Make sure the deletion event gets reported in the following scenario:
1. Watch a file.
2. The initial stat() goes okay.
3. Something deletes the watched file.
4. The second stat() fails with ENOENT.
The second stat() translates into the first 'change' event but a logic error
stopped it from getting emitted.
Fixes#4027.
Before this commit, `fs.unwatchFile(path)` removed *all* listeners for `path`.
The function is overloaded now: `fs.unwatchFile(path)` still removes all
listeners, but `fs.unwatchFile(path, cb)` lets you remove a specific listener.
Fixes#3660.
There is no need for fs.readFile() to be using pread rather than read.
The default semantics of read() are such that subsequent reads are where
we want them anyway.
Also, in the process, fix a bug in fs.realpath on Windows.
If the user has permission to create symlinks, then use symlinks. If
not, then skip over all the tests that cannot be run using Junctions
instead.
Callbacks that were passed to the binding layer ran in the context of the
(internal) binding object. Make sure they run in the global context.
Before:
fs.symlink('a', 'b', function() {
console.log(this); // prints "{ oncomplete: [Function] }"
});
After:
fs.symlink('a', 'b', function() {
console.log(this); // prints "{ <global object> }"
});
In case a fd option is given to fs.createReadStream a read will instantly
happen. But in the edge case where fd point to an empty file and .pause()
was executed instantly, the end event would emit since no async wait was
between fs.createReadStream and the file read there emits end.
This is a cherry-pick of commit 1f3e4a7 into the v0.6 branch.
In case a fd option is given to fs.createReadStream a read will instantly
happen. But in the edge case where fd point to an empty file and .pause()
was executed instantly, the end event would emit since no async wait was
between fs.createReadStream and the file read there emits end.
* Calling fs.ReadStream.destroy() or fs.WriteStream.destroy() twice would close
the file descriptor twice. That's bad because the file descriptor may have
been repurposed in the mean time.
* A bad value check in fs.ReadStream.prototype.destroy() would prevent a stream
created with fs.createReadStream({fd:0}) from getting closed.
If the fs.open method is modified via AOP-style extension, in between
the creation of an fs.WriteStream and the processing of its action
queue, then the test of whether or not the method === fs.open will fail,
because fs.open has been replaced.
The solution is to save a reference to fs.open on the stream itself when
the action is placed in the queue.
This fixesisaacs/node-graceful-fs#6.
If the fs.open method is modified via AOP-style extension, in between
the creation of an fs.WriteStream and the processing of its action
queue, then the test of whether or not the method === fs.open will fail,
because fs.open has been replaced.
The solution is to save a reference to fs.open on the stream itself when
the action is placed in the queue.
This fixesisaacs/node-graceful-fs#6.
A ReadStream constructed from an existing file descriptor failed to start
reading automatically. Avoids a userspace call to ReadStream.prototype._read().
`path.exists*` functions show a deprecation warning and call functions
from `fs`. They should be removed later.
test: fix references to `path.exists*` in tests
test fs: add test for `fs.exists` and `fs.existsSync`
doc: reflect moving `path.exists*` to `fs`