Even though I think the fight is a bit futile, it is considered best practice to have newlines at the end of all files. At the request of meteor/meteor#7786, this commit adds newlines to the end of the new app skeleton `.gitignore` file. These skel files are used when generating new meteor apps so this avoids perpetuation of this problem into futrue generations. ;)
In an effort to beef up this PR, I also took the liberty of fixing the few other Meteor files which were lacking newlines (all `.gitignore` files)
Closesmeteor/meteor#7786
See #7495. Still some decisions to be made:
- Should we make --all-packages the default?
- How should we deal with *new* indirect dependencies?
- Should we do anything about underpinning indirect dependencies when updating?
This will make it much easier to fix bugs and make improvements going
forward, since they won't have to wait for the next release of Meteor.
One functional change: when the parent process exits, it no longer forces
all connected shell clients to disconnect, which is actually a more
convenient behavior, because it gives the clients a chance to reconnect
when/if the server starts up again, and it's easy enough to kill the
clients if that's what you want.
According to the README, this implementation is approximately 2.7 times
slower than native: https://www.npmjs.com/package/bcryptjs
Apps that wish to continue using the native bcrypt package should run
`meteor npm install --save bcrypt` in the root application directory, and
the npm-bcrypt package will prefer that implementation.
We now use a smaller file (the `babel-compiler` archive instead of
`meteor-tool`), and we interrupt every 500kB, which leads to three total
interruptions for that file. Also, we only delay one second (instead of
five) between attempts.
This is a test that really needs to run and pass every time we run the
test suite, so I decided it shouldn't be --slow. If it takes too long, we
can always download a smaller test file.
Hard-coding the download length was a recipe for brittleness, so now I'm
downloading the file without interruptions in parallel with the
interrupted/resumed download, so that we can compare the two files when
both have finished downloading.
Follow-up to #7399.