Try embedding the ` ... ^` lines inside the `SyntaxError` (or any other
native error) object before giving up and printing them to the stderr.
fix#6920fix#1310
Now the second field in asyncFlags will tell if the provider is
currently being watched, or listened for.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Add a new 'tracing' module with a v8 property that lets the user
register listeners for gc events. The listeners are invoked after
every garbage collection cycle with 'before' and 'after' statistics.
Useful for monitoring tools that want to keep track of memory usage.
Before when an AsyncListener object was created and the "create"
callback returned a value, it was necessary to construct a new Object
with the same callbacks but add a place for the new storage value.
Now, instead, a separate storage array is kept on the context which is
used for any return value of the "create" callback. This significantly
reduces the number of Objects that need to be created.
Also added a flags property to the context to quickly check if a
specific callback was available either on the context or on the
AsyncListener instance itself.
Few other minor changes for readability that were difficult to separate
into their own commit.
This has not been optimized yet.
This is a slightly modified revert of bc39bdd.
Getting domains to use AsyncListeners became too much of a challenge
with many edge cases. While this is still a goal, it will have to be
deferred for now until more test coverage can be provided.
The domain module has been switched over to use the domain module API as
much as currently possible. There are still some hooks in the
EventEmitter, but hopefully we can remove those in the future.
AsyncListener is a JS API that works in tandem with the AsyncWrap class
to allow the user to be alerted to key events in the life cycle of an
asynchronous event. The AsyncWrap class has its own MakeCallback
implementation that core will be migrated to use, and uses state sharing
techniques to allow quicker communication between JS and C++ whether the
async event callbacks need to be called.
There was no need to share state between C++ and JS for these two
values. So they have been moved to their respective locations. This will
help performance only a tiny bit, but it does help code complexity much
more.
Inform V8's CPU profiler when we're idle. The profiler is
sampling-based but not all samples are created equal; mark the wall
clock time spent in epoll_wait() and friends so profiling tools can
filter it out. The samples still end up in v8.log but with state=IDLE
rather than state=EXTERNAL.
Don't forget to initialize the c-ares task tree head when creating a
new Environment. Oversight from the multi-context work that landed
in commit 756b622.
Fixes#6244.
This commit makes it possible to use multiple V8 execution contexts
within a single event loop. Put another way, handle and request wrap
objects now "remember" the context they belong to and switch back to
that context when the time comes to call into JS land.
This could have been done in a quick and hacky way by calling
v8::Object::GetCreationContext() on the wrap object right before
making a callback but that leaves a fairly wide margin for bugs.
Instead, we make the context explicit through a new Environment class
that encapsulates everything (or almost everything) that belongs to
the context. Variables that used to be a static or a global are now
members of the aforementioned class. An additional benefit is that
this approach should make it relatively straightforward to add full
isolate support in due course.
There is no JavaScript API yet but that will be added in the near
future.
This work was graciously sponsored by GitHub, Inc.