Ability to return just the length of listeners for a given type, using
EventEmitter.listenerCount(emitter, event). This will be a lot cheaper
than creating a copy of the listeners array just to check its length.
We were using a global temp file while setting the NODE_VERSION
environment variable. This resulted in simultaneous builds swapping
version numbers on occasion.
This patch removes the use of a temp file for this.
Register the 'close' event listener with .once(), not .on().
It doesn't matter in the grand scheme of things because the listener
doesn't keep references to any heavy-weight objects but using .once()
for a oneshot listener is something of a best practice.
The first example uses Readable, and shows the use of
readable.unshift(). The second uses the Transform class, showing that
it's much simpler in this case.
This makes it so that `stream.push(chunk)` is the only way to signal the
end of reading, removing the confusing disparity between the
callback-style _read method, and the fact that most real-world streams
do not have a 1:1 corollation between the "please give me data" event,
and the actual arrival of a chunk of data.
It is still possible, of course, to implement a `CallbackReadable` on
top of this. Simply provide a method like this as the callback:
function readCallback(er, chunk) {
if (er)
stream.emit('error', er);
else
stream.push(chunk);
}
However, *only* fs streams actually would behave in this way, so it
makes not a lot of sense to make TCP, TLS, HTTP, and all the rest have
to bend into this uncomfortable paradigm.
A primary motivation of this is to make the onread function more
inline-friendly, but also to make it more easy to explore not having
onread at all, in favor of always using push() to signal the end of
reading.
Don't emit a 'connect' event on sockets that are handed off to
net.Server 'connection' event listeners.
1. It's superfluous because the connection has already been established
at that point.
2. The implementation is arguably wrong because the event is emitted on
the same tick of the event loop while the rule of thumb is to always
emit it on the next one.
This has been tried before in commit f0a440d but was reverted again in
ede1acc because the change was incomplete (at least one test hadn't
been updated).
Fixes#1047 (again).
The output of `id -G` is unreliable on OS X. It uses an undocumented
Libsystem function called getgrouplist_2() that includes some auxiliary
groups that the POSIX getgroups() function does not return.
Or rather, not always. It leads to fun bug chases where the test fails
in one terminal but not in another.
Turn off safe exception handlers, they're incompatible with how
openssl is compiled / linked under MSVS 2012.
Addresses the following build error:
openssl.lib(x86cpuid.obj) : error LNK2026: module unsafe for SAFESEH
image. [g:\jenkins\workspace\nodejs-oneoff\node.vcxproj]
openssl.lib(x86.obj) : error LNK2026: module unsafe for SAFESEH
image. [g:\jenkins\workspace\nodejs-oneoff\node.vcxproj]
# etc. etc.
g:\jenkins\workspace\nodejs-oneoff\Release\node.exe : fatal error
LNK1281: Unable to generate SAFESEH image.
[g:\jenkins\workspace\nodejs-oneoff\node.vcxproj]
Fixes#4242.
Document how to run the example on the home page in more detail.
Apparently our Windows brethren are prone to double-clicking on the
binary instead of running it from the command line.
Fixes#4854.
It's cleaner to only load domain ticker logic when the domains are being
used. This makes execution slightly quicker in both cases, and simpler
from the spinner since there is no need to check if the latest callback
requires use of domains.
Not necessary, since we can handle the error properly on the first tick
now, even if there are event listeners, etc.
Additionally, this removes the unnecessary "_needTickCallback" from
startup, since Module.loadMain() will kick off a nextTick callback right
after it runs the main module.
Fix#4856
Clear OpenSSL's error stack on return from Connection::HandleSSLError().
This stops stale errors from popping up later in the lifecycle of the
SSL connection where they would cause spurious failures.
This commit causes a 1-2% performance regression on `make bench-tls`.
We'll address that in follow-up commits if possible but let's ensure
correctness first.
Fixes#4771.
This handles the fact that stream.Writable inherits from the Stream class,
meaning that it has the legacy pipe() method. Override that with a pipe()
method that emits an error.
Ensure that Duplex streams ARE still pipe()able, however.
Since the 'readable' flag on streams is sometimes temporary, it's probably
better not to put too much weight on that. But if something is an instanceof
Writable, rather than of Readable or Duplex, then it's safe to say that
reading from it is the wrong thing to do.
Fix#3647
It is not a valid test unless you're connected to the internet, and causes
a lot of spurious failures on Linux anyway, as it's highly dependent on
timing of things that we don't have any control over.
This makes the output of simple/test-debugger-repl and
simle/test-debugger-repl-utf8 mirror an actual debugger session, so it's
a bit easier to reason about.
Also, it uses the same code for both, and fixes it so that it doesn't
leave zombie processes lying around when it crashes.
Run 1000 times without any failures or zombies.
Starting the debugger directly in the SIGUSR1 signal handler results in
a malloc lock contention ~1% of the time. It hangs the test, which is
annoying on a daily basis to all of us, but it also is pretty terrible
if you actually want to debug a node process that has gone sideways.
Credit to @bnoordhuis for most of this. I just added the unref which
keeps it from messing up the event loop for other stuff.
The CI system requires that some environment variables are set so merge
our variables into the current environment instead of blindly replacing
it.
This will probably have to be repeated for other tests. C'est la vie.