In test-http-incoming-pipelined-socket-destory:
* setTimeout() with no duration -> setImmediate()
* eliminate unneeded exit listener
* use common.mustCall()
* var -> const/let
PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/10189
Reviewed-By: Santiago Gimeno <santiago.gimeno@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Sakthipriyan Vairamani <thechargingvolcano@gmail.com>
This helps to prevent issues where a failed test can keep a bound
socket open long enough to cause other tests to fail with EADDRINUSE
because the same port number is used.
PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/7045
Reviewed-By: Ben Noordhuis <info@bnoordhuis.nl>
Reviewed-By: Matteo Collina <matteo.collina@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Rod Vagg <rod@vagg.org>
The http tests seem especially prone to including unused variables.
This change removes them.
PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/4422
Reviewed-By: Johan Bergström <bugs@bergstroem.nu>
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.
The test was calling server.close() after write on the socket
had completed. However the fact that the write had completed was
not valid indication that the server had received the data.
This would result in a premutaure closing of the server and
an ECONNRESET event on the client.
Fixes#3740
In the case of pipelined requests, you can have a situation where
the socket gets destroyed via one req/res object, but then trying
to destroy *another* req/res on the same socket will cause it to
call undefined.destroy(), since it was already removed from that
message.
Add a guard to OutgoingMessage.destroy and IncomingMessage.destroy
to prevent this error.
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).
There is a difference between errors which happen to a socket - like
receiving EPIPE - an exceptional situation but ultimately okay and the
situation where code throws in a callback - which is not okay.
Fixes test/simple/test-http-exceptions.js
TODO: explain this in docs.