Commit 0bba5902 accidentally (or maybe erroneously) added node_isolate
to src/node.h and src/node_object_wrap.h.
Undo that, said variable is not for public consumption. Add-on authors
should use v8::Isolate::GetCurrent() instead.
I missed that while reviewing. Mea culpa.
Fixes#5639.
This is only relevant for CentOS 6.3 using kernel version 2.6.32.
On other linuxes and darwin, the `read` call gets an ECONNRESET in that
case. On sunos, the `write` call fails with EPIPE.
However, old CentOS will occasionally send an EOF instead of a
ECONNRESET or EPIPE when the client has been destroyed abruptly.
Make sure we don't keep trying to write or read more in that case.
Fixes#5504
However, there is still the question of what libuv should do when it
gets an EOF. Apparently in this case, it will continue trying to read,
which is almost certainly the wrong thing to do.
That should be fixed in libuv, even though this works around the issue.
In cases where there are multiple @-chars in a url, Node currently
parses the hostname and auth sections differently than web browsers.
This part of the bug is serious, and should be landed in v0.10, and
also ported to v0.8, and releases made as soon as possible.
The less serious issue is that there are many other sorts of malformed
urls which Node either accepts when it should reject, or interprets
differently than web browsers. For example, `http://a.com*foo` is
interpreted by Node like `http://a.com/*foo` when web browsers treat
this as `http://a.com%3Bfoo/`.
In general, *only* the `hostEndingChars` should be the characters that
delimit the host portion of the URL. Most of the current `nonHostChars`
that appear in the hostname should be escaped, but some of them (such as
`;` and `%` when it does not introduce a hex pair) should raise an
error.
We need to have a broader discussion about whether it's best to throw in
these cases, and potentially break extant programs, or return an object
that has every field set to `null` so that any attempt to read the
hostname/auth/etc. will appear to be empty.
In some cases, the http CONNECT/Upgrade API is unshifting an empty
bodyHead buffer onto the socket.
Normally, stream.unshift(chunk) does not set state.reading=false.
However, this check was not being done for the case when the chunk was
empty (either `''` or `Buffer(0)`), and as a result, it was causing the
socket to think that a read had completed, and to stop providing data.
This bug is not limited to http or web sockets, but rather would affect
any parser that unshifts data back onto the source stream without being
very careful to never unshift an empty chunk. Since the intent of
unshift is to *not* change the state.reading property, this is a bug.
Fixes#5557FixesLearnBoost/socket.io#1242
Remove the need to call start/stop the uv_idle spinner between
MakeCallbacks. The one place where the tick processor needs to be kicked
is where a user catches uncaughtException. For that we'll now use
setImmediate, which accomplishes the same task.
maxTickDepth checks have been removed for domains and replaced with a
flag that checks if the last callback threw. If it did then execution of
the remaining tickQueue is deferred to the spinner.
This is to prevent domains from entering a continuous loop when an error
callback also throws an error.
Removes the check for maxTickDepth for non-domain callbacks. So a user
can starve I/O by setting a recursive nextTick.
The domain case is more complex and will be addressed in another commit.
Previous code was calling uv_loop_delete() directly on a running loop,
which led to race condition aborts/segfaults within libuv. This change
changes the watchdog thread to call uv_run() with UV_RUN_ONCE so that
the call exits after either the timer times out or uv_async_send() is
called from the main thread in Watchdog::Destroy(). The timer/async
handles are then closed and uv_run() with UV_RUN_DEFAULT is called so
that libuv has a chance to cleanup before the thread exits. The main
thread meanwhile calls uv_thread_join() and then uv_loop_delete() to
complete the cleanup.
Before this, entering something like:
> JSON.parse('066');
resulted in the "..." prompt instead of displaying the expected
"SyntaxError: Unexpected number"
1. Emit `sslOutEnd` only when `_internallyPendingBytes() === 0`.
2. Read before checking `._halfRead`, otherwise we'll see only previous
value, and will invoke `._write` callback improperly.
3. Wait for both `end` and `finish` events in `.destroySoon`.
4. Unpipe encrypted stream from socket to prevent write after destroy.
Stream's `._write()` callback should be invoked only after it's opposite
stream has finished processing incoming data, otherwise `finish` event
fires too early and connection might be closed while there's some data
to send to the client.
see #5544