There was an underlying assumption in readline.emitKeypressEvents (and
by extension emitKey) that the given stream (usually process.stdin)
would emit 'data' once per keypress, which is not always the case.
This commit buffers the input stream and ensures a 'keypress' event is
triggered for every keypress (including escape codes).
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Not removing 'end' listeners for input and output on the 'close' event
resulted in an EventEmitter related memory leak.
This issue also might be reproduced at:
https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/5203
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
If an input stream would emit `end` event, like
`fs.createReadStream`, then readline need to get the last line
correctly even though that line isnt ended with `\n`.
Make lines ending \r\n emit one 'line' event, not two (where the second
one is an empty string).
This adds a new keypress name: 'return' (as in: 'carriage return').
Fixes#3305.
While updating the readline test cases to test both "terimal: false" and
"terminal: true" mode, it turned out that the test case testing utf8 chars
being sent over multiple write() calls was failing. The solution is to use
a string_decoder instance when parsing the "keypress" events.
Before this commit, readline was inconsistent in whether or not it would emit
"line" events with or without the trailing "\n" included. When "terminal"
mode was true, then there would be no "\n", when it was false, then the "\n"
would be present. However, the trailing "\n" doesn't add much, and most of the
time people just end up stripping it manually.
Part of #4243.