UsingDomains() assigned process_tickCallback when it had already
been set by MakeCallback() a few frames down the call stack.
Dispose the handle first or we'll retain whatever is in the lexical
closure of the old process._tickCallback function.
Fixes#5795.
If a transform stream has objectMode = true, it should
allow falsey values other than (null) like 0, false, ''.
null is reserved to indicate stream eof but other falsey
values should flow through properly.
Now that Buffer instantiation has improved, the SlabAllocator is an
unnecessary layer of complexity preventing further performance
optimizations.
Currently there is a small performance loss with very small stream
requests, but this will soon be addressed.
Assert that when the client closes it has seen an error, this prevents
the test from timing out.
Also queue a second write in the case that we were able to send the
buffer before the other side closed the connection.
There was previously up to a second exit delay when exiting node
right after an http request/response, due to the utcDate() function
doing a setTimeout to update the cached date/time.
Fixing this should increase the performance of our http tests.
Assert that when the client closes it has seen an error, this prevents
the test from timing out.
Also queue a second write in the case that we were able to send the
buffer before the other side closed the connection.
Most TryCatch blocks have SetVerbose flag on, this tells V8 to report
uncaught exceptions to debugger.
FatalException handler is called from V8 Message listener instead from
the place where TryCatch was used. Otherwise uncaught exceptions are
logged twice.
See comment in `deps/v8/include/v8.h` for explanation of SetVerbose
flag:
> By default, exceptions that are caught by an external exception
> handler are not reported. Call SetVerbose with true on an
> external exception handler to have exceptions caught by the
> handler reported as if they were not caught.
The flag is used by `Isolate::ShouldReportException()`, which is called
by `Isolate::DoThrow()` to decide whether an exception is considered
uncaught.
Might cause write head running over read head, when there were no
allocation and `Commit()` was called. Source of at least one test
failure on windows (`simple/test-https-drain.js`).
Several people have reported cross-compiling build breakage, see e.g.
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/nodejs/k8HzqpqPkJQ
Message-Id: <823c3bd1-e104-4409-86ad-0ab6de936fec@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [nodejs] nodejs 0.10.12 and Angstrom issues
This reverts commit acbdabb74b.
gcc 4.2 on OS X gets confused about the call to node::Buffer::Data().
Fully qualify the function name to help it along.
Fixes the following build error:
../../deps/v8/include/v8.h: In function ‘char*
node::Buffer::Data(v8::Handle<v8::Value>)’:
../../deps/v8/include/v8.h:900: error: ‘class v8::Data’
is not a function,
../../src/node_buffer.h:38: error:
conflict with ‘char* node::Buffer::Data(v8::Handle<v8::Object>)’
../../src/node_buffer.cc:94: error:
in call to ‘Data’
Buffer(<String>) used to pass the string to js where it would then be
passed back to cpp for processing. Now only the buffer object
instantiation is done in js and the string is processed in cpp.
Also added a Buffer api that also accepts the encoding.
Old fill would take the char code of the first character and wrap around
the int to fit in the 127 range. Now fill will duplicate whatever string
is given through the entirety of the buffer.
Note: There is one bug around ending on a partial fill of any character
outside the ASCII range.
While the new Buffer implementation is much faster we still have the
necessity of using Buffer pools. This is undesirable because it may
still lead to unwanted memory retention, but for the time being this is
the best solution.
Because of this re-introduction, and since there is no more SlowBuffer
type, the SlowBuffer method has been re-purposed to return a non-pooled
Buffer instance. This will be helpful for developers to store data for
indeterminate lengths of time without introducing a memory leak.
Another change to Buffer pools was that they are only allocated if the
requested chunk is < poolSize / 2. This was done because allocations are
much quicker now, and it's a better use of the pool.
Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has
been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the
namespace as Buffer.
The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an
allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer).
The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards
compatibility. I'd like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0).
A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or
thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values,
and (most) all out of range index requests will throw.
The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For
example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces
instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future.
The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because
giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that
it's easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the
fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds.
Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer
instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed.
Heapdumps will now show usage under "smalloc" instead of "Buffer".
ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint
argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes.
SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
If the user knows the allocation is no longer needed then the memory can
be manually released.
Currently this will not ClearWeak the Persistent, so the callback will
still run.
If the user passed a ClearWeak callback, and then disposed the object,
the buffer callback argument will == NULL.
smalloc is a simple utility for quickly allocating external memory onto
js objects. This will be used to centralize how memory is managed in
node, and will become the backer for Buffers. So in the future crypto's
SlabBuffer, stream's SlabAllocator will be removed.
Note on the js API: because no arguments are optional the order of
arguments have been placed to match their cc counterparts as closely as
possible.