The test was calling server.close() after write on the socket
had completed. However the fact that the write had completed was
not valid indication that the server had received the data.
This would result in a premutaure closing of the server and
an ECONNRESET event on the client.
* uv: Upgrade to v0.10.23
* npm: Upgrade to v1.3.24
* v8: Fix enumeration for objects with lots of properties
* child_process: fix spawn() optional arguments (Sam Roberts)
* cluster: report more errors to workers (Fedor Indutny)
* domains: exit() only affects active domains (Ryan Graham)
* src: OnFatalError handler must abort() (Timothy J Fontaine)
* stream: writes may return false but forget to emit drain (Yang Tianyang)
Spawn's arguments were documented to be optional, as they are for the
other similar child_process APIs, but the code was missing. Result was
`child_process.spawn('node', {})` errored when calling slice() on an
Object, now it behaves as the documentation said it would.
domain.create().exit() should not clear the domain stack if the domain
instance does not exist within the stack.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
spawn stdio options can be a 'stream', but the following code
fails with "Incorrect value for stdio stream: [object Object]",
despite being a stream. The problem is the test isn't really
for a stream, its for an object with a numeric `.fd` property,
and streams do not have an fd until their async 'open' event
has occurred. This is reasonable, but was not documented.
child_process.spawn('date', [], {stdio: [
'ignore',
fs.createWriteStream('out.txt',{flags:'a'}),
'ignore']})
If a write is above the highWaterMark, _write still manages to
fully send it synchronously, _writableState.length will be adjusted down
to 0 synchronously with the write returning false, but 'drain' will
not be emitted until process.nextTick.
If another small write which is below highWaterMark is issued before
process.nextTick happens, _writableState.needDrain will be reset to false,
and the drain event will never be fired.
So we should check needDrain before setting it up, which prevents it
from inproperly resetting to false.
The fact that the "exit" event passes the exit code as an argument
as omitted from the documentation. This adds the explanation and
augments the example code to show that.
The %p is replaced with the current PID. This used to work in node.js
v0.9.7 but it seems to have been lost somewhere along the way.
This commit makes the fix from 6b713b52 ("cluster: make --prof work for
workers") work again. Without it, all log data ends up in a single
file and is unusable because the addresses are all wrong.