Instead of installing the files in /usr/lib/node/libraries and loading them
from the file system, the files are built-in to the node executable.
However, they are only compiled on demand.
The reasoning is:
1. Allow for more complex internal javascript. In particular,
process.stdout and process.stdin can be js implemented streams.
2. Ease system installs. Loading from disk each time is unnecessary
overhead. Note that there is no "system" path for modules anymore. Only
$HOME/.node_libraries.
Allows for more fine graining, especially finding out about an individual
chunk of data being flushed in a write stream rather than the whole queue.
This commit also fixes a bug causing forceClose to fail on a readStream that
did not finish opening yet.
- Rename fs.cat to fs.readFile
- Move file.write to fs.writeFile
- Allow strings for the flag argument to fs.open
("r", "r+", "w", "w+", "a", "a+")
- Remove the unused 'File' module / class
1. Support streaming in the simple case. Put huge warnings around the
buffering API.
2. Support nested multipart messages.
3. Support various kinds of multipart messages, including all the various
absurdities of multipart email messages.
4. Error out on various invalid types of data that might come through.
5. Gracefully several edge cases that occur when the chunk size is smaller
than the boundary length, or cuts into the \r\n, etc.
6. Provide both positive and negative tests.