blog: nodejs v0.12 roadmap update
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doc/blog/nodejs-road-ahead.md
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title: Node.js and the Road Ahead
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date: Thu Jan 16 15:00:00 PST 2014
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author: Timothy J Fontaine
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slug: nodejs-road-ahead
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As the new project lead for Node.js I am excited for our future, and want to
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give you an update on where we are.
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One of Node's major goals is to provide a small core, one that provides the
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right amount of surface area for consumers to achieve and innovate, without
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Node itself getting in the way. That ethos is alive and well, we're going to
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continue to provide a small, simple, and stable set of APIs that facilitate the
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amazing uses the community finds for Node. We're going to keep providing
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backward compatible APIs, so code you write today will continue to work on
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future versions of Node. And of course, performance tuning and bug fixing will
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always be an important part of every release cycle.
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The release of Node v0.12 is imminent, and a lot of significant work has gone
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into this release. There's streams3, a better keep alive agent for http, the vm
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module is now based on contextify, and significant performance work done in
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core features (Buffers, TLS, streams). We have a few APIs that are still being
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ironed out before we can feature freeze and branch (execSync, AsyncListeners,
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user definable instrumentation). We are definitely in the home stretch.
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But Node is far from done. In the short term there will be new releases of v8
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that we'll need to track, as well as integrating the new ABI stable C module
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interface. There are interesting language features that we can use to extend
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Node APIs (extend not replace). We need to write more tooling, we need to
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expose more interfaces to further enable innovation. We can explore
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functionality to embed Node in your existing project.
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The list can go on and on. Yet, Node is larger than the software itself. Node
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is also the community, the businesses, the ecosystems, and their related
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events. With that in mind there are things we can work to improve.
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The core team will be improving its procedures such that we can quickly and
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efficiently communicate with you. We want to provide high quality and timely
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responses to issues, describe our development roadmap, as well as provide our
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progress during each release cycle. We know you're interested in our plans for
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Node, and it's important we're able to provide that information. Communication
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should be bidirectional: we want to continue to receive feedback about how
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you're using Node, and what your pain points are.
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After the release of v0.12 we will facilitate the community to contribute and
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curate content for nodejs.org. Allowing the community to continue to invest in
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Node will ensure nodejs.org is an excellent starting point and the primary
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resource for tutorials, documentation, and materials regarding Node. We have an
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awesome and engaged community, and they're paramount to our success.
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I'm excited for Node's future, to see new and interesting use cases, and to
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continue to help businesses scale and innovate with Node. We have a lot we can
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accomplish together, and I look forward to seeing those results.
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