1. Support streaming in the simple case. Put huge warnings around the
buffering API.
2. Support nested multipart messages.
3. Support various kinds of multipart messages, including all the various
absurdities of multipart email messages.
4. Error out on various invalid types of data that might come through.
5. Gracefully several edge cases that occur when the chunk size is smaller
than the boundary length, or cuts into the \r\n, etc.
6. Provide both positive and negative tests.
Some HTTP clients include a charset parameter in the Content-Type, e.g:
multipart/form-data; charset=utf-8; boundary=0xKhTmLbOuNdArY
This patch makes the multipart parser more forgiving towards unexpected
information included in the Content-Type header.
It seems that the current __filename module global is mainly used to
determine the directory the current module is in. To make that
easier, this patch adds support for a __dirname module global
directly.
A promise will throw an exception unless an error handler is attached in the
same "tick" that the error is emitted. This is to avoid silent promise
failures.
Deprecate the URI module and remove tests for it.
- Rename "uri" to "url".
- Use the "url" module instead of the "uri" module.
- Remove the url parsing from http.js
- Update http.cat with the changed field names.
- Update tests for changes to http.js
- Update documentation for changes in http.js
Also, make a slight change from original on url-module to put the
spacePattern into the function. On closer inspection, it turns out that the
nonlocal-var cost is higher than the compiling-a-regexp cost.
Also, documentation.
Process at most 10 pending responses from the thread pool in one go.
10 was chosen arbitrarily.
Test and report by Felix Geisendörfer <felix@debuggable.com>
This is not a bug in process.mixin, but I think it is undesirable
behavior. Right now process.mixin will not copy over keys with undefined
values. To me that is an unexpected filtering that should not happen
unless specifically called for.
Bug #1 occurred when trying to use process.mixin on a function and
produced a fatal exception.
Bug #2 occurred when trying to do a deep merge with an object containing
one or more objects with a nodeType property. In those cases the deep
copy for this part of the object was not performed and a shallow one was
performed instead.
Both of these bugs were artifacts of the jQuery.extend port.