prototype;
  }

  const realFetch = fetch;
  const abortableFetch = (input, init) => {
    const signal = Request && Request.prototype.isPrototypeOf(input) ? input.signal : init ? init.signal : undefined;

    if (signal) {
      let abortError;
      try {
        abortError = new DOMException('Aborted', 'AbortError');
      } catch (err) {
        // IE 11 does not support calling the DOMException constructor, use a
        // regular error object on it instead.
        abortError = new Error('Aborted');
        abortError.name = 'AbortError';
      }

      // Return early if already aborted, thus avoiding making an HTTP request
      if (signal.aborted) {
        return Promise.reject(abortError);
      }

      // Turn an event into a promise, reject it once `abort` is dispatched
      const cancellation = new Promise((_, reject) => {
        signal.addEventListener('abort', () => reject(abortError), { once: true });
      });

      if (init && init.signal) {
        // Never pass .signal to the native implementation when the polyfill has
        // been installed because if we're running on top of a browser with a
        // working native AbortController (i.e. the polyfill was installed due to
        // __FORCE_INSTALL_ABORTCONTROLLER_POLYFILL being set), then passing our
        // fake AbortSignal to the native fetch will trigger:
        // TypeError: Failed to execute 'fetch' on 'Window': member signal is not of type AbortSignal.
        delete init.signal;
      }
      // Return the fastest promise (don't need to wait for request to finish)
      return Promise.race([cancellation, realFetch(input, init)]);
    }

    return realFetch(input, init);
  };

  return { fetch: abortableFetch, Request };
}
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