Commit 9901b69c introduces a small regression where the trailing base64
padding is no longer written out when Cipher#final is called. Rectify
that.
Fixes#4837.
There are cases where a push() call would return true, even though
the thing being pushed was in fact way way larger than the high
water mark, simply because the 'needReadable' was already set, and
would not get unset until nextTick.
In some cases, this could lead to an infinite loop of pushing data
into the buffer, never getting to the 'readable' event which would
unset the needReadable flag.
Fix by splitting up the emitReadable function, so that it always
sets the flag on this tick, even if it defers until nextTick to
actually emit the event.
Also, if we're not ending or already in the process of reading, it
now calls read(0) if we're below the high water mark. Thus, the
highWaterMark value is the intended amount to buffer up to, and it
is smarter about hitting the target.
It seems like a good idea on the face of it, but lowWaterMarks are
actually not useful, and in practice should always be set to zero.
It would be worthwhile for writers if we actually did some kind of
writev() type of thing, but actually this just delays calling write()
and the overhead of doing a bunch of Buffer copies is not worth the
slight benefit of calling write() fewer times.
lib/path.js:
- throws a TypeError on the filter if the argument is not a string.
test/simple/test-path.js:
- removed the test to check if non-string types are filtered.
- added a test to check if path.join throws TypeError on arguments that
are not strings.
lib/http.js is using stream._handle.readStart/readStop to control
data-flow coming out from underlying stream. If this methods are not
present - data might be buffered regardless of whether it'll be read.
see #4657
* Callbacks from spinner now calls its own function, separate from the
tickCallback logic
* MakeCallback will call a domain specific function if a domain is
detected
* _tickCallback assumes no domains, until nextTick receives a callback
with a domain. After that _tickCallback is overridden with the domain
specific implementation.
* _needTickCallback runs in startup() instead of nextTick (isaacs)
* Fix bug in _fatalException where exit would be called twice (isaacs)
* Process.domain has a default value of null
* Manually track nextTickQueue.length (will be useful later)
* Update tests to reflect internal api changes
Prior to v0.10, Node ignored ECONNRESET errors in many situations.
There *are* valid cases in which ECONNRESET should be ignored as a
normal part of the TCP dance, but in many others, it's a very relevant
signal that must be heeded with care.
Exacerbating this problem, if the OutgoingMessage does not have a
req.connection._handle, it assumes that it is in the process of
connecting, and thus buffers writes up in an array.
The problem happens when you reuse a socket between two requests, and it
is destroyed abruptly in between them. The writes will be buffered,
because the socket has no handle, but it's not ever going to GET a
handle, because it's not connecting, it's destroyed.
The proper fix is to treat ECONNRESET correctly. However, this is a
behavior/semantics change, and cannot land in a stable branch.
Fix#4775
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
node 0.9.6 introduced Buffer changes that cause the key argument of
Hmac::HmacInit (used in crypto.createHmac) to be NULL when the key is
empty. This argument is passed to OpenSSL's HMAC_Init, which does not
like NULL keys.
This change works around the issue by passing an empty string to
HMAC_Init when the key is empty, and adds crypto.createHmac tests for
the edge cases of empty keys and values.
Fix an exception that was raised when the WriteStream was closed
immediately after creating it:
TypeError: Cannot read property 'fd' of undefined
at WriteStream.close (fs.js:1537:18)
<snip>
Avoid the TypeError and make sure the file descriptor is closed.
Fixes#4745.
Convert the Buffer to an ArrayBuffer. The typed_array.buffer property
should be an ArrayBuffer to avoid confusion: a Buffer doesn't have a
byteLength property and more importantly, its slice() method works
subtly different.
That means that before this commit:
var buf = new Buffer(1);
var arr = new Int8Array(buf);
assert.equal(arr.buffer, buf);
assert(arr.buffer instanceof Buffer);
And now:
var buf = new Buffer(1);
var arr = new Int8Array(buf);
assert.notEqual(arr.buffer, buf);
assert(arr.buffer instanceof ArrayBuffer);
This is commit 01ee551, except for the DataView type this time.
Make the behavior of DataView consistent with that of typed arrays:
make a copy of the backing store.
Otherwise sockets that are 'finish'ed won't be unpiped and `writing to
ended stream` error will arise.
This might sound unrealistic, but it happens in net.js. When
`socket.allowHalfOpen === false`, EOF will cause `.destroySoon()` call which
ends the writable side of net.Socket.
Check that having a worker bind to a port that's already taken doesn't
leave the master process in a confused state. Releasing the port and
trying again should Just Work[TM].
Follow browser behavior, only share the backing store when it's a
ArrayBuffer. That is:
var abuf = new ArrayBuffer(32);
var a = new Int8Array(abuf);
var b = new Int8Array(abuf);
a[0] = 0;
b[0] = 1;
assert(a[0] === b[0]); // a and b share memory
But:
var a = new Int8Array(32);
var b = new Int8Array(a);
a[0] = 0;
b[0] = 1;
assert(a[0] !== b[0]); // a and b don't share memory
The typed arrays spec allows both `a[0] === b[0]` and `a[0] !=== b[0]`
but Chrome and Firefox implement the behavior where memory is not
shared.
Copying the memory is less efficient but let's do it anyway for the
sake of the Principle of Least Surprise.
Fixes#4714.
This is more backwards-compatible with stream1 streams like `fs.WriteStream`
which would allow a callback function to be passed in as the only argument.
Closes#4719.
If the NODE_DEBUGGER_TIMEOUT environment variable is set, then use
that as the number of ms to wait for the debugger to start.
This is primarily to work around a race condition that almost never
happens in real usage with the debugger, but happens EVERY FRACKING
TIME when the debugger tests run as part of 'make test'.
Those values, if passed to the _read() cb, will not signal an EOF. Only
null or undefined will mark the end of data, and trigger the end event.
However, great care must be taken if you are returning an empty string
or buffer! There must be some other thing somewhere that will trigger
a read() call, because there will never be a readable event fired later.
This is in preparation for CryptoStreams being ported to streams2, where
it is safe to simply stop reading, because the crypto cycle process will
cause it to read(0) again at some future date.
Make lines ending \r\n emit one 'line' event, not two (where the second
one is an empty string).
This adds a new keypress name: 'return' (as in: 'carriage return').
Fixes#3305.
This commit breaks simple/test-stream2-stderr-sync. Need to figure out
a better way, or just accept that `(function W(){stream.write(b,W)})()`
is going to be noisy. People should really be using the `'drain'` event
for this use-case anyway.
This reverts commit 02f7d1bfd8.
Always defer the _write callback. The optimization here was only
relevant in some oddball edge cases that we don't actually care about.
Our benchmarks confirm that just always deferring the Socket._write cb
is perfectly fine to do, and in some cases, even slightly more
performant.
The refactor in b43e544140 to use
stream.push() in Transform inadvertently caused it to immediately
consume all the written data, regardless of whether or not the readable
side was being consumed.
Only pull data through the _transform() process when the readable side
is being consumed.
Fix#4667
TCPWrap::Initialize() and PipeWrap::Initialize() should be called before
any data will be read from received socket. But, because of lazy
initialization of these bindings, Initialize() method isn't called.
Init bindings manually upon socket receiving.
See #4669