test/simple/test-url.js:31:(0110) Line too long (82 characters).
test/simple/test-url.js:39:(0110) Line too long (85 characters).
test/simple/test-url.js:40:(0110) Line too long (92 characters).
In ab068db9b1 this test was broken because (I
think) compile/run errors are set to crash the program instead of being
passed back.
Error reporting is more important than remote loading. Disabling until there
is a fix
This is to reduce our dependency on wait(). For some reason this patch
affects the timer test:
% ./node test/mjsunit/test-timers.js
diff: 989
diff: 989
diff: 1989
diff: 2989
Previously it showed:
% ./node test/mjsunit/test-timers.js
diff: 1000
diff: 1000
diff: 2000
diff: 3000
I'm not sure what caused this change, and it's rather disturbing. However I
want to remove wait() as soon as possible and so am pushing this patch
through.
The module loading code is becoming increasingly ugly - this patch has not
helped. A refactor needs to be done soon.
Deprecate the URI module and remove tests for it.
- Rename "uri" to "url".
- Use the "url" module instead of the "uri" module.
- Remove the url parsing from http.js
- Update http.cat with the changed field names.
- Update tests for changes to http.js
- Update documentation for changes in http.js
There is a small problem with test-remote-module-loading.js.
When it starts a child "node", the child uses the default require.paths
instead unshifting the build lib/
The constructor for TCP servers can no longer take a connection handler for
purely technical reasons. (The constructor for EventEmitter is implemented
in C++ but addListener is in javascript, and I don't want to make too many
C++ -> Javascript references.) Thus I introduce new constructor methods to
ease the creation of the servers:
node.tcp.createServer()
node.http.createServer()
These work almost the same as the old constructors.
In general we're working towards a future where no constructors are
publicly exposed or take arguments.
The HTTP events like "on_uri" are not yet using the event interface.
onMessage still is a constructor - but this will change soon.