In addition to removing unused vars, this also fixes an instance where
booleans were set presumably to check something but then never used.
This now confirms that the events that were setting the booleans are
fired.
PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/4425
Reviewed-By: Johan Bergström <bugs@bergstroem.nu>
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
Enable linting for the test directory. A number of changes was made so
all tests conform the current rules used by lib and src directories. The
only exception for tests is that unreachable (dead) code is allowed.
test-fs-non-number-arguments-throw had to be excluded from the changes
because of a weird issue on Windows CI.
PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/io.js/pull/1721
Reviewed-By: Ben Noordhuis <info@bnoordhuis.nl>
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.
Expose `setBlocking` on Pipe's and if a pipe is being created for stdio
on windows then make the pipes blocking.
This fixes test-stream2-stderr-sync.js on Windows.
Fixes#3584
Passing a filename is still supported in place of certain options
arguments, for backward-compatibility, but timeout and display-errors
are not translated since those were undocumented.
Also managed to eliminate an extra stack trace line by not calling
through the `createScript` export.
Added a few message tests to show how `displayErrors` works.
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.
Previously, we were only destroying sockets on end if their readable
side had already been ended. This causes a problem for non-readable
streams, since we don't expect to ever see an 'end' event from those.
Treat the lack of a 'readable' flag the same as if it was an ended
readable stream.
Fix#4751
With -e or --eval, require() can load module using relative path.
node -e 'require("./foo")'
But it can't load module from node_modules directory.
node -e 'require("foo")'
Fixes#1196.