The file:// protocol *always* has a hostname; it's frequently
abbreviated as an empty string, which represents 'localhost'
implicitly.
According to RFC 1738 (http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1738):
A file URL takes the form:
file://<host>/<path>
where <host> is the fully qualified domain name of the system on
which the <path> is accessible...
As a special case, <host> can be the string "localhost" or the empty
string; this is interpreted as 'the machine from which the URL is
being interpreted'.
Problem: Since stream.pipe() is registering it's own error handlers on
the source and destination stream, it needs to replicate the
EventEmitter 'error' emitting semantics of throwing an error if there
are no other listeners. However, there was a off-by-one error because
the check for remaining listeners was done after cleanup() which means
the pipe's own listener was no longer included.
This would cause 'error' events on either the dest or the source to
throw if there was one other error listener, and while swallowing
the 'error' event if there was no other listener.
Solution: I added a test demonstrating the two issues and fixed the
problem by correcting the off-by-one error.
Fixes#1095.
Problem: It was not possible to detect the reason for a premature
connection termination in http requests.
This patch provides a new `err` argument to the 'close' event which
can be inspected to differentiate between a timeout and a client
actively terminating the connection.
Also contains tests for this new behavior for http and https.
The change for #954 introduced a regression that would cause
the url parser to fail on special chars found in the auth
segment. Fix that, and also don't create invalid urls when
format() is called on an object containing an auth member
containing '@' characters or delimiters.
The debugger would give up after only 100ms but on my system this
timeout isn't enough. The startup process is now modified to try 6
times every 50ms instead.
Fixes#1010.
This fixes a critical bug see in MJR's production. Very difficult to build a
test case. Sometimes HTTPS server gets sockets that are hanging in a
half-duplex state.