Include the "expected protocol" in the Error message
string, which evaluates to "http:" for the `http`
core module, and "https:" for the `https` module.
Closes#7355.
These are an old and deprecated properties that was used by previous
stream implementation, and are still in use in some user-land modules.
Prior to this commit, they were read from the underlying socket, which
may be non-readable/non-writable while connecting or while staying
uninitialized.
Force set them to `true`, just to make sure that there will be no
inconsistency.
fix#7152
Default to the `defaultAgent.protocol` when comparing the
user-specified `options.protocol` string. This is so that
`http.Agent` instances do not need to specify their own
`protocol` field, since we have the relevant information
already from the `defaultAgent`.
Note that the test case could be separately cherry-picked
to the `v0.10` branch, since it already passes correctly.
Fixes#7349.
Fixes the regression described in: http://git.io/2ds-WQ
V8 was upgraded from 3.22 to 3.24 in commit 1c7bf24. Upgrade source
files in test/addons/ and automatically generated tests from
doc/api/addons.markdown to the new V8 API.
This coincidentally fixes a bug in src/node_object_wrap.h where it was
still using the old V8 weak persistent handle interface, which is gone
in 3.24.
* ::jsstack -v prints function defintion
* ::jsprint works with objects with only numeric properties
* update tests to use builtin mdb_v8
* add more symbols to postmortem script - pending upstream
inclusion
Internally we use hrtime to schedule when a timer will fire, to avoid
the perils of clock drift or other external operation making time go
backward. The timers ordering test should use the same timing mechanism
If two timers run on the same tick, and the first timer uses a domain,
and then catches an exception and disposes of the domain, then the
second timer never runs. (And even if the first timer does not dispose
of the domain, the second timer could run under the wrong domain.)
This happens because timer.js uses "process.nextTick()" to schedule
continued processing of the timers for that tick. However, there was
an exception inside a domain, then "process.nextTick()" runs under
the domain of the first timer function, and will do nothing if
the domain has been disposed.
To avoid this, we temporarily save the value of "process.domain"
before calling nextTick so that it does not run inside any domain.
Previously if you cached process.nextTick and then require('domain')
subsequent nextTick() calls would not be caught because enqueued
functions were taking the wrong path. This keeps nextTick to a single
function reference and changes the implementation details after domain
has been required.
Unlike the 'exit' event, this event allows the user to schedule more
work and thereby postpone the exit. That also means that the
'beforeExit' event may be emitted many times, see the attached test
case for an example.
Refs #6305.
Don't invoke the `agent.requst()` or `agent.get()` functions
directly. Instead, use the public API and pass the agent
instance in as the `agent` option.
This makes it so that the user may pass in a
`createConnection()` option, and they don't have
to pass `agent: false` at the same time.
Also adding a test for the `createConnection` option,
since none was in place before.
See #7014.
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
One test case in test-stream2-stderr-sync.js was creating a TTY
object using an undocumented constructor and passing in fd 2.
However, this is running in a child process and fd 2 is actually
a pipe, not a TTY.
The constructor fails on Windows and causes the handle type to be
left uninitialized, which later causes an assert to fail.
On Unix, the constructor fails to retrieve the windows size but unlike
on Windows, it just leaves the size fields undefined and continues
with initializing the stream type, yielding a semi-usable object.
I could make the Windows version match Unix behavior, but it
seems to me that the test is relying on an implementation detail of
an undocumented API, and the Unix behavior is not necessarily more
correct than the Windows one. Thus it makes more sense to remove this
test.
Ensure that the behavior of `assert.deepEqual` does not depend on
argument ordering when comparing an `arguments` object with a
non-`arguments` object.
This test is particularly pathological, and requires a ton of time to
run, we need to find a better way to manage it but in general this path
is fairly safe these days.
bufferSize is now a getter that shows all that has not been
acknowledged by the os, as well as in the buffer state. The test is
only looking to verify the js verified state.
Scheduling of next ticks from within the next tick handler will result
in a tight execution loop where a timer cannot break into.
This test was invalid
We were being very aggressive in our connection creations, resulting
in the pipeline flood detection to drop us. Relax how fast we're
creating these connections so the gc can run all its tests.
Expose localPort for binding to a specific port for outbound
connections.
If localAddress is not specified '0.0.0.0' is used for ip4 and '::'
for ip6 connections.
Fixes#7092
The reason this wasn't working was because after restart, when restoring
breakpoints the scripts wasn't loaded, so the breakpoint.script was
undefined. As a fix I added another check to use breakpoint.scriptReq
instead of breakpoint.script, which is the same except when the
breakpoint is a function.
fixes#7027
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`.