For consistency with the newly added src/base64.h header, check that
NODE_WANT_INTERNALS is defined and set in internal headers.
PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/6948
Refs: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/6910
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor.indutny@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
v8::Object::GetAlignedPointerFromInternalField() returns a random value
if Wrap() hasn't been run on the object handle. Causing v8 to abort if
certain getters are accessed. It's possible to access these getters and
functions during class construction through the AsyncWrap init()
callback, and also possible in a subset of those scenarios while running
the persistent handle visitor.
Mitigate this issue by manually setting the internal aligned pointer
field to nullptr in the BaseObject constructor and add necessary logic
to return appropriate values when nullptr is encountered.
PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/6184
Reviewed-By: Ben Noordhuis <info@bnoordhuis.nl>
Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <anna@addaleax.net>
Expose and use in TLSWrap an `v8::External` wrap of the
`StreamBase*` pointer instead of guessing the ancestor C++ class in
`node_wrap.h`.
Make use of `StreamBase::Callback` structure for storing/passing both
callback and context in a single object.
Introduce `GetObject()` for future user-land usage, when a child class
is not going to be inherited from AsyncWrap.
PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/2351
Reviewed-By: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Introduce a way to wrap plain-js `stream.Duplex` streams into C++
StreamBase's child class. With such method at hand it is now possible to
pass `stream.Duplex` instance as a `socket` parameter to
`tls.connect()`.
PR-URL: https://github.com/iojs/io.js/pull/926
Reviewed-By: Chris Dickinson <christopher.s.dickinson@gmail.com>
StreamBase is an improved way to write C++ streams. The class itself is
for separting `StreamWrap` (with the methods like `.writeAsciiString`,
`.writeBuffer`, `.writev`, etc) from the `HandleWrap` class, making
possible to write abstract C++ streams that are not bound to any uv
socket.
The following methods are important part of the abstraction (which
mimics libuv's stream API):
* Events:
* `OnAlloc(size_t size, uv_buf_t*)`
* `OnRead(ssize_t nread, const uv_buf_t*, uv_handle_type pending)`
* `OnAfterWrite(WriteWrap*)`
* Wrappers:
* `DoShutdown(ShutdownWrap*)`
* `DoTryWrite(uv_buf_t** bufs, size_t* count)`
* `DoWrite(WriteWrap*, uv_buf_t*, size_t count, uv_stream_t* handle)`
* `Error()`
* `ClearError()`
The implementation should provide all of these methods, thus providing
the access to the underlying resource (be it uv handle, TLS socket, or
anything else).
A C++ stream may consume the input of another stream by replacing the
event callbacks and proxying the writes. This kind of API is actually
used now for the TLSWrap implementation, making it possible to wrap TLS
stream into another TLS stream. Thus legacy API calls are no longer
required in `_tls_wrap.js`.
PR-URL: https://github.com/iojs/io.js/pull/840
Reviewed-By: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Chris Dickinson <christopher.s.dickinson@gmail.com>
The copyright and license notice is already in the LICENSE file. There
is no justifiable reason to also require that it be included in every
file, since the individual files are not individually distributed except
as part of the entire package.
Now that we are building with C++11 features enabled, replace use
of NULL with nullptr.
The benefit of using nullptr is that it can never be confused for
an integral type because it does not support implicit conversions
to integral types except boolean - unlike NULL, which is defined
as a literal `0`.
This commit makes it possible to use multiple V8 execution contexts
within a single event loop. Put another way, handle and request wrap
objects now "remember" the context they belong to and switch back to
that context when the time comes to call into JS land.
This could have been done in a quick and hacky way by calling
v8::Object::GetCreationContext() on the wrap object right before
making a callback but that leaves a fairly wide margin for bugs.
Instead, we make the context explicit through a new Environment class
that encapsulates everything (or almost everything) that belongs to
the context. Variables that used to be a static or a global are now
members of the aforementioned class. An additional benefit is that
this approach should make it relatively straightforward to add full
isolate support in due course.
There is no JavaScript API yet but that will be added in the near
future.
This work was graciously sponsored by GitHub, Inc.
This is a big commit that touches just about every file in the src/
directory. The V8 API has changed in significant ways. The most
important changes are:
* Binding functions take a const v8::FunctionCallbackInfo<T>& argument
rather than a const v8::Arguments& argument.
* Binding functions return void rather than v8::Handle<v8::Value>. The
return value is returned with the args.GetReturnValue().Set() family
of functions.
* v8::Persistent<T> no longer derives from v8::Handle<T> and no longer
allows you to directly dereference the object that the persistent
handle points to. This means that the common pattern of caching
oft-used JS values in a persistent handle no longer quite works,
you first need to reconstruct a v8::Local<T> from the persistent
handle with the Local<T>::New(isolate, persistent) factory method.
A handful of (internal) convenience classes and functions have been
added to make dealing with the new API a little easier.
The most visible one is node::Cached<T>, which wraps a v8::Persistent<T>
with some template sugar. It can hold arbitrary types but so far it's
exclusively used for v8::Strings (which was by far the most commonly
cached handle type.)