The http tests seem especially prone to including unused variables.
This change removes them.
PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/4422
Reviewed-By: Johan Bergström <bugs@bergstroem.nu>
Enable linting for the test directory. A number of changes was made so
all tests conform the current rules used by lib and src directories. The
only exception for tests is that unreachable (dead) code is allowed.
test-fs-non-number-arguments-throw had to be excluded from the changes
because of a weird issue on Windows CI.
PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/io.js/pull/1721
Reviewed-By: Ben Noordhuis <info@bnoordhuis.nl>
The copyright and license notice is already in the LICENSE file. There
is no justifiable reason to also require that it be included in every
file, since the individual files are not individually distributed except
as part of the entire package.
On Windows we cannot get the server address until a connection
is accepted.
From MSDN:
The getsockname function does not always return information about
the host address when the socket has been bound to an unspecified
address, unless the socket has been connected with connect or accept
(for example, using ADDR_ANY). A Windows Sockets application must not
assume that the address will be specified unless the socket is
connected.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Forcibly flushes the request headers. You need this with long-lived
HTTP connections where the first data isn't written until the connection
has been established (think: tunneling requests over HTTP CONNECT.)
Fixes#7296.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Otherwise the string triggers an assertion error in node_http_parser.c,
line 370:
assert(Buffer::HasInstance(args[0]) == true);
because the first argument is not a Buffer object.
Commit 38149bb changes http.get() and http.request() to escape unsafe
characters. However, that creates an incompatibility with v0.10 that
is difficult to work around: if you escape the path manually, then in
v0.11 it gets escaped twice. Change lib/http.js so it no longer tries
to fix up bad request paths, simply reject them with an exception.
The actual check is rather basic right now. The full check for illegal
characters is difficult to implement efficiently because it requires a
few characters of lookahead. That's why it currently only checks for
spaces because those are guaranteed to create an invalid request.
Fixes#5474.
test/simple/test-url.js:31:(0110) Line too long (82 characters).
test/simple/test-url.js:39:(0110) Line too long (85 characters).
test/simple/test-url.js:40:(0110) Line too long (92 characters).