In case a fd option is given to fs.createReadStream a read will instantly
happen. But in the edge case where fd point to an empty file and .pause()
was executed instantly, the end event would emit since no async wait was
between fs.createReadStream and the file read there emits end.
This is a cherry-pick of commit 1f3e4a7 into the v0.6 branch.
Prevents accidental inheritance by child processes. If the child process is a
node process, it would try to set up a channel with the parent and consequently
never quit because the channel kept the event loop alive.
Fixes#3240.
* Calling fs.ReadStream.destroy() or fs.WriteStream.destroy() twice would close
the file descriptor twice. That's bad because the file descriptor may have
been repurposed in the mean time.
* A bad value check in fs.ReadStream.prototype.destroy() would prevent a stream
created with fs.createReadStream({fd:0}) from getting closed.
If the fs.open method is modified via AOP-style extension, in between
the creation of an fs.WriteStream and the processing of its action
queue, then the test of whether or not the method === fs.open will fail,
because fs.open has been replaced.
The solution is to save a reference to fs.open on the stream itself when
the action is placed in the queue.
This fixesisaacs/node-graceful-fs#6.
This commit fixes a bug where the cluster module failed to propagate EADDRINUSE
errors.
When a worker starts a (net, http) server, it requests the listen socket from
its master who then creates and binds the socket.
Now, OS X and Windows don't always signal EADDRINUSE from bind() but instead
defer the error until a later syscall. libuv mimics this behaviour to provide
consistent behaviour across platforms but that means the worker could end up
with a socket that is not actually bound to the requested addresss.
That's why the worker now checks if the socket is bound, raising EADDRINUSE if
that's not the case.
Fixes#2721.
A ReadStream constructed from an existing file descriptor failed to start
reading automatically. Avoids a userspace call to ReadStream.prototype._read().
The base64 decoder would intermittently throw an out-of-bounds exception when
the buffer in `buf.write('', 'base64')` was a zero-sized buffer located at the
end of the slab.
Fixes#2657.
Honor the length argument in `buf.write(s, 0, buf.length, 'base64')`. Before
this commit, the length argument was ignored. The decoder would keep writing
until it hit the end of the buffer. Since most buffers in Node are slices of
a parent buffer (the slab), this bug would overwrite the content of adjacent
buffers.
The bug is trivially demonstrated with the following test case:
var assert = require('assert');
var a = Buffer(3);
var b = Buffer('xxx');
a.write('aaaaaaaa', 'base64');
assert.equal(b.toString(), 'xxx');
This commit coincidentally also fixes a bug where Buffer._charsWritten was not
updated for zero length buffers.
* check exit code of child processes
* wait 1000 ms to exit the child process
* prefix log messages with [PARENT] or [CHILD] to help debugging
* kill all child processes before exiting
Conflicts:
test/simple/test-dgram-multicast-multi-process.js
If a timer callback throws and the user's uncaughtException handler ignores the
exception, other timers that expire on the current tick should still run.
If #2582 goes through, this hack should be removed.
Fixes#2631.
Also, if an error is already provided, then raise the provided
error, rather than throwing it with a less helpful 'stdout cannot
be closed' message.
This is important for properly handling EPIPEs.
- watch for the death of child processes and fail the test if they all die
- use setTimeout to fail the test if responses are not received and processed in 5000ms
As RFC 2616 says we should, assume that servers will provide a persistent
connection by default.
> A significant difference between HTTP/1.1 and earlier versions of
> HTTP is that persistent connections are the default behavior of any
> HTTP connection. That is, unless otherwise indicated, the client
> SHOULD assume that the server will maintain a persistent connection,
> even after error responses from the server.
> HTTP/1.1 applications that do not support persistent connections MUST
> include the "close" connection option in every message.
Fixes#2436.