While it's true that error objects have a history of getting snake_case
properties attached by the host system, it's a point of confusion to
Node users that comes up a lot. It's still 'experimental', so best to
change this sooner rather than later.
This adds a process._fatalException method which is called into from
C++ in order to either emit the 'uncaughtException' method, or emit
'error' on the active domain.
The 'uncaughtException' event is an implementation detail that it would
be nice to deprecate one day, so exposing it as part of the domain
machinery is not ideal.
Fix#4375
Make `fs.createReadStream({ end: 42 })` work.
Before this commit, it worked only when used like this:
`fs.createReadStream({ start: 0, end: 42 })` - only when `start` was specified
by the caller.
Fixes#4423.
socket.readyState, .readable, and .writable behavior changed as
a result of the new streaming interfaces. Updated to be backwards
compatible with current API and adds regression test.
closes#4461
Fix a bug where calling .end() on a socket without calling .connect() first
throws a TypeError:
TypeError: Cannot read property 'shutdown' of undefined
at Socket.onSocketFinish (net.js:194:20)
at Socket.EventEmitter.emit (events.js:91:17)
at Socket.Writable.end (_stream_writable.js:281:10)
at Socket.end (net.js:352:31)
Fixes#4463.
Fixes#3226.
Consider a production server that uses a REPL to debug. Creating the instance
would wipe out the global cache of modules, and subsequent "require" calls in
the server would be reloaded from disk. The REPL should observe only, without
altering, its environment.
Apply the same optimization to res.end(buf) that is applied to res.end(str).
Speeds up `node benchmark/http_simple_auto -k -c 1 -n 25000 buffer/1`
(non-chunked response body) by about 750x. That's not a typo.
Chunked responses:
$ cat tmp/http-chunked-client.js
// Run `node benchmark/http_simple` in another terminal.
var http = require('http'), url = require('url');
var options = url.parse('http://127.0.0.1:8000/buffer/1/1');
options.agent = new http.Agent({ maxSockets: 1 });
for (var i = 0; i < 25000; ++i) http.get(options);
Before:
$ time out/Release/node tmp/http-chunked-client.js
real 16m40.411s
user 0m9.184s
sys 0m0.604s
After:
$ time out/Release/node tmp/http-chunked-client.js
real 0m5.386s
user 0m2.768s
sys 0m0.728s
That's still a 185x speed-up.
Fixes#4415.
Make parser errors bubble up to the ClientRequest instead of the underlying
net.Socket object.
This is a back-port of commit c78678b from the master branch.
Fixes#3776.
Work around an issue with the glibc malloc() implementation where memory blocks
are never returned to the operating system when they are allocated with brk()
and have overlapping lifecycles.
Fixes#4283.
Because of some of the peculiarities of http, this has a bit of special
magic to handle cases where the IncomingMessage would wait forever in a
paused state.
In the server, if you do not begin consuming the request body by the
time the response emits 'finish', then it will be flushed out.
In the client, if you do not add a 'response' handler onto the request,
then the response stream will be flushed out.
This is a combination of 6 commits.
* XXX net fixup lcase stream
* net: Refactor to use streams2
Use 'socket.resume()' in many tests to trigger old-mode behavior.
* net: Call destroy() if shutdown() is not provided
This is important for TTY wrap streams
* net: Call .end() in socket.destroySoon if necessary
This makes the http 1.0 keepAlive test pass, also.
* net wtf-ish stuff kinda busted
* net fixup
Otherwise (especially with stdin) you sometimes end up in cases
where the high water mark is zero, and the current buffer is at 0,
and it doesn't need a readable event, so it never calls _read().
This fixes the CONNECT/Upgrade HTTP functionality, which was not getting
sliced properly, because readable wasn't emitted on this tick.
Conflicts:
test/simple/test-http-connect.js