All compile time warnings about using deprecated APIs have been
suppressed by updating node's API. Though there are still many function
calls that can accept Isolate, and still need to be updated.
node_isolate had to be added as an extern variable in node.h and
node_object_wrap.h
Also a couple small fixes for Error handling.
Before v8 3.16.6 the error stack message was lazily written when it was
needed, which allowed you to change the message after instantiation.
Then the stack would be written with the new message the first time it
was accessed. Though that has changed. Now it creates the stack message
on instantiation. So setting a different message afterwards won't be
displayed.
This is not a complete fix for the problem. Getting error without any
message isn't very useful.
Expose the file descriptor as a read-only property on the internal
handle objects. Intended for debugging purposes, not part of the API
proper. The property is always null on Windows.
Fixes#4754.
Use static_cast instead of reinterpret_cast when casting from void*
to another type.
This is mostly an aesthetic change but may help catch bugs when the
affected code is modified.
It's possible for a new connection to be closed in the window between the
accept() syscall and the call to uv_accept(). Deal with it and move on, don't
assert.
It was decided that the performance benefits that isolates offer (faster spin-up
times for worker processes, faster inter-worker communication, possibly a lower
memory footprint) are not actual bottlenecks for most people and do not outweigh
the potential stability issues and intrusive changes to the code base that
first-class support for isolates requires.
Hence, this commit backs out all isolates-related changes.
Good bye, isolates. We hardly knew ye.
This makes it so that the stdin TTY-wrap stream gets ref'ed on
.resume() and unref'ed on .pause()
The semantics of the names "pause" and "resume" are a bit weird, but the
important thing is that this corrects an API change from 0.4 -> 0.6
which made it impossible to read from stdin multiple times, without
knowing when it might end up being closed. If no one has it open, this
lets the process die naturally.
LGTM'd by @ry