Length arguments passed to SlowBuffer were coerced to Int32, not Uint32,
so passing a negative number would throw the following:
node: ../src/smalloc.cc:244: void node::smalloc::Alloc(): Assertion `length <= kMaxLength' failed.
Aborted (core dumped)
That has been fixed by coercing to Uint32 and comparing the value
against kMaxLength.
Due to a lot of the util.is* checks there was much unnecessary overhead
for the most common use case of Buffer. Which is creating a new Buffer
instance for data from incoming I/O. NativeBuffer is a simple way to
bypass all the unneeded checks and simply hand back a Buffer instance
while setting the length.
On windows process exit codes can be greater than INT32_MAX. This used
to be not much of a problem - greater values would just come out
negative. However since ca9eb71 a negative result value indicates that
uv_spawn() has failed, so this is no longer acceptable.
Instead of doing all the domain handling in core, allow the domain to
set an error handler that'll take care of it all. This way the domain
error handling can be abstracted enough for any user to use it.
All the Buffer#{ascii,hex,etc.}Slice() methods are intentionally strict
to alert if a Buffer instance was attempting to be accessed out of
bounds. Buffer#toString() is the more user friendly way of accessing the
data, and will coerce values to their min/max on overflow.
This is an important part of the repl use-case.
TODO: The arg parsing in vm.runIn*Context() is rather wonky.
It would be good to move more of that into the Script class,
and/or an options object.
As documented in #3042 and in [1], the existing vm implementation has
many problems. All of these are solved by @brianmcd's [contextify][2]
package. This commit uses contextify as a conceptual base and its code
core to overhaul the vm module and fix its many edge cases and caveats.
Functionally, this fixes#3042. In particular:
- A context is now indistinguishable from the object it is based on
(the "sandbox"). A context is simply a sandbox that has been marked
by the vm module, via `vm.createContext`, with special internal
information that allows scripts to be run inside of it.
- Consequently, items added to the context from anywhere are
immediately visible to all code that can access that context, both
inside and outside the virtual machine.
This commit also smooths over the API very slightly:
- Parameter defaults are now uniformly triggered via `undefined`, per
ES6 semantics and previous discussion at [3].
- Several undocumented and problematic features have been removed, e.g.
the conflation of `vm.Script` with `vm` itself, and the fact that
`Script` instances also had all static `vm` methods. The API is now
exactly as documented (although arguably the existence of the
`vm.Script` export is not yet documented, just the `Script` class
itself).
In terms of implementation, this replaces node_script.cc with
node_contextify.cc, which is derived originally from [4] (see [5]) but
has since undergone extensive modifications and iterations to expose
the most useful C++ API and use the coding conventions and utilities of
Node core.
The bindings exposed by `process.binding('contextify')`
(node_contextify.cc) replace those formerly exposed by
`process.binding('evals')` (node_script.cc). They are:
- ContextifyScript(code, [filename]), with methods:
- runInThisContext()
- runInContext(sandbox, [timeout])
- makeContext(sandbox)
From this, the vm.js file builds the entire documented vm module API.
node.js and module.js were modified to use this new native binding, or
the vm module itself where possible. This introduces an extra line or
two into the stack traces of module compilation (and thus into most
stack traces), explaining the changed tests.
The tests were also updated slightly, with all vm-related simple tests
consolidated as test/simple/test-vm-* (some of them were formerly
test/simple/test-script-*). At the same time they switched from
`common.debug` to `console.error` and were updated to use
`assert.throws` instead of rolling their own error-testing methods.
New tests were also added, of course, demonstrating the new
capabilities and fixes.
[1]: http://nodejs.org/docs/v0.10.16/api/vm.html#vm_caveats
[2]: https://github.com/brianmcd/contextify
[3]: https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/5323#issuecomment-20250726
[4]: bf123f3ef9/src/contextify.cc
[5]: https://gist.github.com/domenic/6068120
* uv: Upgrade v0.10.14
* http_parser: Do not accept PUN/GEM methods as PUT/GET (Chris Dickinson)
* tls: fix assertion when ssl is destroyed at read (Fedor Indutny)
* stream: Throw on 'error' if listeners removed (isaacs)
* dgram: fix assertion on bad send() arguments (Ben Noordhuis)
* readline: pause stdin before turning off terminal raw mode (Daniel Chatfield)
`maybeInitFinished()` can emit the 'secure' event which
in turn destroys the connection in case of authentication
failure and sets `this.pair.ssl` to `null`.
If such condition appeared after non-empty read - loop will continue
and `clearOut` will be called on `null` object instead of
`crypto::Connection` instance. Resulting in the following assertion:
ERROR: Error: Hostname/IP doesn't match certificate's altnames
Assertion failed: handle->InternalFieldCount() > 0
fix#5756
The C++ API has been changed so the passed length is the byte size of
the data, not the length of the array.
This was done so users need to explicitly define how much memory they
want allocated.
`dns.lookup` defaults to selecting IPv4 record even if IPv6 is available
for the desired zone. Generally, this approach works, but if IPv4
address is unavailable - there'll be no other way to opt-out and connect using
IPv6 address than calling `dns.lookup` and passing it to `.connect()`
directly.
This commit adds `family` option to `net.connect` method to figure out
this issue.
It only fails once in about 1000 times, but that's too many.
It's timing dependent, and the main behavior is covered by the other
assertions in the test anyway.
This change is 100% backwards compatible.
This change will make using `EventEmitter` slightly simpler / nicer and
adheres to the best practice set forth by substack.
```js
var EventEmitter = require("events")
var emitter = new EventEmitter()
```
The only difference is that we now have to set `EventEmitter` as a
property of `EventEmitter` for backwards compatibility like we do with
[`Stream`][1]
We have also set the `usingDomains` property on the `EventEmitter`
constructor itself because that aligns with it's current usage of
`require("events").usingDomains = true`
There are other internals that would benefit from this change as well
like `StringDecoder`
This allows automatically-inserted headers to be removed permanently by
calling OutgoingMessage.removeHeader() on them, as if they were normal
headers.