This reverts commit ea1cba6246.
The offending commit was intended to land on the v0.8 branch only, but
it accidentally got merged at some point.
Closes#5054.
Fixes#5071, #5073.
* Normalize capitalization of drive letter
* Fix `exit()` typo in failure path
* Ignore symlink tests (Windows) if not elevated
The `test_relative_input_cwd()` test was failing on Windows when
`skipSymlinks` was `true`. So we won't run it if `skipSymlinks` is
`true`.
When it failed, the unhandled error caused Node to die before
having a chance to clean up, which resulted in two files missing
in subsequent unit tests:
* `test/fixtures/nested-index/one/hello.js`
* `test/fixtures/nested-index/one/index.js`
We should probably find a way to isolate this test from the other
test (`simple/test-module-loading`) that was failing when this test
poluted the disk state.
Looks like a merge conflict in 77ed12f left in the old, unconditional
install rule. Remove it, the new and improved rule is a few lines down.
Fixes#5044.
Also, set paused=false *before* calling resume(). Otherwise,
there's an edge case where an immediately-emitted chunk might make
it call pause() again incorrectly.
The benefits of the hot-path optimization below start to fall off when
the buffer size gets up near 128KB, because the cost of the copy is more
than the cost of the extra write() call. Switch to the write/end method
at that point.
Heuristics and magic numbers are awful, but slow http responses are
worse.
Fix#4975
Consider this example:
// fd 3 is a bound tcp socket
var s = net.createServer(cb);
s.listen({ fd: 3 });
console.log(s.address()); // prints null
This commit makes net.Server#address() print the actual address.
Ditto for non-listen sockets; properties like net.Socket#localAddress
and net.Socket#remoteAddress now return the correct value.
Fixes#5009.
Commit a804347 makes fs function rethrow errors when the callback is
omitted. While the right thing to do, it's a change from the old v0.8
behavior where such errors were silently ignored.
To give users time to upgrade, temporarily disable that and replace it
with a function that warns once about the deprecated behavior.
Close#5005
From OpenSSL's documentation:
"If BIO_free() is called on a BIO chain it will only free one BIO
resulting in a memory leak."
and
"BIO_free_all() frees up an entire BIO chain, it does not halt if an
error occurs freeing up an individual BIO in the chain"
This solves the problem of calling `readable.pipe(writable)` after the
readable stream has already emitted 'end', as often is the case when
writing simple HTTP proxies.
The spirit of streams2 is that things will work properly, even if you
don't set them up right away on the first tick.
This approach breaks down, however, because pipe()ing from an ended
readable will just do nothing. No more data will ever arrive, and the
writable will hang open forever never being ended.
However, that does not solve the case of adding a `on('end')` listener
after the stream has received the EOF chunk, if it was the first chunk
received (and thus, length was 0, and 'end' got emitted). So, with
this, we defer the 'end' event emission until the read() function is
called.
Also, in pipe(), if the source has emitted 'end' already, we call the
cleanup/onend function on nextTick. Piping from an already-ended stream
is thus the same as piping from a stream that is in the process of
ending.
Updates many tests that were relying on 'end' coming immediately, even
though they never read() from the req.
Fix#4942