simple/test-child-process-stdout-flush-exit.js fails with an assertion.
The root cause for this assertion is that the expected boolean value of
true for the variable gotBye was false. This is set to true when the
piped stdout stream of the child writes the end token "goodbye". So the
error message would indicate that the end token was never received by
the parent, but in fact it did. The only difference is that the first
chunk itself had both 'hello' and 'goodbye' (as well as the filler
words in between) in AIX, while Linux receives them separately.
While this issue is not reproducible in Linux, the number of bytes
received each time a callback is called is not consistent across runs,
which is ratified as the actual content size of a UNIX domain data packet
is determined outside of the node's logic, instead in OS tunables, as well
as the runtime context of data transfer (depending on contigeous free
memory available in OS data structures at the time of sending).
In addition, around 200 filler words sent in between the 'hello' and
'goodbye' seem to indicate that the coalescence of chunks was a possibility
in Linux as well, and was devised to separate the first word from the last,
through an arbitrary delimiter.
Parser logic seem to be rigid and have assumptions about the order and size
of the data arrival. For example, it checks for 'goodbye' only when it does
not find 'hello' in it, as if they would always come separately. This
exclusiveness is what makes the test to fail in AIX.
Reviewed-By:
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/14410
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
Passing a filename is still supported in place of certain options
arguments, for backward-compatibility, but timeout and display-errors
are not translated since those were undocumented.
Also managed to eliminate an extra stack trace line by not calling
through the `createScript` export.
Added a few message tests to show how `displayErrors` works.
This is an important part of the repl use-case.
TODO: The arg parsing in vm.runIn*Context() is rather wonky.
It would be good to move more of that into the Script class,
and/or an options object.
Previously, we were only destroying sockets on end if their readable
side had already been ended. This causes a problem for non-readable
streams, since we don't expect to ever see an 'end' event from those.
Treat the lack of a 'readable' flag the same as if it was an ended
readable stream.
Fix#4751
With -e or --eval, require() can load module using relative path.
node -e 'require("./foo")'
But it can't load module from node_modules directory.
node -e 'require("foo")'
Fixes#1196.