The current wording "This module is used for writing unit tests for your applications, you can access it with require('assert')." implies that this module should only be used in development while unit testing.
The article "Error Handling in Node.js" by Joyent (https://www.joyent.com/developers/node/design/errors) uses the assert module in an efficient way to validate required function arguments.
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25786
This change is a backport of 2b4b6006607c33a5699ec53afaf40f987dc11895
from io.js.
Original commit message:
This test was failing because the spawned process was terminated
before anything could be done, by calling child.stdin.end. With this
change, the child's stdin is no longer closed. When the stdin is not
a tty, io.js waits for the whole input before starting, so the child
must be run with --interactive to process the command sent by the
parent. The child is killed explicitly by the parent before it exits.
This test was failing silently because the asserts were not called if
nothing was received from the child. This fix moves assertOutputLines
to always run on exit.
Fixes: https://github.com/nodejs/io.js/issues/2177
Refs: https://github.com/nodejs/io.js/issues/2094
PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/io.js/pull/2186
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Rod Vagg <rod@vagg.org>
Reviewed-By: Johan Bergström <bugs@bergstroem.nu>
Reviewed-By: Alexis Campailla <alexis@janeasystems.com>
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25748
Since install is per machine only, installation path should be stored
in local machine instead of current user. The registry stores HKLM in
different places for 32 and 64 bit applications, so the installer will
not suggest the old path when upgrading from 32 to 64 bit version.
Fixes#5592Fixes#25087
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25640
Reviewed-By: Alexis Campailla <alexis@janeasystems.com>
Reviewed-By: Bert Belder <bertbelder@gmail.com>
The MSI install scope was set to the WiX default, which is per-user.
However, with UAC, it could not be installed by a standard user because
InstallPrivileges is elevated by default, hence the install scope
should be set to per-machine. Furthermore, the default install path is
a per-machine location and setting the system path requires
administrator privileges.
By changing the InstallScope to perMachine, Start Menu shortcuts are
placed in ProgramData and not the installing user's AppData folder,
making the shortcuts available to other users. This also fixes the
installation when AppData is a network folder.
The custom action is necessary to allow upgrades. Since a per-machine
MSI cannot upgrade an application installed per-user, the custom action
checks if there is going to be an upgrade to a previous version
installed per-user and sets the installation as per-user to allow
upgrading. Hence, the advantages of installing per-machine will only
apply in fresh installations.
Fixes#5849Fixes#7629
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25640
Reviewed-By: Alexis Campailla <alexis@janeasystems.com>
Reviewed-By: Bert Belder <bertbelder@gmail.com>
Add a configuration flag that prevents mdb_v8.so from being built.
The default behavior is still the same and mdb_v8.so is built by default
on Solaris based platforms such as SmartOS.
Using --without-mdb fixes build issues on Solaris based platforms where
libproc.h is not available or not compatible with the one shipped by
SmartOS.
Fixes#6439.
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25707
Adding support for specifying flaky test mode to
the test runner:
- via an environment variable FLAKY_TESTS for Makefile
- via an argument ignore-flaky for vcbuild.bat
Conflicts:
Makefile
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25653
Made explicitely clear that when size bytes are not available, it will
return null, unless we've ended, in which case the data remaining in the
buffer will be returned.
Fixes#7273
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25592
The documentation for createWriteStream() references an
'encoding' property that has a default value of null. However,
this property is never referenced by createWriteStream() or
WritableState(). Instead a 'defaultEncoding' property is
referenced in WritableState() with a default of 'utf8' if no value
is supplied.
This fix updates the documentation to rename the 'encoding'
property to 'defaultEncoding' and indicate its default value of
'utf8'.
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25565
This reverts commit 67d9a56251.
This commit actually reverts both
67d9a56251 and
02a549ed2b (both related to ciphers list
changes). It does it in one commit because reverting
02a549ed2b results in an empty commit.
These changes are not yet ready to be released, and before they are we
want to be able to publish new releases. We're reverting them so that we
can submit a new PR that will contain all these changes plus what's
necessary to be able to land them properly.
Conflicts:
src/node.cc
PR: #25511
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25511
Reviewed-By: Shigeki Ohtsu <ohtsu@iij.ad.jp>
Test of 512 bits key is failed after upgrading openssl-1.0.1o due to
its limit of 768 bits key size. Remove it and start from 1024 bits
test.
Reviewed-By: Michael Dawson <mdawson@devrus.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25533
When a timer is added in another timer's callback, its underlying timer
handle will be started with a timeout that is actually incorrect.
The reason is that the value that represents the current time is not
updated between the time the original callback is called and the time
the added timer is processed by timers.listOnTimeout. That leads the
logic in timers.listOnTimeout to do an incorrect computation that makes
the added timer fire with a timeout of scheduledTimeout +
timeSpentInCallback.
This change fixes that and make timers scheduled within other timers'
callbacks fire as expected.
Fixes#9333 and #15447.
PR: #17203
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/17203
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
A deadlock happens when sampler initiated by SIGPROF tries to lock
the thread and the thread is already locked by the same thread. As
a result, other thread involved in sampling process hangs. The
patch adds a check for thread lock before continuing sampler
operation.
The fix has been tested on a sample app under load with and without
profiling turned on.
Fixes issue #14576 and specifically the duplicate issue #25295
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25309
The third sentence of the fifth paragraph of the documentation for
transform._transform() has several words omitted and makes no
sense. This fix fills in the missing words to clarify the passage.
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25371
This improves the performance of openssl s_client on Windows and
gains several seconds to finish test-tls-server-verify.
(cherry picked from commit 2ff517e0e410ea33ba5a3d289a82fc315d120e8e)
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25368
In openssl s_client on Windows, RAND_screen() is invoked to initialize
random state but it takes several seconds in each connection.
This added -no_rand_screen to openssl s_client on Windows to skip
RAND_screen() and gets a better performance in the unit test of
test-tls-server-verify.
Do not enable this except to use in the unit test.
(cherry picked from commit 9f0f7c38e6df975dd39735d0e9ef968076369c74)
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25368
For better performance of the test, the parent kills child processes
so as not to wait them to be ended.
(cherry picked from commit 833b23636045f7afc929196139021630a390391a)
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25368
When running in parallel, it is not easy to identify what server and
client failed when the test fails. This adds identifiers to all lines
of console output.
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25368
OpenSSL s_client introduces some delay on Windows. With all clients
running sequentially, this delay is big enough to break CI. This fix runs
the clients in parallel (unless the test includes renegotiation),
reducing the total run time.
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25368
Issue: https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/25348
The gyp/project files don't explicitly specify a subsystem version,
which results in the default being used. The default changed from
VS 2010 to VS 2012 and later.
Backport e8d08503c7821e8c92e9fa236ed7328e9bdfe62a from io.js.
Original commit message follows:
Chrome still runs on Windows XP, so there is no reason that iojs
couldn't.
PR: https://github.com/iojs/io.js/pull/512
(cherry picked from commit e8d08503c7821e8c92e9fa236ed7328e9bdfe62a)
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25367
The Node 0.12 line was initially released with a version
of v8 that included Array.prototype.values(). In
https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/18206, v8 was
updated to a version that dropped support for values().
https://codereview.chromium.org/647703003 removed this
method because it causes problems with some versions of
Outlook Web Access. This commit reverts the removal of
Array.prototype.values().
Original commit message:
Revert "Version 3.28.71.17 (merged r24706, r24708)"
This reverts commit 529541ecb58fd0d6df4dfbe41d01bff9ae21ff06.
Conflicts:
src/version.cc
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25328
With additional load in the system, the child process which runs sleep
command takes more time to run - typically slightly above 1 second,
but above 2 seconds under stress.
While the intent of the test is to test the functionality of spawnSync
and the child process in general, in effect it is testing the system
command sleep, and further, it's responsiveness.
Since from the name the purpose of the test seems to be unrelated to
the sleep behaviour, I believe a more meaningful assertion would be to
see the time taken is more than 1 second.
Reviewed-By: Michael Dawson <mhdawsonibm@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25291
This test currently fails when run on machines without
IPv6 enabled. Futher it was delete in io.js under
3143d732f6efd82da76e9c53ad192ac14071bf70 as the test
was known to have problems across platforms and
releases.
The existing test was hard to understand so I wrote
a new version but then found exactly what was
reported in the io.js pull request. Behaviour varies
across platforms such that writing a solid test would
either be infeasible or test so little that
it does not seem to make sense to keep it.
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25326
* V8: update to 3.28.71.19
* uv: upgrade to 1.5.0
* npm: upgrade to 2.9.1
* V8: don't busy loop in v8 cpu profiler thread (Mike Tunnicliffe)
* V8: fix issue with let bindings in for loops (adamk)
* debugger: don't spawn child process in remote mode (Jackson Tian)
* net: do not set V4MAPPED on FreeBSD (Julien Gilli)
* repl: make 'Unexpected token' errors recoverable (Julien Gilli)
* src: backport ignore ENOTCONN on shutdown race (Ben Noordhuis)
* src: fix backport of SIGINT crash fix on FreeBSD (Julien Gilli)
Revert "disable RC4, add --cipher-list command line switch" and
"tls: make --enable-legacy-cipher-list=val less verbose"
This reverts commit f9291a9449 and
b5737bb977.
There is still some work to be done to guarantee secure defaults and a
smooth upgrade path for v0.12.x users. Before this work is finished, we
want to be able to release new versions of v0.12.x. So instead of
waiting for these changes to be ready to ship, revert them and integrate
them when they're ready to be shipped.
Conflicts:
src/node.cc
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25296
Fix the regexp used to detect 'Unexpected token' errors so that they can
be considered as recoverable. This fixes the following use case:
> var foo = 'bar \
... baz';
undefined
> foo
'bar baz'
>
Fixes#8874
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8875
Backport 668bde8ac0d16382cbc98c904d8b5f55fd9fd9f0 from io.js.
Original commit message follows:
In theory the msi should broadcast a 'WM_SETTINGCHANGE' message to all
windows after modifying the PATH environment variable. This ensures that
the new PATH is visible to other processes without restarting windows
(although it's still necessary to close and reopen active console
windows).
Unfortunately, the broadcast doesn't always happen, for unknown reasons.
That's why this patch adds a custom action that unconditionally
broadcasts a WM_SETTINGCHANGE message.
Bug: https://github.com/iojs/io.js/issues/603
PR: https://github.com/iojs/io.js/pull/613
Reviewed-by: Bert Belder <bertbelder@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit 668bde8ac0d16382cbc98c904d8b5f55fd9fd9f0)
--Node.js commmit metadata--
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25100
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
Fixes: https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/4356
The loopback on AIX is slower by default than on other platforms
and we've seen a number of tests fail on AIX for this reason. This
looks to be another instance. Changing the test to bind to the
host ip instead of the loopback makes it pass reliably.
This change extends the timeout so that it passes reliably on AIX
even with the slower loopback behaviour
modified: test/simple/test-tls-wrap-timeout.js
Reviewed-By: coln Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/25138
When running make test-npm, make would use the node binary available in
the PATH, which would most of the time not be the same binary as the one
built from the source tree from where the make test-npm command in run.
This can be confusing, as it can lead users to think that they tested
npm with the version of node that was built from the current checkout of
the source tree when it would actually run the tests with a completely
different version.
This change modifies the PATH environment variable for all commands that
need to run the node binary to run npm's tests by adding the root of the
local checkout as the first entry, so that the custom built node is
always used.
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9107
072460265226c047369558b23e9ff2748965bf6c floats a patch on V8 that fixes
issue #9113 that would cause let bindings and continue statements in for
loops to not work properly.
This change adds a regression test that fails if that patch is not
properly floated, thus preventing us from not floating that patch after
future V8 upgrades.
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/23948
Backport b17eaaa5755e625493c5fe537f42b58838923c52 from upstream v8.
Original commit message:
Fix desugaring of let bindings in for loops to handle continue properly
This requires putting the original loop's body inside an inner for loop (with
the same labels as the original loop) and re-binding the temp variables in its
"next" expression. A second flag is added to the desugared code to ensure the
loop body executes at most once per loop.
BUG=v8:3683
LOG=y
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/720863002
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#25363}
Fixes#9113 and #14411.
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/23948
Backport 2ad2237507c5b5f9047b8d94d2f4997327eae852 from V8.
Original commit message:
Fix Unhandled ReferenceError in debug-debugger.js
This fixes following exception in Sky on attempt to set a breakpoint
"Unhandled: Uncaught ReferenceError: break_point is not defined"
I think this happens in Sky but not in Chrome because Sky scripts are executed in strict mode.
BUG=None
LOG=N
R=yangguo@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/741683002
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#25415}
Reviewed-By: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/18206
vcbuild.bat calls python configure before setting GYP_MSVS_VERSION,
so SelectVisualStudioVersion (tools\gyp\pylib\gyp\MSVSVersion.py)
defaults to 'auto' and selects VS 2005.
vcbuild sets the environment in the current shell, so this issue
would manifest itself only on the first invocation of the script
in any given shell windows.
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <jgilli@fastmail.fm>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/20109
61fe1fe21b backported
b64983d77cc3ed2e4b585f3bfc8ed23802389a52 from io.js, but failed to
change nullptr to NULL, which lead to a build break on FreeBSD since the
current build system doesn't enable support for C++11.
This change replaces nullptr by NULL, and has been tested on
FreeBSD 10.1-RELEASE-p8.
Fixes#9326.
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/14819
When debug in remote mode with host:port or pid, the interface
spawn child process also. If the debugger agent is running, will
get following output:
```
< Error: listen EADDRINUSE :::5858
< at Object.exports._errnoException (util.js:734:11)
< at exports._exceptionWithHostPort (util.js:757:20)
< at Agent.Server._listen2 (net.js:1155:14)
< at listen (net.js:1181:10)
< at Agent.Server.listen (net.js:1268:5)
< at Object.start (_debug_agent.js:21:9)
< at startup (node.js:68:9)
< at node.js:799:3
```
This fix won't spawn child process and no more error message was
shown.
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/14172
This is a backport of ea37ac04f4e4e9248fb361d65a3cd69f57bcaba1
Original commit message:
On AIX, OS X and the BSDs, calling shutdown() on one end of a pipe
when the other end has closed the connection fails with ENOTCONN.
The sequential/test-child-process-execsync test failed sporadically
because of a race between the parent and the child where one closed
its end of the pipe before the other got around to calling shutdown()
on its end of the pipe.
Libuv is not the right place to handle that because it can't tell if
the ENOTCONN error is genuine but io.js can.
Refs: libuv/libuv#268
PR-URL: iojs#1214
Reviewed-By: Bert Belder <bertbelder@gmail.com>
Fixes: https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/9444.
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/14480
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
Add command line switches and environment variables to override
the default cipher suite in tls.js
`--cipher-list` and `NODE_CIPHER_LIST` can be used to completely
override the default cipher list with a given value.
`--enable-legacy-cipher-list` and `NODE_LEGACY_CIPHER_LIST` can
be used to reset the default cipher list back to a known legacy
value shipped in prior Node.js releases
A new `getLegacyCiphers` method on the tis module allows
programmatic access to the old cipher list defaults.
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/14383
Disable RC4 in the default cipher list
Add the `--cipher-list` command line switch and `NODE_CIPHER_LIST`
environment variable to completely override the default cipher list.
Add the `--enable-legacy-cipher-list` and `NODE_LEGACY_CIPHER_LIST`
environment variable to selectively enable the default cipher list from
previous node.js releases.
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/14414
Disable RC4 in the default cipher list
Add the `--cipher-list` command line switch and `NODE_CIPHER_LIST`
environment variable to completely override the default cipher list.
Add the `--enable-legacy-cipher-list` and `NODE_LEGACY_CIPHER_LIST`
environment variable to selectively enable the default cipher list from
previous node.js releases.
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/14413
In Linux, simple/test-child-process-fork-net2.js fails intermittently.
In SuSE Linux system, under network high load situations, this failure is
consistently reproducible.
The test case tests whether the TCP connections which were established between
the processes terminate in a timely and clean manner. After some iterations of
data transfer on established connections, the server is closed. The server does
not get closed immediately, instead waits for all the active connections to
terminate. A timed (200ms) callback closes the connections, which eventually
closes the server.
The start is the time when the server close is invoked.
The end is the time when the server is actually closed(onClose call back invoked).
Given that there is a minimum delay of 200ms before the connections are
terminated, expecting the elapsed time above 190 is reasonable and fair,
but looks like the leeway of 800ms for the upper bounds seem to be too
stringent, and breaking some scenarios of network load.
Reviewed-By: Michael Dawson <michael_dawson@ca.ibm.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/14129
simple tests test-cluster-master-error.js, test-cluster-master-kill.js
fails in AIX with assertion failure indicating that the workers were
alive even after the master terminated. A 200ms leeway is provided for
the workers to actually terminate, but the isAlive check returns
true in both the cases.
In AIX, the workers were actually terminating, but they took more time
- as much as 800ms (normal) to 1000ms (in rare cases).
Based on a C test we ran, it is found that the exit routines in AIX
is a bit more longer than that in Linux. There are a number of cleanup
activities performed in exit() system call, and depending on when the
signal handlers are shutdown in that sequence, the process will be
deemed as dead or alive, from another process's perspective.
process.kill(pid) is used in the test case to check the liveliness of
the worker, and when the kill() call is issued, even if the target
process is in it's exit sequences, if the signal handlers are not shut
down, it will respond to external signals, causing those calls to pass.
This fix extends the additional timeout for all platforms
Reviewed-By: Michael Dawson <michael_dawson@ca.ibm.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9431
This change is a backport of 1a3ca8223e08d82051655d7d7e2ea31b439f1bf1
from io.js.
Original commit message:
Read all pending data out of the socket on `error` event and ensure that
no `data`/`end` handlers will be invoked on `socket.destroy()`.
Otherwise following assertion happens:
AssertionError: null == true
at TLSSocket.socketOnData (_http_client.js:308:3)
at TLSSocket.emit (events.js:107:17)
at TLSSocket.Readable.read (_stream_readable.js:373:10)
at TLSSocket.socketCloseListener (_http_client.js:229:10)
at TLSSocket.emit (events.js:129:20)
at TCP.close (net.js:476:12)
Fix: https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/9348
PR-URL: https://github.com/iojs/io.js/pull/1103
Reviewed-By: Rod Vagg <rod@vagg.org>
Reviewed-By: Nicu Micleușanu <micnic90@gmail.com>
Fixes#9348.
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/14087
simple tests test-http-request-end.js, test-http-default-encoding.js
hangs in AIX. The root cause for both the failures is related to the
timing with which packets are sent between the client and server.
On the client side, one factor that affects the timing is Nagle's
algorithm. With Nagle enabled there may be a delay between two packets
as the stack may wait until either:
a. An acknowledgement for the first packet is received, or
b. 200 ms elapses.
before sending the second packet.
Similarly at the server side 2 sequential packages can be delivered to
the application either together or separatly.
On AIX we see that they are delivered separately to the server, while on
Linux delivered together. If we change the timing, for example disabling
Nagle on AIX we see the 2 packets delivered together and the tests pass.
In the test case simple/test-http-request-end.js, the client request
handler of the server receives and stores the data in a data callback,
closes the server in a request end callback, and writes to the client
and ends the response, in-line with the request receipt. An HTTP parser
module parses the incoming message, and invokes callback routines which
are registered for HTTP events (such as header, body, end etc.)
Because the termination sequence arrive in a separate packet, there is a
delay in parsing that message and identify that the client request ended
(and thereby invoke the request end call backhandler). Due to this delay,
the response close happens first, which in-turn destroys the server
socket leading to the fd and watcher removal from the uv loop abandoning
further events on this connection, and end call back never being called,
causing the reported hang. simple/test-http-default-encoding.js suffers
from the same problem.
Also, remove the timer logic from the test case. Test harness anyways
contain a timer which controls the individual tests so remove such
controls from the test case, as suggested by @tjfontaine
Reviewed-By: Michael Dawson <michael_dawson@ca.ibm.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9432
At the uv layer pipes are connected with uv_pipe_connect.
The current spec for this method indicates that the maximum
length is limited to the size of length of
sizeof(sockaddr_un.sun_path), typically between 92 and
108 bytes. Anything longer than that just gets truncated.
The simple testsuite currently creates pipes in directories
under the directory where node was built. In our jenkins
jobs this sometimes ends up being a deep enough path that
the path for the pipes is getting truncated. The result
is that tests using pipes fail with errors that don't
make it obvious what the problem is.
Even if the errors were helpful, we still need a way
to avoid the truncation.
This patch adds the environment variable NODE_PIPE_DIR.
If set the tests create pipes in this directory instead of
the current defaults. In addition the test harness is
updated to remove/delete this directory before/after
each test is run.
modified: test/common.js
modified: test/simple/test-net-pipe-connect-errors.js
modified: test/testpy/__init__.py
modified: test/simple/test-cluster-eaccess.js
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9381
Improve performance by:
+ Not leaking the `arguments` object!
+ Getting the last character of a string by index, instead of
with `.substr()` or `.slice()`
Improve code consistency by:
+ Using `[]` instead of `.charAt()` where possible
+ Using a function declaration instead of a var declaration
+ Using `.slice()` with clearer arguments
+ Checking if `dir` is truthy in `win32.format`
(added tests for this)
Improve both by:
+ Making the reusable `trimArray()` function
+ Standardizing getting certain path statistics with
the new `win32StatPath()` function
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9289
sha256-x86_64.pl does not exist in the origin openssl distribution. It
was copied from sha512-x86_64.pl and both sha256/sha512 scripts were
modified so as to generates only one asm file specified as its key
hash length.
PR: #9451
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9451
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
Switch from running the loop with UV_RUN_ONCE to UV_RUN_DEFAULT, because
it's possible that the poll returns earlier than expected and thus the
timer is not run on a single interation.
The loop is not stopped either from the timer callback or from the async
handle's.
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9410
sha256-x86_64.pl does not exist in the origin openssl distribution. It
was copied from sha512-x86_64.pl and both sha256/sha512 scripts were
modified so as to generates only one asm file specified as its key
hash length.
PR: #9451
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9451
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
Original commit message:
darwin: fix size calculation in select() fallback
Apple's `fd_set` stores its bits in an array of 32-bit integers, which
means `FD_ISSET()` may read out of bounds if we allocate storage at
byte granularity. There's also a chance that the `select()` call could
corrupt the heap, although I didn't investigate that.
This issue was discovered by LLVM's AddressSanitizer which caught
`FD_ISSET()` trying to read out of bounds.
Ref: https://github.com/libuv/libuv/pull/241
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9179
Float patch to fix setsockopt for multicast on Solaris and derivatives.
Original commit message:
solaris: fix setsockopt for multicast options
On Solaris and derivatives such as SmartOS, the length of socket options
for multicast and ttl options is not always sizeof(char).
This fixes the udp_options and udp_options6 tests.
Ref: https://github.com/libuv/libuv/pull/243
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9179
Float patch to fix pipe on Windows. Original commit message:
win: fix pipe blocking writes
In the code path for pipe blocking writes, WriteFile is already
posting a completion packet to the I/O completion port.
POST_COMPLETION_FOR_REQ was causing the same request to get
returned twice by GetCompletionStatusEx.
Also on the same code path, we were waiting on the wrong event.
We need to update queued_bytes and write_queue_size when a
blocking write request completes asynchronously.
Ref: https://github.com/libuv/libuv/pull/238
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9179
process.send() should be synchronous, it should block until the message
has been sent in full, but it wasn't after the second-to-last libuv
upgrade because of commit libuv/libuv@393c1c5 ("unix: set non-block
mode in uv_{pipe,tcp,udp}_open"), which made its way into io.js in
commit 07bd05b ("deps: update libuv to 1.2.1").
Commit libuv/libuv@b36d4ff ("unix: implement uv_stream_set_blocking()")
as landed in io.js in commit 9681fca ("deps: update libuv to 1.4.0")
makes it possible to restore the synchronous behavior again and that's
precisely what this commit does.
The same line of reasoning applies to `net.Socket({ fd: 1 })`: creating
a socket object from a stdio file descriptor, like the `process.stdout`
getter does, should put the file descriptor in blocking mode for
compatibility reasons.
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9179
'.' and '..' are directory specs and resolving urls with or without the
hostname with '.' and '..' should add a trailing slash to the end of the
url.
Fixes#8992.
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9427
When slicing global pool - ensure that the underlying buffer's data ptr
is 8-byte alignment to do not ruin expectations of 3rd party C++ addons.
NOTE: 0.10 node.js always returned aligned pointers and v0.12 should do
this too for compatibility.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9375
Reviewed-By: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
caeb67735b introduced a regression where
the domains stack would not be cleared after an error had been handled
by the top-level domain.
This change clears the domains stack regardless of the position of the
active domain in the stack.
PR: #9364
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9364
Reviewed-By: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
This reverts commit ad0684807c.
Initially, this bug fix targeted master, and I pushed to have it
included in v0.10. In retrospect, I'm not sure it should have made into
v0.10 as it seems it could break a lot of existing working code.
In my opinion, this change is still a bug fix, and it is not backward
incompatible per se. However, I'm not sure that taking the risk to break
a lot of users with a new 0.10.x release that would include this fix is
reasonable, especially now that 0.10.x releases are entering
maintenance mode.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9257
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
A significant performance regressions has been introduced in 1fddc1f for
GET requests which send data through response.end(). The number of
requests per second dropped to somewhere around 6% of their previous
level.
The fix consists of removing a part of the lines added by 1fddc1f,
lines which were supposed to affect only HEAD requests, but interfered
with GET requests instead.
The lines removed would not have affected the behaviour in the case of
a HEAD request as this._hasBody would always be false. Therefore, they
were not required to fix the issue reported in #8361.
Fixes#8940.
PR: #9026
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9026
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
This test setups two event listeners: one on a child process' exit event
, another for the same child process' stdandard output's 'data' event.
The data even listener writes to a stream, and the exit event listener
ends it.
Because the exit event can be emitted before the data event, there is a
chance that something will be written to the stream after it's ended,
and that an error is thrown.
This change makes the test end the stream in the listener for the child
process' standard output's end event, which is guaranteed to be emitted
after the last data event, thus avoiding the race.
PR: #9301
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9301
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Michael Dawson <michael_dawson@ca.ibm.com>
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@users.noreply.github.com>
Reviewed-By: Bert Belder <bertbelder@gmail.com>
Currently, lib/_tls_legacy.js and lib/crypto.js cannot be loaded when
--use-strict is passed to node. In addition to that, console.trace
throws because it uses arguments.callee.
This change fixes these issues and adds a test that makes sure
every external built-in module can be loaded with require when
--use-strict is enabled.
Please note that this change does not fix all issues with built-in
modules' code running with --use-strict. It is very likely that some
code in the built-in modules still fails when passing this flag.
However, fixing all code would require us to enable strict mode by
default in all builtins modules, which would certainly break existing
applications.
Fixes#9187.
PR: #9237
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9237
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
test/simple/test-http-destroyed-socket-write2.js validates
that you get an appropriate error when trying to write to
a request when the response on the other side has been destroyed.
The test uses http.request to get a request and then keeps writing
to it until either it hits 128 writes or gets the expected error.
Since the writes are asynchronous we see that the writes just end
up adding events to the event loop, which then later get processed
once the connection supporting the request is fully ready.
The test is timing dependent and if takes too long for the connection
to be made the limit of 128 writes is exceeded and the test fails.
The fact that the test allows a number of writes is probably to allow
some delay for the connection to be ready for writing.
On AIX, in the default configuration using the loopback interface
is slower and the test fails because the delay is such that many
more writes can be queued up before the connection takes place.
If we use the host ip instead of defaulting to the loopback then
the test passes.
The test needs to be made more robust to delays. Since each write
simply enqueues an additional write to the event queue there is
probably no point in doing the second write until the first has
completed. This patch schedules the next write when the first one
completes and allows the test to pass even if it takes longer for
the connection to be ready for writing
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9270
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
In the documentation for querystring.parse, the documentation mentions
that the default value for options.decodeURIComponent is the
decodeURIComponent function, but it's actually the querystring.unescape
function.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9259
Reviewed-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
`TLSSocket` wraps the original `net.Socket`, but writes/reads to/from
`TLSSocket` do not touch the timers of original `net.Socket`.
Introduce `socket._parent` property, and iterate through all parents
to unref timers and prevent timeout event on original `net.Socket`.
Fix: https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/9242
PR-URL: https://github.com/iojs/io.js/pull/891
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
This is a backport of 6c3647c38d from
v0.12 to v0.10.
Console.prototype.timeEnd() returns NaN if the timer label
corresponds to a property on Object.prototype. In v0.12, this was fixed
by using Object.create(null) to construct the _times object
However, the version of V8 in the v0.10 branch makes this fix not work
as expected. In v0.10, this commit changes the _times object into a
array of objects of the form:
{ label: someLabel, time: staringWallClockTime }
someLabel can thus be any string, including any string that represents
any Object.prototype field.
Fixes#9116.
PR: #9215
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9215
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
Server sockets should be shared by default, and client sockets should be
exclusive by default. For net/TCP, this is how it is, for dgram/UDP, its
a little less clear what a client socket is, but a socket that is
auto-bound during a dgram.send() is not usefully shared among cluster
workers, any more than an outgoing TCP connection would be usefully
shared.
Since implicit binds become exclusive, implicit/client dgram sockets can
now be used with cluster on Windows. Before, neither explicit nor
implicitly bound sockets could be used, causing dgram to be completely
unsupported with cluster on Windows. After this change, they become half
supported.
PR: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8643
Reviewed-by: Ben Noordhuis <info@bnoordhuis.nl>
Reviewed-by: Bert Belder <bertbelder@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
Currently, fs.truncate() silently fails when a file descriptor
is passed as the first argument. This commit changes this
behavior to properly call fs.ftruncate().
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9161
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Currently, fs.truncate() silently fails when a file descriptor
is passed as the first argument. This commit changes this
behavior to properly call fs.ftruncate(). This commit also
adds proper type checking to the callback provided to
makeCallback().
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9161
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
The commit in v0.10 (431eb172f9) that
backported the original change
(https://codereview.chromium.org/806143002) did add an extra newline
because the logging facilities in v0.10's V8 do not add one.
When merging this commit in v0.12, V8's logging facilities now
automatically add the newline character, and the debug builds assert if
one is already present.
If the Buffer allocation isn't a slice then there's no need to adjust
the pool offset after realloc'ing the space available.
Fixes: 6462519 "buffer, doc: misc. fix and cleanup"
The NativeModule system passes NativeModule.require transparently and so
is unnecessary to call explicitly.
The only one which should have the prefix is the in line 295, where
actually implements a big fs-based module system and actually requires a
native module. That is left unchanged.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9201
Ref: https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/2009
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Timeout#unref() call returns undefined, not this. The test already
worked before, because the interval was still unref'd, and the test also
succeeds without clearing the interval.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9171
Reviewed-by: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
A number -> uint32 type coercion bug made buffer sizes
larger than kMaxLength (0x3fffffff) wrap around.
Instead of rejecting the requested size with an exception,
the constructor created a buffer with the wrong size.
PR-URL: https://github.com/iojs/io.js/pull/657
Reviewed-By: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
AsyncWrap should always properly propagate asynchronous calls to any
child that is created. Regardless whether kCallInitHook is currently
active. The previous logic would always return early if kCallInitHook
wasn't set.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9146
Reviewed-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
V8_CONSTANT_REMOVED_SINCE(major, minor) can be used to mark a constant
has being removed from V8 since V8 version major.minor.
Reviewed-By: Dave Pacheco <dap@joyent.com>
Reviewed-By: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Bugs fixed:
* v0.12 and later: in-object properties not printing correctly.
* 64-bit: not printing external strings correctly (offset was hardcoded
for 32-bit). This would happen with "::jsstack -vn0" because the
script "node.js" wasn't printed correctly, at least with 0.10 core
files.
* 64-bit: printing JS source (via "::jsstack -v") emits errors and shows
the wrong code.
* Several build warnings.
* Two-byte strings are unnecessarily truncated.
* Could print friendlier note when given obviously bogus function token
positions.
New features:
* ::jsstack prints much cleaner output by default.
* ::jsprint keys are now quoted.
* ::jsstack -v includes "this" value for each function on the stack.
* ::jsstack -v includes more details about each argument (constructor
names for each object).
* new commands: ::jsconstructor, ::jsfunctions, ::jssource, ::nodebuffer
and ::v8internal.
* ::findjsobjects and ::jsprint hidden flags for developers to measure
and improve test coverage.
* internal jsobj_properties() function is much better documented.
Reviewed-By: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Building node with GCC > 4.4 on CentOS makes the node binary depend on a
more recent version of the C/C++ runtime that is not installed by
default on these older CentOS platforms, and probably on other platforms
as well.
Building node with the default gcc and g++ compilers that come with
these older versions of CentOS allows to ship a node binary that runs
out of the box on these setups with older C/C++ runtimes.
This change works around a bug that was fixed in GCC 4.5. Versions of
GCC < 4.5 would not support using the injected-class-name of a
template base class as a type name.
This change also disables aliasing optimizations for toolchains using
GCC <= 4.4 as they're not able to deal with the aliasing in the queue
implementation used by libuv and node (see src/queue.h).
Fixes#9079.
PR: #9098
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9098
Reviewed-By: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Currently, JSON.stringify() is used to create error messages
on failed assertions. This causes an error when stringifying
objects with circular references. This commit switches out
JSON.stringify() for util.inspect(), which can handle
circular references.
PR: #8734
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8734
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
This reverts commit d312b6d15c.
d312b6d15c introduced some confusion in
the existing API of url.format and url.parse.
The way the 'path' property overrides other properties in url.format's
input is too confusing for existing users compared to the issues it
fixes.
Fixes such as https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9081 have been
proposed, but they do not make the API less confusing.
Instead, this change just reverts the original breaking change so that
it gives us more time after v0.12.0 is released to come up with a better
API for url.format, url.parse and other related APIs in the v0.13
development branch.
Fixes#9070.
Conflicts:
doc/api/url.markdown
PR: #9109
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9109
Reviewed-By: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
On Windows, when building the "build-release" rule, enable both small-icu
and download-all.
This change also slightly refactors the build-release rule, mainly so that
it's easier to read.
The resulting MSI package was tested on Windows 7.
Fixes#9099.
PR: #9100
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9100
Reviewed-By: Steven R. Loomis <srloomis@us.ibm.com>
Reviewed-By: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Make this test less prone to race conditions by using synchronous
interprocess communication instead of a timer to determine when the
child process is ready to receive messages from its parent.
Also, remove a superfluous timer since the tests suite already makes
tests time out after a while.
Reviewed-By: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
In order to preserve the potential for a flush method being added to the
streams API, rename flush to flushHeaders which is much more clear about
the behavior of this method.
PR: #9048
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/9048
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
Since the current environment is in scope use ThrowError on that,
instead of having to lookup the Environment again.
Added benefit, lint the source code.
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
On non-windows supported platforms, fs.access(readOnlyFile, W_OK, ...)
is expected to fail, but always succeeds if node runs as the super user,
which is often the case for tests running on our continuous integration
platform.
This change makes the test try to change its process user id to nobody
on non-windows platforms so that the above mentioned test can pass and
still perform the actual desired test. If changing the process user id
to a nobody is not possible, then the test checks that
fs.access(readOnlyFile, W_OK, ...) actually succeeds.
Fixes#9033.
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
unref one superfluous timer (as the test suite already has a global
timeout), and improve the state machine to iterate the messages more
reliably.
Ultimately make the test complete more quickly.
Signed-off-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
Previously if a worker's state machine had already transitioned into the
'listening' state when it received the message enabling the debugger,
the worker would never enable its debugger.
Change the logic to allow the 'listening' as a valid state for enabling
the debugger.
Fixes#6440
Signed-off-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
In general path functions don't change the case of a path. Making an
exception for windows drive letters violates the principle of least
surprise.
Changing the drive letter case has caused a lot of issues, including
joyent/node#7031, joyent/node#7806 and lots of bikeshedding about
whether uppercase is the right case or lowercase.
This effectively reverts joyent/node@a05f973
Reviewed-by: Alexis Campailla <alexis@janeasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
Invokes the configure script used to build binary packages
(OSX pkg, binary tarballs, pkgsrc, MSI) with --download=all
--with-intl=small-icu.
Also makes PACKAGEMAKER customizable, because PackageMaker is not
necessarily installed in /Developer on OSX anymore.
Tested all binary packages on Windows, OSX, Linux and SmartOS.
Fixes#7676.
Reviewed-by: Steven R. Loomis <srl@icu-project.org>
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
The tests suite available in test/external/ssl-options was originally
written for security fixes made in the v0.10 branch. In this branch, the
client's default ciphers list is compatible with SSLv2.
After merging this change from v0.10 to v0.12, this tests suite was
broken because commits 5d2aef17ee and
f4c8020d10 make SSL/TLS clients use a
default ciphers list that is not compatible with the SSLv2 protocol.
This change fixes two issues:
1) The cipher list that was setup for a given test was not passed
properly to the client.
2) When either or both of clients/servers were using SSLv2, tests were
expected to succeed when at least the server end was using SSLv2
compatible ciphers. Now, tests are expected to succeed only if
SSLv2 compatible ciphers are used on both ends.
Fixes#9020.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
A recent merge of v0.10 to v0.12
(0c7f6ca830) upgraded OpenSSL to version
1.0.1j. In v0.10, this required test-crypto-stream.js to be fixed with
commit 707cc25011. Basically, instead of
returning the proper error, Err_get_error() would return 0 and the test
for the error message needed to be updated in test-crypto-stream.js.
However, in the v0.12 branch, crypto error messages are handled a bit
differently since commit 26a1b712ec
landed. Instead of returning the default OpenSSL error message, it makes
the decipher stream return a default message specific to Node.js.
This commit updates test-crypto-stream.js to test the error object
against the proper default error message.
Fixes#9019.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Workers that are already disconnected but not yet exited should not be
disconnected, trying to do so raises exceptions.
Signed-off-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
- `sh.css` already exists in `api_assets`
- `sh_vim-dark.css` is unused, but used in the repo `node-website`
now
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
Backport 10703774f0 from the v0.12 branch.
Currently, the test-child-process-spawn-typeerror.js is
calling execFile() on a JavaScript source file, which is
causing failures on Windows. This commit switches to calling
spawn() on an actual executable.
Fixes#8930.
Signed-off-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
child_process.spawn's argument parsing is stricter in v0.12 than in
v0.10. Changes in tests merged from v0.10 that relied on the less-strict
argument parsing would fail. This change updates the test so that it
makes sure that the stricter argument parsing fails as expected.
This change also fixes a small typo introduced during the conflicts
resolution of said merge.
fs.exists() and fs.existsSync() do not follow the typical error first
callback convention. access() and accessSync() are added as alternatives
in this commit.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8714
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Currently, the test-child-process-spawn-typeerror.js is
calling execFile() on a JavaScript source file, which is
causing failures on Windows. This commit switches to calling
spawn() on an actual executable.
Reviewed-by: Sam Roberts <sam@strongloop.com>
Reviewed-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
Some tests that rely on some environment variables being passed to child
processes would fail because they reset the child processes'
environement instead of appending to it. This would break on test
environments where some custom environment variables are needed to make
node work properly.
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Reduce the overhead of the CPU profiler by replacing sched_yield() with
nanosleep() in V8's tick event processor thread. The former only yields
the CPU when there is another process scheduled on the same CPU.
Before this commit, the thread would effectively busy loop and consume
100% CPU time. By forcing a one nanosecond sleep period rounded up to
the task scheduler's granularity (about 50 us on Linux), CPU usage for
the processor thread now hovers around 10-20% for a busy application.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8789
Ref: https://github.com/strongloop/strong-agent/issues/3
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
The latest merge resulted in uv__loop_configure being defined twice on
Windows. This changes removes one of these duplicates to fix the build
on this platform.
If the data length passed to smalloc.alloc() the array_length will be
zero, causing an overflow check to fail. This prevents that from
happening.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Make "--with-intl=none" the default and add "intl-none" option to
vcbuild.bat.
If icu data is missing print a warning unless either --download=all or
--download=icu is set. If set then automatically download, verify (MD5)
and unpack the ICU data if not already available.
There's a "list" of URLs being used, but right now only the first is
picked up. The logic works something like this:
* If there is no directory deps/icu,
* If no zip file (currently icu4c-54_1-src.zip),
* Download zip file (icu-project.org -> sf.net)
* Verify the MD5 sum of the zipfile
* If bad, print error and exit
* Unpack the zipfile into deps/icu
* If deps/icu now exists, use it, else fail with help text
Add the configuration option "--with-icu-source=..."
Usage:
* --with-icu-source=/path/to/my/other/icu
* --with-icu-source=/path/to/icu54.zip
* --with-icu-source=/path/to/icu54.tgz
* --with-icu-source=http://example.com/icu54.tar.bz2
Add the configuration option "--with-icu-locals=...". Allows choosing
which locales are used in the "small-icu" case.
Example:
configure --with-intl=small-icu --with-icu-locales=tlh,grc,nl
(Also note that as of this writing, neither Klingon nor Ancient Greek
are in upstream CLDR data. Serving suggestion only.)
Don't use hard coded ../../out paths on windows. This was suggested by
@misterdjules as it causes test failures. With this fix, "out" is no
longer created on windows and the following can run properly:
python tools/test.py simple
Reduce space by about 1MB with ICU 54 (over without this patch). Also
trims a few other source files, but only conditional on the exact ICU
version used. This is to future-proof - a file that is unneeded now may
be needed in future ICUs.
Also:
* Update distclean to remove icu related files
* Refactor some code into tools/configure.d/nodedownload.py
* Update docs
* Add test
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8719
Fixes: https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/7676#issuecomment-64704230
[trev.norris@gmail.com small change to test's whitespace and logic]
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
The url.parse() function now checks whether an escapable character is in
the URL before trying to escape it.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8638
[trev.norris@gmail.com: Switch to use continue instead of if]
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Commit 934bfe23a1 had introduced a
regression where node would crash trying to access a null unref timer if
a given unref timer's callback would remove other unref timers set to
fire in the future.
More generally, it makes the unrefTimeout function more solid by not
mutating the unrefList while traversing it.
Fixes#8897.
Reviewed-By: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
This change fixes a regression introduced by commit
0d051238be, which contained a typo that
would cause every unrefd interval to fire only once.
Fixes#8900.
Reviewed-By: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Reviewed-By: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Add documentation for the callback parameter of http.ClientRequest's and
http.ServerResponse's end methods.
Signed-off-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
In cases where many small writes are made to a stream
lacking _writev, the array data structure backing the
WriteReq buffer would greatly increase GC pressure.
Specifically, in the fs.WriteStream case, the
clearBuffer routine would only clear a single WriteReq
from the buffer before exiting, but would cause the
entire backing array to be GC'd. Switching to [].shift
lessened pressure, but still the bulk of the time was
spent in memcpy.
This replaces that structure with a linked list-backed
queue so that adding and removing from the queue is O(1).
In the _writev case, collecting the buffer requires an
O(N) loop over the buffer, but that was already being
performed to collect callbacks, so slowdown should be
neglible.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8826
Reviewed-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Fix a Windows-only build error that was introduced in
commit 1183ba4 ("zlib: support concatenated gzip files").
Rename the NO_ERROR and FAILED enumerations, they conflict
with macros of the same name in <winerror.h>.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8893
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Reviewed-By: Rod Vagg <rod@vagg.org>
Reviewed-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Original commit message:
Fix Unhandled ReferenceError in debug-debugger.js
This fixes following exception in Sky on attempt to set a breakpoint
"Unhandled: Uncaught ReferenceError: break_point is not defined"
I think this happens in Sky but not in Chrome because Sky scripts are executed in strict mode.
BUG=None
LOG=N
R=yangguo@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/741683002
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#25415}
Before this change, _unrefActive would keep the unrefList sorted when
adding a new timer.
Because _unrefActive is called extremely frequently, this linear scan
(O(n) at worse) would make _unrefActive show high in the list of
contributors when profiling CPU usage.
This commit changes _unrefActive so that it doesn't try to keep the
unrefList sorted. The insertion thus happens in constant time.
However, when a timer expires, unrefTimeout has to go through the whole
unrefList because it's not ordered anymore.
It is usually not large enough to have a significant impact on
performance because:
- Most of the time, the timers will be removed before unrefTimeout is
called because their users (sockets mainly) cancel them when an I/O
operation takes place.
- If they're not, it means that some I/O took a long time to happen, and
the initiator of subsequents I/O operations that would add more timers
has to wait for them to complete.
With this change, _unrefActive does not show as a significant
contributor in CPU profiling reports anymore.
Fixes#8160.
PR-URL: #8751
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
ICU support in v0.12 generates a new icu_config.gypi. This was
accidentally committed after switching branches. The file has been removed
and added to .gitignore.
Fixes: 0d051238 "timers: fix unref() memory leak"
Previously, 'configure' would not return an exit status
if gyp blows up. This can be tested via:
date >> node.gyp ; ./configure && echo A-OK
You will get "A-OK" even though gyp had failed.
Signed-off-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
The original documentation was slightly confusing. It seemed that the
list of items described the properties of the urlObj object, while it
was actually describing the formatting process. This change makes this
clearer.
Fixes#8796.
Reviewed-by: Chris Dickinson <christopher.s.dickinson@gmail.com>
Documentation mentioned 'securityOptions', where it should have read
'secureOptions'.
Fixes#8608.
Signed-off-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
Dtrace probes were removed from libuv recently, but their usage by node
was not completely removed, causing build breaks on SmartOS.
Even though the build is working on other platforms, these probes are
not fired by libuv anymore, so there's no point in using them on these
platforms too.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Code examples in documentation for net.createServer and
net.createConnection contained confusing log messages. This change makes
them clearer.
Signed-off-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
Currently there's an example using http.ServerResponse stream, which
has a known bug and will not throw an error while writing after end().
Changed to a writable stream from fs which behaves as expected.
fix#8814
Signed-off-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
In `tls.markdown`, there was a misuse of 'a' which has been replaced
with 'an'.
In `timers.markdown`...
line 31: misuse of 'a', replaced with 'an'
line 59: unclear wording, haywire 'a', added new comma
Call a user-defined callback at specific points in the lifetime of an
asynchronous event. Which are on instantiation, just before/after the
callback has been run.
**If any of these callbacks throws an exception, there is no forgiveness
or recovery. A message will be displayed and a core file dumped.**
Currently these only tie into AsyncWrap, meaning no call to a hook
callback will be made for timers or process.nextTick() events. Though
those will be added in a future commit.
Here are a few notes on how to make the hooks work:
- The "this" of all event hook callbacks is the request object.
- The zero field (kCallInitHook) of the flags object passed to
setupHooks() must be set != 0 before the init callback will be called.
- kCallInitHook only affects the calling of the init callback. If the
request object has been run through the create callback it will always
run the before/after callbacks. Regardless of kCallInitHook.
- In the init callback the property "_asyncQueue" must be attached to
the request object. e.g.
function initHook() {
this._asyncQueue = {};
}
- DO NOT inspect the properties of the object in the init callback.
Since the object is in the middle of being instantiated there are some
cases when a getter is not complete, and doing so will cause Node to
crash.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8110
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexis Campailla <alexis@janeasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
When instantiating a new AsyncWrap allow the parent AsyncWrap to be
passed. This is useful for cases like TCP incoming connections, so the
connection can be tied to the server receiving the connection.
Because the current architecture instantiates the *Wrap inside a
v8::FunctionCallback, the parent pointer is currently wrapped inside a
new v8::External every time and passed as an argument. This adds ~80ns
to instantiation time.
A future optimization would be to add the v8::External as the data field
when creating the v8::FunctionTemplate, change the pointer just before
making the call then NULL'ing it out afterwards. This adds enough code
complexity that it will not be attempted until the current approach
demonstrates it is a bottle neck.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8110
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexis Campailla <alexis@janeasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
Instead of simply creating a new v8::Object to contain the connection
information, instantiate a new instance of a FunctionTemplate. This will
allow future improvements for debugging and performance probes.
Additionally, the "provider" argument in the ReqWrap constructor is no
longer optional.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8110
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexis Campailla <alexis@janeasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
C++ won't deoptimize like JS if specific conditional branches are
sporadically met in the future. Combined with the amount of code
duplication removal and simplified maintenance complexity, it makes more
sense to merge MakeCallback and MakeDomainCallback.
Additionally, type casting in V8 before verifying what that type is will
cause V8 to abort in debug mode if that type isn't what was expected.
Fix this by first checking the v8::Value before casting.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8110
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Reviewed-by: Alexis Campailla <alexis@janeasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Julien Gilli <julien.gilli@joyent.com>
Adding --flaky-tests option, to allow regarding flaky tests failures
as non-fatal.
Currently only observed by the TapProgressIndicator, which will
add a # TODO directive to tests classified as flaky. According to the
TAP specification, the test harness is supposed to treat failures
that have a # TODO directive as non-fatal.
In very unlikely case, where `deflateInit2()` may return error (right
now happening only on exhausting all memory), the `ZCtx::Error()` will
be called and will try to `Unref()` the handle. But the problem is that
this handle was never `Ref()`ed, so it will trigger an assertion error
and crash the program.
Reviewed-By: Ben Noordhuis <info@bnoordhuis.nl>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8687
Remove unneeded functionality and tweak the generated output so we
can #include it in C++ source code.
This is a back-port of commit e159073 from the master branch.
It was my mistake to change an assert check. This changes it back to how
the assert was originally done.
Fixes: c131c1f "modules: adding load linked modules feature"
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
- introduced NM_F_LINKED flag to identify linked modules
- setting node_is_initialized after calling V8::Initialize in order to
make the right decision during initial module registration
- introduced modlist_linked in order to track modules that were
pre-registered in order to complete it once node is initialized
- completing registration of linked module similarly to the way it's
done inside DLOpen
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8386
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
In 59658a8de7
the return of uv_thread_self() was changed from unsigned long to
uv_thread_t.
uv_thread_t is a HANDLE (pointer-sized) on Windows, which means that
on Win64 it cannot be stored with CRYPTO_THREADID_set_numeric without
data loss.
Furthermore, without this change there will be a build break on Windows
when the libuv change is integrated into Node, because of the
conversion from HANDLE to unsigned long.
Other related commits:
5845a6bcd5919d8ec63a
Should work in all platforms and it fixes this compilation problem
on OSX:
../src/node_crypto.cc:154:3: error: no matching function for call to
'CRYPTO_THREADID_set_numeric'
CRYPTO_THREADID_set_numeric(tid, uv_thread_self());
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
../deps/openssl/openssl/include/openssl/../../crypto/crypto.h:435:6:
note: candidate function not viable: no known conversion from
'uv_thread_t' (aka '_opaque_pthread_t *') to 'unsigned long'
for 2nd argument
void CRYPTO_THREADID_set_numeric(CRYPTO_THREADID *id, unsigned
long val);
^
1 error generated.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8785
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
The normalizeArray() function now avoids using the slow Array#splice()
method to improve performance and now also filters out empty path parts.
Code that pre-filtered empty parts has been removed.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8724
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
- Add hyperlinks from spawn options to subsections detailing what
those options do.
- Clarify some verbiage around ChildProcess.prototype.std{in,out,err}.
- Remove second-person pronoun.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8639
Reviewed-by: Chris Dickinson <christopher.s.dickinson@gmail.com>
execFile and spawn have same API signature with respect to optional arg
array and optional options object, they should have same behaviour with
respect to argument validation.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8454
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
The test wasn't checking directly that an assertion was thrown. Instead,
it was checking that spawn did not sucessfully spawn a non-existent
command.
However, the command chosen, dir, exists in GNU coreutils, so it exists
on Linux (though not on BSD derived OS X). The test as written passed on
Linux, even with the TypeError it is supposed to be checking for deleted
from spawn(). It would also pass on Windows if a ls.exe existed.
The approach is unnecessarily obscure, assert.throw() is for asserting
code throws, using it is more clear and works regardless of what
commands do or do not exist.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8454
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
So what I did here is to make the icutools library actually contain the
entire ICU dependencies needed for host-side tools. Sadly, this will
build ICU twice, but avoids conflicts between host and target side.
This all seems like a gyp bug of some sort, but without docs for
toolsets, who’s to say?
I removed the icuio library as a separate target, because it was only
used by the host-side tools.
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8681
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Revert uv_thread_self() to return unsigned long instead of uv_thread_t.
This was causing a build failure on Windows and is only a temporary fix
until the proper patch lands upstream.
Reverts: https://github.com/joyent/libuv/commit/59658a8
Fixes: ce112c2 "deps: update uv to v1.0.0-rc2"
Add a test that goes through the whole matrix of:
- command line options (--enable-ssl*)
- secureOptions
- secureProtocols
and makes sure that compatible test setups actually work as expected.
The test works by spawning two processes for each test case: one client
and one server. The test passes if a SSL/TLS connection from the client
to the server is successful and the test case was supposed to pass, or
if the connection couldn't be established and the test case was supposed
to fail.
The test is currently located in the directory 'test/external' because
it has external dependencies.
* openssl: Update to 1.0.1j (Addressing multiple CVEs)
* uv: Update to v0.10.29
* child_process: properly support optional args (cjihrig)
* crypto: Disable autonegotiation for SSLv2/3 by default (Fedor Indutny,
Timothy J Fontaine, Alexis Campailla)
This is a behavior change, by default we will not allow the negotiation to
SSLv2 or SSLv3. If you want this behavior, run Node.js with either
`--enable-ssl2` or `--enable-ssl3` respectively.
This does not change the behavior for users specifically requesting
`SSLv2_method` or `SSLv3_method`. While this behavior is not advised, it is
assumed you know what you're doing since you're specifically asking to use
these methods.
Always set ssl2/ssl3 disabled based on whether they are enabled in Node.
In some corner-case scenario, node with OPENSSL_NO_SSL3 defined could
be linked to openssl that has SSL3 enabled.
In the case of a pipe'd input, i.e. from the CI the fd will be a PIPE
and when listen() is called it will return ENOTSOCK instead of EINVAL.
Backport: cd2d3aedaa
The order of the callbacks is non-deterministic, so don't expect the
error messages to come back in the same order every time, instead just
verify they are expected messages.
This change disables SSLv2/SSLv3 use by default, and introduces a
command line flag to opt into using SSLv2/SSLv3.
SSLv2 and SSLv3 are considered unsafe, and should only be used in
situations where compatibility with other components is required and
they cannot be upgrade to support newer forms of TLS.
Because of constant-timeness change made in openssl-1.0.1j the error is
no longer returned from EVP_DecryptFinal_ex. Now it just return 0, and
thus the error message does not contain proper error code. Adapt to this
change, there is not much that we could do about it.
vcbuild.bat is calling vcvars.bat, which doesn't detect if the environment
has already been set. This causes repeated entries to be added to the PATH,
which after a few invocations will lead to an error:
The input line is too long.
You cannot spawn 'dir' on Windows because it's not an executable. Also,
some people might have 'ls' on their path on Windows, so I changed
invalidCmd to something that's highly unlikely to exist.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
The cluster children are hitting breakpoint at `cluster.onread` and
hanging on a Semaphore wait now. This prevents them from disconnecting
gracefully. Considering that the test is checking different thing, the
cluster children needs to be force killed from the grand parent process.
Reviewed-By: Trevor Norris <trevnorris@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8476
Because of behavior change of some V8 APIs (they mostly became more
strict), following modules needed to be fixed:
* crypto: duplicate prototype methods are not allowed anymore
* contextify: some TryCatch trickery, the binding was using it
incorrectly
* util: maximum call stack error is now crashing in a different place
Reviewed-By: Trevor Norris <trevnorris@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8476
Do not send signal to children if they are already in debug mode.
Node.js on Windows does not register signal handler, and thus calling
`process._debugProcess()` will throw an error.
Reviewed-By: Trevor Norris <trevnorris@gmail.com>
PR-URL: https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/8476
* Add official documentation that a Buffer instance is a viable
argument when instantiating a new Buffer.
* Properly set the poolOffset when a buffer needs to be truncated.
* Add comments clarifying specific peculiar coding choices.
* Remove a level of unnecessary indentation.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
The constants in enum v8::ExternalArrayType have been changed. The old
values are there for legacy reasons, but it's best to update anyway.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
* `util.inspect` cannot accept es6 symbol primitive
* It will throw exception if do `util.inspect(Symbol())`
* This also affects repl, console.log, etc.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Chris Dickinson <christopher.s.dickinson@gmail.com>
Add generic functions for (U)Int read/write operations on Buffers. These
support up to and including 48 bit reads and writes.
Include documentation and tests.
Additional work done by Trevor Norris to include 40 and 48 bit write
support. Because bitwise operations cannot be used on values greater
than 32 bits, the operations have been replaced with mathematical
calculations. Regardless, they are still faster than floating point
operations.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Performance improvement by moving checks for floating point operations
to JS and doing the operation on a protected internal function that
assumes all arguments are correct. Still abort if the operation
overflows memory. This can only be caused if the Buffer's length
property isn't the same as the actual internal length.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Passing null as the output stream to readline.Interface()'s constructor
is now supported. Any output written by readline is just discarded. It
makes it easier to use readline just as a line parser.
Fixes: https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/4408
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Since we are taking control of the microtask queue it makes sense to
disable autorun and only run microtasks when necessary. Just setting
isolate->SetAutorunMicrotasks(false) would cause _tickCallback() not to
be called.
Automatically running the microtask queue will cause it to run:
* After callback invocation
* Inside _tickCallback()
* After _tickCallback() invocation
The third one is unnecessary as the microtask queue is guaranteed to be
empty at this point. The first only needs to be run manually when
_tickCallback() isn't going to be called by MakeCallback().
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Match the behavior of the slow path by setting url.query to an empty
object when the url contains no query, but query parsing is requested.
Also add a test for this case, and update the documents to clearly
reflect this behavior.
Fixes: https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/8332
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
The two main goals of this change are:
- To make it easier to build the Intl option using ICU (particularly,
using a newer ICU than v8/Chromium's version)
- To enable a much smaller ICU build with only English support The goal
here is to get node.js binaries built this way by default so that the
Intl API can be used. Additional data can be added at execution time
(see Readme and wiki)
More details are at https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/7719
In particular, this change adds the "--with-intl=" configure option to
provide more ways of building "Intl":
- "full-icu" picks up an ICU from deps/icu
- "small-icu" is similar, but builds only English
- "system-icu" uses pkg-config to find an installed ICU
- "none" does nothing (no Intl)
For Windows builds, the "full-icu" or "small-icu" options are added to
vcbuild.bat.
Note that the existing "--with-icu-path" option is not removed from
configure, but may not be used alongside the new option.
Wiki changes have already been made on
https://github.com/joyent/node/wiki/Installation
and a new page created at
https://github.com/joyent/node/wiki/Intl
(marked as provisional until this change lands.)
Summary of changes:
* README.md : doc updates
* .gitignore : added "deps/icu" as this is the location where ICU is
unpacked to.
* Makefile : added the tools/icu/* files to cpplint, but excluded a
problematic file.
* configure : added the "--with-intl" option mentioned above.
Calculate at config time the list of ICU source files to use and data
packaging options.
* node.gyp : add the new files src/node_i18n.cc/.h as well as ICU
linkage.
* src/node.cc : add call into
node::i18n::InitializeICUDirectory(icu_data_dir) as well as new
--icu-data-dir option and NODE_ICU_DATA env variable to configure ICU
data loading. This loading is only relevant in the "small"
configuration.
* src/node_i18n.cc : new source file for the above Initialize..
function, to setup ICU as needed.
* tools/icu : new directory with some tools needed for this build.
* tools/icu/icu-generic.gyp : new .gyp file that builds ICU in some new
ways, both on unix/mac and windows.
* tools/icu/icu-system.gyp : new .gyp file to build node against a
pkg-config detected ICU.
* tools/icu/icu_small.json : new config file for the "English-only" small
build.
* tools/icu/icutrim.py : new tool for trimming down ICU data. Reads the
above .json file.
* tools/icu/iculslocs.cc : new tool for repairing ICU data manifests
after trim operation.
* tools/icu/no-op.cc : dummy file to force .gyp into using a C++ linker.
* vcbuild.bat : added small-icu and full-icu options, to call into
configure.
* Fixed toolset dependencies, see
https://github.com/joyent/node/pull/7719#issuecomment-54641687
Note that because of a bug in gyp {CC,CXX}_host must also be set.
Otherwise gcc/g++ will be used by default for part of the build.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
The current implementation uses the arguments object in the Server()
constructor. Since both arguments to Server() are optional, there was a
high likelihood of accessing a non-existent element in arguments, which
carries a performance overhead. This commit replaces the arguments
object with named arguments.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Running fill() with an empty string would cause Node to hang
indefinitely. Now it will return without having operated on the buffer.
User facing function has been pulled into JS to perform all initial
value checks and coercions. The C++ method has been placed on the
"internal" object.
Coerced non-string values to numbers to match v0.10 support.
Simplified logic and changed a couple variable names.
Added tests for fill() and moved them all to the beginning of
buffer-test.js since many other tests depend on fill() working properly.
Fixes: https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/8469
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
The parameter parser specifically looked for the old bracket syntax.
This generated a lot of warnings when building the docs. Those warnings
have been fixed by changing the parsing logic.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Several fields on OutgoingMessage were set after instantiation. These
have been included in the constructor to prevent mutation of the object
map after instantiation.
"name" is now explicitly checked to be a string. Where before if a
non-string was passed the following cryptic error was thrown:
_http_outgoing.js:334
var key = name.toLowerCase();
^
TypeError: undefined is not a function
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Calls from JS to C++ have an implicit HandleScope. So there is no need
to instantiate a new HandleScope in these basic cases.
Check if the returned int64_t is an SMI and cast the return value to
uint32_t instead of a double. Prevents needing to box the return value,
and saves a small amount of execution time.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Don't allocate any BIO buffers initially, do this on a first read from
the TCP connection. Allocate different amount of data for initial read
and for consequent reads: small buffer for hello+certificate, big buffer
for better throughput.
see #8416
Add stricter argument type checking to normalizeSpawnArguments().
Removes a number of extraneous checks in spawn().
Fix regression in handling of the optional args argument.
Add more thorough testing of spawn() arguments.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Only run lineEnding.test() on the newly acquired chunk of string instead
of on the entire line buffer.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Documentation incorrectly used bracket notation for optional parameters.
This caused inconsistencies in usage because of examples like the
following:
fs.write(fd, data[, position[, encoding]], callback)
This simply fixes all uses of bracket notation in documentation.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
The property server.connections should no longer be enumerable because
it has been deprecated. This will prevent deprecation warnings when
server objects are accessed by functions such as JSON.stringify.
Fixes: https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/8373
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Adds a test for benchmarking the module loader, needed for benchmarking
changes / refacortings in the module loader.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
4c9b30d introduced a regression in buffer.slice that 7c3c51b fixed, but
no test had been added to make sure that a similar regression is caught
by the tests suite in the future.
In 4c9b30d removal of the prototype attributes meant NativeBuffer() no
longer had the same object map as Buffer(). By now setting the same
properties in the same order both constructors will produce the same
map.
The same commit changed "parent" from undefined to null. This caused a
failure in Buffer#slice() where it was checked if parent === undefined.
Causing the incorrect parent to be set.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Expands the paragraph in the transform stream
implementation docs about the callback that is passed
to the _transform method to include details about how
two arguments may be passed, error and data. A code
example is also included.
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
When calling write() after end() has been called on an OutgoingMessage,
an error is emitted and the write's callback is called with an instance
of Error.
Fix#7477.
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Increase the performance of new Buffer construction by initializing all
properties before SetIndexedPropertiesToExternalArrayData call.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
When V8 started supporting Promises natively it also introduced a
microtack queue. This feature operates similar to process.nextTick(),
and created an issue where neither knew when the other had run. This
patch has nextTick() call the microtask queue runner at the end of
processing callbacks in the nextTickQueue.
Fixes: https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/7714
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Add a simple test to cover workers' implementation of
Worker.prototype.destroy(). Before adding this test, this code wouldn't
be covered by the tests suite, and any regression introduced in workers'
implementation of Worker.prototype.destroy wouldn't be caught.
Fixes: https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/8223
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
* npm: Update to 1.4.28
* v8: fix a crash introduced by previous release (Fedor Indutny)
* configure: add --openssl-no-asm flag (Fedor Indutny)
* crypto: use domains for any callback-taking method (Chris Dickinson)
* http: do not send `0rnrn` in TE HEAD responses (Fedor Indutny)
* querystring: fix unescape override (Tristan Berger)
* url: Add support for RFC 3490 separators (Mathias Bynens)
When replying to a HEAD request, do not attempt to send the trailers and
EOF sequence (`0\r\n\r\n`). The HEAD request MUST not have body.
Quote from RFC:
The presence of a message body in a response depends on both the
request method to which it is responding and the response status code
(Section 3.1.2). Responses to the HEAD request method (Section 4.3.2
of [RFC7231]) never include a message body because the associated
response header fields (e.g., Transfer-Encoding, Content-Length,
etc.), if present, indicate only what their values would have been if
the request method had been GET (Section 4.3.1 of [RFC7231]).
fix#8361
Reviewed-By: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
This adds domains coverage for pdbkdf2, pseudoRandomBytes, and randomBytes.
All others should be covered by event emitters.
Fixes#5801.
Reviewed-By: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Compiles and executes source code in V8's debugger context. Provides
a programmatic way to get access to the debug object by executing:
var Debug = vm.runInDebugContext('Debug');
Fixes#7886.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Strings are treated as UTF8 instead of one-byte strings when
names are processed and when OpenSSL's ..._print functions are used.
This commit fixes simple/test-tls-peer-certificate-encoding test.
fix#8366
The behavior of the `node_modules` lookup algorithm was
changed in #1177, but the documentation was not updated completely
to describe the new behavior.
The pseudocode of the lookup algorithm did not metion that
`index.json` is tried to be loaded if you require a folder.
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
V8 3.26.31 has received 14 patches since the upgrade to 3.26.33. Since
3.26.33 is technically a tag on the 3.27 branch, reverting back to
3.26.31 would remove now default functionality like WeakMaps. Because of
that the patches have simply been cherry-picked and squashed.
Here is a summary of all patches:
* Fix index register assignment in LoadFieldByIndex for arm, arm64, and
mips.
* Fix invalid attributes when generalizing because of incompatible map
change.
* Skip write barriers when updating the weak hash table.
* MIPS: Avoid HeapObject check in HStoreNamedField.
* Do GC if CodeRange fails to allocate a block.
* Array.concat: properly go to dictionary mode when required.
* Keep CodeRange::current_allocation_block_index_ in range.
* Grow heap slower if GC freed many global handles.
* Do not eliminate bounds checks for "<const> - x".
* Add missing map check to optimized f.apply(...).
* In GrowMode, force the value to the right representation to avoid
deopts between storing the length and storing the value.
* Reduce max executable size limit.
* Fix invalid condition in check elimination effects.
* Fix off-by-one error in Array.concat slow mode check.
For more information see: https://github.com/v8/v8/commits/3.26
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
There is only one call site that uses it and that can do the checks
itself. Removes ~15 lines of code.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Unexport the http.parsers freelist. It was originally exported by Ryan
in commit 0003c701 but the commit log doesn't mention why and it's never
been documented. It's unclear if there are any users.
The lifecycle of parser objects changed recently and it seems better to
not let people shoot themselves in the foot so easily.
If it turns out there are actually users, we can always re-export it
again - probably under a slightly different name, to force people to
update their code to the new way of things.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Make it a little harder to slip in use-after-free bugs by nulling out
references to the parser object after handing it off to freeParser().
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
It's safe to call BaseObject::object() from your destructor _unless_
the handle is weak; then it's the weak callback that is calling your
destructor and the object will have been released by the time the
destructor runs.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Weak handles put strain on the garbage collector and the parser handle
doesn't need to be weak in the first place. This change should improve
GC times on busy servers a little.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Counterpart to Wrap(), clears the previously assigned internal field.
Will be used in an upcoming commit.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Fix a resource leak where an intermediate Local<Context> handle in
Environment::GetCurrent() got leaked into whatever HandleScope was
further up the stack.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Allow cluster workers to listen on exclusive ports for TCP and UDP,
instead of forcing all calls to go through the cluster master.
Fixes: #3856
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
node::StringBytes::Write() has appropriate support to write strings with
'binary' encoding. So expose that API through StreamWrap and allow
inheriting classes to use it.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
The REPL global object lazy loads modules by placing getters for each.
This causes MakeDomainCallback() to be run if a native module is loaded
from the REPL, but if the domain module hasn't been loaded then there
are no enter/exit callbacks to be called. Causing an assert() to fail.
Fix the issue by conditionally running the callback instead of asserting
it is available. Also add "addon" test to verify the fix.
Fixes: #8231
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
PR #8034 came with a test to make sure that timers expiry is based on
monotonic time and not on wall-clock time. However, a bug in the
implementation broke timers with non-integer delays. A fix for this
issue was provided with PR #8073, but it didn't come with a test.
Because #8073 fixed a subtle issue that could reappear in the future,
and because the impact of such an issue would be significant, I suggest
adding this test.
The test would timeout after 1 minute if the issue was reproduced.
Otherwise it will run very quickly.
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Allow to create an executable with no external dynamic libraries, also the
ones from the system. This is somewhat dependent of the used C lib, for
example glibc has some internal dynamic libraries loaded by itself, but for
other ones like eglibc or dietlib, this would produce a true static linked
executable. This can be of interest for embebers or resource constraints
platforms, but the main reason for this is to allow to use a Javascript
file as Linux kernel 'init' on NodeOS.
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Currently, cluster workers can be removed from the workers list in three
different places:
- In the exit event handler for the worker process.
- In the disconnect event handler of the worker process.
- In the disconnect event handler of the cluster master.
However, handles for a given worker are cleaned up only in one of these
places: in the cluster master's disconnect event handler.
Because these events happen asynchronously, it is possible that the
workers list is empty before we even clean up one handle. This makes
the assert that makes sure that no handle is left when the workers
list is empty fail.
This commit removes the worker from the cluster.workers list only when
the worker is dead _and_ disconnected, at which point we're sure that
its associated handles are cleaned up.
Fixes#8191 and #8192.
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
In case of an invalid DH parameter file, it is sliently discarded. To
use auto DH parameter in a server and DHE key length check in a
client, we need to wait for the next release of OpenSSL-1.0.2.
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
There is no need to split the host by hand in `url.js` – Punycode.js
takes care of it anyway. This not only simplifies the code, but also
adds support for RFC 3490 separators (i.e. not just U+002E, but U+3002,
U+FF0E, and U+FF61 as well).
Closes#6055.
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Documentation states that `querystring.unescape` may be overridden to
replace unescaper during parsing. However, the function was only
being used as a fallback for when the native decoder throws (on a
malformed URL). This patch moves the call to the native function and
the try/catch around it into querystring.unescape then has the parser
always invoke it, so that an override will always be used.
Fixes#4055
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
fd80a31e06 has introduced a segfault
during redundant boundary check elimination (#8208).
The problem consists of two parts:
1. Abscense of instruction iterator in
`EliminateRedundantBoundsChecks`. It was present in recent v8, but
wasn't considered important at the time of backport. However, since
the function is changing instructions order in block, it is
important to not rely at `i->next()` at the end of the loop.
2. Too strict ASSERT in `MoveIndexIfNecessary`. It is essentially a
backport of a45c96ab from v8's upstream. See
https://github.com/v8/v8/commit/a45c96ab for details.
fix#8208
net Sockets were calling read(0) to start reading, without
checking to see if they were paused first. This would result
in paused Socket objects keeping the event loop alive.
Fixes#8200
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Fix assertion failure from poor argument parsing logic introduced in
6ea5d16. Add tests to make sure arguments are properly parsed.
Fixes: 6ea5d16 "dns: always set variable family in lookup()"
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Fix a few issues in test/internet/test-dns.js:
- 'hint' should be 'hints'
- reverse name lookup is not guaranteed to return 'localhost'
- V4MAPPED hint requires IPV6 address family
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Tests in test-net-remote-address-port.js assume that client and server
sockets always use IPv4. However, depending on the OS and the network
interfaces setup, this is not true. This change makes the test consider
that both IPv4 or IPv6 sockets are valid
Fixes#8096.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Instead of hard-coding http service name in test-dns, retrieve it from
/etc/services. This is not ideal, but it's still better than hard-coding
it.
Fixes#8047.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
1 is actually a valid flag on SmartOS. More generally, hints flags'
values are defined by the underlying native flags, and these can have
different values on different systems.
Using (ADDRCONFIG | V4MAPPED) + 1 ensure that the flag will be invalid,
since it will always be different from ADDRCONFIG, V4MAPPED, ADDRCONFIG
| V4MAPPED, 0 and any other combination of even flags.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
The slot 0 and 1 had already been taken by "gin" and "blink" in Chrome,
and the size of isolate's slots is 4 by default, so using 3 should hopefully
make node work independently when embedded into other application.
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Fixes an issue that caused the first querystring to be parsed prepending
a "?" in the first variable name on relative urls with no #fragment
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Fix issue where output of a native prototype method would simply print
[Function]. It will now print [Function: name].
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Regression occurred that prevented the variable "family" from being set
properly when the lookup() function's "options" parameter was passed a
number instead of an object.
Also included a sanity check by setting the default value of "family" to
a value that will not pass verification.
Fixes: e643fe4 "dns: fix GetAddrInfo assert"
Reviewed-by: Alexis Campailla <alexis@janeasystems.com>
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Linking CoreFoundation for OSX is needed for OSX debugging features to
function properly.
For instance Instruments cannot record Heap Allocations if the
CoreFoundation is not linked.
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Disabling the part of the test that relies on dispatching SIGHUP,
because sending SIGHUP is not supported on Windows.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Send messages until both the parent and the child process have received
at least one message. If at least one of them doesn't receive any
message, the test runner will make the test timeout.
Fixes#8046.
This is the Node side of the fix for Node's cluster module on Windows.
https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/7691
The other required part is
https://github.com/joyent/libuv/pull/1384
Windows and Unix return certain socket errors (i.e. EADDRINUSE) at
different times: bind on Windows, and listen on Unix.
In an effort to hide this difference, libuv on Windows stores such
errors in the bind_error field of uv_tcp_t, to defer raising it at
listen time.
This worked fine except for the case in which a socket is shared in
a Node cluster and a bind error occurs.
A previous attempt to fix this (
d1e6be14603da36fe00e
) was flawed becaused in an attempt to relay the error at the JS level
it caused the master to start accepting connections.
With this new approach, libuv itself is relaying the bind errors,
providing for a uniform behavior of uv_tcp_listen.
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
The method GetAddrInfo() is used by more than just dns.lookup(), and in
those cases a third argument isn't passed. This caused the following
check to abort:
assert(args[3]->IsInt32());
Fixes: 4306786 "net: don't prefer IPv4 addresses during resolution"
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Currently the address resolution family defaults to IPv4. Instead remove
the preference and instead resolve to a family suitable for the host.
Expose the getaddrinfo flags and allow them to be passed.
Add documentation about new flags.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
On Windows, path.isAbsolute() returns an empty string on failed cases.
This forces the return value to always be boolean.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
When backporting f8193ab into v0.10, a regression was introduced. Timers
with non-integer timeout could trigger a infinite recursion with 100%
cpu usage. This commit backports 93b0624 which fixes the regression.
After backporting f8193ab, instead of using Date.now(), timers would use
Timer.now() to determine if they had expired. However, Timer.now() is
based on loop->time, which is not updated when a timer's remaining time
is > 0 and < 1. Timers would thus never timeout if their remaining time
was at some point > 0 and < 1.
With this commit, Timer.now() updates loop->time itself, and timers
always timeout eventually.
Fixes#8065 and #8068.
Callbacks in node are usually asynchronous, and should never be
sometimes synchronous, and sometimes asynchronous.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Internal function trim(arr). 2nd parameter of slice() should be slice's
end index (not included). Because of function normalize() (called before
trim()), "start" is always zero so the bug -for now- has no effect, but
its a bug waiting to happen.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
A streams1 stream will have its falsy values such as 0, false, or ""
eaten by the upgrade to streams2, even when objectMode is enabled.
Include test for said cases.
Reviewed-by: isaacs <i@izs.me>
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
This patch adds a fast path for parsing of simple path-only URLs, as commonly
found in HTTP requests received by a server.
Benchmark results [ms], before / after patch:
/foo/bar 0.008956 0.000418 (fast path used)
http://example.com/ 0.011426 0.011437 (normal slow path, no change)
In a simple 'ab' benchmark of a single-threaded web server, this patch
increases the request rate from around 6400 to 7400 req/s.
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Original commit message:
timers: use uv_now instead of Date.now
This saves a few calls to gettimeofday which can be expensive, and
potentially subject to clock drift. Instead use the loop time which
uses hrtime internally.
In addition to the backport, this commit:
- keeps _idleStart timers' property which is still set to
Date.now() to avoid breaking existing code that uses it, even if
its use is discouraged.
- adds automated tests. These tests use a specific branch of
libfaketime that hasn't been submitted upstream yet. libfaketime
is git cloned if needed when running automated tests.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
This is the Node side of the fix for Node's cluster module on Windows.
https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/7691
The other required part is
https://github.com/joyent/libuv/pull/1384
Windows and Unix return certain socket errors (i.e. EADDRINUSE) at
different times: bind on Windows, and listen on Unix.
In an effort to hide this difference, libuv on Windows stores such
errors in the bind_error field of uv_tcp_t, to defer raising it at
listen time.
This worked fine except for the case in which a socket is shared in
a Node cluster and a bind error occurs.
A previous attempt to fix this (
d1e6be14603da36fe00e
) was flawed becaused in an attempt to relay the error at the JS level
it caused the master to start accepting connections.
With this new approach, libuv itself is relaying the bind errors,
providing for a uniform behavior of uv_tcp_listen.
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
v0.10 and node docs specific that in a worker, the 'message' and 'error'
event emits on process, and on cluster.worker.
Reviewed-By: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
internet/test-dns.js assumes that ::1 always resolves to "localhost" on
all platforms. This is not what happens in reality. Some platforms
resolve it to "ip6-localhost" too. There doesn't seem to be any consensus
on what's the right thing to do. However, most sane platforms will use
either one of these two values.
Reviewed-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Prevent test-process-kill-pid.js tests suite from sending SIGHUP
to its process group, which was causing the test runner to terminate.
Fix jenkins' jobs for nodejs-master.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Between 0.11.1 and 0.11.2, the message and error events stopped
being usable via the cluster.worker object. This commit makes
them usable again. Closes#7998.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Currently, invalid usage such as:
process.kill('SIGTERM')
process.kill(null)
process.kill(undefined);
all coerce the pid to 0, and signal the current process.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Currently, stringification of an empty array outputs a single
separator character. This commit causes an empty array to output
the empty string.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
When TLS Alert is occured in handshake, ClearOut only write it into
wbio and does not flush to socket. TLS Alert should be written to
socket with EncOut before socket is destroyed within its error
callback.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
According to V8 changelog, `armv7` config variable was replaced by
`arm_version`, with value either '7', '6' or 'default'.
Detect ARMv7 and ARMv6 CPUs and default to 'default'.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Currently, checkExecSyncError() attempts to access the contents
of stderr. When stdio is set to 'ignore', this causes a crash.
This commit adds a check on the access of stderr. Closes#7966.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Documentation claimed it accepted a single label argument, as time and
timeEnd do, which was incorrect.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
This allows embedders enough control to initialize node, run the
event loop, and cleanly exit (including calling handlers).
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
A ReadableStream with a base64 StringDecoder backed by only
one or two bytes would fail to output its partial data before
ending. This fix adds a check to see if the `read` was triggered
by an internal `flow`, and if so, empties any remaining data.
fixes#7914.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Emits on every call to cluster.setupMaster(), even if no new settings
are given. This is because calling cluster.setupMaster() without
arguments (or with an empty options object) results in the settings
being restored to their defaults.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Only attributes of 'cluster.settings' will be modified after the first
call, leaving all other cluster initialization alone. Each call that
includes a 'settings' argument triggers a 'setup' event to be emitted.
Instead of each call resetting all values to their defaults, use the
current settings (if any) as the default. This retains setupMaster's
support how cluster.fork() uses setupMaster() to ensure
cluster.settings has been populated.
Update example in docs to use current node coding style and include
an example of progressive configuration.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Pass in the v8::Context, instead of creating it
within CreateEnvironment. This allows callers
to use a pre-existing context.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
The spawnSync() cwd option was being copied to the incorrect
location. This commit copies to the correct location.
Closes#7824
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Switch condition order to check for null before calling isNaN().
Also remove two unnecessary calls to isNaN() that are already
covered by calls to isFinite(). This commit targets v0.10, as
opposed to #7891, which targets master (suggested by
@bnoordhuis). Closes#7840.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Use a util.deprecate wrapper to issue warnings like any other
deprecated API. The option has been marked as deprecated in the docs
since v0.5.11.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Default highWaterMark is now set properly when using stream Duplex's
writableObjectMode and readableObjectMode options.
Added condition to the already existing split objectMode test to ensure
the highWaterMark is being set to the correct default value on both the
ReadableState and WritableState for readableObjectMode and
writableObjectMode.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Documentation for console.assert incorrectly described message as a
single message, but it is a format.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Fix for `error` events emitting only once when reconnecting
a single instance of net.Socket.
Fixesjoyent/node#7888
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
A udp packet can have 0 content. In that case nread will be equal to 0,
but addr != NULL.
Add test case for empty data gram packets and fixed test that checked
for OOB when length == 0.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
V8 seems to ignore the default value for want_separate_host_toolset and
would override it at build time. Instead always explicitly set the value.
Fixes#7833
The refactor in 3ae0b17c broke the multiline input's visual appearence.
While actually switching to this mode, the `...` prefix is not
displayed.
Additionally, account only SyntaxErrors that are happening at the parse
time, everything else should not be switching repl to the multiline
mode.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
The [Stream documentation for .push](http://nodejs.org/api/stream.html#stream_readable_push_chunk_encoding)
explicitly states multiple times that null is a special cased value
that indicates the end of a stream. It is confusing and undocumented
that undefined *also* ends the stream, even though in object mode
there is a distinct and important difference.
The docs for Object-Mode also explicitly mention null as the *only*
special cased value, making no mention of undefined.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Creating a new buffer from the toJSON() output of another
buffer does not currently work. This commit adds that
support. Closes#7849.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Calling dns.lookup with arguments that generate an error from c-ares
previously sent those errors back to the callback. This commit restores
the ca9eb71 behavior.
Fixes#7731.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Instrumentation code might need to find out the entry point of the
process in a global context.
Documenting the existing process.mainModule to officially support this.
Fixes#7808
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Currently child_process.exec() assumes that cmd.exe is on the PATH,
and fails with a spawn ENOENT error if it is not.
The Windows 'comspec' environment variable contains the full filepath
to the default command interpreter, eg "C:\Windows\System32\cmd.exe".
Should it not be set, we fall-back to using 'cmd.exe' from PATH, as
before.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Increase the performance and simplify the logic of Buffer#write{U}Int*
and Buffer#read{U}Int* methods by placing the byte manipulation code
directly inline.
Also improve the speed of buffer-write benchmarks by creating a new
call directly to each method by using Function() instead of calling by
buff[fn].
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Conflicts:
lib/buffer.js
It's possible to construct a typed array from a buffer but the buffer
is treated as an array, not a byte array as one might expect.
Fixes#7786.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Building MSIs for different arch's can sometimes confuse MSBuild and
Wix, isntead run the toolchain externally so we don't have to worry
about which arch cmd.exe is running as.
This features comes from the need of adding extra options when displaying
the object using console.dir().
console.dir() accepts now a second parameter that is passed to util.inspect()
in order to provide extra options to the output. These options are: depth, color
and showHidden. More information about these options in util.inspect() documentation.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
WriteItem callback may add new item to the `pending_write_items`. Ensure
that this item won't be called in the same `InvokeQueued` call, as it
may result in way-to-early `finish` event on js-side.
fix#7733
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Tests for the behaviour in v0.10.x which allows process.argv changes
to be honoured by cluster.setupMaster().
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
In v0.10.x, process.argv and process.execArgv would only be
evaluated and copied into cluster.settings on the first call to
cluster.setupMaster() (either directly or via cluster.fork()),
allowing them to be modified as needed before initializing the
settings.
In 41b75ca the behaviour was changed so that these values are
initialized at the time of the first require('cluster').
Fixes#7670.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
* openssl: to 1.0.1h (CVE-2014-0224)
* npm: upgrade to 1.4.10
* utf8: Prevent Node from sending invalid UTF-8 (Felix Geisendörfer)
- *NOTE* this introduces a breaking change, previously you could construct
invalid UTF-8 and invoke an error in a client that was expecting valid
UTF-8, now unmatched surrogate pairs are replaced with the unknown UTF-8
character. To restore the old functionality simply have NODE_INVALID_UTF8
environment variable set.
* child_process: do not set args before throwing (Greg Sabia Tucker)
* child_process: spawn() does not throw TypeError (Greg Sabia Tucker)
* constants: export O_NONBLOCK (Fedor Indutny)
* crypto: improve memory usage (Alexis Campailla)
* fs: close file if fstat() fails in readFile() (cjihrig)
* lib: name EventEmitter prototype methods (Ben Noordhuis)
* tls: fix performance issue (Alexis Campailla)
Previously we were only shifting the address space for ASLR on 32bit
processes, apply the same shift for 64bit so processes don't
get artificially limited native heap.
Previously v8's WriteUtf8 function would produce invalid utf-8 output
when encountering unmatched surrogate code units [1]. The new
REPLACE_INVALID_UTF8 option fixes that by replacing invalid code points
with the unicode replacement character.
[1]: JS Strings are defined as arrays of 16 bit unsigned integers. There
is no unicode enforcement, so one can easily end up with invalid unicode
code unit sequences inside a string.
- https://codereview.chromium.org/121173009/
- https://code.google.com/p/v8/source/detail?r=18683
Note: The v8 test case did not cleanly apply, so it's missing from this
patch. I'm assuming this is not a problem if the v8 test suite is not
part of the node build / test system. If that's the case I'll fix it.
Otherwise the test case will be integrated once v8 is upgraded.
This patch simplifies the implementation of StringDecoder, fixes the
failures from the new test cases, and also no longer relies on v8's
WriteUtf8 function to encode individual surrogates.
The test cases are still essentially the same, but now all possible ways
of writing a buffer into the decoder are tested, which has exposed a few
failing scenarios that had not been discovered so far!
The test is supposed to measure the performance of the base64 encoder
so move the Buffer#write() calls out of the benchmark section.
The overhead of the calls isn't terrible (about 1-3%) but having
unrelated activity in a micro-benchmark is never a good idea.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Replace the CONTAINER_OF macro with a template function that is as
type-safe as a reinterpret_cast<> of an arbitrary pointer can be made.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Currently, if fstat() fails in readFile(), the callback
is invoked without closing the file. This commit closes
the file before calling back.
Closes#7697
Currently, if fstat() fails in readFile(), the callback
is invoked without closing the file. This commit closes
the file before calling back.
Closes#7697
See https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/7675
net.server.listen() behaves inconsistently depending on whether the port
number is provided.
1. port === 0 && host == '' (i.e. false-y), node creates an AF_INET
socket but does not call bind().
2. port > 0 && host == '', node creates an AF_INET6 socket and calls
bind().
The fix makes 1 consistent with 2.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Rework the fix from commit 6810132 in a way that removes ~60 lines of
code.
The bug was introduced in commit e87ceb2 (mea culpa) and is at its core
a pointer aliasing bug where sometimes two independent pointers existed
that pointed to the same chunk of heap memory.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Otherwise it's not possible to check from inside a destructor if V8 is
still alive with v8::V8::IsDead(). In V8 3.25, that function returns
true until the last isolate is destroyed.
This used to work in v0.10 and is a standard trick to dispose persistent
handles conditionally.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
dispose() free's the memory when executed and sets the external array
data to NULL and length to zero.
To prevent the same memory from being free'd twice when the object is
garbage collected we first check if the object's external array data
length == 0. Since alloc() passes NULL to
SetIndexedPropertiesToExternalArrayData() if length == 0 there's no
opportunity for memory leak.
Fix up a bad assumption in pummel/test-net-pingpong, namely that binding
to 'localhost' or '' means that incoming connections will have an IPv4
address.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
EMFILE and ENFILE mean 'out of file descriptors'. It's a run-time error
and as such should emit an error on the child process object, not throw
an exception.
Fixes#7453.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Avoid sending unsent data and destroying otherwise legitimate sockets
for requests that are aborted while still in the agent queue. This
reduces stress on upstream systems who will likely respond to the
request but client app already knows that it will be dropped on the
floor and also helps avoid killing keep-alive connections.
See also commit e7bfbaf. Don't depend on deps/v8/build/features.gypi
to disable handle zapping, be explicit about it.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Slashes should be documented, because 3rd-party protocols -- those
postfixed with `://` -- would incorrectly `format` and `parse` if they
didn't set/get the `slashes` option.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Not all querystring are utf-8 encoding, make querystring can be used
to encode / decode `non-utf8` encoding string if necessary.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Do not ever call `Delete()` on `proxy_global_`, it will invoke
`GlobalPropertyDeleteCallback` and cause crash because of the infinite
recursion.
fix#7529
Adds a section to the transform stream docs to clarify the
difference between the `end` event and the `finish` events.
Also clarifies the wording on the `end` event.
64bit constants are keyed for x64 platforms only, add PowerPC based
platform constants.
Node's "ucs2" encoding wants LE character data stored in the Buffer, so
we need to reorder on BE platforms. See
http://nodejs.org/api/buffer.html regarding Node's "ucs2" encoding
specification
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Storing it in SSL_CTX is incorrect as it may go away and get destructed
earlier, also it'll yield invalid results in SelectSNIContextCallback.
Use `SSL_get_app_data()` instead.
fix#7484
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
The spawnsync test was written wrong, the timeout can never fire before
the sync process has returned, the delta is immaterial and times when
it was succeeding are not reliable cases.
Instead verify that the timeout doesn't fire while the sync process is
happening.
When close() is called on a non-listening server, a synchronous
error is thrown. This commit causes the error to be passed to
the asynchronous callback function instead.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
ClientHelloParser used to contain an 18k buffer that was kept around
for the life of the connection, even though it was not needed in many
situations. I changed it to be deallocated when it's determined to
be no longer needed.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Fix the following compiler warning on systems where _XOPEN_SOURCE is
defined by default:
../src/node_constants.cc:35:0: warning: "_XOPEN_SOURCE" redefined
#define _XOPEN_SOURCE 500
Move the (re)definition of _XOPEN_SOURCE to the top of the file while
we're here. Commit 00890e4 adds a `#define _XOPEN_SOURCE 500` in order
to make <fcntl.h> expose O_NONBLOCK but it does so after other system
headers have been included. If those headers include <fcntl.h>, then
the #include in node_constants.cc will be a no-op and O_NONBLOCK won't
be visible.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
stringToFlags() has fall throughs in a case statement.
However, they are not consistently implemented. This commit adds
consistency.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
There was an underlying assumption in readline.emitKeypressEvents (and
by extension emitKey) that the given stream (usually process.stdin)
would emit 'data' once per keypress, which is not always the case.
This commit buffers the input stream and ensures a 'keypress' event is
triggered for every keypress (including escape codes).
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
This test is still in test/disabled because it requires a tty, however
when executed directly this test now passes.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Ensure TypeError is thrown, fix a bug where `env` option was
assuming the option was actually an object.
This case is especially bad because it then sets `env == null`
instead of using `process.env`.
Fix#7456
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
A recent change to v8's API now makes it impossible to memcpy to a
v8::ArrayBuffer without causing it to be externalized. This means that
the garbage collector will not automatically free the memory when the
object is collected.
When/If the necessary API is included to allow the above
Buffer#toArrayBuffer() will be reintroduced.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Not removing 'end' listeners for input and output on the 'close' event
resulted in an EventEmitter related memory leak.
This issue also might be reproduced at:
https://github.com/npm/npm/issues/5203
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
When process._setupNextTick() was introduced as the means to properly
initialize the mechanism behind process.nextTick() a chunk of code was
left behind that assigned memory to process._tickInfo. This code is no
longer needed.
Before this commit the EventEmitter methods were anonymous functions.
V8 tries to infer names for anonymous functions based on the execution
context but it frequently gets it wrong and when that happens, the
stack trace is usually confusing and unhelpful. This commit names all
methods so V8 can fall back to the method.name property.
The above gotcha applies to all anonymous functions but is exacerbated
for EventEmitter methods because those are invoked with a plenitude of
different receivers.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
On windows you can see ECONNABORTED instead of ECONNRESET in various
scenarios, and they are both applicable we're testing that Node is not
swallowing these errors which it was known to do prior to 0.10
As a comment in the test states: "This test should not be ported to
v0.10 and higher, because the problem is fixed by not ignoring
ECONNRESET in the first place."
The test is checking whether write returns false instead of whether an
ECONNRESET has been raised.
Replace with test-http-destroyed-socket-write2, this test verifies that
ECONNRESET is raised when writing to an http request where the server
has destroyed the socket.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
* Don't set referer if already set
* fetch: Send referer and npm-session headers
* run-script: Support --parseable and --json
* list runnable scripts (Evan Lucas)
* Use marked instead of ronn for html docs
On Windows we cannot get the server address until a connection
is accepted.
From MSDN:
The getsockname function does not always return information about
the host address when the socket has been bound to an unspecified
address, unless the socket has been connected with connect or accept
(for example, using ADDR_ANY). A Windows Sockets application must not
assume that the address will be specified unless the socket is
connected.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
* Check SHA before using files from cache
* adduser: allow change of the saved password
* Make `npm install` respect `config.unicode`
* Fix lifecycle to pass `Infinity` for config env value
* Don't return 0 exit code on invalid command
* cache: Handle 404s and other HTTP errors as errors
* bump tap dep, make tests stderr a bit quieter
* Resolve ~ in path configs to env.HOME
* Include npm version in default user-agent conf
* npm init: Use ISC as default license, use save-prefix for deps
* Many test and doc fixes
Because of differences in memcmp() implementation, normalize output to
return -1, 0 or 1 only.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
This commit introduces `readableObjectMode` and
`writableObjectMode` options for Duplex streams.
This can be used mostly to make parsers and
serializers with Transform streams.
Also the docs section about stream state objects
is removed, because it is not relevant anymore.
The example from the section is remade to show
new options.
fixes#6284
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
When ExitCallback was not called with an error such as ENOENT in
uv_spawn, the process handle still remains refed and needs to be closed.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
1) ThrowCryptoTypeErrors was not actually used for
type-related errors. Removed it.
2) For AEAD modes, OpenSSL does not set any internal
error information if Final does not complete suc-
cessfully. Therefore, "TypeError:error:00000000:l
ib(0):func(0):reason(0)" would be the error mess-
age. Use a default message for these cases.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
compare() works like String.localeCompare such that:
Buffer.compare(a, b) === a.compare(b);
equals() does a native check to see if two buffers are equal.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Commit f9ced08 switches V8 on Linux over from gettimeofday() to
clock_getres() and clock_gettime(). As of glibc 2.17, those functions
live in libc. For older versions, we need to pull them in from librt.
Fixes the following link-time error;
Release/obj.target/deps/v8/tools/gyp/libv8_base.a(platform-posix.o):
In function `v8::internal::OS::Ticks()':
platform-posix.cc:(.text+0x93c):
undefined reference to `clock_gettime'
platform-posix.cc:(.text+0x989):
undefined reference to `clock_getres'
Fixes#7514.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Date.now() indirectly calls gettimeofday() on Linux and that's a system
call that is extremely expensive on virtualized systems when the host
operating system has to emulate access to the hardware clock.
Case in point: output from `perf record -c 10000 -e cycles:u -g -i`
for a benchmark/http_simple bytes/8 benchmark with a light load of
50 concurrent clients:
53.69% node node [.] v8::internal::OS::TimeCurrentMillis()
|
--- v8::internal::OS::TimeCurrentMillis()
|
|--99.77%-- v8::internal::Runtime_DateCurrentTime(v8::internal::Arguments, v8::internal::Isolate*)
| 0x23587880618e
That's right - over half of user time spent inside the V8 function that
calls gettimeofday().
Notably, nearly all system time gets attributed to acpi_pm_read(), the
kernel function that reads the ACPI power management timer:
32.49% node [kernel.kallsyms] [k] acpi_pm_read
|
--- acpi_pm_read
|
|--98.40%-- __getnstimeofday
| getnstimeofday
| |
| |--71.61%-- do_gettimeofday
| | sys_gettimeofday
| | system_call_fastpath
| | 0x7fffbbaf6dbc
| | |
| | |--98.72%-- v8::internal::OS::TimeCurrentMillis()
The cost of the gettimeofday() system call is normally measured in
nanoseconds but we were seeing 100 us averages and spikes >= 1000 us.
The numbers were so bad, my initial hunch was that the node process was
continuously getting rescheduled inside the system call...
v8::internal::OS::TimeCurrentMillis()'s most frequent caller is
v8::internal::Runtime_DateCurrentTime(), the V8 run-time function
that's behind Date.now(). The timeout handling logic in lib/http.js
and lib/net.js calls into lib/timers.js and that module will happily
call Date.now() hundreds or even thousands of times per second.
If you saw exports._unrefActive() show up in --prof output a lot,
now you know why.
That's why this commit makes V8 switch over to clock_gettime() on Linux.
In particular, it checks if CLOCK_REALTIME_COARSE is available and has
a resolution <= 1 ms because in that case the clock_gettime() call can
be fully serviced from the vDSO.
It speeds up the aforementioned benchmark by about 100% on the affected
systems and should go a long way toward addressing the latency issues
that StrongLoop customers have been reporting.
This patch will be upstreamed as a CR against V8 3.26. I'm sending it
as a pull request for v0.10 first because that's what our users are
running and because the delta between 3.26 and 3.14 is too big to
reasonably back-port the patch. I'll open a pull request for the
master branch once the CR lands upstream.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Forcibly flushes the request headers. You need this with long-lived
HTTP connections where the first data isn't written until the connection
has been established (think: tunneling requests over HTTP CONNECT.)
Fixes#7296.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
In tls.connect a unix socket connection to a path may be made in
recent versions of node by specifying the value for the path
property.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
OpenSSL behaves oddly: on client `cert_chain` contains
the `peer_certificate`, but on server it doesn't.
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
When creating a TLSSocket instance based on the existing connecting
socket, `_connecting` property is copied after the initialization of
`net.Socket`. However, since `net.Socket` constructor will call
`.read(0)` if the `readable` is true - error may happen at this code
chunk in net.js:
Socket.prototype._read = function(n) {
debug('_read');
if (this._connecting || !this._handle) {
debug('_read wait for connection');
this.once('connect', this._read.bind(this, n));
...
Leading to a test failures on windows:
- test/simple/test-tls-connect-given-socket.js
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
* isaacs, Robert Kowalski, Benjamin Coe: Test Improvements
* isaacs doc: Add canonical url
* isaacs view: handle unpublished packages properly
* Raynos (Jake Verbaten) do not log if silent
* Julian Gruber fix no such property error
* isaacs npmconf@0.1.14
* Thorsten Lorenz adding save-prefix configuration option
* isaacs npm-registry-client@0.4.7
* isaacs cache: treat missing versions as a 404
* isaacs cache: Save shasum, write resolved/etc data to cache
* isaacs cache: Always fetch root doc
* isaacs cache: don't repack unnecessarily from tmp
* Andrey Kislyuk Don't crash if shrinkwrap-dependencies were not passed in pkginfo
* Robert Kowalski fix link in faq
* Jean Lauliac Add a peerDependencies section in package.json doc
* isaacs read-installed@2.0.2
Oversight to not pass blksize to fs.Stats on initialization.
Also added a test to make sure the object property has been set. Since
now on Windows both blksize and blocks will simply be set to undefined.
Fix possible deadlock, when handles are sent in both direction
simultaneously. In such rare cases, both sides may queue their
`NODE_HANDLE_ACK` replies and wait for them.
fix#7465
Fix issue where a signed integer is returned.
Example:
var b = new Buffer(4);
b.writeUInt32BE(0xffffffff);
b.readUInt32BE(0) == -1
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
When our estimates for a storage size are higher than the actual length
of decoded data, the destination buffer should be truncated. Otherwise
`Buffer::Length` will give misleading information to C++ layer.
fix#7365
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
`process.uptime()` interface will return the amount of time the
current process has been running. To achieve this it was caching the
`uv_uptime` value at program start, and then on the call to
`process.uptime()` returning the delta between the two values.
`uv_uptime` is defined as the number of seconds the operating system
has been up since last boot. On sunos this interface uses `kstat`s
which can be a significantly expensive operation as it requires
exclusive access, but because of the design of `process.uptime()` node
*had* to always call this on start. As a result if you had many node
processes all starting at the same time you would suffer lock
contention as they all tried to read kstats.
Instead of using `uv_uptime` to achieve this, the libuv loop already
has a concept of current loop time in the form of `uv_now()` which is
in fact monotonically increasing, and already stored directly on the
loop. By using this value at start every platform performs at least
one fewer syscall during initialization.
Since the interface to `uv_uptime` is defined as seconds, in the call
to `process.uptime()` we now `uv_update_time` get our delta, divide by
1000 to get seconds, and then convert to an `Integer`. In 0.12 we can
move back to `Number::New` instead and not lose precision.
Caveat: For some platforms `uv_uptime` reports time monotonically
increasing regardless of system hibernation, `uv_now` interface is
also monotonically increasing but may not reflect time spent in
hibernation.
Introduce new signature for both `dgram.createSocket` method and
`dgram.Socket` constructor:
dgram.createSocket(options, [listener])
Options should contain `type` property and may contain `reuseAddr`
property. When `reuseAddr` is `true` - SO_REUSEADDR will be issued on
socket on bind.
fix#7415
Signed-off-by: Fedor Indutny <fedor@indutny.com>
Socket may become not `readable`, but http should not rely on this
property and should not think that it means that no data will ever
arrive from it. In fact, it may arrive in a next tick and, since
`this.push(null)` was already called, it will result in a error like
this:
Error: stream.push() after EOF
at readableAddChunk (_stream_readable.js:143:15)
at IncomingMessage.Readable.push (_stream_readable.js:123:10)
at HTTPParser.parserOnBody (_http_common.js:132:22)
at Socket.socketOnData (_http_client.js:277:20)
at Socket.EventEmitter.emit (events.js:101:17)
at Socket.Readable.read (_stream_readable.js:367:10)
at Socket.socketCloseListener (_http_client.js:196:10)
at Socket.EventEmitter.emit (events.js:123:20)
at TCP.close (net.js:479:12)
fix#6784
This prevents segfaults when a native method is reassigned to a
different object (which corrupts args.This()). When unwrapping,
clients should use args.Holder() instead of args.This().
Closes#6690.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Increase the performance and simplify the logic of Buffer#write{U}Int*
and Buffer#read{U}Int* methods by placing the byte manipulation code
directly inline.
Also improve the speed of buffer-write benchmarks by creating a new
call directly to each method by using Function() instead of calling by
buff[fn].
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
The two biggest changes are that v8::Script::New() has been removed and
that a v8::Script object now has to be explicitly bound to a context if
you want to run it from another context.
We can accommodate both changes without breaking the vm module's public
API or even the internal JS API.
The test/simple/test-smalloc.js has an implicit assumption
of the byte order of the data stored for Double and Uint32
values. On a big endian platform this test fails without
these patches.
Use os.endianness() to detect the endian of the platform
and use it to gate the static value used for comparison.
Improve on commit b55c9d6 by not requiring that switches are comma
separated. This commit makes `./configure --v8-options="--foo --bar"`
work and takes special care to properly escape quotes in the options
string.
By building the fs.Stats object in JS, which is returned by all fs stat
functions, calls to v8::Object::Set() are removed. This also includes
creating all associated Date objects in JS, rather than using
v8::Date::New(). Both these changes have significant performance gains.
Note that the returned value from fs.stat changes slightly for non-POSIX
systems. Whereas before the stats object would be missing blocks and
blksize keys, it now has these keys with undefined as the value.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Move `createCredentials` to `tls` module and rename it to
`createSecureContext`. Make it use default values from `tls` module:
`DEFAULT_CIPHERS` and `DEFAULT_ECDH_CURVE`.
fix#7249
Include the "expected protocol" in the Error message
string, which evaluates to "http:" for the `http`
core module, and "https:" for the `https` module.
Closes#7355.
These are an old and deprecated properties that was used by previous
stream implementation, and are still in use in some user-land modules.
Prior to this commit, they were read from the underlying socket, which
may be non-readable/non-writable while connecting or while staying
uninitialized.
Force set them to `true`, just to make sure that there will be no
inconsistency.
fix#7152
Previously the build artifacts did not include a signed timestamp, so
when the certificate expired the validation of the artifact would fail.
Now we sign against a timestamp server such that the artifact will
always be valid regardless of the disposition of the certificate.
Closes#7360 and #7059.
Ensure that OpenSSL has enough entropy (at least 256 bits) for its PRNG.
The entropy pool starts out empty and needs to fill up before the PRNG
can be used securely.
OpenSSL normally fills the pool automatically but not when someone
starts generating random numbers before the pool is full: in that case
OpenSSL keeps lowering the entropy estimate to thwart attackers trying
to guess the initial state of the PRNG.
When that happens, we wait until enough entropy is available, something
that normally should never take longer than a few milliseconds.
Fixes#7338.
The default entropy source is /dev/urandom on UNIX platforms, which is
okay but we can do better by seeding it from OpenSSL's entropy pool.
On Windows we can certainly do better; on that platform, V8 seeds the
random number generator using only the current system time.
Fixes#6250.
NB: This is a back-port of commit 7ac2391 from the master branch that
for some reason never got back-ported to the v0.10 branch.
The default on UNIX platforms in v0.10 is different and arguably worse
than it is with master: if no entropy source is provided, V8 3.14 calls
srandom() with a xor of the PID and the current time in microseconds.
That means that on systems with a coarse system clock, the initial
state of the PRNG may be easily guessable.
The situation on Windows is even more dire because there the PRNG is
seeded with only the current time... in milliseconds.
* Documentation upgrades
* Fix glob bug which prevents proper README publishing
* node-gyp upgrade to 0.13
* Documentation updates
* Add --save-exact to save an exact dep (instead of a range)
* alias 't' to 'test'
The `Agent#request()` function was removed in
f3189ace6b, so don't
use it in the documentation example. The function
wasn't documented in the first place.
Default to the `defaultAgent.protocol` when comparing the
user-specified `options.protocol` string. This is so that
`http.Agent` instances do not need to specify their own
`protocol` field, since we have the relevant information
already from the `defaultAgent`.
Note that the test case could be separately cherry-picked
to the `v0.10` branch, since it already passes correctly.
Fixes#7349.
Fixes the regression described in: http://git.io/2ds-WQ
Turn off -Werror when building V8, it hits -Werror=unused-local-typedefs
with g++ 4.8. The warning itself is harmless so don't abort the build.
This was originally implemented in commit d2ab314e back in 2011 but the
build process has gone through a few iterations since then, that change
no longer works.
`env.h` is an internal header file and should not be copied or exposed
to the users.
Additionally, export convenience `Throw*` methods with `v8::Isolate*` as
a first argument.
Fix up the dtrace/etw/systemtap infrastructure after the V8 upgrade in
commit 1c7bf24. The win32 changes are untested but can hardly make
things worse because node doesn't build on windows right now.
Fixes#7313 with some luck.
Don't call DecodeWrite() with a Buffer as its argument because it in
turn calls StringBytes::Write() and that method expects a Local<String>.
"Why then does that function take a Local<Value>?" I hear you ask.
Good question but I don't have the answer. I added a CHECK for good
measure and what do you know, all of a sudden a large number of crypto
tests started failing.
Calling DecodeWrite(BINARY) on a buffer is nonsensical anyway: if you
want the contents of the buffer, just copy out the data, there is no
need to decode it - and that's exactly what this commit does.
Fixes a great many instances of the following run-time error in debug
builds:
FATAL ERROR: v8::String::Cast() Could not convert to string
Fix a regression that was introduced in commit ce04c726 after the
upgrade to V8 3.24.
The new weak persistent handle API no longer gives you the original
persistent but still requires that you clear it inside your weak
callback.
Rearrange the code in src/smalloc.cc to keep track of the persistent
handle with the least amount of pain and try hard to share as much
code as possible between the 'just free it' and 'invoke my callback'
versions of the smalloc API.
Fixes#7309.
Conform to the Google styleguide more and make cpplint happy, add more
CHECK macros.
Preemptively addresses cpplint's readability/check warnings ("Consider
using CHECK_GT instead of CHECK(a > b)".)
Make calls to v8::Isolate::AdjustAmountOfExternalAllocatedMemory() take
special care when negating 32 bits unsigned types like size_t.
Before this commit, values were negated before they got promoted to
64 bits, meaning that on 32 bits architectures, a value like 42 got
cast to 4294967254 instead of -42.
That in turn made the garbage collector start scavenging like crazy
because it thought the system was out of memory.
That's bad enough but calls to AdjustAmountOfExternalAllocatedMemory()
were made from weak callbacks, i.e. at a time when the garbage collector
was already busy. It triggered asserts in debug builds and caused
random crashes and memory corruption in release builds.
The behavior in release builds is arguably a V8 bug and should perhaps
be reported upstream.
Partially fixes#7309 but requires further bug fixes to src/smalloc.cc
that I'll address in a follow-up commit.
The variable isn't actually used uninitialized but g++ 4.8 doesn't know
that. Set it to NULL to silence the following compiler warning:
../src/string_bytes.cc:247:29: warning: 'data' may be used
uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
unsigned a = hex2bin(src[i * 2 + 0]);
^
../src/string_bytes.cc:299:15: note: 'data' was declared here
const char* data;
^
V8 was upgraded from 3.22 to 3.24 in commit 1c7bf24. Upgrade source
files in test/addons/ and automatically generated tests from
doc/api/addons.markdown to the new V8 API.
This coincidentally fixes a bug in src/node_object_wrap.h where it was
still using the old V8 weak persistent handle interface, which is gone
in 3.24.
* ::jsstack -v prints function defintion
* ::jsprint works with objects with only numeric properties
* update tests to use builtin mdb_v8
* add more symbols to postmortem script - pending upstream
inclusion
Previously if you wanted to be notified of pending handles for pipes
you needed to use uv_read2_start, however in v0.11.22 you can query for
pending handles independently.
Internally we use hrtime to schedule when a timer will fire, to avoid
the perils of clock drift or other external operation making time go
backward. The timers ordering test should use the same timing mechanism
Fix the following valgrind warning:
Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
at 0x7D64E7: v8::internal::GlobalHandles::IterateAllRootsWithClassIds(v8::internal::ObjectVisitor*) (global-handles.cc:613)
by 0x94DCDC: v8::internal::NativeObjectsExplorer::FillRetainedObjects() (profile-generator.cc:2849)
# etc.
This was fixed upstream in r12903 and released in 3.15.2 but that commit
was never back-ported to the 3.14 branch that node.js v0.10 uses.
The code itself works okay; this commit simply shuffles the clauses in
an `if` statement to check that the node is in use before checking its
class id (which is uninitialized if the node is not in use.)
When sending a socket to a child process via IPC pipe,
`child_process.js` picks a raw UV handle from `_handle` property, sends
it, and assigns `null` to the property. Sending the same socket twice
was resulting in a runtime error, since we weren't handling the empty
`_handle` case.
In case of `null` `_handle` we should send just a plain text message
as passed it was passed to `.send()` and ignore the handle, letting
users handle such cases themselves instead of throwing the error at
runtime.
fix#5469
It's currently not really possible to compile native add-ons with
-fvisibility=hidden because that also hides the struct containing
the module definition.
The NODE_MODULE() and NODE_MODULE_DECL() macros are structured in
a way that makes it impossible to add a visibility attribute manually
so there is no escape hatch there.
That's why this commit adds an explicit visibility attribute to
the module definition. It doesn't help with node.js releases that
are already out there but at least it improves the situation going
forward.
If two timers run on the same tick, and the first timer uses a domain,
and then catches an exception and disposes of the domain, then the
second timer never runs. (And even if the first timer does not dispose
of the domain, the second timer could run under the wrong domain.)
This happens because timer.js uses "process.nextTick()" to schedule
continued processing of the timers for that tick. However, there was
an exception inside a domain, then "process.nextTick()" runs under
the domain of the first timer function, and will do nothing if
the domain has been disposed.
To avoid this, we temporarily save the value of "process.domain"
before calling nextTick so that it does not run inside any domain.
Previously if you cached process.nextTick and then require('domain')
subsequent nextTick() calls would not be caught because enqueued
functions were taking the wrong path. This keeps nextTick to a single
function reference and changes the implementation details after domain
has been required.
When `setImmediate(cb)` is called in `beforeExit` event handler the
consequent `uv_run(..., UV_RUN_NOWAIT)` may return `0`, even if there
was some active handles at start.
Fixes simple/test-beforeexit-event.js.
Unlike the 'exit' event, this event allows the user to schedule more
work and thereby postpone the exit. That also means that the
'beforeExit' event may be emitted many times, see the attached test
case for an example.
Refs #6305.
libuv gyp builds now require you to define the library disposition
(static or shared).
Also, libuv now supports vectored IO for file system reads and writes,
update to those function signatures
Between `ClientRequest` and `Agent`. The circular require was doing
weird things at load time, like making the `globalAgent` property
be `undefined` from within the context of the "_http_client"
module.
Removing the circular dependency completely fixes this.
This commit effectively removes the undocumented `Agent#request()`
and `Agent#get()` functions.
Don't invoke the `agent.requst()` or `agent.get()` functions
directly. Instead, use the public API and pass the agent
instance in as the `agent` option.
For the `request()` and `get()` functions. I could never
really understand why these two functions go through agent
first... Especially since the user could be passing `agent: false`
or a different Agent instance completely, in which `globalAgent`
will be completely bypassed.
Moved the relevant logic from `Agent#request()` into the
`ClientRequest` constructor.
Incidentally, this commit fixes#7012 (which was the original
intent of this commit).
This makes it so that the user may pass in a
`createConnection()` option, and they don't have
to pass `agent: false` at the same time.
Also adding a test for the `createConnection` option,
since none was in place before.
See #7014.
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
One test case in test-stream2-stderr-sync.js was creating a TTY
object using an undocumented constructor and passing in fd 2.
However, this is running in a child process and fd 2 is actually
a pipe, not a TTY.
The constructor fails on Windows and causes the handle type to be
left uninitialized, which later causes an assert to fail.
On Unix, the constructor fails to retrieve the windows size but unlike
on Windows, it just leaves the size fields undefined and continues
with initializing the stream type, yielding a semi-usable object.
I could make the Windows version match Unix behavior, but it
seems to me that the test is relying on an implementation detail of
an undocumented API, and the Unix behavior is not necessarily more
correct than the Windows one. Thus it makes more sense to remove this
test.
NodeBIO::Gets was reading off the end of a buffer if it
didn't find a "\n" before the EOF. This behavior
was causing X509 certificates passed to `https.Agent`
via the "ca" option to be silently discarded. It also
was causing improper parsing of certs and keys
passed to https.Agent, but those problems were worked
around in cdde9a3.
Backed out workaround in `lib/crypto.js` from ccde9a3,
which now isn't needed. But keep the test introduced
in that commit, which tests properly for this
bug.
This bug was first introduced in a58f93f
Gist containing test code, bisection log, and notes:
https://gist.github.com/maxtaco/9211605
The linker was optimizing the static variables that were supposed
to trigger module initialization.
I am making them non-static, and dllexport so that they don't get
optimized away.
Fixes#7116
Ensure that the behavior of `assert.deepEqual` does not depend on
argument ordering when comparing an `arguments` object with a
non-`arguments` object.
This test is particularly pathological, and requires a ton of time to
run, we need to find a better way to manage it but in general this path
is fairly safe these days.
bufferSize is now a getter that shows all that has not been
acknowledged by the os, as well as in the buffer state. The test is
only looking to verify the js verified state.
Scheduling of next ticks from within the next tick handler will result
in a tight execution loop where a timer cannot break into.
This test was invalid
We were being very aggressive in our connection creations, resulting
in the pipeline flood detection to drop us. Relax how fast we're
creating these connections so the gc can run all its tests.
It wasn't doing anything, and actually due to
3ae0b17c76, it was causing
the readline `prompt()` function to be overwritten
which throws an error in the REPL shortly after.
Expose localPort for binding to a specific port for outbound
connections.
If localAddress is not specified '0.0.0.0' is used for ip4 and '::'
for ip6 connections.
Fixes#7092
The reason this wasn't working was because after restart, when restoring
breakpoints the scripts wasn't loaded, so the breakpoint.script was
undefined. As a fix I added another check to use breakpoint.scriptReq
instead of breakpoint.script, which is the same except when the
breakpoint is a function.
fixes#7027
In some scenarios this will strip the DOF sections for DTrace, and in a
future world where we re-export all static libraries it would defeat
that purpose.
If an input stream would emit `end` event, like
`fs.createReadStream`, then readline need to get the last line
correctly even though that line isnt ended with `\n`.
Given the assert message, and the fact that endCb is always true
in the assert, I am pretty sure the test author was intending
to test for finishEvent, not endCb.
In this test, an HTTP server was ending the response before
consuming all the data sent in the PUT request.
Ending the response would cause the socket to be destroyed,
and since there is some data still to be read, an ECONNRESET is
surfaced on the client side, event though the client has already
ended its side and even seen a 'finish' event.
See:
http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec8.html#sec8.2.2
While it is certainly admissible for the server to send a response
before consuming the entire request, it seems reasonable to
expect that the server would close the connection afterwards
and that the ECONNRESET would be raised on the client.
So I have changed the test to wait until the entire request has been
consumed before sending the response.
Before sending a socket from a cluster master to a worker,
we would call listen in UV but not handle the error.
I made createServerHandle call listen on Windows so we get a chance
the handle any bind/listen errors early.
This fix is 100% windows specific.
It fixes test-cluster-bind-twice and
test-cluster-shared-handle-bind-error on Windows.
This implements the user-facing APIs that lets one run a child process
and block until it exits.
Logic shared with the async counterpart of each function was refactored
to enable code reuse.
Docs and tests are included.
Don't use argument as callback if it's not a valid callback function.
Throw a valid exception instead explaining the issue.
Adds to #7070 ("DNS — Throw meaningful error(s)").
The number of connections achieved by the test can vary by platform
and by machine. Lowering the acceptance threshold so that the
test passes on Windows.
Don't use argument as callback if it's not a valid callback function.
Throw a valid exception instead explaining the issue. Adds to #7070
("DNS — Throw meaningful error(s)").
Make vm.runInContext() and vm.runInNewContext() stop copying the Proxy
object from the parent context into the new context when --harmony or
--harmony_proxies is in effect because it overwrites the new context's
native Proxy object.
This commit also adds a regression test for Harmony symbols. They work
okay in the current implementation and the test should ensure it stays
that way.
Conditional globals like 'gc' should only be recognized when --expose_gc
is set. The global.gc feature check works only when done eagerly, else
it lets through a leaked variable called 'gc'.
Before, `new String('foo')` would be inspected as `"{}"` which
is simply not very helpful. Now, a more meaningful
`"[String: 'foo']"` result will be returned from `util.inspect()`.
Boxed String, Boolean, and Number types are all supported.
Closes#7047
Try embedding the ` ... ^` lines inside the `SyntaxError` (or any other
native error) object before giving up and printing them to the stderr.
fix#6920fix#1310
The AsyncListener API has been moved into the "tracing" module in order
to keep the process object free from unnecessary clutter.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Now the second field in asyncFlags will tell if the provider is
currently being watched, or listened for.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
These will be used to allow users to filter for which types of calls
they wish their callbacks to run.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
"flags" could mean one of many things, and multiple flag types could be
checked. So make the field more explicit on what type of flags are being
stored.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
Add a new 'tracing' module with a v8 property that lets the user
register listeners for gc events. The listeners are invoked after
every garbage collection cycle with 'before' and 'after' statistics.
Useful for monitoring tools that want to keep track of memory usage.
Create a new HandleScope before looking up the object context with
v8::Object::CreationContext(), else we leak the Local<Context> into
the current HandleScope.
That's relatively harmless unless the HandleScope is long-lived and
MakeCallback() is called a lot. In a scenario like that, we may end
up leaking a lot of memory.
What is unfortunate about this change is that we're trying hard to
eradicate the node_isolate global. Longer term, we will probably have
to change the MakeCallback() prototype to one that requires an explicit
v8::Isolate* argument.
Make it possible to invoke MakeCallback() on a v8::Value but only for
the variant that takes a v8::Function as the thing to call.
The const char* and v8::String variants still require a v8::Object
because the function to call is looked up as a property on the receiver,
but that only works when the receiver is an object, not a primitive.
If the call to writeBuffer completes asynchronously, we need to have
an oncomplete callback on the request object no matter what. The
writeQueueSize seems irrelvant to that regard.
Note that on Windows writeBuffer always completes asynchronously.
See related commit 9836a4eeda
Update the list of root certificates in src/node_root_certs.h with
tools/mk-ca-bundle.pl and update src/node_crypto.cc to make use of
the new format.
Fixes#6013.
`tls_wrap.cc` was crashing in an `Unwrap` call, when non
`SecureContext` object was passed to it. Check that the passed object
is a `SecureContext` instance before unwrapping it.
fix#7008
Original commit message:
VS2013 contains a number of improvements, most notably the addition
of all C99 math functions.
I'm a little bit concerned about the change I had to make in
cpu-profiler.cc, but I spent quite a bit of time looking at it and was
unable to figure out any rational explanation for the warning. It's
possible it's spurious. Since it seems like a useful warning in
general though, I chose not to disable globally at the gyp level.
I do think someone with expertise here should probably try to
determine if this is a legitimate warning.
BUG=288948
R=dslomov@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/23449035
NOTE: Path applied without `cpu-profiler.cc` changes because in our
version it was looking totally different.
The test is no longer valid for the original scenario.
It now fails intermittently because of two other issues:
1. Since the client is only processing one readable event, the
client request is not enough to keep the process alive and the
process can exit before the desired events have been raised.
2. Reading just 1 byte is not enough to guarantee that the parser
will eventually consume all the data and raise the desired
parse error. I tried postponing the server.close() to address
the issue at [1], but then the test just hangs sometimes.
Even if stdio streams are opened as file streams, we should not ever try
to close them. This could be accomplished by passing `autoClose: false`
in options on their creation.
Even if stdio streams are opened as file streams, we should not ever try
to close them. This could be accomplished by passing `autoClose: false`
in options on their creation.
This was originally introduced in 6034701 to prevent the closing
brace being pushed onto the next line if an object is longer than
the max width, however the functionality was removed in d164989 but
the supplementary variables (and operations) were left behind
This matches how libuv handles the definition of ssize_t, by
typedef'ing intptr_t to ssize_t.
However, in the future we will use portable types from stddef.h
It's saner to check exit codes or signals to determine if the process
actually aborted. On OSX and Linux the exit code is 134, on SunOS it
propagates the SIGABRT signal
Built-in modules should be automatically registered, replacing the
static module list. Add-on modules should also be automatically
registered via DSO constructors. This improves flexibility in adding
built-in modules and is also a prerequisite to pure-C addon modules.
Right now no default ciphers are use in, e.g. https.get, meaning that
weak export ciphers like TLS_RSA_EXPORT_WITH_DES40_CBC_SHA are
accepted.
To reproduce:
node -e "require('https').get({hostname: 'www.howsmyssl.com', \
path: '/a/check'}, function(res) {res.on('data', \
function(d) {process.stdout.write(d)})})"
The test was not waiting for all the worker-created sockets
to be listening before calling cluster.disconnect().
As a result, the channels with the workers could get closed
before all the socket handles had been passed to them, leading
to various errors.
Original commit message:
ares_parse_txt_reply: return a ares_txt_reply node for each sub-string
Previously, the function would wrongly return all substrings merged into
one.
fix#6931
Socket may become not `readable`, but http should not rely on this
property and should not think that it means that no data will ever
arrive from it. In fact, it may arrive in a next tick and, since
`this.push(null)` was already called, it will result in a error like
this:
Error: stream.push() after EOF
at readableAddChunk (_stream_readable.js:143:15)
at IncomingMessage.Readable.push (_stream_readable.js:123:10)
at HTTPParser.parserOnBody (_http_common.js:132:22)
at Socket.socketOnData (_http_client.js:277:20)
at Socket.EventEmitter.emit (events.js:101:17)
at Socket.Readable.read (_stream_readable.js:367:10)
at Socket.socketCloseListener (_http_client.js:196:10)
at Socket.EventEmitter.emit (events.js:123:20)
at TCP.close (net.js:479:12)
fix#6784
The test was calling server.close() after write on the socket
had completed. However the fact that the write had completed was
not valid indication that the server had received the data.
This would result in a premutaure closing of the server and
an ECONNRESET event on the client.
When creating TLSSocket on top of the regular socket that already
contains some received data, `_tls_wrap.js` should try to write all that
data to the internal `SSL*` instance.
fix#6940
* uv: Upgrade to v0.10.23
* npm: Upgrade to v1.3.24
* v8: Fix enumeration for objects with lots of properties
* child_process: fix spawn() optional arguments (Sam Roberts)
* cluster: report more errors to workers (Fedor Indutny)
* domains: exit() only affects active domains (Ryan Graham)
* src: OnFatalError handler must abort() (Timothy J Fontaine)
* stream: writes may return false but forget to emit drain (Yang Tianyang)
When the domain specific code was reintroduced in 828f145 the
conditional to check and clear the nextTickQueue if many items had run
was not introduced. This allows for the application to run out of memory
if domains are being used in an infinite recursive loop.
ERR_load_crypto_strings() registers the error strings for
all libcrypto functions, SSL_load_error_strings() does the
same, but also registers the libssl error strings.
Make the HMAC digest method configurable. Update crypto.pbkdf2() and
crypto.pbkdf2Sync() to take an extra, optional digest argument.
Before this commit, SHA-1 (admittedly the most common method) was used
exclusively.
Fixes#6553.
Now that the context stores the active execution stack, and because
removeAsyncListener() always removed the AsyncListener from the queue
and the stack, there's no need to keep a stack around anymore. Instead
the active asyncQueue and the currentContext is able to handle it all.
Signed-off-by: Forrest L Norvell <ogd@aoaioxxysz.net>
Performance gains are ~4x (~1.5us), but still much slower than a naive
approach. There is some duplicate work done between join(), normalize()
and normalizeArray() so additional optimizations are possible.
Note that this only improves the POSIX implementation.
Thanks to @isaacs and @othiym23 for helping with this optimization.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
After one of OpenSSL updates we have stopped accepting PEM private keys
and certificates that doesn't end with a newline (`\n`) character.
Handle this regression in `crypto.js` to make less trouble to our users.
fix#6892
Do not throw in internal C++ methods, that clobbers logic and may lead
to the situations, where both exception was thrown and the value was
returned (via `args.GetReturnValue().Set()`). That doesn't play nicely
with v8.
fix#6912
Now that process.createAsyncListener() returns a unique object instance
it is no longer necessary to compare the uid's of the objects.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
It was possible that the same AL instance was run twice if it were both
attached to the currentContext then again added to the new asyncQueue
generated for the new stack.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
The ability to add/remove an AsyncListener to an object after its
creation was an artifact of trying to get AL working with the domain
module. Now that is no longer necessary and other features are going to
be implemented that would be affected by this functionality. So the code
will be removed for now to simplify the implementation process.
In the future this code will likely be reintroduced, but after some
other more important matters have been addressed.
None of this functionality was documented, as is was meant specifically
for domain specific implementation work arounds.
Signed-off-by: Timothy J Fontaine <tjfontaine@gmail.com>
All C++ code should be using `args.GetIsolate()` or `env->isolate()`.
Using static `node_isolate` var limits possible future functionality
(like multi-isolate support).
This test was originally intended to guard against regressions for
commit 16b59cbc74.
As such, it only needs to ensure that process exit has not been held up
by the date cache timer, which would fire on the next second.
We now wait to connect to the debuggee until we know that
its error stream has data, to ensure that the output message
"connecting..... ok" appears after "Debugger listening on port xyz"
I also increased the test timeout to let the more complex
tests finish in time on Windows
This change fixes the following unit tests on Windows:
test-debugger-repl.js
test-debugger-repl-term.js
test-debugger-repl-utf8.js
test-debugger-repl-restart.js
addon_register_func and its cousin addon_context_register_func are type
definitions, dllimport and dllexport are name mangling directives, i.e.
they're quite unrelated concepts. MinGW complains about mixing them
when cross-compiling native add-ons.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Bert Belder <bertbelder@gmail.com>
Before this commit, verification exceptions had err.message set to the
OpenSSL error code (e.g. 'UNABLE_TO_VERIFY_LEAF_SIGNATURE').
This commit moves the error code to err.code and replaces err.message
with a human-readable error. Example:
// before
{
message: 'UNABLE_TO_VERIFY_LEAF_SIGNATURE'
}
// after
{
code: 'UNABLE_TO_VERIFY_LEAF_SIGNATURE',
message: 'unable to verify the first certificate'
}
UNABLE_TO_VERIFY_LEAF_SIGNATURE is a good example of why you want this:
the error code suggests that it's the last certificate that fails to
validate while it's actually the first certificate in the chain.
Going by the number of mailing list posts and StackOverflow questions,
it's a source of confusion to many people.
Spawn's arguments were documented to be optional, as they are for the
other similar child_process APIs, but the code was missing. Result was
`child_process.spawn('node', {})` errored when calling slice() on an
Object, now it behaves as the documentation said it would.
domain.create().exit() should not clear the domain stack if the domain
instance does not exist within the stack.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
spawn stdio options can be a 'stream', but the following code
fails with "Incorrect value for stdio stream: [object Object]",
despite being a stream. The problem is the test isn't really
for a stream, its for an object with a numeric `.fd` property,
and streams do not have an fd until their async 'open' event
has occurred. This is reasonable, but was not documented.
child_process.spawn('date', [], {stdio: [
'ignore',
fs.createWriteStream('out.txt',{flags:'a'}),
'ignore']})
The RR cluster scheduler replaces the normal StreamWrap handle. Because
of this the AsyncListener method failed to be in place when domains were
in use.
The issue was resolved in 828f145 by reverting having domains use
AsyncListeners.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
Before when an AsyncListener object was created and the "create"
callback returned a value, it was necessary to construct a new Object
with the same callbacks but add a place for the new storage value.
Now, instead, a separate storage array is kept on the context which is
used for any return value of the "create" callback. This significantly
reduces the number of Objects that need to be created.
Also added a flags property to the context to quickly check if a
specific callback was available either on the context or on the
AsyncListener instance itself.
Few other minor changes for readability that were difficult to separate
into their own commit.
This has not been optimized yet.
This is a slightly modified revert of bc39bdd.
Getting domains to use AsyncListeners became too much of a challenge
with many edge cases. While this is still a goal, it will have to be
deferred for now until more test coverage can be provided.
Forcibly disable -Werror, the old { 'werror': '' } hack in node.gyp
no longer works with newer versions of V8.
We support a wide range of compilers, it's simply not feasible to
squelch all warnings, never mind that the libraries in deps/ are
not under our control.
Fixes#6817.
If a write is above the highWaterMark, _write still manages to
fully send it synchronously, _writableState.length will be adjusted down
to 0 synchronously with the write returning false, but 'drain' will
not be emitted until process.nextTick.
If another small write which is below highWaterMark is issued before
process.nextTick happens, _writableState.needDrain will be reset to false,
and the drain event will never be fired.
So we should check needDrain before setting it up, which prevents it
from inproperly resetting to false.
Instead of checking the uid on the array index of the queue, instead the
object property "uid" was checked on the queue iteself. Because this
will always evaluate to "undefined" the same listener could be added
multiple times to the same context.
There was a flaw in the old API that has been fixed. Now the
asyncListener callback is now the "create" object property in the
callback object, and is optional.
The fact that the "exit" event passes the exit code as an argument
as omitted from the documentation. This adds the explanation and
augments the example code to show that.
Master was disconnecting its workers as soon as they both started up.
Meanwhile, the workers were trying to listen. Its a race, sometimes the
disconnect would happen between when worker gets the response message,
and acks that message with a 'listening'. This worked OK after v0.11
introduced a behaviour where disconnect would always exit the worker,
but once that backwards-incompatible behaviour is removed, the worker
lives long enough to try and respond to the master, and child_process
errors at the attempt to send from a disconnected child.
This is a problem present in both v0.10, and v0.11, where the 'setup'
event is synchronously emitted by `cluster.setupMaster()`, a mostly
harmless anti-pattern.
Fix inadvertent v0.11 changes to the definition of suicide, particularly
the relationship between suicide state, the disconnect event, and when
exit should occur.
In v0.10, workers don't forcibly exit on disconnect, it doesn't give
them time to do a graceful finish of open client connections, they exit
under normal node rules - when there is nothing left to do. But on
unexpected disconnect they do exit so the workers aren't left around
after the master.
Note that a test as-written was invalid, it failed against the v0.10
cluster API, demonstrating that it was an undocumented API change.
Fixes issue in 0.11 where callback doesn't occur if worker count is
currently zero. In 0.10 callback occurs after worker count is zero, and
occurs in next tick if worker count is currently zero.
QueryString.stringify() allowed a fourth argument that was used as a
conditional in the return value, but was undocumented, not used by core
and always was always false/undefiend. So the argument and conditional
have been removed.
Signed-off-by: Trevor Norris <trev.norris@gmail.com>
After landing 6ed861d it is no longer possible to reliably monkey-patch
the EventEmitter constructor. However there's valid use cases for that,
and makes for easier debugging. Therefore, move the guts of the
constructor to a separate function which is monkey-patchable.
Closes#6693
The UNIX domain is also known as the LOCAL domain (AF_LOCAL), and
node/libuv implements it on Windows using named pipes. The API
documentation did not describe the naming rules for named pipes, and
also repeatedly described `listen(path)` as being UNIX, which it is not
on Windows.
Closes#6743
Removing a hack intended to shortcut the resolution of 'localhost'
but which doesn't work for ipv6.
This was introduced in 2876141c42.
However it seems that the problems that this was trying to
circumvent has gone away ages ago, when dns resolution on
Windows started relying on Win32 GetAddrInfoW, which was
probably with be2320d408.
Fixes test-net-connect-options-ipv6.js on Windows.
The %p is replaced with the current PID. This used to work in node.js
v0.9.7 but it seems to have been lost somewhere along the way.
This commit makes the fix from 6b713b52 ("cluster: make --prof work for
workers") work again. Without it, all log data ends up in a single
file and is unusable because the addresses are all wrong.
Eliminate a race condition between uv_async_send and the closing of the
corresponding handle.
Also made errors in Watchdog constructor call abort()
Fixes#6088
The 1.3.19 release had a critical bug: any packages published with it
could not be installed, because the shasum would be incorrect.
Thankfully, 1.3.19 was published using 1.3.19, so could not be installed
by any users! However, if it goes out as part of a Node.js release,
then obviously that would be a problem.
This is a comment change, where it originally says disabling TLS
Compression protects against BEAST attack. But in fact, it is the
CRIME attack(Compression Ratio Info-leak Made Easy) that makes use
of TLS Compression and not BEAST.
BEAST(Browser Exploit Against SSL/TLS) is an entirely another variant
making use of the chosen boundary attack against CBC mode in
encryption.
Just making sure, that the exact reason for disabling TLS compression
must be made clear and not be misleading with some other attack.
Quoting CVE-2013-6639:
The DehoistArrayIndex function in hydrogen-dehoist.cc in Google V8
before 3.22.24.7, as used in Google Chrome before 31.0.1650.63,
allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (out-of-bounds
write) or possibly have unspecified other impact via JavaScript code
that sets the value of an array element with a crafted index.
Quoting CVE-2013-6640:
The DehoistArrayIndex function in hydrogen-dehoist.cc in Google V8
before 3.22.24.7, as used in Google Chrome before 31.0.1650.63,
allows remote attackers to cause a denial of service (out-of-bounds
read) via JavaScript code that sets a variable to the value of an
array element with a crafted index.
Like 6b92a7, this is unlikely to affect node.js because it only runs
local, trusted code. However, if there exists some module somewhere
that populates an array index with remotely provided data this could
very well be used to crash a remote server running node. Defense in
depth and all.
This is a backport of upstream commit r17801. Original commit log:
Limit size of dehoistable array indices
LOG=Y
BUG=chromium:319835,chromium:319860
R=dslomov@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/74113002
The test is expecting an invalid result for the loopback
interface network mask, but this issue was fixed in
libuv commit 1d5c61a8b31257733c41fb507762d3eb56eecb2d
Closes#5262#6673
When `symlink`, `link` or `rename` report EEXIST, ENOTEMPTY or EPERM -
the destination file name should be included in the error message,
instead of source file name.
fix#6510
NOTE: Also removed `.receivedShutdown` method of `Connection` it wasn't
documented anywhere, and was rewritten with `true` after receiving
`close_notify`.
fix#6638
FSEventStream may emit events that happened right before it has started.
Ignore changes emitted for the directory itself, since they may come
from the stale events.
This was failing if the file didn't already exist.
Fixes unit tests on Windows:
* test\simple\test-http-curl-chunk-problem.js
* test\simple\test-pipe-file-to-http.js
This adds two new member functions getAuthTag and setAuthTag that
are useful for AES-GCM encryption modes. Use getAuthTag after
Cipheriv.final, transmit the tag along with the data and use
Decipheriv.setAuthTag to have the encrypted data verified.
gyp by default now tries to process gyp files in parallel by using
python's multiprocessing module, but it has problems on oddball
platforms. We don't have many files or complex dependency chains that
would benefit from parallel processing so disable by deafult
fixes#6640
The android generator for gyp currently doesn't support
--generator-output - this makes embedding node.js as project dependency
difficult for android projects.
Note: the generated files in deps/uv should be ignored in libuv's
.gitignore
1. Swallow errors when sending internal NODE_HANDLE_ACK messages, so
they don't crash the process.
2. Queue process.disconnect() if there are any pending queued messages.
Fixes test-child-process-fork-net2.js on win.
Wildcard server names should not match subdomains.
Quote from RFC2818:
...Names may contain the wildcard
character * which is considered to match any single domain name
component or component fragment. E.g., *.a.com matches foo.a.com but
not bar.foo.a.com. f*.com matches foo.com but not bar.com.
fix#6610
Adds a --with-icu-path= switch to the configure script. Requires that
the user checks out the copy of libicu that's bundled with chromium to
a fixed directory. It's still a little rough around the edges but it
works.
Fixes#6371.
When calling `encOut` in loop, `maybeInitFinished()` may invoke
`clearOut`'s loop, leading to the writing of interleaved data
(encrypted and cleartext) into the one shared pool.
Move `maybeInitFinished()` out of the loop and add assertion for
future.
The null signal test existed, but only tested the case where the target
process existed, not when it did not exist.
Also clarified that SIGUSR1 is reserved by Node.js only for receiveing,
its not at all reserved when sending a signal with kill().
kill(pid, 'O_RDWR'), or any other node constant, "worked". I fixed this
by also checking for 'SIG'. The same as done in the isSignal() function.
Now the signal names supported by process.kill() are the same as those
supported by process.on().
Previously we were building the symbols, but the linker was garbage
collecting the symbols because they weren't used. Inform the linker
that we want to keep all symbols from v8 around.
HTTP Parser instance was freed twice, leading to the reusal of it
in several different requests simultaneously.
The flow:
`socketCloseListener` is firing, which calls `socket.read()` to flush
any queued data, `socket.buffer` has data which emits and fires
`socketOnData` in sync, this triggers a parser error which frees the
parser, `socketCloseListener` resumes execution only to have the wrong
parser associated with the socket.
The fix is to only cache the parser after the flushing from the socket,
and to assert in `socketOnData` that `socket === parser.socket`
fix#6451
Replace call to Number::New() with a call to Integer::NewFromUnsigned().
Profiling a Real World(TM) application with perf(1) suggests that the
conversion of its argument from integer to double is disproportionally
costly: over 60% of CPU cycles accountable to WriteStringImpl() are
attributable to the conversion.
After changing it to Integer::NewFromUnsigned(), WriteStringImpl()
has dropped from the 'most costly functions' top ten altogether.
Add a 'serialNumber' property to the object that is returned by
tls.CryptoStream#getPeerCertificate(). Contains the certificate's
serial number encoded as a hex string. The format is identical to
`openssl x509 -serial -in path/to/certificate`.
Fixes#6583.
Format negative zero as '-0' instead of as '0', as it does not behave
identically to positive zero. ((-0).toString() still returns '0' as
required by ES5 9.8.1.2).
Fixesjoyent/node#6548.
Closesjoyent/node#6550.
context._asyncQueue shouldn't be exposed as asyncQueue, as it allows
modification of queues already attached to an event. Which is not
supposed to happend. Instead context._asyncQueue should be copied.
Check that `listeners` is actually an array before trying to manipulate it
because it won't be if no regular event listeners have been registered yet
but there are 'removeListener' event listeners.
Removing the depth counter while processing the nextTickQueue made it
possible to run out of memory if in an infinite recursive loop using
nextTick(). There was also an edge case where too many callbacks were
pushed onto the nextTickQueue, while not actually being recursive.
This is being done to prevent possible cryptic FATAL ERROR messages from
popping up, and issues being posted about them.
* uv: upgrade to v0.11.15 (Timothy J Fontaine)
* v8: upgrade to 3.22.24.5 (Timothy J Fontaine)
* buffer: remove warning when no encoding is passed (Trevor Norris)
* build: make v8 use random seed for hash tables (Ben Noordhuis)
* crypto: build with shared openssl without NPN (Ben Noordhuis)
* crypto: update root certificates (Ben Noordhuis)
* debugger: pass on v8 debug switches (Ben Noordhuis)
* domain: use AsyncListener API (Trevor Norris)
* fs: add recursive subdirectory support to fs.watch (Nick Simmons)
* fs: make fs.watch() non-recursive by default (Ben Noordhuis)
* http: cleanup freeSockets when socket destroyed (fengmk2)
* http: force socket encoding to be null (isaacs)
* http: make DELETE requests set `req.method` (Nathan Rajlich)
* node: add AsyncListener support (Trevor Norris)
* src: remove global HandleScope that hid memory leaks (Ben Noordhuis)
* tls: add ECDH ciphers support (Erik Dubbelboer)
* tls: do not default to 'localhost' servername (Fedor Indutny)
* tls: more accurate wrapping of connecting socket (Fedor Indutny)
After the uv upgrade, uv_spawn will now fail faster for certain
failures like ENOENT. However, our tests and other people may be
depending on that error being passed to the callback instead of a
throw.
v8's `messages.js` file's `CallSiteGetMethodName` is running through all
object properties and getter to figure out method name of function that
appears in stack trace. This run-through will also read `fd` property of
`UDPWrap` instance's javascript object, making `UNWRAP()` fail.
As a simple alternative to the test case above, one could just keep
reference to the dgram handle and try accessing `handle.fd` after it has
been fully closed.
fix#6536
Before this commit, passing --debugger and other V8 debug switches to
node.js made node print a usage message and exit.
Rewrite the debug argument parser so it only consumes switches that we
understand and pass everything else as-is to V8.
A side effect of this change is that switches like --debugger_agent and
--debugger_port now work. That kind of obsoletes our debugger switches
because they implement pretty much the same functionality but let's
leave them in for now for the sake of convenience and backwards
compatibility.
Fixes#6526.
Buffer#write() was showing the deprecation warning when only
buf.write('string') was passed. This is incorrect since the encoding is
always optional.
Argument order should follow:
Buffer#write(string[, offset[, length]][, encoding])
(yeah, not confusing at all)
Emitting an event within a `EventEmitter#once` callback of the same
event name will cause subsequent `EventEmitter#once` listeners of the
same name to be called multiple times.
var emitter = new EventEmitter();
emitter.once('e', function() {
emitter.emit('e');
console.log(1);
});
emitter.once('e', function() {
console.log(2);
});
emitter.emit('e');
// Output
// 2
// 1
// 2
Fix the issue, by calling the listener method only if it was not
already called.
BaseObject is a class that just handles the Persistent handle attached
to the class instance.
This also removed WeakObject. Reordering the inheritance chain helps
prevent unneeded calls on instances that don't call MakeCallback.
Make it more difficult to accidentally leak handles by removing the
top-level HandleScope. Now if there's no valid HandleScope now, V8
will complain and, in debug builds, abort.
* npm: Upgrade to 1.3.14
* uv: Upgrade to v0.10.19
* child_process: don't assert on stale file descriptor events (Fedor Indutny)
* darwin: Fix "Not Responding" in Mavericks activity monitor (Fedor Indutny)
* debugger: Fix bug in sb() with unnamed script (Maxim Bogushevich)
* repl: do not insert duplicates into completions (Maciej Małecki)
* src: Fix memory leak on closed handles (Timothy J Fontaine)
* tls: prevent stalls by using read(0) (Fedor Indutny)
* v8: use correct timezone information on Solaris (Maciej Małecki)
Fixes a 4 byte leak on handles closing. AKA The Walmart leak.
MakeCallback doesn't have a HandleScope. That means the callers scope
will retain ownership of created handles from MakeCallback and related.
There is by default a wrapping HandleScope before uv_run, if the caller
doesn't have a HandleScope on the stack the global will take ownership
which won't be reaped until the uv loop exits.
If a uv callback is fired, and there is no enclosing HandleScope in the
cb, you will appear to leak 4-bytes for every invocation. Take heed.
cc @hueniverse
`timezone` variable contains the difference, in seconds, between UTC and
local standard time (see `man 3 localtime` on Solaris).
Call to `tzset` is required to apply contents of `TZ` variable to
`timezone` variable.
BUG=v8:2064
Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10967066
Patch from Maciej Małecki <me@mmalecki.com>.
This is a back-port of upstream commit r12802 and a forward port of
commit 9fa953d from the v0.8 branch. V8 3.22 in the master branch
contains the patch so no further forward-porting is necessary.
Fix invalid `hasOwnProperty` function usage.
For example, before in the REPL:
```
> Ar<Tab>
Array
Array ArrayBuffer
```
Now:
```
> Ar<Tab>
Array
ArrayBuffer
```
Fixes#6255.
Closes#6498.
Create a HandleScope before calling the Environment::GetCurrent() that
takes a v8::Isolate* as an argument because it creates a handle with
the call to v8::Isolate::CurrentContext().
This commit removes the simple/test-event-emitter-memory-leak test for
being unreliable with the new garbage collector: the memory pressure
exerted by the test case is too low for the garbage collector to kick
in. It can be made to work again by limiting the heap size with the
--max_old_space_size=x flag but that won't be very reliable across
platforms and architectures.
Update the list of root certificates in src/node_root_certs.h with
tools/mk-ca-bundle.pl and update src/node_crypto.cc to make use of
the new format.
Fixes#6013.
The security fix from commit 6b92a713 also back-ported the test case.
Said test case relies on API that is only available in newer versions
of V8 and, as a result, broke the `make native` and `make <arch.mode>`
builds. This commit reverts that part of the back-port. Fixes the
following build error:
../test/cctest/test-api.cc: In function ‘void TestRegress260106()’:
../test/cctest/test-api.cc:17712:34: error: ‘class v8::Context’ has
no member named ‘GetIsolate’
Upstream V8 as of commit v8/v8@4bc70e8 uses a fixed seed of 314159265
for hash tables unless instructed otherwise. Tell V8 to keep using a
random seed.
CONTAINER_OF was introduced a while ago but was not used consistently
everywhere yet. This commit fixes that.
Why CONTAINER_OF instead of container_of? The former makes it crystal
clear that it's a macro, not a function.
Unbreak the build when linking against a shared version of OpenSSL that
doesn't support NPN (Next Protocol Negotiation.)
Fixes the following build error:
../src/node_crypto.cc:140: error: no member function
'AdvertiseNextProtoCallback' declared in
'node::crypto::SSLWrap<node::TLSCallbacks>'
../src/node_crypto.cc:147: error: no member function
'SelectNextProtoCallback' declared in
'node::crypto::SSLWrap<node::TLSCallbacks>'
Otherwise it might get stall (`Peek()` will return zero-length chunk)
in following situation:
1. `Write(kBufferLength)`
2. `Read(kBufferLength)`
3. `Write(anything)`
4. `Peek()` => `len=0`
Otherwise the string triggers an assertion error in node_http_parser.c,
line 370:
assert(Buffer::HasInstance(args[0]) == true);
because the first argument is not a Buffer object.
When socket, passed in `tls.connect()` `options` argument is not yet
connected to the server, `_handle` gets assigned to a `net.Socket`,
instead of `TLSSocket`.
When socket is connecting to the remote server (i.e. not yet connected,
but already past dns resolve phase), derive `_connecting` property from
it, because otherwise `afterConnect()` will throw an assertion.
fix#6443
|i| and |j| arent't used when building without crypto support. Hat tip
to Brian White.
Rename |l| to |k| while we're here because it's quite hard to discern
from |i| or |j| with some fonts.
The domain module has been switched over to use the domain module API as
much as currently possible. There are still some hooks in the
EventEmitter, but hopefully we can remove those in the future.
pbkdf2_req has been renamed to PBKDF2Request and converted to a class.
It now uses AsyncWrap::MakeCallback.
Also includes, using env()->ondone_string() instead of "ondone" and
using malloc instead of new char[].
Since RandomBytesRequest makes a call to MakeCallback, needed it to be
a class so AsyncWrap could handle any async listeners.
Also added a simple test for an issue had during implementation where
the memory was being released and returned.
AsyncListener is a JS API that works in tandem with the AsyncWrap class
to allow the user to be alerted to key events in the life cycle of an
asynchronous event. The AsyncWrap class has its own MakeCallback
implementation that core will be migrated to use, and uses state sharing
techniques to allow quicker communication between JS and C++ whether the
async event callbacks need to be called.
Profiling suggested that on Linux sometimes over 10% of CPU time was
being spent inside the systemtap probe entry points in the binding
layer, even when the process was not actively being traced with the
`stap` tool.
That's why this commit makes it possible to use the *_ENABLED() macros
and bail out early when we're not being traced, reducing the overhead
of unused probes to (almost) zero.
Said macros were already being generated by `dtrace -h` but were not
usable because they rely on external definitions. To remedy that, we
now generate the accompanying object files with `dtrace -G`.
This commit includes a change to libuv that has been landed upstream in
commit joyent/libuv@3c172ea.
When `tls.connect()` is called with `socket` option, it should try to
reuse hostname previously passed to `net.connect()` and only after that
fall back to `'localhost'`.
fix#6409
Currently fs.watch does not have an option to specify if a directory
should be recursively watched for events across all subdirectories.
Several file watcher APIs support this. FSEvents on OS X > 10.5 is
one example. libuv has added support for FSEvents, but fs.watch had
no way to specify that a recursive watch was required.
fs.watch now has an additional boolean option 'recursive'. When set
to true, and when supported, fs.watch will return notifications for
the entire directory tree hierarchy rooted at the specified path.
There was no need to share state between C++ and JS for these two
values. So they have been moved to their respective locations. This will
help performance only a tiny bit, but it does help code complexity much
more.
We need to keep ObjectWrap around for module authors (we think), but
v8 3.21 broke node_object_wrap.h with respect to MSVC. Coincidentally,
we no longer use ObjectWrap at all in core, and native modules might
as well use their own entirely internal implementation if they need it.
Turns out that we don't use node_object_wrap.h any more in core,
and, with v8 3.21, it's breaking our Windows build. Removing refs
to it everywhere (and adding node.h in one case where it was the
only way node.h was being included), we have restored the Windows
build.
Previous behaviour was to drop to an openssl prompt
("Enter PEM pass phrase:") when supplying a private key with a
passphrase. This change adds a fourth, optional, paramter that
will be used as the passphrase.
To include this parameter in a backwards compatible way it was
necessary to expose the previously undocumented (and unexposed)
feature of being able to explitly setting the output encoding.
This addresses a current shortcoming of the V8 SetNamedPropertyHandler
function.
It does not provide a way to intercept Object.defineProperty(..) calls.
As a result, these properties are not copied onto the contextified
sandbox when a new global property is added via either a function
declaration or a Object.defineProperty(global, ...) call.
Note that any function declarations or Object.defineProperty() globals
that are created asynchronously (in a setTimeout, callback, etc.) will
happen AFTER the call to copy properties, and thus not be caught.
The way to properly fix this is to add some sort of a
Object::SetNamedDefinePropertyHandler() function that takes a callback,
which receives the property name and property descriptor as arguments.
Luckily, such situations are rare, and asynchronously-added globals
weren't supported by Node's VM module until 0.12 anyway. But, this
should be fixed properly in V8, and this copy function should be removed
once there is a better way.
Fix#6416
The list of supported HTTP methods is available in JS land now so there
is no longer any need to pass a stringified version of the method to the
parser callback, it can look up the method name for itself.
Saves a call to v8::Eternal::Get() in the common case and a costly
v8::String::NewFromOneByte() in the uncommon case.
Make the build rule depend on the build artifact (weakref.node) itself
rather than the directory it's built in. Depending on the directory
means that a build failure won't trigger a rebuild on the next
invocation because the directory's timestamp has been updated.
This is a back-port of commit 1189571 from the master branch that
hopefully fixes the following CI error:
executing: make test/gc/node_modules/weak/build/
make: *** No rule to make target `test/gc/node_modules/weak/build/'.
Command exited with non-zero: make test/gc/node_modules/weak/build/
Build step 'Execute NodeJS script' marked build as failure
When the socket closes, the client's http incoming message object was
emitting an 'aborted' event if it had not yet been ended.
However, it's possible, when a response is being repeatedly paused and
resumed (eg, if piped to a slow FS write stream), that there will be a
final chunk remaining in the js-land buffer when the socket is torn
down.
When that happens, the socketCloseListener function detects that we have
not yet reached the end of the response message data, and treats this as
an abrupt abort, immediately (and forcibly) ending the incoming message
data stream, and discarding that final chunk of data.
The result is that, for example, npm will have problems because tarballs
are missing a few bytes off the end, every time.
Closes GH-6402
Make the build rule depend on the build artifact (weakref.node) itself
rather than the directory it's built in. Depending on the directory
means that a build failure won't trigger a rebuild on the next
invocation because the directory's timestamp has been updated.
If a client sends a lot more pipelined requests than we can handle, then
we need to provide backpressure so that the client knows to back off.
Do this by pausing both the stream and the parser itself when the
responses are not being read by the downstream client.
Backport of 085dd30
- fixed some incomprehensible wording ("event assigned to..."?)
- removed undocumented and unnecessary process properties from example
- corrected the docs on the default for the exec setting
- described when workers are removed from cluster.workers
- described addressType, which was documented as existing, but not what
values it might have
- spell out more clearly the limitations of setupMaster
- describe disconnect in sufficient detail that why a child does or does
not exit can be understood
- clarify which cluster functions and events are available on process or
just on the worker, as well as which are not available in children,
- don't describe events as the same, when they have receive different
arguments
- fix misleading disconnect example: since disconnect already calls
close on all servers, doing it again in the example is a no-op, not
the "force close" it was claimed to be
- document the error event, not catching it will kill your node
- describe suicide better, it is important, and a bit unintuitive
(process.exit() is not suicide?)
- use worker consistently throughout, instead of child.
- Make explicit that .disconnected is set before the disconnect event,
and it is not allowed to send messages after calling .disconnect(),
even while waiting for a delayed disconect event.
- Remove obsolete claim that explicit exit is required
- Describe silent: in the options for fork()
- Describe .connected as the property it is, not just as an aside in
the disconnect() method
A follow-up commit will save the domain name on the request object but
we can't call that property 'domain' because that gets intercepted by
src/node.cc and lib/domain.js to implement the node.js feature of the
same name.
To avoid confusion, rename all variables called 'domain' to 'hostname'.
Before this commit, the SIGUSR1 signal handler wasn't installed until
late in the bootstrapping process and we were prone to miss signals
sent by other processes.
This commit installs an early-boot signal handler that merely records
the fact that we received a signal. Once the debugger infrastructure
is in place, the signal is re-raised, kickstarting the debugger.
Among other things, this means that simple/test-debugger-client is
now _much_ less likely to fail.
Commit 30e5366b ("core: Use a uv_signal for debug listener") changed
SIGUSR1 handling from a signal handler to libuv's uv_signal_*()
functionality to fix a race condition (and possible hang) in the
signal handler.
While a good change in itself, it made it impossible to interrupt
long running scripts. When a script is stuck in a busy loop, control
never returns to the event loop, which in turn means the signal
callback - and therefore the debugger - is never invoked.
This commit changes SIGUSR1 handling back to a normal signal handler
but one that treads _very_ carefully.
If a client sends a lot more pipelined requests than we can handle, then
we need to provide backpressure so that the client knows to back off.
Do this by pausing both the stream and the parser itself when the
responses are not being read by the downstream client.
Fix GH-6214
Add a short explanation of what the load average is and why it's
unavailable on Windows.
Also sneak in a fix for a typo that I introduced in commit 56c5806.
Don't emit the 'disconnect' event until all workers have gone away.
Before this commit, the event was emitted when all open handles were
closed, which usually - but not always - amounts to the same thing.
Fixes#6346.
Because it's possible for the data within a Buffer instance to be
altered after instantiation, or in case a user attempts to do something
like the following:
Buffer.prototype.fill.call({}, 10, 0, 10);
It doesn't result in a segfault.
* Extend examples to show how to handle non-constructor invocation in
constructor callback functions.
* Fix up examples to initialize member variables at object construction.
* Fix up a few naming inconsistencies.
Fixes#5701.
Destroying the TLS session implies destroying the underlying socket but
before this commit, that was done with net.Socket#destroy() rather than
net.Socket#destroySoon(). The former closes the connection right away,
even when there is still data to write. In other words, sometimes the
final TLS record got truncated.
Fixes#6107.
This change makes several improvements to the ustack helper and MDB
support:
- ustack helper and MDB: add support for two-byte strings
(necessary to print many filenames in stacktraces in 0.10 and later).
- ustack helper: fix position numbers, which were off by a factor of two
- ustack helper: fix frames with undefined Scripts (e.g., "RegExp")
- ustack helper: add stub frames
- MDB: add support for sliced strings
- MDB: sync up with changes from the illumos version of the module
Fixes#6309Closes#6318
fs.truncate() and its synchronous sibling are implemented in terms of
open() + ftruncate(). Unfortunately, it opened the target file with
mode 'w' a.k.a. 'write-only and create or truncate at open'.
The subsequent call to ftruncate() then moved the end-of-file pointer
from zero to the requested offset with the net result of a file that's
neatly truncated at the right offset and filled with zero bytes only.
This bug was introduced in commit 168a5557 but in fairness, before that
commit fs.truncate() worked like fs.ftruncate() so it seems we've never
had a working fs.truncate() until now.
Fixes#6233.
Mea culpa, I didn't properly resolve a merge conflict in the last two
commits. The resulting segmentation fault only happened on Linux and
only sometimes.
Fixes#6306.
The previous commit changes the profiler idle notifier so that it only
gets started when a --prof or --prof_lazy argument is specified on the
command line.
This commit adds two internal methods to the process object that allows
one to start and stop the idle notifier programmatically.
The previous commit adds a notifier that tells the V8 profiler when
node.js is idle, i.e. when it's about to start sleeping in the
platform's equivalent of epoll_wait().
This commit adds a heuristic that only starts the notifier when the
V8 profiler is started from the command line.
Inform V8's CPU profiler when we're idle. The profiler is
sampling-based but not all samples are created equal; mark the wall
clock time spent in epoll_wait() and friends so profiling tools can
filter it out. The samples still end up in v8.log but with state=IDLE
rather than state=EXTERNAL.
I haven't actually tested this code, but was reading it due to a
post that linked to the code here:
http://dailyjs.com/2013/09/26/libuv/
As I was reading through the code, I noticed a path that can't
be reached.
I didn't strictly follow the contributing guide:
https://github.com/joyent/node/wiki/Contributing
but the change seems safe.
Feel free to close this out. I'm not sure if it was just an oversight
or what.
Drop the ObjectWrap dependency in favor of an internal WeakObject class.
Let's us stop worrying about API and ABI compatibility when making
changes to the way node.js deals with weakly persistent handles
internally.
After the upgrade from 3.20.17.7 to 3.20.17.11, we've begun hitting
random assertions in V8 in memory-constrained / GC-heavy situations.
The assertions all seem to be related to heap allocations and garbage
collection but apart from that, they're all over the place.
This reverts commit 970bdccc38.
The default entropy source is /dev/urandom on UNIX platforms, which is
okay but we can do better by seeding it from OpenSSL's entropy pool.
On Windows we can certainly do better; on that platform, V8 seeds the
random number generator using only the current system time.
Fixes#6250.
The test case from the previous commit exposed a regression in the way
that c-ares errors are reported to JS land. Said regression was
introduced in commit 756b622 ("src: add multi-context support").
Fixes the following test failure:
$ out/Release/node test/simple/test-dns-regress-6244
util.js:675
var errname = uv.errname(err);
^
Error: err >= 0
at Object.exports._errnoException (util.js:675:20)
at errnoException (dns.js:43:15)
at Object.onresolve [as oncomplete] (dns.js:145:19)
lib/dns.js erroneously assumed that the error code was a libuv error
code when it's really a c-ares status code. Libuv handles getaddrinfo()
style lookups (which is by far the most common type of lookup), that's
why this bug wasn't discovered earlier.
Don't forget to initialize the c-ares task tree head when creating a
new Environment. Oversight from the multi-context work that landed
in commit 756b622.
Fixes#6244.
Fix "Assertion failed" when trying to connect to non-int ports:
Assertion failed: (args[2]->Uint32Value()), function Connect,
file ../src/tcp_wrap.cc, line 379.
Abort trap: 6
Apparently, context->Global() won't be destroyed if the context itself
isn't marked as weak and independent.
Also, the weakness flag should be cleared once the weak callback is
executed, otherwise we'll get crashes in Debug builds.
fix#6115 and #6201
The `options` that were being passed in before here are specific to a
single request, which kinda defeats the purpose of using an Agent in the
first place.
On a worse note, these `options` have not yet been "processed" by the
`http.ClientRequest` class, so if `port: null` is set (like it is as the
result of a `url.parse()` call), then they take preference over the
processed values since the agent's "options" get mixed in last in the
`createSocket()` function.
Fixes#6197.
Fixes#6199.
Closes#6231.
Otherwise the data ends up "on the wire" twice, and
switching between consuming the stream using `ondata`
vs. `read()` would yield duplicate data, which was bad.
Apparently Joyent decommissioned joyeur.com but at least they saved the
contents of the blog. Update the links in the README and the nodejs.org
blog posts.
Hat tip to Eugen Pirogoff (@eugenpirogoff) for pointing it out.
Fixes#6224.
Functions created using: `vm.runInNewContext('(function() { })')` will
reference only `proxy_global_` object and not `sandbox_`. Thus in case,
where there're no references to sandbox (such as in example above),
`ContextifyContext` will be destroyed and use-after-free might happen.
String#toLowerCase() is incredibly slow and was costing a 15-30%
performance hit for Buffers less than 1KB. Now instead it'll attempt to
find the correct encoding directly from the passed encoding, only then
afterwards it'll lowercase.
The optimization for not passing any encoding at all is still at the top
of the method.
At most this may add 10% performance hit for passing a mixed case
encoding.
The NPN protocols was set on `require('tls')` or `global` object instead
of being a local property. This fact lead to strange persistence of NPN
protocols, and sometimes incorrect protocol selection (when no NPN
protocols were passed in client options).
fix#6168
Slowness being somewhat subjective but determined by running the
test suite a few times and picking off everything that consistently
clocks in at 2 seconds or more.
Honorable mention for simple/test-tls-server-large-request, it often
runs for 10 (!) seconds or more.
Since it is Unix tradition to use exit code 1 for general-purpose script
bail-out, and the way of doing that in Node is to throw an exception and
not catch it, it makes the most sense to exit with 1 when an exception
goes uncaught.
Move the `Invalid Argument` exit to 9, so that it's something specific,
and clear that it's a node internal error.
Also, document the exit codes that we use.
Fix pointer unwrapping when T is a class with more than one base class.
Before this commit, the wrapped void* pointer was cast directly to T*
without going through ObjectWrap* first, possibly leading to a class
instance pointer that points to the wrong vtable.
This change required some cleanup in various files; some classes
used private rather than public inheritance, others didn't derive
from ObjectWrap at all...
Fixes#6188.
This commit makes it possible to use multiple V8 execution contexts
within a single event loop. Put another way, handle and request wrap
objects now "remember" the context they belong to and switch back to
that context when the time comes to call into JS land.
This could have been done in a quick and hacky way by calling
v8::Object::GetCreationContext() on the wrap object right before
making a callback but that leaves a fairly wide margin for bugs.
Instead, we make the context explicit through a new Environment class
that encapsulates everything (or almost everything) that belongs to
the context. Variables that used to be a static or a global are now
members of the aforementioned class. An additional benefit is that
this approach should make it relatively straightforward to add full
isolate support in due course.
There is no JavaScript API yet but that will be added in the near
future.
This work was graciously sponsored by GitHub, Inc.
From commit 756ae2c all the WRAP/UNWRAP were moved to a single location
for ease of use. In a single location NO_ABORT should have been used but
wasn't. This caused HandleWrap::Close to abort. Below is the applicable
code change as demonstration there was no abort specified when
unwrapping the object.
void HandleWrap::Close(const FunctionCallbackInfo<Value>& args) {
HandleScope scope(node_isolate);
- HandleWrap *wrap = static_cast<HandleWrap*>(
- args.This()->GetAlignedPointerFromInternalField(0));
+ HandleWrap* wrap;
+ UNWRAP(args.This(), HandleWrap, wrap);
Also included a test that will reproduce the abort.
Stop gcc from getting confused, explicitly cast the return value from
getuid() and getgid() to uint32_t. Fixes the following build error:
../src/node.cc: In function 'void node::GetUid(const
v8::FunctionCallbackInfo<v8::Value>&)':
../src/node.cc:1552:37: error: call of overloaded 'Set(uid_t)' is
ambiguous
../src/node.cc:1552:37: note: candidates are:
../deps/v8/include/v8.h:5939:6: note: void
v8::ReturnValue<T>::Set(bool) [with T = v8::Value]
../deps/v8/include/v8.h:5909:6: note: void
v8::ReturnValue<T>::Set(double) [with T = v8::Value]
../deps/v8/include/v8.h:5915:6: note: void
v8::ReturnValue<T>::Set(int32_t) [with T = v8::Value, int32_t = int]
../deps/v8/include/v8.h:5926:6: note: void
v8::ReturnValue<T>::Set(uint32_t) [with T = v8::Value, uint32_t =
unsigned int]
Fixes#6182.
In cases where the Agent has maxSockets=Infinity, and
keepAlive=false, there's no case where we won't immediately close the
connection after the response is completed.
Since we're going to close it anyway, send a `connection:close` header
rather than a `connection:keep-alive` header. Still send the
`connection:keep-alive` if the agent will actually reuse the socket,
however.
Closes#5838
This simplifies the logic that was in isSyntaxError, as well as the
choice to wrap command input in parens to coerce to an expression
statement.
1. Rather than a growing blacklist of allowed-to-throw syntax errors,
just sniff for the one we really care about ("Unexpected end of input")
and let all the others pass through.
2. Wrapping {a:1} in parens makes sense, because blocks and line labels
are silly and confusing and should not be in JavaScript at all.
However, wrapping functions and other types of programs in parens is
weird and required yet *more* hacking to work around. By only wrapping
statements that start with { and end with }, we can handle the confusing
use-case, without having to then do extra work for functions and other
cases.
This also fixes the repl wart where `console.log)(` works in the repl,
but only by virtue of the fact that it's wrapped in parens first, as
well as potential side effects of double-running the commands, such as:
> x = 1
1
> eval('x++; throw new SyntaxError("e")')
... ^C
> x
3
Adding a new `repl-harmony` test file here because adding the
`--use_strict --harmony` flags on the main repl test file was causing
lots of unrelated failures, due to global variable assignments and
things like that. This new test file is based off of the original
repl.js test file, but has a lot of the tests stripped out. A test case
for this commit is included though.
Fixes#6132.
Replace the growing list of 'isSyntaxError' whackamole conditions with a
smarter approach. This creates a vm Script object *first*, which will
parse the code and raise a SyntaxError right away.
We still do need the test function, but only because strict mode syntax
errors are not recoverable, and should be raised right away. Really, we
should probably *only* continue on "unexpected end of input" SyntaxErrors.
Also fixes a very difficult-to-test nit where the '...' indentation is
not properly cleared when you ^C out of a syntax error.
Closes#6093
This commit changes src/tcp_wrap.cc and src/udp_wrap.cc just enough to
get by (i.e. to compile and function correctly.)
The new libuv API allows for more cleanup and deduplication but I'm
saving that for another day.
If the string is external then the length can be quickly retrieved. This
is especially faster for large strings that are being treated as UTF8.
Also, if the string is external then there's no need for a full
String::WriteUtf8 operation. A simple memcpy will do.
This is useful when we need to push some debugging messages out to
stderr, without going through the Writable class, or triggering any kind
of nextTick or callback behavior.
* Exit with an error message when the option is not a node or V8 option.
* Remove the option_end_index global. Needs to happen anyway for
the multi-context work, might as well land it in master now.
* Add a smidgen of const-correctness.
* Pay off a few years of accrued technical debt.
Don't wait a full second before starting the watcher, 10 ms ought to be
more than enough time. Reduces running time from 1250 ms to 250 ms on
my system.
Don't call uv_loop_delete() until we've figured out a way to gracefully
close open handles. See also commit 4915884 and its subsequent revert
in commit 980cbd5.
This reverts commit 556b890ad9.
This change is not entirely ready for prime time: it's making ~50 tests
fail on Windows, mostly due to timeouts. It's up for debate who is
at fault here: node.js or libuv.
It does however expose a libuv bug on OS X, where the event loop
sometimes gets stuck in uv__io_poll() when there is a single
UV_SHUTDOWN request left in the queue. Needs further investigation.
This reverts commit 4915884da6.
Commit 556b890 added a call to uv_loop_delete() with the intent of
catching handle lifecycle bugs. It worked because it exposed one:
process.on('exit', function() {
console.log('bye'); // Asserts.
});
When run, it asserts with the following message:
Assertion failed: (!uv__has_active_reqs(loop)), function
uv__loop_delete, file ../deps/uv/src/unix/loop.c, line 150.
That's because libuv as of joyent/libuv@3f2d4d5 checks that there are
no in-flight requests when the event loop is destroyed. In the test
case above, the write request for the string hasn't completed yet by
the time node.js exits: the string itself has most likely been written
but libuv hasn't had the opportunity to return the write request to
node.js.
That's why this commit adds a cleanup step right before exit where it
explicitly closes all open handles, then waits until the event loop
exits naturally.
Named pipes (UNIX domain sockets) are shut down first in order to flush
pending write requests. Should go some way towards fixing the Windows
issue where output on stdout/stderr sometimes gets truncated.
Fixesjoyent/libuv#911.
Remove NodeBIO::GetMethod() and replace calls to BIO_new() with calls
to the new NodeBIO::New() function.
This commit basically reshuffles some code in order to make it explicit
that the NodeBIO BIO_METHOD is const.
Before this commit it was declared static (in a header file!), meaning
it got duplicated in every file that includes it.
A few duplicated pointers is not the end of the world but it introduces
a lot of potential for confusion because root_cert_store in file A is
not the root_cert_store in file B.
Moral of the story: don't declare static variables in header files.
- The caveats no longer apply.
- Document options arguments, including `displayErrors` and the
different things it means in each place.
- Re-did examples to be more on point, e.g. `runInContext` example
runs multiple scripts in the same context.
- Documented how `vm.createContext`s meaning has substantially changed,
and is now more of a "contextifier" than a "creator."
- Reordered vm functions to be readable in order; the concept of
contextifying needs to come before `runInContext` and
`runInNewContext`.
- Documented new `vm.isContext`.
- Documented the `vm.Script` constructor, instead of `createScript`,
since factory methods are silly and we wanted to document the class's
methods anyway.
- Documented `script.runInContext`.
- Change stability to stable, if I may be so bold.
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.
In `Timer.now` always update the loop time by calling uv_update_time.
Previously we were trying to cache the loop time to prevent extra
syscalls. While a noble goal, it can cause timers to fire early in
certain circumstances. Especially seen in cpu bound work loads or work
loads with synchronous file operations.
Previously, calling `vm.createContext(o)` repeatedly on the same `o`
would cause new C++ `ContextifyContext`s to be created and stored on
`o`, while the previous resident went off into leaked-memory limbo.
Now, repeatedly trying to contextify a sandbox will do nothing after
the first time.
To detect this, an independently-useful `vm.isContext(sandbox)` export
was added.
This was a remnant of the original Contextify code, wherein
ContextifyContext was a user-exposed object. In vm, it is not, so all
of the ObjectWrap and function-template stuff for the ContextifyContext
constructor is now unnecessary.
There's no need to create a new Buffer instance if we're just going to
immediately call toString() at the end anyway. Better to create a
string up front, and setEncoding() on the streams, and do a string
concatenation instead.
Since the encoding is no longer relevant once it is decoded to a Buffer,
it is confusing and incorrect to pass the encoding as 'utf8' or whatever
in those cases.
Closes#6119
Length arguments passed to SlowBuffer were coerced to Int32, not Uint32,
so passing a negative number would throw the following:
node: ../src/smalloc.cc:244: void node::smalloc::Alloc(): Assertion `length <= kMaxLength' failed.
Aborted (core dumped)
That has been fixed by coercing to Uint32 and comparing the value
against kMaxLength.
Due to a lot of the util.is* checks there was much unnecessary overhead
for the most common use case of Buffer. Which is creating a new Buffer
instance for data from incoming I/O. NativeBuffer is a simple way to
bypass all the unneeded checks and simply hand back a Buffer instance
while setting the length.
On windows process exit codes can be greater than INT32_MAX. This used
to be not much of a problem - greater values would just come out
negative. However since ca9eb71 a negative result value indicates that
uv_spawn() has failed, so this is no longer acceptable.
Instead of doing all the domain handling in core, allow the domain to
set an error handler that'll take care of it all. This way the domain
error handling can be abstracted enough for any user to use it.
All the Buffer#{ascii,hex,etc.}Slice() methods are intentionally strict
to alert if a Buffer instance was attempting to be accessed out of
bounds. Buffer#toString() is the more user friendly way of accessing the
data, and will coerce values to their min/max on overflow.
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.
As documented in #3042 and in [1], the existing vm implementation has
many problems. All of these are solved by @brianmcd's [contextify][2]
package. This commit uses contextify as a conceptual base and its code
core to overhaul the vm module and fix its many edge cases and caveats.
Functionally, this fixes#3042. In particular:
- A context is now indistinguishable from the object it is based on
(the "sandbox"). A context is simply a sandbox that has been marked
by the vm module, via `vm.createContext`, with special internal
information that allows scripts to be run inside of it.
- Consequently, items added to the context from anywhere are
immediately visible to all code that can access that context, both
inside and outside the virtual machine.
This commit also smooths over the API very slightly:
- Parameter defaults are now uniformly triggered via `undefined`, per
ES6 semantics and previous discussion at [3].
- Several undocumented and problematic features have been removed, e.g.
the conflation of `vm.Script` with `vm` itself, and the fact that
`Script` instances also had all static `vm` methods. The API is now
exactly as documented (although arguably the existence of the
`vm.Script` export is not yet documented, just the `Script` class
itself).
In terms of implementation, this replaces node_script.cc with
node_contextify.cc, which is derived originally from [4] (see [5]) but
has since undergone extensive modifications and iterations to expose
the most useful C++ API and use the coding conventions and utilities of
Node core.
The bindings exposed by `process.binding('contextify')`
(node_contextify.cc) replace those formerly exposed by
`process.binding('evals')` (node_script.cc). They are:
- ContextifyScript(code, [filename]), with methods:
- runInThisContext()
- runInContext(sandbox, [timeout])
- makeContext(sandbox)
From this, the vm.js file builds the entire documented vm module API.
node.js and module.js were modified to use this new native binding, or
the vm module itself where possible. This introduces an extra line or
two into the stack traces of module compilation (and thus into most
stack traces), explaining the changed tests.
The tests were also updated slightly, with all vm-related simple tests
consolidated as test/simple/test-vm-* (some of them were formerly
test/simple/test-script-*). At the same time they switched from
`common.debug` to `console.error` and were updated to use
`assert.throws` instead of rolling their own error-testing methods.
New tests were also added, of course, demonstrating the new
capabilities and fixes.
[1]: http://nodejs.org/docs/v0.10.16/api/vm.html#vm_caveats
[2]: https://github.com/brianmcd/contextify
[3]: https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/5323#issuecomment-20250726
[4]: bf123f3ef9/src/contextify.cc
[5]: https://gist.github.com/domenic/6068120
* uv: Upgrade v0.10.14
* http_parser: Do not accept PUN/GEM methods as PUT/GET (Chris Dickinson)
* tls: fix assertion when ssl is destroyed at read (Fedor Indutny)
* stream: Throw on 'error' if listeners removed (isaacs)
* dgram: fix assertion on bad send() arguments (Ben Noordhuis)
* readline: pause stdin before turning off terminal raw mode (Daniel Chatfield)
`maybeInitFinished()` can emit the 'secure' event which
in turn destroys the connection in case of authentication
failure and sets `this.pair.ssl` to `null`.
If such condition appeared after non-empty read - loop will continue
and `clearOut` will be called on `null` object instead of
`crypto::Connection` instance. Resulting in the following assertion:
ERROR: Error: Hostname/IP doesn't match certificate's altnames
Assertion failed: handle->InternalFieldCount() > 0
fix#5756
The C++ API has been changed so the passed length is the byte size of
the data, not the length of the array.
This was done so users need to explicitly define how much memory they
want allocated.
`dns.lookup` defaults to selecting IPv4 record even if IPv6 is available
for the desired zone. Generally, this approach works, but if IPv4
address is unavailable - there'll be no other way to opt-out and connect using
IPv6 address than calling `dns.lookup` and passing it to `.connect()`
directly.
This commit adds `family` option to `net.connect` method to figure out
this issue.
It only fails once in about 1000 times, but that's too many.
It's timing dependent, and the main behavior is covered by the other
assertions in the test anyway.
This change is 100% backwards compatible.
This change will make using `EventEmitter` slightly simpler / nicer and
adheres to the best practice set forth by substack.
```js
var EventEmitter = require("events")
var emitter = new EventEmitter()
```
The only difference is that we now have to set `EventEmitter` as a
property of `EventEmitter` for backwards compatibility like we do with
[`Stream`][1]
We have also set the `usingDomains` property on the `EventEmitter`
constructor itself because that aligns with it's current usage of
`require("events").usingDomains = true`
There are other internals that would benefit from this change as well
like `StringDecoder`
This allows automatically-inserted headers to be removed permanently by
calling OutgoingMessage.removeHeader() on them, as if they were normal
headers.
In this situation:
writable.on('error', handler);
readable.pipe(writable);
writable.removeListener('error', handler);
writable.emit('error', new Error('boom'));
there is actually no error handler, but it doesn't throw, because of the
fix for stream.once('error', handler), in 23d92ec.
Note that simply reverting that change is not valid either, because
otherwise this will emit twice, being handled the first time, and then
throwing the second:
writable.once('error', handler);
readable.pipe(writable);
writable.emit('error', new Error('boom'));
Fix this with a horrible hack to make the stream pipe onerror handler
added before any other userland handlers, so that our handler is not
affected by adding or removing any userland handlers.
Closes#6007.
Commit 03e008d introduced src/tls_wrap.cc and src/tls_wrap.h but
said files copied on the order of 1 kLoC from src/node_crypto.cc
and src/node_crypto.h. This commit undoes some of the duplication.
Fixes#6024.
Add range checks for the offset, length and port arguments to
dgram.Socket#send(). Fixes the following assertion:
node: ../../src/udp_wrap.cc:264: static v8::Handle<v8::Value>
node::UDPWrap::DoSend(const v8::Arguments&, int): Assertion
`offset < Buffer::Length(buffer_obj)' failed.
And:
node: ../../src/udp_wrap.cc:265: static v8::Handle<v8::Value>
node::UDPWrap::DoSend(const v8::Arguments&, int): Assertion
`length <= Buffer::Length(buffer_obj) - offset' failed.
Interestingly enough, a negative port number was accepted until now but
silently ignored. (In other words, it would send the datagram to a
random port.)
This commit exposed a bug in the simple/test-dgram-close test which
has also been fixed.
This is a back-port of commit 41ec6d0 from the master branch.
Fixes#6025.
On windows, libuv will immediately make a `ReadConsole` call (in the
thread pool) when a 'flowing' `uv_tty_t` handle is switched to
line-buffered mode. That causes an immediate issue for some users,
since libuv can't cancel the `ReadConsole` operation on Windows 8 /
Server 2012 and up if the program switches back to raw mode later.
But even if this will be fixed in libuv at some point, it's better to
avoid the overhead of starting work in the thread pool and immediately
cancelling it afther that.
See also f34f1e3, where the same change is made for the opposite
flow, e.g. move `resume()` after `_setRawMode(true)`.
Fixes#5927
This is a backport of dfb0461 (see #5930) to the v0.10 branch.
On windows, libuv will immediately make a `ReadConsole` call (in the
thread pool) when a 'flowing' `uv_tty_t` handle is switched to
line-buffered mode. That causes an immediate issue for some users,
since libuv can't cancel the `ReadConsole` operation on Windows 8 /
Server 2012 and up if the program switches back to raw mode later.
But even if this will be fixed in libuv at some point, it's better to
avoid the overhead of starting work in the thread pool and immediately
cancelling it afther that.
See also f34f1e3, where the same change is made for the opposite
flow, e.g. move `resume()` after `_setRawMode(true)`.
Fixes#5927Closes#5930
RandomBytes() allocated memory with new[] which was then handed off to
Buffer::Use() which eventually releases it again with free().
Mixing the two is technically a violation of the spec and besides, it's
generally frowned upon.
In other Writable streams, the 'finish' event means that all of the data
was written, and flushed to the underlying system.
The 'prefinish' event means that end() was called, and all of the data
was processed, but not necessarily completely flushed.
This change brings the http OutgoingMessage classes more in sync with
the other Writable classes throughout Node.
Unfortunately, this change highlights an issue with http
IncomingMessages, where the _dump() method will not actually pull the
data off the wire. This is a minor issue that is typically only
relevant in test cases, and will be addressed in the next commit.
This removes a dubious performance "optimization" where strings body
chunks were concatenated to one another (and to the headers) without any
regard for their encoding.
Achieve a minor speed-up by looking up the timeout callback on the timer
object by using an array index rather than a named property.
Gives a performance boost of about 1% on the misc/timers benchmarks.
Code cleanup: don't call a Connection object `p` in some places, `c` in
other places and `ss` in yet other places. Let's just call it `conn`.
This also fixes about a million style errors in one fell swoop.
Don't create an Integer when setting a numeric index on an object or an
array, use the version of v8::Object::Set() that takes an uint32_t.
Change the types of the variables from int to uint32_t and clean up
some code consistency issues while we're here.
Don't set the oncomplete property in src/cares_wrap.cc, we can do it
just as easily in lib/dns.js.
Switch two closures to the 'function with _this_ object' model. Makes
it impossible for an overzealous closure to capture too much context
and accidentally hold on to too much memory.
* The test calls an internal API that changed in commit ca9eb71.
* Trying to reverse-lookup a bogus hostname now returns EINVAL rather
than the (bogus!) status code ENOTIMP.
Use v8::Integer::NewFromUnsigned() when updating the writeQueueSize
field.
Before this commit, it used v8::Integer::New() but that takes an
int32_t. It's unlikely for a write queue to grow beyond 2**31-1 bytes
but let's use the unsigned integer constructor anyway, just in case.
This is [1] applied ahead of time. Summary:
OpenBSD doesn't have <ucontext.h>. ucontext_t lives in <signal.h>
and is a typedef for struct sigcontext. There is no uc_mcontext.
[1] https://codereview.chromium.org/21705003/
Note: the patch has been accepted upstream but hasn't made its way into
a stable release yet.
No one in this day and age should be using SSLv2 so disable it by
default. You can re-enable it with `./configure --with-sslv2` but
there really should be no reason for that.
Alphabetical order should make it easier to find the switches you need
because we've got quite a lot of them now.
Keep --prefix at the top because that's arguably the one people will be
looking for most.
Don't run configure when the configure script has been touched. Doing so
would be okay if the Makefile passed the original arguments to configure
but it doesn't - it runs configure without any arguments, effectively
destroying the current configuration.
Remove this misfeature and instead print an error message telling the
user to (re-)run configure.
Change process.domain to use a getter/setter and access that property
via an array index. These are much faster to get from c++, and it can be
passed to _setupDomainUse and stored as a Persistent<Array>.
InDomain() and GetDomain() as trivial ways to access the domain
information in the native layer. Important because we'll be able to
quickly access if a domain is active. Instead of just whether the domain
module has been loaded.
Don't use v8::Object::SetHiddenValue() to keep a reference alive to the
buffer, we can just as easily do that from JS land and it's a lot faster
to boot.
Because the buffer is now a visible property of the write request
object, it's essential that we do *not* log it - we'd be effectively
serializing the whole buffer to a pretty-printed string.
v0.10 allows strings for the offset, length and port arguments to
dgram.send() and dgram.sendto() but master before this commit would
abort with the following assert:
node: ../../src/udp_wrap.cc:227: static void
node::UDPWrap::DoSend(const v8::FunctionCallbackInfo<v8::Value>&,
int): Assertion `args[2]->IsUint32()' failed.
Go beyond what v0.10 does and also add range checks: offset and length
should be >= 0, port should be between 1 and 65535.
That particular change needs to be back-ported to v0.10 because passing
a negative offset or length number aborts with the following assertions:
node: ../../src/udp_wrap.cc:264: static v8::Handle<v8::Value>
node::UDPWrap::DoSend(const v8::Arguments&, int): Assertion
`offset < Buffer::Length(buffer_obj)' failed.
Or:
node: ../../src/udp_wrap.cc:265: static v8::Handle<v8::Value>
node::UDPWrap::DoSend(const v8::Arguments&, int): Assertion
`length <= Buffer::Length(buffer_obj) - offset' failed.
Interestingly enough, a negative port number is accepted in v0.10 but
is silently ignored.
This commit exposed a bug in the simple/test-dgram-close test which
has also been fixed.
* Change calls to String::New() and String::NewSymbol() to their
respective one-byte, two-byte and UTF-8 counterparts.
* Add a FIXED_ONE_BYTE_STRING macro that takes a string literal and
turns it into a v8::Local<v8::String>.
* Add helper functions that make v8::String::NewFromOneByte() easier to
work with. Said function expects a `const uint8_t*` but almost every
call site deals with `const char*` or `const unsigned char*`. Helps
us avoid doing reinterpret_casts all over the place.
* Code that handles file system paths keeps using UTF-8 for backwards
compatibility reasons. At least now the use of UTF-8 is explicit.
* Remove v8::String::NewSymbol() entirely. Almost all call sites were
effectively minor de-optimizations. If you create a string only once,
there is no point in making it a symbol. If you are create the same
string repeatedly, it should probably be cached in a persistent
handle.
When a stream is flowing, and not in the middle of a sync read, and
the read buffer currently has a length of 0, we can just emit a 'data'
event rather than push it onto the array, emit 'readable', and then
automatically call read().
As it happens, this is quite a frequent occurrence! Making this change
brings the HTTP benchmarks back into a good place after the removal of
the .ondata/.onend socket kludge methods.
smalloc.alloc now accepts an optional third argument which allows
specifying the type of array that should be allocated. All available
types are now located on smalloc.Types.
* Moved the ToObject check out of smalloc::Alloc and into JS. Direct
usage of that method is for internal use only and so can bypass the
possible coercion.
* Same has been done with smalloc::SliceOnto.
* smalloc::CopyOnto will now throw if passed argument is not an object.
* Remove extra TargetFreeCallback function. There was a use for it when
it was working with a Local<T>, but that code has been removed making
the function superfluous.
There are some agent subclasses using this today.
Despite the addRequest function being undocumented internal API, it's
easy enough to just support the old signature for backwards
compatibility.
Add is_named_pipe(), is_named_pipe_ipc() and is_tcp() and update the
code base to use those rather than `stream->type == UV_FOO` and
`reinterpret_cast<uv_pipe_t*>(handle)->ipc` style checks.
Hide member fields behind getters. Make the fields themselves const
in the sense that the pointer is non-assignable - the pointed to object
remains mutable.
Makes reasoning about lifecycle and mutability a little easier.
`server.SNICallback` was initialized with `SNICallback.bind(this)`, and
therefore check `this.SNICallback === SNICallback` was always false, and
`_tls_wrap.js` always thought that it was a custom callback instead of
default one. Which in turn was causing clienthello parser to be enabled
regardless of presence of SNI contexts.
Don't create a superfluous Number object, just use the version of
v8::Object::Get() that takes an unsigned int. Convert the index to
unsigned int while we're here.
If an error listener is added to a stream using once() before it is
piped, it is invoked and removed during pipe() but before pipe() sees it
which causes it to be emitted again.
Fixes#4155#4978
The type of the expression `(uint16_t) server_names_len + 2` gets
implicitly widened to int. Change the type of server_names_len to
uint32_t to avoid the following warnings:
../../src/node_crypto_clienthello.cc:144: warning: comparison
between signed and unsigned integer expressions
../../src/node_crypto_clienthello.cc:146: warning: comparison
between signed and unsigned integer expressions
Quoting the CVE:
Google V8, as used in Google Chrome before 28.0.1500.95, allows
remote attackers to cause a denial of service or possibly have
unspecified other impact via vectors that leverage "type confusion."
Likely has zero impact on node.js because it only runs local, trusted
code but let's apply it anyway.
This is a back-port of upstream commit r15665. Original commit log:
Use internal array as API function cache.
R=yangguo@chromium.org
BUG=chromium:260106
TEST=cctest/test-api/Regress260106
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/19159003Fixes#5973.
Flags and modes aren't the same, symlinks are followed in all of the
path but the last component, docs should say something about what the
mode argument is for and when its used, fs.openSync should point to the
function that contains the docs for its args, as fs.writeSync does.
This is [1] applied ahead of time. Summary:
OpenBSD doesn't have <ucontext.h>. ucontext_t lives in <signal.h>
and is a typedef for struct sigcontext. There is no uc_mcontext.
[1] https://codereview.chromium.org/21705003/
It shouldn't ignore it!
There're two possibile cases, which should be handled properly:
1. Having a default `SNICallback` which is using contexts, added with
`server.addContext(...)` routine
2. Having a custom `SNICallback`.
In first case we may want to opt-out setting `.onsniselect` method (and
thus save some CPU time), if there're no contexts added. But, if custom
`SNICallback` is used, `.onsniselect` should always be set, because
server contexts don't affect it.
Update a few more `Local<T>::New(isolate, persistent)` call sites to
`PersistentToLocal(isolate, persistent)` - the latter has a fast path
for non-weak persistent references.
When doing `FreeEmpty`, `NodeBIO` skips pre-allocated `head_` buffer.
However this might lead to double-freeing buffers since in `~NodeBIO()`
we're starting deallocation from `head_` buffer.
Commit 78d9094 updated src/*.cc to use the version of PersistentToLocal
that takes a v8::Isolate* as its first argument. This commit removes
the non-isolate version.
* Numeric values passed to alloc were converted to int32, not uint32
before the range check, which allows wrap around on ToUint32. This
would cause massive malloc calls and v8 fatal errors.
* dispose would not check if value was an Object, causing segfault if a
Primitive was passed.
* kMaxLength was not enumerable.
Build breakage accidentally introduced in 8e29ce9 during code cleanup.
HAVE_OPENSSL is always defined (as either 0 or 1) so use #if rather
than #ifdef.
Fixes#5979.
Run the garbage collector before running the actual test. It doesn't
matter now but if in the future something in node.js core creates a lot
of reclaimable garbage, that will break the test's expectation.
* Run the garbage collector before creating the big array. It doesn't
matter now but if in the future something in node.js core creates
a lot of reclaimable garbage, that will break the test's expectation.
* The first RSS check was being done too late. The garbage collector
might have run before the check, throwing off the 'reclaimed memory'
calculation.
* Due to changes in how V8 represents the big array internally, the
actual memory usage is just below 256 MB on x64. Update the test's
expectation.
Before this commit, events were set to undefined rather than deleted
from the EventEmitter's backing dictionary for performance reasons:
`delete obj.key` causes a transition of the dictionary's hidden class
and that can be costly.
Unfortunately, that introduces a memory leak when many events are added
and then removed again. The strings containing the event names are never
reclaimed by the garbage collector because they remain part of the
dictionary.
That's why this commit makes EventEmitter delete events again. This
effectively reverts commit 0397223.
Fixes#5970.
Change the build/include_order rule to match our preference:
project headers before system headers.
The rationale is that system headers before project headers makes it
easy to slip in bugs where a project header that requires a definition
from a system header, forgets to include the system header but still
compiles because the source files that include the project header
coincidentally include the system header too.
A good example is the size_t type. A project header file that needs the
definition of size_t should include stddef.h but forgetting to do so
will probably go unnoticed for a long time because almost every other
system header includes stddef.h (either directly or indirectly) and
almost every source file includes one or more system headers.
Ergo, project headers before system headers. It's a good thing.
To prevent all unnecessary calls to JS from MakeCallback, the remaining
two immediate return variables inTick and lastThrew have been added to
infoBox. Now MakeCallback should never need to call into JS unless it
absolutely has to.
Also removed Tock. Performance tests showed it was at least as fast or
faster than using a normal object, and this is more readable.
Avoid a costly buffer-to-string operation. Instead, allocate a new
buffer, copy the chunk header and data into it and send that.
The speed difference is negligible on small payloads but it really
shines with larger (10+ kB) chunks. benchmark/http/end-vs-write-end
with 64 kB chunks gives 45-50% higher throughput. With 1 MB chunks,
the difference is a staggering 590%.
Of course, YMMV will vary with real workloads and networks but this
commit should have a positive impact on CPU and memory consumption.
Big kudos to Wyatt Preul (@wpreul) for reporting the issue and providing
the initial patch.
Fixes#5941 and #5944.
Use the StringBytes::IsValidString() function introduced in commit
dce26cc to ensure that the input string meets the expectations of the
other StringBytes functions before processing it further.
Fixes the following assertion:
Assertion failed: (str->Length() % 2 == 0 && "invalid hex string
length"), function StorageSize, file ../../src/string_bytes.cc,
line 301.
Fixes#5725.
Performs a quick, non-exhaustive check on the input string to see if
it's compatible with the specified string encoding.
Curently it only checks that hex strings have a length that is a
multiple of two.
Don't throw an exception when the argument to %j is an object that
contains circular references, it's not helpful. Catch the exception
and return the string '[Circular]'.
Prior, strings would first be converted to a Buffer before being written
to disk. Now the intermediary step has been removed.
Other changes of note:
* Class member "must_free" was added to req_wrap so to track if the
memory needs to be manually cleaned up after use.
* External String Resource support, so the memory will be used directly
instead of copying out the data.
* Docs have been updated to reflect that if position is not a number
then it will assume null. Previously it specified the argument must be
null, but that was not how the code worked. An attempt was made to
only support == null, but there were too many tests that assumed !=
number would be enough.
* Docs update show some of the write/writeSync arguments are optional.
* Use ARRAY_SIZE() rather than scanning until we hit a NULL entry.
* Fix `-fsigned-char -Wnarrowing` compiler warnings. Harmless but
numerous and annoying.
* Static-ify the modp_group and mod_groups arrays.
* Const-ify the modp_groups array.
It imports the definition into every source file that includes
string_bytes.h, as evidenced by the build suddenly breaking left
and right because of missing Handle/Local/String/Value imports.
Passing the number of sent bytes to the callback is superfluous;
datagram sockets operate in atomic mode: either the sendmsg() system
call succeeds or it fails but it never does partial writes.
Instead, report send errors to the callback. UDP error reporting is
fairly haphazard on most platforms. You should not expect reliable
delivery of anything besides EMSGSIZE and (possibly) ENETDOWN and
ENETUNREACH.
Fixes#2608.
V8 3.20.9 enforces that external pointers are aligned on a two-byte
boundary.
We cannot portably guarantee that for the source code strings that
tools/js2c.py generates so simply stop using String::NewExternal()
altogether (and by extension String::ExternalAsciiStringResource).
Fixes the following run-time assert:
FATAL ERROR: v8::String::NewExternal() Pointer is not aligned
This prevents the following sort of thing from being confusing:
```javascript
stream.on('data', function() { console.error('got data'); });
stream.pause(); // stop reading
// turns out no data is available
stream.push(null);
// Hand the stream to someone else, who does stuff...
setTimeout(function() {
// too late! 'end' is already emitted!
stream.on('end', function() { console.error('got end'); });
});
```
With this change, the `end` event is not emitted until you call `read()`
*past* the EOF null. So, a paused stream will not swallow the `end`
event and emit it before you `resume()` the stream.
The title shouldn't be too long; libuv's uv_set_process_title() out of
security considerations no longer overwrites envp, only argv, so the
maximum title length is possibly quite short.
Fixes#5908.
And process.getgid() too.
Commit ed80638 changed fs.chown() and fs.fchown() to only accept
unsigned integers. Make process.getuid() and process.getgid() follow
suit.
This commit should unbreak npm on OS X - it's hitting the new 'uid must
be an unsigned int' check when installing as e.g. user 'nobody' (which
has an UID of -2 in /etc/passwd or 4294967294 when cast to an uid_t.)
Fixes#5904.
* uv: Upgrade to v0.10.13
* npm: Upgrade to v1.3.5
* os: Don't report negative times in cpu info (Ben Noordhuis)
* fs: Handle large UID and GID (Ben Noordhuis)
* url: Fix edge-case when protocol is non-lowercase (Shuan Wang)
* doc: Streams API Doc Rewrite (isaacs)
* node: call MakeDomainCallback in all domain cases (Trevor Norris)
* crypto: fix memory leak in LoadPKCS12 (Fedor Indutny)
If `obj` given to `cluster._getServer` has `_setServerData` or
`_getServerData` methods, the data will be synchronized across workers
and stored in master.
This incarnation of macros.py is only used to disable the (d)trace
macros. Rename it so it better reflects its purpose. A new macros.py
will be added in a follow-up commit.
Includes:
* No need for `typeof` when checking undefined.
* length is coerced to uint so no need to check if < 0.
* Stay consistent and always throw `new` errors.
* Returning offset + magic number in every write is error prone. Instead
return the central write function which returns the correct offset.
In a rush to implement the fix 35e0d60 I overlooked the logic that
causes 0-length buffer instantiation to automatically not assign the
parent regardless.
Before this commit, fs.chown() and fs.fchown() coerced the uid and gid
arguments to signed integers which is wrong because uid_t and gid_t are
unsigned on most all platforms and IDs that don't fit in a signed
integer do exist.
This commit changes the aforementioned functions to take unsigned ints
instead. No test because we can't assume the system has [GU]IDs that
large.
This change depends on joyent/libuv@d779eb5.
Fixes#5890.
SlowBuffer(0) passes NULL instead of doing malloc(0). So when someone
attempted to SlowBuffer(0).slice(0, 1) an assert would fail in
smalloc::SliceOnto.
It's important that the check go where it is because the resulting
Buffer needs to have external array data allocated. In the case a user
tries to slice a zero length Buffer it will also have NULL passed as the
data argument.
Also fixed where the .parent attribute was set for zero length Buffers.
There is no need to track the source of slice if the slice isn't
actually occurring.
Closes#5860
In streams2, there is an "old mode" for compatibility. Once switched
into this mode, there is no going back.
With this change, there is a "flowing mode" and a "paused mode". If you
add a data listener, then this will start the flow of data. However,
hitting the `pause()` method will switch *back* into a non-flowing mode,
where the `read()` method will pull data out.
Every time `read()` returns a data chunk, it also emits a `data` event.
In this way, a passive data listener can be added, and the stream passed
off to some other reader, for use with progress bars and the like.
There is no API change beyond this added flexibility.
Just forward declare struct sockaddr, the struct is never actually
dereferenced in src/node_internals.h.
Before this commit, it included sys/socket.h but that header doesn't
exist on Windows.
Libuv now returns errors directly. Make everything in src/ and lib/
follow suit.
The changes to lib/ are not strictly necessary but they remove the need
for the abominations that are process._errno and node::SetErrno().
Prep work for removing process._errno. The handle.getsockname() function
will return a status code in the future and set the address and port
properties on the object that's passed in from JS land.
Commit 636ca7c adds an optimization that casts strong Persistent<T>
handles directly to Local<T> handles to avoid the overhead of creating
new HandleScope-rooted Local<T> handles all the time.
One gotcha that I missed is that it's no longer legal to reference the
Local<T> after calling Persistent<T>::Dispose(). This commit addresses
that.
Helps catch bugs early on. Without it, V8 throws the fairly
unhelpful exception "TypeError: undefined is not a function" -
unhelpful because there is no stack trace.
It will be confusing if later on we add Buffer#dispose(), and smalloc is
its own cpp api anyways. So instead create a new require('smalloc') to
expose the previous Buffer.alloc/dispose methods, and expose copyOnto
and kMaxLength as well.
Other changes:
* Added documentation and additional tests.
* smalloc::CopyOnto has changed from using assert() to throwing errors
on bad argument values because it is not exposed to the user.
* Minor style fixes.
When using url.parse(), path and pathname usually return '/' when there
is no path available. However when you have a protocol that contains
non-lowercase letters and the input string does not have a trailing
slash, both path and pathname will be undefined.
The Streams API doc is now broken up into 3 sections:
1. API for Consumers
2. API for Implementors
3. Details and Extras
This addresses one of the biggest points of confusion for new users who
start to consume streams, and get the impression that they have to do
lots of extra work and implement classes and such, just to get some data
out of a file.
In fa10b75 the assert to check if data == NULL was remove for
smalloc::Alloc with no callback. It should have also been removed where
a callback is accepted.
No sense in making sure that length == 0 if data == NULL because devs
already have to be responsible for checking that length is the same as
the char* they're passing in.
It hits a compiler bug in gcc <= 4.4 similar to the issue that was
recently addressed in commit 157d2bc:
../deps/v8/include/v8.h: In function ‘char*
node::Buffer::Data(v8::Persistent&) [with TypeName = v8::Object]’:
../src/node_crypto.cc:1123: instantiated from here
../deps/v8/include/v8.h:876: error: ‘class v8::Data’ is not a
function,
../src/node_internals.h:356: error: conflict with ‘template char*
node::Buffer::Data(v8::Persistent&)’
../src/node_internals.h:357: error: in call to ‘Data’
Remove the helper function, it was only used in a couple of places.
Should fix the build on Ubuntu 10.04.
Fixes#5844.
Previously there was no way to pass a Function callback directly to
MakeCallback and support domains. The check has been added so that users
never have to worry about supporting domains while using MakeCallback.
X509_STORE_add_cert increment reference of passed `x509` cert,
`X509_free` must be called to avoid memory leak.
This is a back-port of commit c1db1ec from the master branch.
* uv: Upgrade to v0.10.12
* npm: Upgrade to 1.3.2
* windows: get proper errno (Ben Noordhuis)
* tls: only wait for finish if we haven't seen it (Timothy J Fontaine)
* http: Dump response when request is aborted (isaacs)
* http: use an unref'd timer to fix delay in exit (Peter Rust)
* zlib: level can be negative (Brian White)
* zlib: allow zero values for level and strategy (Brian White)
* buffer: add comment explaining buffer alignment (Ben Noordhuis)
* string_bytes: properly detect 64bit (Timothy J Fontaine)
* src: fix memory leak in UsingDomains() (Ben Noordhuis)
A pooled https agent may get a Connection: close, but never finish
destroying the socket as the prior request had already emitted finish
likely from a pipe.
Since the socket is not marked as destroyed it may get reused by the
agent pool and result in an ECONNRESET.
re: #5712#5739
Instead of destroying sockets when there are no pending requests, put
them in a freeSockets list, and unref() them so that they do not keep
the event loop open.
Also, set the default max sockets to Infinity, to prevent the awful
surprising deadlocks that happen when more connections are made.
When creating a slice, make sure to propagate the originating parent.
This is to prevent a buf.parent.parent.(etc) scenario.
Also speed up the constructor by preventing lookup of non-existant
properties by setting them beforehand in the prototype. (see
https://github.com/joyent/node/commit/7ce5a31#commitcomment-3332779)
Since the SlabAllocator was removed the buffer length/offset is no
longer sent to the onread callback. The benchmarks have been updated to
reflect that.
Fix bug where if dev passed a callback to Alloc then called AllocDispose
it wouldn't bother to pass the data to the callback and instead would
just free it.
There was previously up to a second exit delay when exiting node
right after an http request/response, due to the utcDate() function
doing a setTimeout to update the cached date/time.
Fixing this should increase the performance of our http tests.
This is a big commit that touches just about every file in the src/
directory. The V8 API has changed in significant ways. The most
important changes are:
* Binding functions take a const v8::FunctionCallbackInfo<T>& argument
rather than a const v8::Arguments& argument.
* Binding functions return void rather than v8::Handle<v8::Value>. The
return value is returned with the args.GetReturnValue().Set() family
of functions.
* v8::Persistent<T> no longer derives from v8::Handle<T> and no longer
allows you to directly dereference the object that the persistent
handle points to. This means that the common pattern of caching
oft-used JS values in a persistent handle no longer quite works,
you first need to reconstruct a v8::Local<T> from the persistent
handle with the Local<T>::New(isolate, persistent) factory method.
A handful of (internal) convenience classes and functions have been
added to make dealing with the new API a little easier.
The most visible one is node::Cached<T>, which wraps a v8::Persistent<T>
with some template sugar. It can hold arbitrary types but so far it's
exclusively used for v8::Strings (which was by far the most commonly
cached handle type.)
The previous commit removes our patch that builds V8 at -O2 rather
than -O3 so there is not much point in keeping the configure switch
around.
The reason it did so was to work around an assortment of compiler and
linker bugs. In particular, certain combinations of g++ and binutils
generate bad or no code when -ffunction-sections or -finline-functions
is enabled (which -O3 implicitly does.)
It was quite the problem back in the day because everyone and his dog
built from source. Now that we have prebuilt binaries and packages
available, there is no longer a pressing need to be so accommodating.
If you experience spurious (or possibly not so spurious) segmentation
faults after this commit, you need to upgrade your compiler/linker
toolchain.
UsingDomains() assigned process_tickCallback when it had already
been set by MakeCallback() a few frames down the call stack.
Dispose the handle first or we'll retain whatever is in the lexical
closure of the old process._tickCallback function.
Fixes#5795.
If a transform stream has objectMode = true, it should
allow falsey values other than (null) like 0, false, ''.
null is reserved to indicate stream eof but other falsey
values should flow through properly.
Now that Buffer instantiation has improved, the SlabAllocator is an
unnecessary layer of complexity preventing further performance
optimizations.
Currently there is a small performance loss with very small stream
requests, but this will soon be addressed.
Assert that when the client closes it has seen an error, this prevents
the test from timing out.
Also queue a second write in the case that we were able to send the
buffer before the other side closed the connection.
There was previously up to a second exit delay when exiting node
right after an http request/response, due to the utcDate() function
doing a setTimeout to update the cached date/time.
Fixing this should increase the performance of our http tests.
Assert that when the client closes it has seen an error, this prevents
the test from timing out.
Also queue a second write in the case that we were able to send the
buffer before the other side closed the connection.
Most TryCatch blocks have SetVerbose flag on, this tells V8 to report
uncaught exceptions to debugger.
FatalException handler is called from V8 Message listener instead from
the place where TryCatch was used. Otherwise uncaught exceptions are
logged twice.
See comment in `deps/v8/include/v8.h` for explanation of SetVerbose
flag:
> By default, exceptions that are caught by an external exception
> handler are not reported. Call SetVerbose with true on an
> external exception handler to have exceptions caught by the
> handler reported as if they were not caught.
The flag is used by `Isolate::ShouldReportException()`, which is called
by `Isolate::DoThrow()` to decide whether an exception is considered
uncaught.
Might cause write head running over read head, when there were no
allocation and `Commit()` was called. Source of at least one test
failure on windows (`simple/test-https-drain.js`).
gcc 4.2 on OS X gets confused about the call to node::Buffer::Data().
Fully qualify the function name to help it along.
Fixes the following build error:
../../deps/v8/include/v8.h: In function ‘char*
node::Buffer::Data(v8::Handle<v8::Value>)’:
../../deps/v8/include/v8.h:900: error: ‘class v8::Data’
is not a function,
../../src/node_buffer.h:38: error:
conflict with ‘char* node::Buffer::Data(v8::Handle<v8::Object>)’
../../src/node_buffer.cc:94: error:
in call to ‘Data’
Buffer(<String>) used to pass the string to js where it would then be
passed back to cpp for processing. Now only the buffer object
instantiation is done in js and the string is processed in cpp.
Also added a Buffer api that also accepts the encoding.
Old fill would take the char code of the first character and wrap around
the int to fit in the 127 range. Now fill will duplicate whatever string
is given through the entirety of the buffer.
Note: There is one bug around ending on a partial fill of any character
outside the ASCII range.
While the new Buffer implementation is much faster we still have the
necessity of using Buffer pools. This is undesirable because it may
still lead to unwanted memory retention, but for the time being this is
the best solution.
Because of this re-introduction, and since there is no more SlowBuffer
type, the SlowBuffer method has been re-purposed to return a non-pooled
Buffer instance. This will be helpful for developers to store data for
indeterminate lengths of time without introducing a memory leak.
Another change to Buffer pools was that they are only allocated if the
requested chunk is < poolSize / 2. This was done because allocations are
much quicker now, and it's a better use of the pool.
Memory allocations are now done through smalloc. The Buffer cc class has
been removed completely, but for backwards compatibility have left the
namespace as Buffer.
The .parent attribute is only set if the Buffer is a slice of an
allocation. Which is then set to the alloc object (not a Buffer).
The .offset attribute is now a ReadOnly set to 0, for backwards
compatibility. I'd like to remove it in the future (pre v1.0).
A few alterations have been made to how arguments are either coerced or
thrown. All primitives will now be coerced to their respective values,
and (most) all out of range index requests will throw.
The indexes that are coerced were left for backwards compatibility. For
example: Buffer slice operates more like Array slice, and coerces
instead of throwing out of range indexes. This may change in the future.
The reason for wanting to throw for out of range indexes is because
giving js access to raw memory has high potential risk. To mitigate that
it's easier to make sure the developer is always quickly alerted to the
fact that their code is attempting to access beyond memory bounds.
Because SlowBuffer will be deprecated, and simply returns a new Buffer
instance, all tests on SlowBuffer have been removed.
Heapdumps will now show usage under "smalloc" instead of "Buffer".
ParseArrayIndex was added to node_internals to support proper uint
argument checking/coercion for external array data indexes.
SlabAllocator had to be updated since handle_ no longer exists.
If the user knows the allocation is no longer needed then the memory can
be manually released.
Currently this will not ClearWeak the Persistent, so the callback will
still run.
If the user passed a ClearWeak callback, and then disposed the object,
the buffer callback argument will == NULL.
smalloc is a simple utility for quickly allocating external memory onto
js objects. This will be used to centralize how memory is managed in
node, and will become the backer for Buffers. So in the future crypto's
SlabBuffer, stream's SlabAllocator will be removed.
Note on the js API: because no arguments are optional the order of
arguments have been placed to match their cc counterparts as closely as
possible.
The console module has always been called 'stdio' in the
table-of-contents, but nowhere else, since its name is
'console'. This makes it difficult to find.
This is a back-port of commit 226a20d from the master branch.
Libuv may provide a NULL buffer to the uv_read callback in case of an
error, so with this assert we'd be using the api incorrectly. None of
the current DoRead implementations rely on this constraint, either.
The console module has always been called 'stdio' in the
table-of-contents, but nowhere else, since its name is
'console'. This makes it difficult to find.
Resolves minor discrepancies between android and standard POSIX systems.
In addition, some configure parameters were added, and a helper-script
for android configuration. Ideally, this script should be merged into
the standard configure script.
To build for android, source the android-configure script with an NDK
path:
source ./android-configure ~/android-ndk-r8d
This will create an android standalone toolchain and export the
necessary environment parameters.
After that, build as normal:
make -j8
After the build, you should now have android-compatible NodeJS binaries.
Suppress the following warning:
../../src/cares_wrap.cc: In function ‘v8::Handle<v8::Value>
node::cares_wrap::SetServers(const v8::Arguments&)’:
../../src/cares_wrap.cc:1017:5: warning: ‘uv_ret.uv_err_s::code’
may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wuninitialized]
Split `tls.js` into `_tls_legacy.js`, containing legacy
`createSecurePair` API, and `_tls_wrap.js` containing new code based on
`tls_wrap` binding.
Remove tests that are no longer useful/valid.
In case of cross-compilation host_arch_cc() function could return
target arch if CC was set to target arch compiler. Host arch
compiler should always be used in this case. This was broken
by commit 707863c.
This reverts commit a40133d10c.
Unfortunately, this breaks socket.io. Even though it's not strictly an
API change, it is too subtle and in too brittle an area of node, to be
done in a stable branch.
Conflicts:
doc/api/http.markdown
When large strings are used they cause v8's GC to spend a lot more time
cleaning up. In these cases it's much faster to use external string
resources.
UTF8 strings do not use external string resources because only one and
two byte external strings are supported.
EXTERN_APEX is the value at which v8's GC overtakes performance.
The following table has the type and buffer size that use to encode the
strings as rough estimates of the percentage of performance gain from
this patch (UTF8 is missing because they cannot be externalized).
encoding 128KB 1MB 5MB
-----------------------------
ASCII 58% 208% 250%
HEX 15% 74% 86%
BASE64 11% 74% 71%
UCS2 2% 225% 398%
BINARY 2234% 1728% 2305%
BINARY is so much faster across the board because of using the new v8
WriteOneByte API.
v8 has a new API to write out strings to memory. This has been
implemented.
One other change of note is BINARY encoded strings have a new
implementation. This has improved performance substantially.
Clang branch release_33 would optimize out a != NULL check because of
some undefined behavior. This is a floating patch as a backport of that
fix.
Committed: http://code.google.com/p/v8/source/detail?r=13570
Normalize the encoding in getEncoding() before using it. Fixes a
"AssertionError: Cannot change encoding" exception when the caller
mixes "utf8" and "utf-8".
Fixes#5655.
Before this commit NodeBIO never shrank, possibly consuming a lot of
memory (depending on reader's haste).
All buffers between write_head's child and read_head should be
deallocated on read, leaving only space left in write_head and in the
next buffer.
Commit 0bba5902 accidentally (or maybe erroneously) added node_isolate
to src/node.h and src/node_object_wrap.h.
Undo that, said variable is not for public consumption. Add-on authors
should use v8::Isolate::GetCurrent() instead.
I missed that while reviewing. Mea culpa.
Fixes#5639.
This is only relevant for CentOS 6.3 using kernel version 2.6.32.
On other linuxes and darwin, the `read` call gets an ECONNRESET in that
case. On sunos, the `write` call fails with EPIPE.
However, old CentOS will occasionally send an EOF instead of a
ECONNRESET or EPIPE when the client has been destroyed abruptly.
Make sure we don't keep trying to write or read more in that case.
Fixes#5504
However, there is still the question of what libuv should do when it
gets an EOF. Apparently in this case, it will continue trying to read,
which is almost certainly the wrong thing to do.
That should be fixed in libuv, even though this works around the issue.
In cases where there are multiple @-chars in a url, Node currently
parses the hostname and auth sections differently than web browsers.
This part of the bug is serious, and should be landed in v0.10, and
also ported to v0.8, and releases made as soon as possible.
The less serious issue is that there are many other sorts of malformed
urls which Node either accepts when it should reject, or interprets
differently than web browsers. For example, `http://a.com*foo` is
interpreted by Node like `http://a.com/*foo` when web browsers treat
this as `http://a.com%3Bfoo/`.
In general, *only* the `hostEndingChars` should be the characters that
delimit the host portion of the URL. Most of the current `nonHostChars`
that appear in the hostname should be escaped, but some of them (such as
`;` and `%` when it does not introduce a hex pair) should raise an
error.
We need to have a broader discussion about whether it's best to throw in
these cases, and potentially break extant programs, or return an object
that has every field set to `null` so that any attempt to read the
hostname/auth/etc. will appear to be empty.
In some cases, the http CONNECT/Upgrade API is unshifting an empty
bodyHead buffer onto the socket.
Normally, stream.unshift(chunk) does not set state.reading=false.
However, this check was not being done for the case when the chunk was
empty (either `''` or `Buffer(0)`), and as a result, it was causing the
socket to think that a read had completed, and to stop providing data.
This bug is not limited to http or web sockets, but rather would affect
any parser that unshifts data back onto the source stream without being
very careful to never unshift an empty chunk. Since the intent of
unshift is to *not* change the state.reading property, this is a bug.
Fixes#5557FixesLearnBoost/socket.io#1242
Remove the need to call start/stop the uv_idle spinner between
MakeCallbacks. The one place where the tick processor needs to be kicked
is where a user catches uncaughtException. For that we'll now use
setImmediate, which accomplishes the same task.
maxTickDepth checks have been removed for domains and replaced with a
flag that checks if the last callback threw. If it did then execution of
the remaining tickQueue is deferred to the spinner.
This is to prevent domains from entering a continuous loop when an error
callback also throws an error.
Removes the check for maxTickDepth for non-domain callbacks. So a user
can starve I/O by setting a recursive nextTick.
The domain case is more complex and will be addressed in another commit.
Previous code was calling uv_loop_delete() directly on a running loop,
which led to race condition aborts/segfaults within libuv. This change
changes the watchdog thread to call uv_run() with UV_RUN_ONCE so that
the call exits after either the timer times out or uv_async_send() is
called from the main thread in Watchdog::Destroy(). The timer/async
handles are then closed and uv_run() with UV_RUN_DEFAULT is called so
that libuv has a chance to cleanup before the thread exits. The main
thread meanwhile calls uv_thread_join() and then uv_loop_delete() to
complete the cleanup.
Before this, entering something like:
> JSON.parse('066');
resulted in the "..." prompt instead of displaying the expected
"SyntaxError: Unexpected number"
1. Emit `sslOutEnd` only when `_internallyPendingBytes() === 0`.
2. Read before checking `._halfRead`, otherwise we'll see only previous
value, and will invoke `._write` callback improperly.
3. Wait for both `end` and `finish` events in `.destroySoon`.
4. Unpipe encrypted stream from socket to prevent write after destroy.
Stream's `._write()` callback should be invoked only after it's opposite
stream has finished processing incoming data, otherwise `finish` event
fires too early and connection might be closed while there's some data
to send to the client.
see #5544
Quote from SSL_shutdown man page:
The output of SSL_get_error(3) may be misleading,
as an erroneous SSL_ERROR_SYSCALL may be flagged even though
no error occurred.
Also, handle all other errors to prevent assertion in `ClearError()`.
When writing bad data to EncryptedStream it'll first get to the
ClientHello parser, and, only after it will refuse it, to the OpenSSL.
But ClientHello parser has limited buffer and therefore write could
return `bytes_written` < `incoming_bytes`, which is not the case when
working with OpenSSL.
After such errors ClientHello parser disables itself and will
pass-through all data to the OpenSSL. So just trying to write data one
more time will throw the rest into OpenSSL and let it handle it.
Otherwise, writing an empty string causes the whole program to grind to
a halt when piping data into http messages.
This wasn't as much of a problem (though it WAS a bug) in 0.8 and
before, because our hyperactive 'drain' behavior would mean that some
*previous* write() would probably have a pending drain event, and cause
things to start moving again.
This saves a few calls to gettimeofday which can be expensive, and
potentially subject to clock drift. Instead use the loop time which
uses hrtime internally.
fixes#5497
This commit adds an optimization to the HTTP client that makes it
possible to:
* Pack the headers and the first chunk of the request body into a
single write().
* Pack the chunk header and the chunk itself into a single write().
Because only one write() system call is issued instead of several,
the chances of data ending up in a single TCP packet are phenomenally
higher: the benchmark with `type=buf size=32` jumps from 50 req/s to
7,500 req/s, a 150-fold increase.
This commit removes the check from e4b716ef that pushes binary encoded
strings into the slow path. The commit log mentions that:
We were assuming that any string can be concatenated safely to
CRLF. However, for hex, base64, or binary encoded writes, this
is not the case, and results in sending the incorrect response.
For hex and base64 strings that's certainly true but binary strings
are 'das Ding an sich': string.length is the same before and after
decoding.
Fixes#5528.
Consider a user on his Mac, who wants to cross-compile for his Linux ARM device:
./configure --dest-cpu=arm --dest-os=linux
Before this patch, for example, DTrace probes would incorrectly attempt to be
enabled because the configure script is running on a MacOS machine, even though
we're trying to compile a binary for `linux`.
With this patch, the `--dest-os` flag is respected throughout the configure
script, thus leaving DTrace probes disabled in this cross-compiling scenario.
When an internal api needs a timeout, they should use
timers._unrefActive since that won't hold the loop open. This solves
the problem where you might have unref'd the socket handle but the
timeout for the socket was still active.
Previously one could write anywhere in a buffer pool if they accidently
got their offset wrong. Mainly because the cc level checks only test
against the parent slow buffer and not against the js object properties.
So now we check to make sure values won't go beyond bounds without
letting the dev know.
Because of variations in different base64 implementation, it's been
decided to strip all padding from the end of a base64 string and
calculate its size from that.
Add localAddress and localPort properties to tls.CleartextStream.
Like remoteAddress and localPort, delegate to the backing net.Socket
object.
Refs #5502.
Instead of String::New every time, use a Persistent sym. This can be
accomplished in two ways:
1) Local<String> str = *persistent_str_sym;
2) Handle<String> str = persistent_str_sym;
I've chosen to use the latter method for simplicity's sake.
Other small changes include creating syms on Initialize and removing
unnecessary Local casting on return values.
The default encoding is 'buffer'. When the input is a string, treat it
as 'binary'. Fixes the following assertion:
node: ../src/string_bytes.cc:309: static size_t
node::StringBytes::StorageSize(v8::Handle<v8::Value>, node::encoding):
Assertion `0 && "buffer encoding specified but string provided"'
failed.
Introduced in 64fc34b2.
Fixes#5482.
Test case:
var t = setInterval(function() {}, 1);
process.nextTick(t.unref);
Output:
Assertion failed: (args.Holder()->InternalFieldCount() > 0),
function Unref, file ../src/handle_wrap.cc, line 78.
setInterval() returns a binding layer object. Make it stop doing that,
wrap the raw process.binding('timer_wrap').Timer object in a Timeout
object.
Fixes#4261.
Commit 38149bb changes http.get() and http.request() to escape unsafe
characters. However, that creates an incompatibility with v0.10 that
is difficult to work around: if you escape the path manually, then in
v0.11 it gets escaped twice. Change lib/http.js so it no longer tries
to fix up bad request paths, simply reject them with an exception.
The actual check is rather basic right now. The full check for illegal
characters is difficult to implement efficiently because it requires a
few characters of lookahead. That's why it currently only checks for
spaces because those are guaranteed to create an invalid request.
Fixes#5474.
getServers returns an array of ips that are currently being used for
resolution
setServers takes an array of ips that are to be used for resolution,
this will throw if there's invalid input but preserve the original
configuration
This also templatizes the Buffer::*Slice functions, and the template
function probably cannot be safely used outside of Node. However, it
also SHOULD not be used outside of Node, so this is arguably a feature
as well as a caveat.
Pretty much everything assumes strings to be utf-8, but crypto
traditionally used binary strings, so we need to keep the default
that way until most users get off of that pattern.
If there is an encoding, and we do 'stream.push(chunk, enc)', and the
encoding argument matches the stated encoding, then we're converting from
a string, to a buffer, and then back to a string. Of course, this is a
completely pointless bit of work, so it's best to avoid it when we know
that we can do so safely.
Empirical evidence suggests that OS-level load balancing (that is,
having multiple processes listen on a socket and have the operating
system wake up one when a connection comes in) produces skewed load
distributions on Linux, Solaris and possibly other operating systems.
The observed behavior is that a fraction of the listening processes
receive the majority of the connections. From the perspective of the
operating system, that somewhat makes sense: a task switch is expensive,
to be avoided whenever possible. That's why the operating system likes
to give preferential treatment to a few processes, because it reduces
the number of switches.
However, that rather subverts the purpose of the cluster module, which
is to distribute the load as evenly as possible. That's why this commit
adds (and defaults to) round-robin support, meaning that the master
process accepts connections and distributes them to the workers in a
round-robin fashion, effectively bypassing the operating system.
Round-robin is currently disabled on Windows due to how IOCP is wired
up. It works and you can select it manually but it probably results in
a heavy performance hit.
Fixes#4435.
Commit 9352c19 ("child_process: don't emit same handle twice") trades
one bug for another.
Before said commit, a handle was sometimes delivered with messages it
didn't belong to.
The bug fix introduced another bug that needs some explaining. On UNIX
systems, handles are basically file descriptors that are passed around
with the sendmsg() and recvmsg() system calls, using auxiliary data
(SCM_RIGHTS) as the transport.
node.js and libuv depend on the fact that none of the supported systems
ever emit more than one SCM_RIGHTS message from a recvmsg() syscall.
That assumption is something we should probably address someday for the
sake of portability but that's a separate discussion.
So, SCM_RIGHTS messages are never coalesced. SCM_RIGHTS and normal
messages however _are_ coalesced. That is, recvmsg() might return this:
recvmsg(); // { "message-with-fd", "message", "message" }
The operating system implicitly breaks pending messages along
SCM_RIGHTS boundaries. Most Unices break before such messages but Linux
also breaks _after_ them. When the sender looks like this:
sendmsg("message");
sendmsg("message-with-fd");
sendmsg("message");
Then on most Unices the receiver sees messages arriving like this:
recvmsg(); // { "message" }
recvmsg(); // { "message-with-fd", "message" }
The bug fix in commit 9352c19 assumes this behavior. On Linux however,
those messages can also come in like this:
recvmsg(); // { "message", "message-with-fd" }
recvmsg(); // { "message" }
In other words, it's incorrect to assume that the file descriptor is
always attached to the first message. This commit makes node wise up.
Fixes#5330.
This adds proper support for the following situation:
w.cork();
w.write(...);
w.cork();
w.write(...);
w.uncork();
w.write(...);
w.uncork();
This is relevant when you have a function (as we do in HTTP) that wants
to use cork, but in some cases, want to have a cork/uncork *around*
that function, without losing the benefits of writev.
In synchronous Writable streams (where the _write cb is called on the
current tick), the 'finish' event (and thus the end() callback) can in
some cases be called before all the write() callbacks are called.
Use a counter, and have stream.Transform rely on the 'prefinish' event
instead of the 'finish' event.
This has zero effect on most streams, but it corrects an edge case and
makes it perform more deterministically, which is a Good Thing.
uv_async_t handles for dispatching of debug messages and
emitting NODE_DEBUG_ENABLED used to be initialized every time
node::EnableDebug() was called, which happened every time
user sends a SIGUSR1.
Now they are initialized only once from node::Init() during
application start.
Implement support for debugging cluster workers. Each worker process
is assigned a new debug port in an increasing sequence.
I.e. when master process uses port 5858, then worker 1 uses port 5859,
worker 2 uses port 5860, and so on.
Introduce new command-line parameter '--debug-port=' which sets debug_port
but does not start debugger. This option works for all node processes, it
is not specific to cluster workers.
Fixesjoyent/node#5318.
Preserve default install prefix seen in process.config, but use DESTDIR
for installing to deliniate 32/64 versions, avoid conflicts with PREFIX
settings in config.mk
Preserve default install prefix seen in process.config, but use DESTDIR
for installing to deliniate 32/64 versions, avoid conflicts with PREFIX
settings in config.mk
Change vcbuild.bat to ignore VCINSTALLDIR environment variable,
always check for specific VS version and set GYP_MSVS_VERSION
accordingly. Otherwise GYP generates project files in format
that cannot be compiled by VS2012.
When developer calls setBreakpoint with an unknown script name,
we convert the script name into regular expression matching all
paths ending with given name (name can be a relative path too).
To create such breakpoint in V8, we use type `scriptRegEx`
instead of `scriptId` for `setbreakpoint` request.
To restore such breakpoint, we save the original script name
send by the user. We use this original name to set (restore)
breakpoint in the new child process.
This is a back-port of commit 5db936d from the master branch.
After much investigation it turns out that the affected servers are
buggy. user-service.condenastdigital.com:443 in particular seems to
reject large TLS handshake records. Cutting down the number of
advertised ciphers or disabling SNI fixes the issue.
Similarly, passing { secureOptions: constants.SSL_OP_NO_TLSv1_2 }
seems to fix most connection issues with IIS servers.
Having to work around buggy servers is annoying for our users but not
a reason to downgrade OpenSSL. Therefore, revert it.
This reverts commit 4fdb8acdae.
Add a watchdog class which executes a timer in a separate event loop in
a separate thread that will terminate v8 execution if it expires.
Add timeout argument to functions in vm module which use the watchdog
if a non-zero timeout is specified.
This commit undoes the downgrade from OpenSSL v1.0.1e to v1.0.0f,
effectively upgrading OpenSSL to v1.0.1e again. The reason for the
downgrade was to work around compatibility issues with certain TLS
servers in the stable branch. See the commit log of 4fdb8ac and the
linked issue for details. We're going to revisit that in the master
branch.
This reverts commit 4fdb8acdae.
Forward-port the comments from commit 01e2920 (v0.10) to the master
branch. Everything else from that patch already exists in master.
It didn't merge cleanly because lib/http.js has been split up in
several files.
Several people have reported issues with IIS and Resin servers (or maybe
SSL terminators sitting in front of those servers) that are fixed by
downgrading OpenSSL. The AESNI performance improvements were nice but
stability is more important. Downgrade OpenSSL from 1.0.1e to 1.0.0f.
Fixes#5360 (and others).
When developer calls setBreakpoint with an unknown script name,
we convert the script name into regular expression matching all
paths ending with given name (name can be a relative path too).
To create such breakpoint in V8, we use type `scriptRegEx`
instead of `scriptId` for `setbreakpoint` request.
To restore such breakpoint, we save the original script name
send by the user. We use this original name to set (restore)
breakpoint in the new child process.
Fixed a bug in debugger repl where `restart` command did not work
when a custom debug port was specified via command-line option
--port={number}.
File test/simple/helper-debugger-repl.js was extracted
from test/simple/test-debugger-repl.js
Fixed a bug in debugger repl where `restart` command did not work
when a custom debug port was specified via command-line option
--port={number}.
File test/simple/helper-debugger-repl.js was extracted
from test/simple/test-debugger-repl.js
Errors in leaf child processes weren't picked up by the test runner
because they didn't get bubbled up to the main process. Don't forcibly
kill the child processes; tell them to quit gracefully, then inspect
their exit codes.
This change introduces support for the common PREFIX variable in the
Makefile and install.py, instead of having /usr/local hardcoded. This
makes it much easier to install node to custom locations e.g. in a
user's home directory.
The PREFIX variable defaults to /usr/local.
The uname function can return any non-negative int to indicate success.
Strange, but that's how it is documented. This also fixes a similar
buffer overflow in the even more unlikely event that info.release is
> 255 characters, similar to how 78c5de5 did for info.sysname.
Fixes#3740
In the case of pipelined requests, you can have a situation where
the socket gets destroyed via one req/res object, but then trying
to destroy *another* req/res on the same socket will cause it to
call undefined.destroy(), since it was already removed from that
message.
Add a guard to OutgoingMessage.destroy and IncomingMessage.destroy
to prevent this error.
Fixes#3740
In the case of pipelined requests, you can have a situation where
the socket gets destroyed via one req/res object, but then trying
to destroy *another* req/res on the same socket will cause it to
call undefined.destroy(), since it was already removed from that
message.
Add a guard to OutgoingMessage.destroy and IncomingMessage.destroy
to prevent this error.
It needs to apply the Transform class when the _readableState,
_writableState, or _transformState properties are accessed,
otherwise things like setEncoding and on('data') don't work
properly.
Also, the methods wrappers are no longer needed, since they're only
problematic because they access the undefined properties.
Clean up and DRY the cluster source code. Fix a few bugs while we're
here:
* Short-lived handles in long-lived worker processes were never
reclaimed, resulting in resource leaks.
* Handles in the master process are now closed when the last worker
that holds a reference to them quits. Previously, they were only
closed at cluster shutdown.
* The cluster object no longer exposes functions/properties that are
only valid in the 'other' process, e.g. cluster.fork() is no longer
exported in worker processes.
So much goodness and still manages to reduce the line count from 590
to 320.
An absolute path will always open the same location regardless of your
current working directory. For posix, this just means path.charAt(0) ===
'/', but on Windows it's a little more complicated.
Fixesjoyent/node#5299.
V8 was upgraded to 3.18 in commit 9f68226. The knobs that control the
ARM build have changed in a number of ways. This commit patches the
configure script to reflect that. Should fix the Raspberry Pi build.
Fixes#5329.
4716dc6 made assert.equal() and related functions work better by
generating a better toString() from the expected, actual, and operator
values passed to fail(). Unfortunately, this was accomplished by putting
the generated message into the error's `name` property. When you passed
in a custom error message, the error would put the custom error into
`name` *and* `message`, resulting in helpful string representations like
"AssertionError: Oh no: Oh no".
This commit resolves that issue by storing the generated message in the
`message` property while leaving the error's name alone and adding
a regression test so that this doesn't pop back up later.
Closes#5292.
I broke dgram.Socket#bind(port, cb) almost a year ago in 332fea5a but
it wasn't until today that someone complained and none of the tests
caught it because they all either specify the address or omit the
callback.
Anyway, now it works again and does what you expect: it binds the
socket to the "any" address ("0.0.0.0" for IPv4 and "::" for IPv6.)
process.stdout isn't fully initialized yet by the time the test starts
when invoked with `python tools/test.py`. Use process.stdin instead and
force initialization with process.stdin.resume().
Fix a NULL pointer dereference in src/handle_wrap.cc which is really a
use-after-close bug.
The test checks that unref() after close() works on process.stdout but
this bug affects everything that derives from HandleWrap. I discovered
it because child processes would sometimes quit for no reason (that is,
no reason until I turned on core dumps.)
When LD_LIBRARY_PATH is overriden for custom builds we need to preserve
it for child processes. To be sure we preserve whole environment of
parent process and just add TEST_INIT variable to it.
When LD_LIBRARY_PATH is overriden for custom builds we need to preserve
it for forked process. There are possibly other environment variables
that could cause test failures so we preserve whole environment of
parent process.
Fix a (rather academic) buffer overflow. MAXHOSTNAMELEN is 256 on most
platforms, which means the buffer wasn't big enough to hold the
trailing nul byte on a system with a maximum length hostname.
Make http.request() and friends escape unsafe characters in the request
path. That is, a request for '/foo bar' is now escaped as '/foo%20bar'.
Before this commit, the path was used as-is in the request status line,
creating an invalid HTTP request ("GET /foo bar HTTP/1.1").
Fixes#4381.
Fix#5272
The consumption of a readable stream is a dance with 3 partners.
1. The specific stream Author (A)
2. The Stream Base class (B), and
3. The Consumer of the stream (C)
When B calls the _read() method that A implements, it sets a 'reading'
flag, so that parallel calls to _read() can be avoided. When A calls
stream.push(), B knows that it's safe to start calling _read() again.
If the consumer C is some kind of parser that wants in some cases to
pass the source stream off to some other party, but not before "putting
back" some bit of previously consumed data (as in the case of Node's
websocket http upgrade implementation). So, stream.unshift() will
generally *never* be called by A, but *only* called by C.
Prior to this patch, stream.unshift() *also* unset the state.reading
flag, meaning that C could indicate the end of a read, and B would
dutifully fire off another _read() call to A. This is inappropriate.
In the case of fs streams, and other variably-laggy streams that don't
tolerate overlapped _read() calls, this causes big problems.
Also, calling stream.shift() after the 'end' event did not raise any
kind of error, but would cause very strange behavior indeed. Calling it
after the EOF chunk was seen, but before the 'end' event was fired would
also cause weird behavior, and could lead to data being lost, since it
would not emit another 'readable' event.
This change makes it so that:
1. stream.unshift() does *not* set state.reading = false
2. stream.unshift() is allowed up until the 'end' event.
3. unshifting onto a EOF-encountered and zero-length (but not yet
end-emitted) stream will defer the 'end' event until the new data is
consumed.
4. pushing onto a EOF-encountered stream is now an error.
So, if you read(), you have that single tick to safely unshift() data
back into the stream, even if the null chunk was pushed, and the length
was 0.
Don't scan the whole string for a "NODE_" substring, just check that
the string starts with the expected prefix.
This is a reprise of dbbfbe7 but this time for the child_process
module.
Don't scan the whole string for a "NODE_CLUSTER_" substring, just check
that the string starts with the expected prefix. The linear scan was
causing a noticeable (but unsurprising) slowdown on messages with a
large .cmd string property.
Call SetPointerInInternalField(0, NULL) rather than
SetInternalField(0, Undefined()).
Fixes the following spurious NULL pointer dereference in debug builds:
#0 0x03ad2821 in v8::internal::FixedArrayBase::length ()
#1 0x03ad1dfc in v8::internal::FixedArray::get ()
#2 0x03ae05dd in v8::internal::Context::global_object ()
#3 0x03b6b87d in v8::internal::Context::builtins ()
#4 0x03ae1871 in v8::internal::Isolate::js_builtins_object ()
#5 0x03ab4fab in v8::CallV8HeapFunction ()
#6 0x03ab4d4a in v8::Value::Equals ()
#7 0x03b4f38b in CheckEqualsHelper ()
#8 0x03ac0f4b in v8::Object::SetInternalField ()
#9 0x06a99ddd in node::ObjectWrap::~ObjectWrap ()
#10 0x06a8b051 in node::Buffer::~Buffer ()
#11 0x06a8afbb in node::Buffer::~Buffer ()
#12 0x06a8af5e in node::Buffer::~Buffer ()
#13 0x06a9e569 in node::ObjectWrap::WeakCallback ()
We should go to next buffer if *current* one is full, not the next one.
Otherwise we may hop through buffers and written data will become
interleaved, which will lead to failure.
This change shouldn't have landed in the stable branch. It's a feature,
not a bug fix.
This reverts commit 58f93ffc4a.
This reverts commit 8c8ebe49b6.
This reverts commit ba0f7b8066.
This reverts commit 21f3c5c367.
Buffer.byteLength() works only for string inputs. Thus, when connection
has pending Buffer to write, it should just use it's length instead of
throwing exception.
Since 049903e, an end callback could be called before a write
callback if end() is called before the write is done. This patch
resolves the issue.
In collaboration with @gne
Fixesfelixge/node-formidable#209Fixes#5215
We were assuming that any string can be concatenated safely to
CRLF. However, for hex, base64, or binary encoded writes, this
is not the case, and results in sending the incorrect response.
An unusual edge case, but certainly a bug.
DH_compute_secret() may return key that is smaller than input buffer,
in such cases key should be left-padded because it is a BN (big number).
fix#5239
We should go to next buffer if *current* one is full, not the next one.
Otherwise we may hop through buffers and written data will become
interleaved, which will lead to failure.
On Linux, positional writes don't work when the file is opened in
append mode. The kernel ignores the position argument and always
appends the data to the end of the file.
To quote the man page:
POSIX requires that opening a file with the O_APPEND flag should have
no affect on the location at which pwrite() writes data. However, on
Linux, if a file is opened with O_APPEND, pwrite() appends data to the
end of the file, regardless of the value of offset.
RFC 6125 explicitly states that a client "MUST NOT seek a match
for a reference identifier of CN-ID if the presented identifiers
include a DNS-ID, SRV-ID, URI-ID, or any application-specific
identifier types supported by the client", but it MAY do so if
none of the mentioned identifier types (but others) are present.
Always define v8_postmortem_support, even if the platform does not
support it. Commit d8852aa adds a rule that references it in node.gyp.
Fixes the Windows build.
The DTrace probes were updated to accomodate platforms that can't
handle structs, update the prototypes for ETW but it's not necessary
to do anything with the new arguments as it's redundant information.
OSX and other DTrace implementations don't support dereferencing
structs in probes. To accomodate that pass members from the struct as
arguments so that DTrace is useful on those systems.
If an http response has an 'end' handler that throws, then the socket
will never be released back into the pool.
Granted, we do NOT guarantee that throwing will never have adverse
effects on Node internal state. Such a guarantee cannot be reasonably
made in a shared-global mutable-state side-effecty language like
JavaScript. However, in this case, it's a rather trivial patch to
increase our resilience a little bit, so it seems like a win.
There is no semantic change in this case, except that some event
listeners are removed, and the `'free'` event is emitted on nextTick, so
that you can schedule another request which will re-use the same socket.
From the user's point of view, there should be no detectable difference.
Closes#5107
The tests did not agree with the test comments. Tests first and second
were both testing the !state.reading case. Now second tests the
state.reading && state.length case.
Fixesjoyent/node#5183
The v0.8 Stream.pipe() method automatically destroyed the destination
stream whenever the src stream closed. However, this caused a lot of
problems, and was removed by popular demand. (Many userland modules
still have a no-op destroy() method just because of this.) It was also
very hazardous because this would be done even if { end: false } was
passed in the pipe options.
In v0.10, we decided that the 'close' event and destroy() method are
application-specific, and pipe() doesn't automatically call destroy().
However, TLS actually depended (silently) on this behavior. So, in this
case, we should just go ahead and destroy the thing when close happens.
Closes#5145
The DTrace probes were updated to accomodate platforms that can't
handle structs, update the prototypes for ETW but it's not necessary
to do anything with the new arguments as it's redundant information.
Expand the JSON representation of Buffer to include type information
so that it can be deserialized in JSON.parse() without context.
Fixes#5110.
Fixes#5143.
OSX and other DTrace implementations don't support dereferencing
structs in probes. To accomodate that pass members from the struct as
arguments so that DTrace is useful on those systems.
Pass the Isolate to Persistent<Function>::New(). Fixes the following
warning:
../../src/node.cc: In function ‘v8::Handle<v8::Value>
node::UsingDomains(const v8::Arguments&)’:
../../src/node.cc:921: warning: ‘New’ is deprecated
declared at ../../deps/v8/include/v8.h:4438)
In cases where a stream may have data added to the read queue before the
user adds a 'readable' event, there is never any indication that it's
time to start reading.
True, there's already data there, which the user would get if they
checked However, as we use 'readable' event listening as the signal to
start the flow of data with a read(0) call internally, we ought to
trigger the same effect (ie, emitting a 'readable' event) even if the
'readable' listener is added after the first emission.
To avoid confusing weirdness, only the *first* 'readable' event listener
is granted this privileged status. After we've started the flow (or,
alerted the consumer that the flow has started) we don't need to start
it again. At that point, it's the consumer's responsibility to consume
the stream.
Closes#5141
Have the formatter filter out vt100 color codes when calculating the
line width. Stops it from unnecessarily splitting strings over multiple
lines.
Fixes#5039.
A llvm/clang bug on Darwin ia32 makes these tests fail 100% of
the time. Since no one really seems to mind overly much, and we
can't reasonably fix this in node anyway, just accept both types
of NaN for now.
Calling `this.pair.encrypted._internallyPendingBytes()` before
handling/resetting error will result in assertion failure:
../src/node_crypto.cc:962: void node::crypto::Connection::ClearError():
Assertion `handle_->Get(String::New("error"))->BooleanValue() == false'
failed.
see #5058
Microsoft's IIS doesn't support it, and is not replying with ServerHello
after receiving ClientHello which contains it.
The good way might be allowing to opt-out this at runtime from
javascript-land, but unfortunately OpenSSL doesn't support it right now.
see #5119
Since _tickCallback and _tickDomainCallback were both called from
MakeCallback, it was possible for a callback to be called that required
a domain directly to _tickCallback.
The fix was to implement process.usingDomains(). This will set all
applicable functions to their domain counterparts, and set a flag in cc
to let MakeCallback know domain callbacks always need to be checked.
Added test in own file. It's important that the test remains isolated.
_charsWritten is an internal property that was constantly written to,
but never read from. So it has been removed.
Removed documentation reference as well.
Add the `sessionTimeout` integral value to the list of options
recognized by `tls.createServer`.
This option will be useful for applications which need frequently
establish short-lived TLS connections to the same endpoint. The TLS
tickets RFC is an ideal option to reduce the socket setup overhead
for such scenarios, but the default ticket timeout value (5
minutes) is too low to be useful.
It's possible to read multiple messages off the parent/child channel.
When that happens, make sure that recvHandle is cleared after emitting
the first message so it doesn't get emitted twice.
Commit f53441a added crypto.getCiphers() as a function that returns the
names of SSL ciphers.
Commit 14a6c4e then added crypto.getHashes(), which returns the names of
digest algorithms, but that creates a subtle inconsistency: the return
values of crypto.getHashes() are valid arguments to crypto.createHash()
but that is not true for crypto.getCiphers() - the returned values are
only valid for SSL/TLS functions.
Rectify that by adding tls.getCiphers() and making crypto.getCiphers()
return proper cipher names.
In process#send() and child_process.ChildProcess#send(), use 'utf8' as
the encoding instead of 'ascii' because 'ascii' mutilates non-ASCII
input. Correctly handle partial character sequences by introducing
a StringDecoder.
Sending over UTF-8 no longer works in v0.10 because the high bit of
each byte is now cleared when converting a Buffer to ASCII. See
commit 96a314b for details.
Fixes#4999 and #5011.
Commit 8632af3 ("tools: update gyp to r1601") broke the Windows build.
Older versions of GYP link to kernel32.lib, user32.lib, etc. but that
was changed in r1584. See https://codereview.chromium.org/12256017
Fix the build by explicitly linking to the required libraries.
While libuv supports reporting subsecond stat resolution across
platforms, to actually get that resolution your platform and filesystem
must support it (not HFS, ext[23], fat), otherwise the nsecs are 0
The EncIn, EncOut, ClearIn & ClearOut functions are victims of some code
copy + pasting. A common line copied to all of them is:
`if (off >= buffer_length) { ...`
448e0f43 corrected ClearIn's check from `>=` to `>`, but left the others
unchanged (with an incorrect bounds check). However, if you look down at
the next very next bounds check you'll see:
`if (off + len > buffer_length) { ...`
So the check is actually obviated by the next line, and should be
removed.
This fixes an issue where writing a zero-length buffer to an encrypted
pair's *encrypted* stream you would get a crash.
The EncIn, EncOut, ClearIn & ClearOut functions are victims of some code
copy + pasting. A common line copied to all of them is:
`if (off >= buffer_length) { ...`
448e0f43 corrected ClearIn's check from `>=` to `>`, but left the others
unchanged (with an incorrect bounds check). However, if you look down at
the next very next bounds check you'll see:
`if (off + len > buffer_length) { ...`
So the check is actually obviated by the next line, and should be
removed.
This fixes an issue where writing a zero-length buffer to an encrypted
pair's *encrypted* stream you would get a crash.
Increase the number of bits by 1 by making Flags unsigned.
BUG=chromium:211741
Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/12886008
This is a back-port of commits 13964 and 13988 addressing CVE-2013-2632.
Throw a TypeError if size > 0x3fffffff. Avoids the following V8 fatal
error:
FATAL ERROR: v8::Object::SetIndexedPropertiesToExternalArrayData()
length exceeds max acceptable value
Fixes#5126.
The stall is exposed in the test, though the test itself asserts before
it stalls.
The test is constructed to replicate the stalling state of a complex
Passthrough usecase since I was not able to reliable trigger the stall.
Some of the preconditions for triggering the stall are:
* rs.length >= rs.highWaterMark
* !rs.needReadable
* _transform() handler that can return empty transforms
* multiple sync write() calls
Combined this can trigger a case where rs.reading is not cleared when
further progress requires this. The fix is to always clear rs.reading.
Before this patch calling `socket.setTimeout(0xffffffff)` will result in
signed int32 overflow in C++ which resulted in assertion error:
Assertion failed: (timeout >= -1), function uv__io_poll, file
../deps/uv/src/unix/kqueue.c, line 121.
see #5101
Since WriteBuffer has been replaced with WriteOneByte, writing ascii
will no longer automatically convert 0x0 to 0x20. So removed mention of
this special case from docs.
This is not a great fix, and it's a bug that's very tricky to reproduce.
Occasionally, while downloading a file, especially on Linux for some
reason, the pause/resume timing will be just right such that the
CryptoStream is in a 'reading' state, but actually has no data, so it
ought to pull more in. Because there's no reads happening, it just sits
there, and the process will exit
This is, fundamentally, a factor of how the HTTP implementation sits
atop CryptoStreams and TCP Socket objects, which is utterly horrible,
and needs to be rewritten. However, in the meantime, npm downloads are
prematurely exiting, causing hard-to-debug "cb() never called!" errors.
The benchmark compare would drop the last run of the binary pairs. So
when they were only run once an error would arise because no data was
generated for the second binary.
Every constant is certainly 4 bytes now, but freebsd's objdump utility
prints out odd byte sequences (5-bytes, 6-bytes and even 9-bytes long)
for v8's data section. We can safely ignore all upper bytes, because all
constants that we're using are just `int`s. Since on all supported
platforms `int` is 32bit long (and anyway v8's constants are 32bit too),
we ignore all higher bits if they were read.
All compile time warnings about using deprecated APIs have been
suppressed by updating node's API. Though there are still many function
calls that can accept Isolate, and still need to be updated.
node_isolate had to be added as an extern variable in node.h and
node_object_wrap.h
Also a couple small fixes for Error handling.
Before v8 3.16.6 the error stack message was lazily written when it was
needed, which allowed you to change the message after instantiation.
Then the stack would be written with the new message the first time it
was accessed. Though that has changed. Now it creates the stack message
on instantiation. So setting a different message afterwards won't be
displayed.
This is not a complete fix for the problem. Getting error without any
message isn't very useful.
This reverts commit ea1cba6246.
The offending commit was intended to land on the v0.8 branch only, but
it accidentally got merged at some point.
Closes#5054.
Fixes#5071, #5073.
* Normalize capitalization of drive letter
* Fix `exit()` typo in failure path
* Ignore symlink tests (Windows) if not elevated
The `test_relative_input_cwd()` test was failing on Windows when
`skipSymlinks` was `true`. So we won't run it if `skipSymlinks` is
`true`.
When it failed, the unhandled error caused Node to die before
having a chance to clean up, which resulted in two files missing
in subsequent unit tests:
* `test/fixtures/nested-index/one/hello.js`
* `test/fixtures/nested-index/one/index.js`
We should probably find a way to isolate this test from the other
test (`simple/test-module-loading`) that was failing when this test
poluted the disk state.
Looks like a merge conflict in 77ed12f left in the old, unconditional
install rule. Remove it, the new and improved rule is a few lines down.
Fixes#5044.
Also, set paused=false *before* calling resume(). Otherwise,
there's an edge case where an immediately-emitted chunk might make
it call pause() again incorrectly.
The benefits of the hot-path optimization below start to fall off when
the buffer size gets up near 128KB, because the cost of the copy is more
than the cost of the extra write() call. Switch to the write/end method
at that point.
Heuristics and magic numbers are awful, but slow http responses are
worse.
Fix#4975
Consider this example:
// fd 3 is a bound tcp socket
var s = net.createServer(cb);
s.listen({ fd: 3 });
console.log(s.address()); // prints null
This commit makes net.Server#address() print the actual address.
Ditto for non-listen sockets; properties like net.Socket#localAddress
and net.Socket#remoteAddress now return the correct value.
Fixes#5009.
Commit a804347 makes fs function rethrow errors when the callback is
omitted. While the right thing to do, it's a change from the old v0.8
behavior where such errors were silently ignored.
To give users time to upgrade, temporarily disable that and replace it
with a function that warns once about the deprecated behavior.
Close#5005
From OpenSSL's documentation:
"If BIO_free() is called on a BIO chain it will only free one BIO
resulting in a memory leak."
and
"BIO_free_all() frees up an entire BIO chain, it does not halt if an
error occurs freeing up an individual BIO in the chain"
This solves the problem of calling `readable.pipe(writable)` after the
readable stream has already emitted 'end', as often is the case when
writing simple HTTP proxies.
The spirit of streams2 is that things will work properly, even if you
don't set them up right away on the first tick.
This approach breaks down, however, because pipe()ing from an ended
readable will just do nothing. No more data will ever arrive, and the
writable will hang open forever never being ended.
However, that does not solve the case of adding a `on('end')` listener
after the stream has received the EOF chunk, if it was the first chunk
received (and thus, length was 0, and 'end' got emitted). So, with
this, we defer the 'end' event emission until the read() function is
called.
Also, in pipe(), if the source has emitted 'end' already, we call the
cleanup/onend function on nextTick. Piping from an already-ended stream
is thus the same as piping from a stream that is in the process of
ending.
Updates many tests that were relying on 'end' coming immediately, even
though they never read() from the req.
Fix#4942
In the function that pre-emptively fills the Readable queue, it relies
on a recursion through:
stream.push(chunk) ->
maybeReadMore(stream, state) ->
if (not reading more and < hwm) stream.read(0) ->
stream._read() ->
stream.push(chunk) -> repeat.
Since this was only calling read() a single time, and then relying on a
future nextTick to collect more data, it ends up causing a nextTick
recursion error (and potentially a RangeError, even) if you have a very
high highWaterMark, and are getting very small chunks pushed
synchronously in _read (as happens with TLS, or many simple test
streams).
This change implements a new approach, so that read(0) is called
repeatedly as long as it is effective (that is, the length keeps
increasing), and thus quickly fills up the buffer for streams such as
these, without any stacks overflowing.
so `ee.emit('error')` doesn't throw when domains are active
create an empty error only when handled by a domain
test for when no error is provided to an error event
Fix#4948
This adds a check before setting the incoming parser
to null. Under certain circumstances it'll already be set to
null by freeParser().
Otherwise this will cause node to crash as it tries to set
null on something that is already null.
When calling setImmediate with extra arguments the this keyword in the
callback would refer to the global object, but when not calling
setImmediate with extra arguments this would refer to the returned
handle object.
This commit fixes that inconsistency so its always set handle object.
The handle object was chosen for performance reasons.
Also, this seems to occasionally cause some annoying file-locking
errors in Windows. Not sure if this is the best fix, but it seems
to make the warnings go away in that spot.
If you call z.flush();z.write('foo'); then it would try to write 'foo'
before the flush was done, triggering an assertion in the zlib binding.
Closes#4950
Consider the following example:
console.log(Buffer('ú').toString('ascii'));
Before this commit, the contents of the buffer was used as-is and hence it
prints 'ú'.
Now, it prints 'C:'. Perhaps not much of an improvement but it conforms to what
the documentation says it does: strip off the high bits.
Fixes#4371.
Fix#4948
This adds a check before setting the incoming parser
to null. Under certain circumstances it'll already be set to
null by freeParser().
Otherwise this will cause node to crash as it tries to set
null on something that is already null.
There are no unsafe structured exception handlers in object files
generated from hand-crafted assembly - because they contain no exception
handlers at all.
child.send can send net servers and sockets. Now that we have support
for dgram clusters this functionality should be extended to include
dgram sockets.
* stream: Allow strings in Readable.push/unshift (isaacs)
* stream: Remove bufferSize option (isaacs)
* stream: Increase highWaterMark on large reads (isaacs)
* stream: _write: takes an encoding argument (isaacs)
* stream: _transform: remove no output() method, provide encoding (isaacs)
* stream: Don't require read(0) to emit 'readable' event (isaacs)
* node: Add --throw-deprecation (isaacs)
* http: fix multiple timeout events (Eugene Girshov)
* http: More useful setTimeout API on server (isaacs)
* net: use close callback, not process.nextTick (Ben Noordhuis)
* net: Provide better error when writing after FIN (isaacs)
* dns: Support NAPTR queries (Pavel Lang)
* dns: fix ReferenceError in resolve() error path (Xidorn Quan)
* child_process: handle ENOENT correctly on Windows (Scott Blomquist)
* cluster: Rename destroy() to kill(signal=SIGTERM) (isaacs)
* build: define nightly tag external to build system (Timothy J Fontaine)
* build: make msi build work when spaces are present in the path (Bert Belder)
* build: fix msi build issue with WiX 3.7/3.8 (Raymond Feng)
* repl: make compatible with domains (Dave Olszewski)
* events: Code cleanup and performance improvements (Trevor Norris)
This adds the following to HTTP:
* server.setTimeout(msecs, callback)
Sets all new connections to time out after the specified time, at
which point it emits 'timeout' on the server, passing the socket as an
argument.
In this way, timeouts can be handled in one place consistently.
* req.setTimeout(), res.setTimeout()
Essentially an alias to req/res.socket.setTimeout(), but without
having to delve into a "buried" object. Adds a listener on the
req/res object, but not on the socket.
* server.timeout
Number of milliseconds before incoming connections time out.
(Default=1000*60*2, as before.)
Furthermore, if the user sets up their own timeout listener on either
the server, the request, or the response, then the default behavior
(destroying the socket) is suppressed.
Fix#3460
This will run the benchmarks the number of times specified by NODE_BENCH_RUNS,
to attempt to reduce variability.
If the number of runs is high enough, it'll also throw out the top and bottom
quartiles, since that's where the outliers will be.
It's not very fancy statistics-fu, but it's better than nothing.
Also, linted this file. It had tabs in it. TABS!
Now that highWaterMark increases when there are large reads, this
greatly reduces the number of calls necessary to _read(size), assuming
that _read actually respects the size argument.
Don't emit the 'close' event with process.nextTick.
Closing a handle is an operation that usually *but not always* completes
on the next tick of the event loop, hence using process.nextTick is not
reliable.
Use a proper handle close callback and emit the 'close' event from
inside the callback.
Update tests that depend on the intricacies of the old model.
Fixes#3459.
1. Get rid of unnecessary 'finishing' flag
2. Dont check both ending and ended. Extraneous.
Also: Remove extraneous 'finishing' flag, and don't check both 'ending'
and 'ended', since checking just 'ending' is sufficient.
There are no unsafe structured exception handlers in object files
generated from hand-crafted assembly - because they contain no exception
handlers at all.
This commit fixes a bug where the cluster module fails 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.
Strict checking for typeof types broke backwards compatibility for other
libraries. This reverts those checks.
The subclass test has been changed to ensure all operations can be
performed on the inherited EE before instantiation. Including the
ability to set event names with numbers.
When a readable listener is added, call read(0) so that data will flow in, up to
the high water mark.
Otherwise, it's somewhat confusing that you have to listen for readable,
and ALSO call read() (when it will certainly return null) just to get some
data out of the stream.
See: #4720
A typo in the variable name makes it throw a ReferenceError instead of
the expected "Unknown type" error when dns.resolve() is passed a bad
record type argument.
Fixes the following exception:
ReferenceError: type is not defined
at Object.exports.resolve (dns.js:189:40)
at /Users/bnoordhuis/src/master/test/simple/test-c-ares.js:48:9
<snip>
Calling end(data) calls write(data). Doing this after end should
raise a 'write after end' error.
However, because end() calls were previously ignored on already
ended streams, this error was confusingly suppressed, even though the
data never is written, and cannot get to the other side.
This is a re-hash of 5222d19a11, but
without assuming that the data passed to end() is valid, and thus
breaking a bunch of tests.
The try/catch in repl.js keeps any active domain from catching the
error. Since the domain may not even be enterd until the code is run,
it's not possible to avoid the try/catch, so emit on the domain when an
error is thrown.
Calling end(data) calls write(data). Doing this after end should
raise a 'write after end' error.
However, because end() calls were previously ignored on already
ended streams, this error was confusingly suppressed, even though the
data never is written, and cannot get to the other side.
The stock writable stream "write after end" message is overly vague, if
you have clearly not called end() yourself yet.
When we receive a FIN from the other side, and call destroySoon() as a
result, then generate an EPIPE error (which is what would happen if you
did actually write to the socket), with a message explaining what
actually happened.
By making sure the _events is always an object there is one less check
that needs to be performed by emit.
Use undefined instead of null. typeof checks are a lot faster than
isArray.
There are a few places where the this._events check cannot be removed
because it is possible for the user to call those methods after using
utils.extend to create their own EventEmitter, but before it has
actually been instantiated.
Unnecessary checks were being performed on if the event existed before
being removed.
_events starts out as null, so reset to null when emptied.
Checking typeof is a lot cheaper than isArray().
Ability to return just the length of listeners for a given type, using
EventEmitter.listenerCount(emitter, event). This will be a lot cheaper
than creating a copy of the listeners array just to check its length.
We were using a global temp file while setting the NODE_VERSION
environment variable. This resulted in simultaneous builds swapping
version numbers on occasion.
This patch removes the use of a temp file for this.
Register the 'close' event listener with .once(), not .on().
It doesn't matter in the grand scheme of things because the listener
doesn't keep references to any heavy-weight objects but using .once()
for a oneshot listener is something of a best practice.
The first example uses Readable, and shows the use of
readable.unshift(). The second uses the Transform class, showing that
it's much simpler in this case.
This makes it so that `stream.push(chunk)` is the only way to signal the
end of reading, removing the confusing disparity between the
callback-style _read method, and the fact that most real-world streams
do not have a 1:1 corollation between the "please give me data" event,
and the actual arrival of a chunk of data.
It is still possible, of course, to implement a `CallbackReadable` on
top of this. Simply provide a method like this as the callback:
function readCallback(er, chunk) {
if (er)
stream.emit('error', er);
else
stream.push(chunk);
}
However, *only* fs streams actually would behave in this way, so it
makes not a lot of sense to make TCP, TLS, HTTP, and all the rest have
to bend into this uncomfortable paradigm.
A primary motivation of this is to make the onread function more
inline-friendly, but also to make it more easy to explore not having
onread at all, in favor of always using push() to signal the end of
reading.
Don't emit a 'connect' event on sockets that are handed off to
net.Server 'connection' event listeners.
1. It's superfluous because the connection has already been established
at that point.
2. The implementation is arguably wrong because the event is emitted on
the same tick of the event loop while the rule of thumb is to always
emit it on the next one.
This has been tried before in commit f0a440d but was reverted again in
ede1acc because the change was incomplete (at least one test hadn't
been updated).
Fixes#1047 (again).
The output of `id -G` is unreliable on OS X. It uses an undocumented
Libsystem function called getgrouplist_2() that includes some auxiliary
groups that the POSIX getgroups() function does not return.
Or rather, not always. It leads to fun bug chases where the test fails
in one terminal but not in another.
Turn off safe exception handlers, they're incompatible with how
openssl is compiled / linked under MSVS 2012.
Addresses the following build error:
openssl.lib(x86cpuid.obj) : error LNK2026: module unsafe for SAFESEH
image. [g:\jenkins\workspace\nodejs-oneoff\node.vcxproj]
openssl.lib(x86.obj) : error LNK2026: module unsafe for SAFESEH
image. [g:\jenkins\workspace\nodejs-oneoff\node.vcxproj]
# etc. etc.
g:\jenkins\workspace\nodejs-oneoff\Release\node.exe : fatal error
LNK1281: Unable to generate SAFESEH image.
[g:\jenkins\workspace\nodejs-oneoff\node.vcxproj]
Fixes#4242.
Document how to run the example on the home page in more detail.
Apparently our Windows brethren are prone to double-clicking on the
binary instead of running it from the command line.
Fixes#4854.
It's cleaner to only load domain ticker logic when the domains are being
used. This makes execution slightly quicker in both cases, and simpler
from the spinner since there is no need to check if the latest callback
requires use of domains.
Not necessary, since we can handle the error properly on the first tick
now, even if there are event listeners, etc.
Additionally, this removes the unnecessary "_needTickCallback" from
startup, since Module.loadMain() will kick off a nextTick callback right
after it runs the main module.
Fix#4856
Clear OpenSSL's error stack on return from Connection::HandleSSLError().
This stops stale errors from popping up later in the lifecycle of the
SSL connection where they would cause spurious failures.
This commit causes a 1-2% performance regression on `make bench-tls`.
We'll address that in follow-up commits if possible but let's ensure
correctness first.
Fixes#4771.
This handles the fact that stream.Writable inherits from the Stream class,
meaning that it has the legacy pipe() method. Override that with a pipe()
method that emits an error.
Ensure that Duplex streams ARE still pipe()able, however.
Since the 'readable' flag on streams is sometimes temporary, it's probably
better not to put too much weight on that. But if something is an instanceof
Writable, rather than of Readable or Duplex, then it's safe to say that
reading from it is the wrong thing to do.
Fix#3647
It is not a valid test unless you're connected to the internet, and causes
a lot of spurious failures on Linux anyway, as it's highly dependent on
timing of things that we don't have any control over.
This makes the output of simple/test-debugger-repl and
simle/test-debugger-repl-utf8 mirror an actual debugger session, so it's
a bit easier to reason about.
Also, it uses the same code for both, and fixes it so that it doesn't
leave zombie processes lying around when it crashes.
Run 1000 times without any failures or zombies.
Starting the debugger directly in the SIGUSR1 signal handler results in
a malloc lock contention ~1% of the time. It hangs the test, which is
annoying on a daily basis to all of us, but it also is pretty terrible
if you actually want to debug a node process that has gone sideways.
Credit to @bnoordhuis for most of this. I just added the unref which
keeps it from messing up the event loop for other stuff.
The CI system requires that some environment variables are set so merge
our variables into the current environment instead of blindly replacing
it.
This will probably have to be repeated for other tests. C'est la vie.
Commit 3d67f89 ("fix generation of v8 constants on freebsd") is an
unfortunate victim of this rollback.
Revert "dtrace: fix generation of v8 constants on freebsd"
Revert "dtrace: More style"
Revert "dtrace: Make D style more D-ish"
Revert "dtrace: x64 ustack helper"
Revert "dtrace: fix style in ustack helper"
Revert "dtrace: SeqAsciiString was renamed to SeqOneByteString in v8"
This reverts commit 3d67f89552.
This reverts commit 321b8eec08.
This reverts commit 38df9d51a2.
This reverts commit f9afb3f010.
This reverts commit 13296e4b13.
This reverts commit 3b715edda9.
Reapply floating patches. Special mention: also reapplies 017009f but
with the extra change of removing DescriptorArray::kTransitionsIndex
from the postmortem metadata generator because said field no longer
exists in V8 3.14.
* http: Do not free the wrong parser on socket close (isaacs)
* http: Handle hangup writes more gently (isaacs)
* zlib: fix assert on bad input (Ben Noordhuis)
* test: add TAP output to the test runner (Timothy J Fontaine)
* unix: Handle EINPROGRESS from domain sockets (Ben Noordhuis)
This appears to fix#4673. That bug is very hard to reproduce, so it's
hard to tell for certain, but this approach is more correct anyway.
Hat-tip: @dougwilson
The Readable and Writable classes will nextTick certain things
if in sync mode. The sync flag gets unset after a call to _read
or _write. However, most of these behaviors should also be
deferred until nextTick if no reads have been made (for example,
the automatic '_read up to hwm' behavior on Readable.push(chunk))
Set the sync flag to true in the constructor, so that it will not
trigger an immediate 'readable' event, call to _read, before the
user has had a chance to set a _read method implementation.
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.
The following test case occasionally triggered an assert because
write_in_progress_ didn't get cleared on error:
$ cat test.js
require('zlib').gunzip('BAM', console.log);
setTimeout(gc, 10);
$ while true; do node --expose-gc test.js || break; done
{ [Error: incorrect header check] errno: -3, code: 'Z_DATA_ERROR' }
Assertion failed: (!write_in_progress_ && "write in progress"),
function Clear, file ../src/node_zlib.cc, line 71.
Abort trap: 6
Steps to avoid that:
* Initialize all primitive member fields in the constructor.
* Clear the write_in_progress_ member field in ZCtx::Error().
* Ref the ZCtx object as soon as write_in_progress_ is set to true.
Before this commit, it could get GC'ed in the time between setting
the field and the call to ctx->Ref().
Fixes#4783.
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
Checks have been simplified and optimized for most-used cases.
Calling Buffer with another Buffer as the subject will now use the
SlowBuffer Copy method instead of the for loop.
No need to call for value coercion, just place the ternary inline.
ASN1_STRING_to_UTF8() passes an ASN1_STRING to ASN1_STRING_set() but forgot to
initialize the `length` field.
Fixes the following valgrind error:
$ valgrind -q --track-origins=yes --num-callers=19 \
out/Debug/node test/simple/test-tls-client-abort.js
==2690== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
==2690== at 0x784B69: ASN1_STRING_set (asn1_lib.c:382)
==2690== by 0x809564: ASN1_mbstring_ncopy (a_mbstr.c:204)
==2690== by 0x8090F0: ASN1_mbstring_copy (a_mbstr.c:86)
==2690== by 0x782F1F: ASN1_STRING_to_UTF8 (a_strex.c:570)
==2690== by 0x78F090: asn1_string_canon (x_name.c:409)
==2690== by 0x78EF17: x509_name_canon (x_name.c:354)
==2690== by 0x78EA7D: x509_name_ex_d2i (x_name.c:210)
==2690== by 0x788058: ASN1_item_ex_d2i (tasn_dec.c:239)
==2690== by 0x7890D4: asn1_template_noexp_d2i (tasn_dec.c:746)
==2690== by 0x788CB6: asn1_template_ex_d2i (tasn_dec.c:607)
==2690== by 0x78877A: ASN1_item_ex_d2i (tasn_dec.c:448)
==2690== by 0x7890D4: asn1_template_noexp_d2i (tasn_dec.c:746)
==2690== by 0x788CB6: asn1_template_ex_d2i (tasn_dec.c:607)
==2690== by 0x78877A: ASN1_item_ex_d2i (tasn_dec.c:448)
==2690== by 0x787C93: ASN1_item_d2i (tasn_dec.c:136)
==2690== by 0x78F5E4: d2i_X509 (x_x509.c:141)
==2690== by 0x7C9B91: PEM_ASN1_read_bio (pem_oth.c:81)
==2690== by 0x7CA506: PEM_read_bio_X509 (pem_x509.c:67)
==2690== by 0x703C9A: node::crypto::SecureContext::AddRootCerts(v8::Arguments const&) (node_crypto.cc:497)
==2690== Uninitialised value was created by a stack allocation
==2690== at 0x782E89: ASN1_STRING_to_UTF8 (a_strex.c:560)
When perlasm generates MASM code it sets the assembler target to 468.
In this mode MASM refuses to assemble a couple of instructions. Bumping
the target to 686 solves this problem.
For throughput benchmarks, run with just 5s durations rather than 1s and 3s.
For startup benchmark, run with just a single 1s duration, since it's very
consistent anyway.
This increases fs.WriteStream throughput dramatically by removing the
"higher default water marks" for fs.WriteStream.
Also includes a benchmark. Current performance is significantly higher
than v0.8 for strings at all tested levels except size=1. Buffer
performance is still lackluster.
Further improvement in the stream.Writable base class is required, but
this is a start.
Using external memory values allows for quick communication between js
and cc land, so we can check if the js land callback needs to be run.
(this is where I meant that manually tracking nextTickQueue.length would
be helpful)
Also did some minor cleanup of removing the old Tick and
StartTickSpinner functions, and a few unneeded comments.
Conflicts:
src/node.cc
* 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
This reverts commit 0109a9f90a.
Also included: Port all the changes to process._makeCallback into the
C++ version. Immediate nextTick, etc.
This yields a slight boost in several benchmarks. V8 is optimizing and
deoptimizing process._makeCallback repeatedly.
* npm: Upgrade to v1.2.11
* http: Do not let Agent hand out destroyed sockets (isaacs)
* http: Raise hangup error on destroyed socket write (isaacs)
* http: protect against response splitting attacks (Bert Belder)
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
Running repl.start without the prompt set produces this error:
repl.js:95
throw new Error('An options Object, or a prompt String are required');
^
Error: An options Object, or a prompt String are required
at new REPLServer (repl.js:95:11)
at Object.exports.start (repl.js:321:14)
at Object.<anonymous> (/Users/dan/Dropbox/Documents/dev/nextgen/repl_test.js:5:6)
at Module._compile (module.js:449:26)
at Object.Module._extensions..js (module.js:467:10)
at Module.load (module.js:356:32)
at Function.Module._load (module.js:312:12)
at Module.runMain (module.js:492:10)
at process.startup.processNextTick.process._tickCallback (node.js:244:9)
Expose the file descriptor as a read-only property on the internal
handle objects. Intended for debugging purposes, not part of the API
proper. The property is always null on Windows.
Fixes#4754.
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.
This is causing the CryptoStreams to get into an awful state when
there is a tight loop calling connection.write(chunk) waiting for
a false return.
Because CryptoStreams use read(0) to cycle data, this was causing
the encrypted side to pull way too much data in from the cleartext
side, since the read(0) would make it always call _read.
The unfortunate side effect, fixed in the next patch, is that
CryptoStreams don't automatically cycle when the Socket drains.
Let ECONNRESET network errors bubble up so clients can detect them.
Commit c4454d2e suppressed and turned them into regular end-of-stream
events to fix the then-failing simple/test-regress-GH-1531 test. See
also issue #1571 for (scant) details.
It turns out that special handling is no longer necessary. Remove the
special casing and let the error bubble up naturally.
pummel/test-https-ci-reneg-attack and pummel/test-tls-ci-reneg-attack
are updated because they expected an EPIPE error code that is now an
ECONNRESET. Suppression of the ECONNRESET prevented the test from
detecting that the connection has been severed whereupon the next
write would fail with an EPIPE.
Fixes#1776.
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.
Don't run the 'has function been called?' checks if the test is exiting
with an error because a failed check will mask the real exception.
v0.8 doesn't have the _fatalException machinery in src/node.js and
src/node.cc so it doesn't have this issue.
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);
Noteworthy installer improvements provided here:
* Support in the Installer UI for not installing shortcuts.
* Support in the Installer UI for choosing a custom install directory.
* Command line support for not installing shortcuts (ADDDEFAULT=nodejs)
* Command line support for custom install directory (INSTALLDIR=c:\tools\node)
http.ServerRequest and http.ClientResponse are merged into http.IncomingMessage
which has fields for both, and acts as a Readable Stream and EventEmitter.
Fixes#3851.
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.
Inform V8 that the zlib context object is tied to a large off-heap buffer.
This makes the GC run more often (in theory) and improves the accuracy of
--trace_external_memory.
In zlibBuffer(), don't wait for the garbage collector to reclaim the zlib memory
but release it manually. Reduces memory consumption by a factor of 10 or more
with some workloads.
Test case:
function f() {
require('zlib').deflate('xxx', g);
}
function g() {
setTimeout(f, 5);
}
f();
Observe RSS memory usage with and without this commit. After 10,000 iterations,
RSS stabilizes at ~35 MB with this commit. Without, RSS is over 300 MB and keeps
growing.
Cause: whenever the JS object heap hits the high-water mark, the V8 GC sweeps
it clean, then tries to grow it in order to avoid more sweeps in the near
future. Rule of thumb: the bigger the JS heap, the lazier the GC can be.
A side effect of a bigger heap is that objects now live longer. This is harmless
in general but it affects zlib context objects because those are tied to large
buffers that live outside the JS heap, on the order of 16K per context object.
Ergo, don't wait for the GC to reclaim the memory - it may take a long time.
Fixes#4172.
Move the implementation to C++ land. This is similar to commit 3f65916
but this time for the write() function and the Buffer(s, 'hex')
constructor.
Speeds up the benchmark below about 24x (2.6s vs 1:02m).
var s = 'f';
for (var i = 0; i < 26; ++i) s += s; // 64 MB
Buffer(s, 'hex');
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'.
Move the implementation to C++ land. The old JS implementation used
string concatenation, was dog slow and consumed copious amounts of
memory for large buffers. Example:
var buf = Buffer(0x1000000); // 16 MB
buf.toString('hex') // Used 3+ GB of memory.
The new implementation operates in O(n) time and space.
Fixes#4700.
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.
When a datagram socket hasn't been bound yet, node will defer `send()`
operations until binding has completed. Before this patch a `listening`
listener would be installed every time `send` was called. This triggered
an EventEmitter leak warning when more than 10 packets were sent in a
tight loop. Therefore switch to using a single `listening` listener, and
use an array to enqueue outbound packets.
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
Fix the following OOM error in pummel/test-net-connect-memleak
and pummel/test-tls-connect-memleak:
FATAL ERROR: CALL_AND_RETRY_0 Allocation failed - process out of
memory
Commit v8/v8@91afd39 increases the size of the deoptimization table
to the extent that a 64M float array pushes it over the brink. Switch
to SMIs so it stays below the limit.
pummel/test-net-connect-memleak is still failing albeit with a different
error this time. Needs further investigation.
=== release test-net-connect-memleak ===
Path: pummel/test-net-connect-memleak
-64 kB reclaimed
assert.js:102
throw new assert.AssertionError({
^
AssertionError: false == true
at done [as _onTimeout] (/home/bnoordhuis/src/nodejs/master/
test/pummel/test-net-connect-memleak.js:48:3)
at Timer.listOnTimeout [as ontimeout] (timers.js:110:15)
at process._makeCallback (node.js:306:20)
If the end argument is omitted or not a number, make it default to
the end of the buffer, not zero.
Ideally, it should not matter what it defaults to because the JS shim
in lib/buffer.js should handle that but there are still several places
in node.js core that secrete SlowBuffers, hence Buffer::Copy() gets
called without going through Buffer.prototype.copy() first.
It's segfaulting in release mode and asserting in debug mode:
#
# Fatal error in ../../deps/v8/src/api.h, line 297
# CHECK(allow_empty_handle || that != __null) failed
#
This reverts commit 99f0b022d5.
Before sending handle to another process using uv_write2(), it should be
referenced to prevent it from being GCed before AfterWrite() will be
called.
see #4599
mainly to allow native addons to export single functions on `exports`
rather than being restricted to operating on an existing `exports`
object.
added link to addons repo in docs
mainly to allow native addons to export single functions on
rather than being restricted to operating on an existing
object.
Init functions now receive exports as the first argument, like
before, but also the module object as the second argument, if they
support it.
Related to #4634
cc: @rvagg
* Omit ToObject() call. Buffer::Data() and Buffer::Length() know how
to deal with Values.
* Don't check if the argument is undefined because it realistically
never is and undefined->integer coercion achieves the same thing.
Fix issue where SlowBuffers couldn't be passed as target to Buffer
copy().
Also included checks to see if Argument parameters are defined before
assigning their values. This offered ~3x's performance gain.
Backport of 16bbecc from master branch. Closes#4633.
Changed types of errors thrown to be more indicative of what the error
represents. Also removed a few unnecessary uses of the v8 fully
quantified typename.
Argument checks were simplified by setting all undefined/NaN or out of
bounds values equal to their defaults.
Also copy() tests had a flaw that each buffer had the same bit pattern at
the same offset. So even if the copy failed, the bit-by-bit comparison
would have still been true. This was fixed by filling each buffer with a
unique value before copy operations.
Fix issue where SlowBuffers couldn't be passed as target to Buffer
copy().
Also included checks to see if Argument parameters are defined before
assigning their values. This offered ~3x's performance gain.
This adds a proxy for bytesWritten to the tls.CryptoStream. This
change makes the connection object more similar between HTTP and
HTTPS requests in an effort to avoid confusion.
See issue #4650 for more background information.
* npm: Upgrade to v1.2.3
* V8: Upgrade to 3.15.11.10
* streams: Support objects other than Buffers (Jake Verbaten)
* buffer: remove float write range checks (Trevor Norris)
* http: close connection on 304/204 responses with chunked encoding (Ben Noordhuis)
* build: fix build with dtrace support on FreeBSD (Fedor Indutny)
* console: Support formatting options in trace() (isaacs)
* domain: empty stack on all exceptions (Dave Olszewski)
* unix, windows: make uv_*_bind() error codes consistent (Andrius Bentkus)
* linux: add futimes() fallback (Ben Noordhuis)
We detect for non-string and non-buffer values in onread and
turn the stream into an "objectMode" stream.
If we are in "objectMode" mode then howMuchToRead will
always return 1, state.length will always have 1 appended
to it when there is a new item and fromList always takes
the first value from the list.
This means that for object streams, the n in read(n) is
ignored and read() will always return a single value
Fixed a bug with unpipe where the pipe would break because
the flowing state was not reset to false.
Fixed a bug with sync cb(null, null) in _read which would
forget to end the readable stream
This is similar to commit 2cbf458 but this time for 204 No Content
instead of 304 Not Modified responses.
When the user sends a 204 response with a Transfer-Encoding: chunked
header, suppress sending the zero chunk and force the connection to
close.
Removed range checks when writing float values, and removed a few
includes and defines. Also updated api docs to reflect that invalid 32
bit float is an unspecified behavior.
Force the connection to close when the response is a 304 Not Modified
and the user has set a "Transfer-Encoding: chunked" header.
RFC 2616 mandates that 304 responses MUST NOT have a body but node.js
used to send out a zero chunk anyway to accommodate clients that don't
have special handling for 304 responses.
It was pointed out that this might confuse reverse proxies to the point
of creating security liabilities, so suppress the zero chunk and force
the connection to close.
Every constant is certainly 4 bytes now, but freebsd's objdump utility
prints out odd byte sequences (5-bytes, 6-bytes and even 9-bytes long)
for v8's data section. We can safely ignore all upper bytes, because all
constants that we're using are just `int`s. Since on all supported
platforms `int` is 32bit long (and anyway v8's constants are 32bit too),
we ignore all higher bits if they were read.
Fix an off-by-one error introduced in 9fe3734 that caused a regression
in the default endianness used for writes in DataView::setGeneric().
Fixes#4626.
Due to the nature of asyncronous programming, it's impossible to know
what will run on the next tick. Because of this, it's not correct to
maintain domain stack state between ticks
Since the _fatalException handler is only invoked after the stack is
unwound, once it exits the tick will end. The only reasonable thing to
do in that case is to exit *all* domains.
The first example in cluster.markdown requires NODE_DEBUG env to show
debug message.
And also fix the message because it was a little bit different with
the actual message.
* V8: Upgrade to 3.15.11.7
* npm: Upgrade to 1.2.2
* punycode: Upgrade to 1.2.0 (Mathias Bynens)
* repl: make built-in modules available by default (Felix Böhm)
* windows: add support for '_Total' perf counters (Scott Blomquist)
* cluster: make --prof work for workers (Ben Noordhuis)
* child_process: do not keep list of sent sockets (Fedor Indutny)
* tls: Follow RFC6125 more strictly (Fedor Indutny)
* buffer: floating point read/write improvements (Trevor Norris)
* TypedArrays: Improve dataview perf without endian param (Dean McNamee)
* module: assert require() called with a non-empty string (Felix Böhm, James Campos)
* stdio: Set readable/writable flags properly (isaacs)
* stream: Properly handle large reads from push-streams (isaacs)
Profiling in clustered environments doesn't work out of the box.
By default, V8 writes the profile data of all processes to a single
v8.log.
Running that log file through a tick processor produces bogus numbers
because many events won't match up with the recorded memory mappings
and you end up with graphs where 80+% of ticks is unaccounted for.
Fixing the tick processor to deal with multi-process output is not very
useful because the processes may be running wildly disparate workloads.
That's why we fix up the command line arguments to include
a "--logfile=v8-%p.log" argument (where %p is expanded to the PID)
unless it already contains a --logfile argument.
Fixes#4617.
Keeping list of all sockets that were sent to child process causes memory
leak and thus unacceptable (see #4587). However `server.close()` should
still work properly.
This commit introduces two options:
* child.send(socket, { track: true }) - will send socket and track its status.
You should use it when you want to receive `close` event on sent sockets.
* child.send(socket) - will send socket without tracking it status. This
performs much better, because of smaller number of RTT between master and
child.
With both of these options `server.close()` will wait for all sent
sockets to get closed.
Keeping list of all sockets that were sent to child process causes memory
leak and thus unacceptable (see #4587). However `server.close()` should
still work properly.
This commit introduces two options:
* child.send(socket, { track: true }) - will send socket and track its status.
You should use it when you want `server.connections` to be a reliable
number, and receive `close` event on sent sockets.
* child.send(socket) - will send socket without tracking it status. This
performs much better, because of smaller number of RTT between master and
child.
With both of these options `server.close()` will wait for all sent
sockets to get closed.
Unfortunately, it's just too slow to do this in events.js. Users will
just have to live with not having events named __proto__ or toString.
This reverts commit b48e303af0.
'Stability: 5' is described as 'Locked' not as 'API Locked'
in other documents.
For example:
- `/doc/api/assert.markdown`
- `/doc/api/util.markdown`
This word was injected in 192192a.
This test starts two clustered HTTP servers on the same port.
It expects the first cluster to succeed and the second cluster
to fail with EADDRINUSE.
Reapplies commit cacd3ae, accidentally reverted in a2851b6.
Reject negative offsets in SlowBuffer::MakeFastBuffer(), it allows
the creation of buffers that point to arbitrary addresses.
Reported by Trevor Norris.
V8 seems to be particularly slow converting an undefined value to false
in BooleanValue.
Revert this when we upgrade to V8 3.17, or whenever the fix discussed
in http://code.google.com/p/v8/issues/detail?id=2487 lands in V8.
Problem 1: If stream.push() triggers a 'readable' event, and the user
calls `read(n)` with some n > the highWaterMark, then the push() will
return false (indicating that they should not push any more), but no
future 'readable' event is coming (because we're above the
highWaterMark).
Solution: return true from push() when needReadable is set.
Problem 2: A read(n) for n != 0, after the stream had encountered an
EOF, would not trigger the 'end' event if the EOF was pushed in
synchronously by the _read() function.
Solution: Check for ended in stream.read() and schedule an end event if
the length now equals 0.
Fix#4585
Improved assert check order of execution and added additional checks on
parameters to ensure no bad values make it through (e.g. negative offset
values).
Improvements:
* floating point operations are approx 4x's faster
* Now write quiet NaN's
* all read/write on floating point now done in C, so no more need for
lib/buffer_ieee754.js
* float values have more accurate min/max value checks
* add additional benchmarks for buffers read/write
* created benchmark/_bench_timer.js which is a simple library that
can be included into any benchmark and provides an intelligent tracker
for sync and async tests
* add benchmarks for DataView set methods
* add checks and tests to make sure offset is greater than 0
Make tools/install.py work with python 2.5
2.5 is still fairly widespread and does not include a json lib as
standard. Most python folk will have simplejson if they are in that
boat.
In general it seems a bit tricky to solve this perfectly...
There was previously an assert() in there, but this part of the code is
so high-volume that the added cost made a measurable dent in http_simple.
Just checking inline is fine, though, and prevents a lot of potential
hazards.
Say that a stream's current read queue has 101 bytes in it, and the
underlying resource has ended (ie, reached EOF).
If you do something like this:
stream.read(100); // leave a byte behind
stream.read(0); // read(0) for some reason
then the read(0) will get 0 from the howMuchToRead function. Since the
stream was ended, this was incorrectly treating the 0 as a "there is no
more in the buffer", and emitting 'end' before that last byte was read.
Why have the read(0) in the first place? We do this in some cases to
trigger the last few bytes of a net socket (such as a child process's
stdio pipes). This was causing issues when piping a `git archive` job
to a file: the resulting tarball was incomplete, because it occasionally
was not getting the last chunk.
Fix the following exception:
http.js:974
this._httpMessage.emit('close');
^
TypeError: Cannot call method 'emit' of null
at Socket.onServerResponseClose (http.js:974:21)
at Socket.EventEmitter.emit (events.js:124:20)
at net.js:421:10
at process._tickCallback (node.js:386:13)
at process._makeCallback (node.js:304:15)
Fixes#4586.
Remove compiler switches from $(TOPLEVEL)/deps/v8/build/common.gypi,
we set them globally in $(TOPLEVEL)/common.gypi.
Commit 7b4d95a introduced the switches again, resulting in V8 getting
built without any optimizations.
This commit is essentially a rehash of commit 4b8629d.
The int8_t and uint8_t typedefs on sunos/smartos depend on a number of
compiler directives. Avoid ambiguity and specify signed and unsigned
char explicitly.
Fixes the following build error:
../src/stream_wrap.cc: In static member function 'static void*
node::WriteWrap::operator new(size_t)':
../src/stream_wrap.cc:70:49: warning: no return statement in function
returning non-void [-Wreturn-type]
In file included from ../src/v8_typed_array.cc:26:0:
../src/v8_typed_array_bswap.h: In function 'T
v8_typed_array::SwapBytes(T) [with T = signed char]':
../src/v8_typed_array_bswap.h:150:23: instantiated from 'T
v8_typed_array::LoadAndSwapBytes(void*) [with T = signed char]'
../src/v8_typed_array.cc:694:7: instantiated from 'static
v8::Handle<v8::Value> {anonymous}::DataView::getGeneric(const
v8::Arguments&) [with T = signed char]'
../src/v8_typed_array.cc:738:40: instantiated from here
../src/v8_typed_array_bswap.h:125:16: error: size of array is
negative
For example, to cross-compile from my OS X laptop for Raspberry Pi, you would
do something like:
$ make binary BINARYNAME=node-v`python tools/getnodeversion.py`-linux-arm-pi \
DESTCPU=arm CONFIG_FLAGS="--dest-os=linux"
This also slightly changes the semantics, in that a 'readable'
event may be triggered by the first write() call, even if a
user has not yet called read().
This happens because the Transform _write() handler is calling
read(0) to start the flow of data. Technically, the new behavior
is more 'correct', since it is more in line with the semantics
of the 'readable' event in other streams.
Implement load and store swizzling operations. This reduces an unneeded
back and forth between types and additionally keeps the value in the
swappable type until it is swapped. This is important for correctness
when dealing with floating point, to avoid the possibility of loading
the bits of a signaling NaN (because it isn't yet swapped) into the FPU.
This additionally produces better code (comments are mine):
gcc version 4.2.1 (Based on Apple Inc. build 5658) (LLVM build 2336.11.00)
setValue<double>:
movd %xmm0, %rax ; fp reg -> gen reg
bswapq %rax ; 64-bit byte swap
movq %rax, (%r15,%r12) ; store
Implement swizzling with compiler intrinsics and be aware of the native
endianness to correctly swap on big endian machines.
This introduces a template function to swap the bytes of a value,
and macros for the low level swap (taking advantage of gcc and msvc
intrinsics). This produces code like the following (comments are mine):
gcc version 4.2.1 (Based on Apple Inc. build 5658) (LLVM build 2336.11.00)
setValue<double>:
movd %xmm0, %rax ; fp reg -> gen reg
bswapq %rax ; 64-bit byte swap
movd %rax, %xmm0 ; gen reg -> fp reg
movq %xmm0, (%r15,%r12) ; store
When switching into compatibility mode by setting `data` event listener,
`_read()` method will be called immediately. If method implementation
invokes callback in the same tick - all emitted `data` events will be
discarded, because `data` listener wasn't set yet.
Raise a TypeError when the argument to send() or sendto() is anything
but a Buffer.
Fixes the following assertion:
$ node -e 'require("dgram").createSocket("udp4").send("BAM")'
node: ../../src/udp_wrap.cc:220: static v8::Handle<v8::Value>
node::UDPWrap::DoSend(const v8::Arguments&, int): Assertion
`Buffer::HasInstance(args[0])' failed.
Aborted (core dumped)
Fixes#4496.
V8 3.15 has new API functions that let you specify the Isolate. V8 and
node.js generally spend 0.5-3.5% of the time in pthread_getspecific(),
looking up the current Isolate. Avoid that overhead by making "our"
isolate global so we can pass it around. The change to the new API is
introduced in follow-up commits.
The test was failing in debug mode because the timeouts were set too
low. Fix that by increasing the timeouts. Admittedly not a great fix.
If this test keeps playing up, it's probably best to remove it.
Fixes#4528.
Tests can leave the tty in non-blocking mode. If the test runner tries
to print to stdout/stderr after that and the tty buffer is full, it'll
die with a EAGAIN OSError. Ergo, put the tty back in blocking mode
before proceeding.
This test is timing sensitive and hence quite unreliable with debug
builds. What's worse is that it leaves a stray child process behind
that listens on the default test port and that makes all the tests
that come after it fail with EADDRINUSE errors.
Allows for arbitrary path to executable spawned using `fork`. This
fixes some issues around running multiple versions of node with workers
and allows arbitrary IPC with compatible executables.
Fixes#3248.
Use static_cast instead of reinterpret_cast when casting from void*
to another type.
This is mostly an aesthetic change but may help catch bugs when the
affected code is modified.
Remove compiler switches from $(TOPLEVEL)/deps/v8/build/common.gypi,
we set them globally in $(TOPLEVEL)/common.gypi.
Commit 7b4d95a introduced the switches again, resulting in V8 getting
built without any optimizations.
This commit is essentially a rehash of commit 4b8629d.
In JS, the expression ".1" is a floating point number. Issue 4268 concerns the
REPL interpreting floating point numbers that lead with a "." as keywords. The
original bugfix worked for this specific case but not for the general case:
var x = [
.1,
.2,
.3
];
The attached change and test (`.1+.1` should be `.2`) fix the bug.
Closes#4513.
Some performance counter related functions are not available on Windows
XP and Windows Server 2003, which caused node to call a NULL pointer.
Closes#4462Closes#4511
Don't give names of built-in libraries special treatment.
Changes the REPL's behavior from this:
> var path = 42
> path
A different "path" already exists globally
To this:
> var path = 42
> path
42
Fixes#4512.
Remove compiler switches from $(TOPLEVEL)/deps/v8/build/common.gypi,
we set them globally in $(TOPLEVEL)/common.gypi.
Commit 7b4d95a introduced the switches again, resulting in V8 getting
built without any optimizations.
This commit is essentially a rehash of commit 4b8629d.
Calling send() on an unbound socket forces an implicit bind to
a random port.
332fea5 made the 'listening' event asynchronous. Unfortunately,
it also introduced a bug where the implicit bind was tried more
than once if send() was called again before the first bind operation
completed.
Address that by keeping track of the bind status and making sure that
bind() is called only once.
Fixes#4499.
* assert: improve support for new execution contexts (lukebayes)
* domain: use camelCase instead of snake_case (isaacs)
* domain: Do not use uncaughtException handler (isaacs)
* fs: make 'end' work with ReadStream without 'start' (Ben Noordhuis)
* https: optimize createConnection() (Ryunosuke SATO)
* buffer: speed up base64 encoding by 20% (Ben Noordhuis)
* doc: Colorize API stabilitity index headers in docs (Luke Arduini)
* net: socket.readyState corrections (bentaber)
* http: Performance enhancements for http under streams2 (isaacs)
* stream: fix to emit end event on http.ClientResponse (Shigeki Ohtsu)
* stream: fix event handler leak in readstream pipe and unpipe (Andreas Madsen)
* build: Support ./configure --tag switch (Maciej Małecki)
* repl: don't touch `require.cache` (Nathan Rajlich)
* node: Emit 'exit' event when exiting for an uncaught exception (isaacs)
While it's true that error objects have a history of getting snake_case
properties attached by the host system, it's a point of confusion to
Node users that comes up a lot. It's still 'experimental', so best to
change this sooner rather than later.
This adds a process._fatalException method which is called into from
C++ in order to either emit the 'uncaughtException' method, or emit
'error' on the active domain.
The 'uncaughtException' event is an implementation detail that it would
be nice to deprecate one day, so exposing it as part of the domain
machinery is not ideal.
Fix#4375
Make `fs.createReadStream({ end: 42 })` work.
Before this commit, it worked only when used like this:
`fs.createReadStream({ start: 0, end: 42 })` - only when `start` was specified
by the caller.
Fixes#4423.
Remove a lot of branches from the inner loop. Speeds up buf.toString('base64')
by about 20%.
Before:
$ time out/Release/node benchmark/buffer-base64-encode.js
real 0m6.607s
user 0m5.508s
sys 0m1.088s
After:
$ time out/Release/node benchmark/buffer-base64-encode.js
real 0m5.520s
user 0m4.520s
sys 0m0.992s
Noted in @shtylman's #3898, API stability notes are easy to overlook
in the html documentation. This can be especially troublesome if the API
is deprecated. This commit gives visual feedback by adding in a class
to the html docs when they're generated. The API headers with
corresponding colors are also listed in the 'About this Documentation'
page for easy reference.
socket.readyState, .readable, and .writable behavior changed as
a result of the new streaming interfaces. Updated to be backwards
compatible with current API and adds regression test.
closes#4461
When building custom `node` versions (e.g., floating features/fixes from
different versions) it's often useful to specify a custom tag which
easily identifies build when invoking `node -v`.
Introduce a way to specify this tag in `node_version.h` file or by
running `./configure --tag="<tag>"`. Insert it right after the patch
version (and before `-pre`, if build is not a release).
Fix a bug where calling .end() on a socket without calling .connect() first
throws a TypeError:
TypeError: Cannot read property 'shutdown' of undefined
at Socket.onSocketFinish (net.js:194:20)
at Socket.EventEmitter.emit (events.js:91:17)
at Socket.Writable.end (_stream_writable.js:281:10)
at Socket.end (net.js:352:31)
Fixes#4463.
When building custom `node` versions (e.g., floating features/fixes from
different versions) it's often useful to specify a custom tag which
easily identifies build when invoking `node -v`.
Introduce a way to specify this tag in `node_version.h` file or by
running `./configure --tag="<tag>"`. Insert it right after the patch
version (and before `-pre`, if build is not a release).
Closes#4452.
Fixes#3226.
Consider a production server that uses a REPL to debug. Creating the instance
would wipe out the global cache of modules, and subsequent "require" calls in
the server would be reloaded from disk. The REPL should observe only, without
altering, its environment.
Starting a line with `**bold**` text makes it think that it's a link,
and get confused.
This should really be fixed properly in the doc generator, but for now,
it's not a major issue. It's probably just a matter of updating marked.
When perlasm generates MASM code it sets the assembler target to 468.
In this mode MASM refuses to assemble a couple of instructions. Bumping
the target to 686 solves this problem.
This patch brings the openssl library that is built with gyp closer
to what the standard build system produces.
All opensslconf.h versions are now merged into a single file, which
makes it easier for compiled addons to locate this file.
Apply the same optimization to res.end(buf) that is applied to res.end(str).
Speeds up `node benchmark/http_simple_auto -k -c 1 -n 25000 buffer/1`
(non-chunked response body) by about 750x. That's not a typo.
Chunked responses:
$ cat tmp/http-chunked-client.js
// Run `node benchmark/http_simple` in another terminal.
var http = require('http'), url = require('url');
var options = url.parse('http://127.0.0.1:8000/buffer/1/1');
options.agent = new http.Agent({ maxSockets: 1 });
for (var i = 0; i < 25000; ++i) http.get(options);
Before:
$ time out/Release/node tmp/http-chunked-client.js
real 16m40.411s
user 0m9.184s
sys 0m0.604s
After:
$ time out/Release/node tmp/http-chunked-client.js
real 0m5.386s
user 0m2.768s
sys 0m0.728s
That's still a 185x speed-up.
Fixes#4415.
This is very similar to http.sh, but generates a flamegraph
with dtrace, pruning off the single-hit stacks so that we can
more easily see the places where relevant amounts of time are
spent.
Remove the idle garbage collector. Its purpose was to run the garbage collector
when the application is idle but it never worked quite right. Many people have
complained over the years that with heaps > 128 MB, a node.js process never
sleeps anymore; instead, it spends nearly 100% of its CPU time trying to
collect garbage.
Back in the old days, idle GC probably was a good idea. But with V8's current
incremental collector, idle gc appears to offer no time or space benefits
whatsoever and indeed seems actively harmful. Remove it.
Fixes#3870.
Although it is not used externally by node, it is needed by upstream and Plask.
This effectively reverts:
commit 1444801374
Author: Aaron Jacobs <jacobsa@google.com>
Date: Thu Mar 15 13:26:35 2012 +1100
typed arrays: unexport SizeOfArrayElementForType()
It isn't used anywhere else, so made it an implementation detail in
v8_typed_array.cc.
Make parser errors bubble up to the ClientRequest instead of the underlying
net.Socket object.
This is a back-port of commit c78678b from the master branch.
Fixes#3776.
Work around an issue with the glibc malloc() implementation where memory blocks
are never returned to the operating system when they are allocated with brk()
and have overlapping lifecycles.
Fixes#4283.
Streams2 style streams might have already kicked off a read() or write()
before emitting 'data' events. Make the test less dependent on ordering
of when data events occur.
Because of some of the peculiarities of http, this has a bit of special
magic to handle cases where the IncomingMessage would wait forever in a
paused state.
In the server, if you do not begin consuming the request body by the
time the response emits 'finish', then it will be flushed out.
In the client, if you do not add a 'response' handler onto the request,
then the response stream will be flushed out.
This is a combination of 6 commits.
* XXX net fixup lcase stream
* net: Refactor to use streams2
Use 'socket.resume()' in many tests to trigger old-mode behavior.
* net: Call destroy() if shutdown() is not provided
This is important for TTY wrap streams
* net: Call .end() in socket.destroySoon if necessary
This makes the http 1.0 keepAlive test pass, also.
* net wtf-ish stuff kinda busted
* net fixup
Otherwise (especially with stdin) you sometimes end up in cases
where the high water mark is zero, and the current buffer is at 0,
and it doesn't need a readable event, so it never calls _read().
This fixes the CONNECT/Upgrade HTTP functionality, which was not getting
sliced properly, because readable wasn't emitted on this tick.
Conflicts:
test/simple/test-http-connect.js
Verifies that the callback gets invoked <n> times during the lifetime of the
test script.
This is a back-port of commit d0e6c3f from the master branch.
Don't allow connections to stall indefinitely if the SSL/TLS handshake does
not complete.
Adds a new tls.Server and https.Server configuration option, handshakeTimeout.
Fixes#4355.
The test assumes the parent and the child are scheduled fairly. Probably true
most of the time but not always, making it fail spuriously.
Bad test, remove it.
V8 debug agent needs some time to be ready and no longer sends the first event
break response to a debug client. We wait some time to connect the agent and
check its break status by obtaining breakpoint list and seeing if it exists on
line 0.
Enable long stacktraces if NODE_DEBUG=fs is set in the environment. Only
applies to the default rethrow callback; it's to help you find places where
you forgot to pass in a callback.
Use a default callback if the user omitted one. Avoids errors like the one
below:
fs.js:777
if (err) return callback(err);
^
TypeError: object is not a function
at fs.appendFile (fs.js:777:21)
at Object.oncomplete (fs.js:297:15)
This commit fixes the behavior of fs.lchmod(), fs.lchown() and fs.readFile()
when the callback is omitted. Before, they silently swallowed errors.
Fixes#4352.
Just sends a buffer to a server, which echoes it back, and then measures
the Gbits/second. Very similar to throughput.js, but using a single
process, so that it's possible to dtrace and get the jsstack frames for
profile comparison.
Fix#4331
Using double negate forces values into 32bit space. Because of this
Math.ceil needs to be used. Since NaN comparisons are always false, use
that to our advantage to return 0 if it is.
Also added two tests to verify the changes.
* Added isIP method to make use of inet_pton to cares_wrap.cc
* Modified net.isIP() to make use of new C++ isIP method.
* Added new tests to test-net-isip.js.
This is a back-port of commit fb6377e from the master branch.
Disabled the following unit tests:
* test-eio-race.js
* test-eio-race2.js
* test-eio-race4.js
These tests are known to fail on busy boxes due to being timing sensitive,
and are deemed not meaningful tests.
See https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/4272Fixes#4272.
* npm: Upgrade to 1.1.66 (isaacs)
* linux: use /proc/cpuinfo for CPU frequency (Ben Noordhuis)
* windows: map WSAESHUTDOWN to UV_EPIPE (Ben Noordhuis)
* windows: map ERROR_GEN_FAILURE to UV_EIO (Bert Belder)
* unix: do not set environ unless one is provided (Charlie McConnell)
* domains: don't crash if domain is set to null (Bert Belder)
* windows: fix the x64 debug build (Bert Belder)
* net, tls: fix connect() resource leak (Ben Noordhuis)
OR'ing together two large values, like `SSL_OP_ALL | SSL_OP_NO_TICKET`,
produces a negative number. To wit:
assert((0x80000000 | 0x4000) === -0x7fffc000); // true
assert((0x80000000 | 0x4000) === 0x80004000); // false!
It's easy to work around by doing a logical shift, like this:
assert((0x80000000 | 0x4000) >>> 0 === 0x80004000); // true
But that's not very intuitive. Let's be more lenient in what we accept.
* fix gyp build
* don't require libexecinfo, it's not there
* libpthread doesn't implement sem_timedwait(), fall back to sem_wait()
Upstreamed in https://codereview.chromium.org/11421013/
The purpose of this file was to remap the old libeio API to the new one.
We dropped libeio in ee77a6a and this file has been broken ever since.
Ergo, remove it.
While updating the readline test cases to test both "terimal: false" and
"terminal: true" mode, it turned out that the test case testing utf8 chars
being sent over multiple write() calls was failing. The solution is to use
a string_decoder instance when parsing the "keypress" events.
Before this commit, readline was inconsistent in whether or not it would emit
"line" events with or without the trailing "\n" included. When "terminal"
mode was true, then there would be no "\n", when it was false, then the "\n"
would be present. However, the trailing "\n" doesn't add much, and most of the
time people just end up stripping it manually.
Part of #4243.
* Added isIP method to make use of inet_pton to cares_wrap.cc
* Modified net.isIP() to make use of new C++ isIP method.
* Added new tests to test-net-isip.js.
DTrace on Linux should not be enabled by default because not all systems will
have the proper headers installed. Only enable when --with-dtrace is passed to
the configure script.
`url.format` should escape ? and # chars in pathname, and # chars in
search, because they change the semantics of the operation otherwise.
Don't escape % chars, or anything else. (see: #4082)
Inform V8 that the zlib context object is tied to a large off-heap buffer.
This makes the GC run more often (in theory) and improves the accuracy of
--trace_external_memory.
In zlibBuffer(), don't wait for the garbage collector to reclaim the zlib memory
but release it manually. Reduces memory consumption by a factor of 10 or more
with some workloads.
Test case:
function f() {
require('zlib').deflate('xxx', g);
}
function g() {
setTimeout(f, 5);
}
f();
Observe RSS memory usage with and without this commit. After 10,000 iterations,
RSS stabilizes at ~35 MB with this commit. Without, RSS is over 300 MB and keeps
growing.
Cause: whenever the JS object heap hits the high-water mark, the V8 GC sweeps
it clean, then tries to grow it in order to avoid more sweeps in the near
future. Rule of thumb: the bigger the JS heap, the lazier the GC can be.
A side effect of a bigger heap is that objects now live longer. This is harmless
in general but it affects zlib context objects because those are tied to large
buffers that live outside the JS heap, on the order of 16K per context object.
Ergo, don't wait for the GC to reclaim the memory - it may take a long time.
Fixes#4172.
The gyp target node_etw didn't list its output dependencies. This
was causing virgin builds to fail with a "failed to open file for
write" error.
With this corrected outputs list, gyp reliably pre-creates
required output directories.
* V8: Upgrade to 3.11.10.25
* npm: Upgrade to 1.1.65
* url: parse hostnames that start with - or _ (Ben Noordhuis)
* repl: Fix Windows 8 terminal issue (Bert Belder)
* typed arrays: use signed char for signed int8s (Aaron Jacobs)
* crypto: fix bugs in DiffieHellman (Ben Noordhuis)
* configure: turn on VFPv3 on ARMv7 (Ben Noordhuis)
* Re-enable OpenSSL UI for entering passphrases via tty (Ben Noordhuis)
* repl: ensure each REPL instance gets its own "context" (Nathan Rajlich)
Always add domain, _events, and _maxListeners properties, set to the
default values at first.
Leads to a very very slight perf improvement when using setMaxListeners,
or dealing with a lot of EE objects that don't have any listeners.
Remove compiler switches from $(TOPLEVEL)/deps/v8/build/common.gypi, we set
them globally in $(TOPLEVEL)/common.gypi.
Commit 29d12c73 accidentally reintroduced the switches again. In particular,
the 'cflags!': ['-O2','-Os'] section forced building V8 without any
optimizations, resulting in a steep (~66%) performance drop on some benchmarks.
Fixes#4191.
This is a flag to make it easier for users to upgrade through the
breaking crypto change, and easier for us to switch it back if it's a
problem.
Explicitly set default encoding to 'buffer' in other tests, in case it
ever changes back.
crypto: Hash and Hmac default to buffers
crypto: Move Cipher encoding logic to JS
crypto: Move Cipheriv encoding logic to JS
crypto: Move Decipher encoding logic to JS
crypto: Move Decipheriv into JS, default to buffers
crypto: Move Sign class to JS
crypto: Better encoding handling in Hash.update
crypto: Move Verify class to JS
crypto: Move DiffieHellman to JS, default to buffers
crypto: Move DiffieHellmanGroup to JS, default to buffers
Also, create a test for this feature
`timezone` variable contains the difference, in seconds, between UTC and
local standard time (see `man 3 localtime` on Solaris).
Call to `tzset` is required to apply contents of `TZ` variable to
`timezone` variable.
BUG=v8:2064
Review URL: https://chromiumcodereview.appspot.com/10967066
Patch from Maciej Małecki <me@mmalecki.com>.
This is a back-port of upstream commit r12802.
Fix a use-after-free bug and a memory leak in the error path of
DiffieHellman::ComputeSecret().
* the BIGNUM key was used after being freed with BN_free().
* the output buffer was not freed
Previously, the "global" mode of REPLs was broken when created after another
non-global REPL (they would end up sharing the same context). Now that "global"
mode is fixed for that case (b1e78cef09), this
test case gets its global scope modified with "module" and other REPL-specific
properties, so disable the global check.
This reverts commit 1c88c3b3b5.
It breaks the "read a password from stdin" functionality that OpenSSL provides.
Fixes#4059, #4143.
Conflicts:
deps/openssl/openssl.gyp
* The 'close' event doesn't emit an error object.
* It's possible for a 'close' event to come after an 'end' event, contrary to
what the documentation said.
Fixes#4116.
Before there was this weird module-scoped "context" variable which seemingly
shared the "context" of subsequent REPL instances, unless ".clear" was invoked
inside the REPL. To be proper, we need to ensure that each REPL gets its own
"context" object. I literally don't know why this "sharing" behavior was in place
before, but it was just plain wrong.
Make buffers report the proper retained size in heap snapshots.
Before this commit, Buffer objects would show up in the heap profiler as being
only a few hundred bytes large, even if the actual buffer was many megabytes.
Consolidates all the formatting options into an "options" object argument.
This is so that we don't have to be constantly remembering the order of
the arguments and so that we can add more formatting options easily.
Closes#4085.
Listen for the 'clientError' event that is emitted when a renegotation attack
is detected and close the connection.
Fixes test/pummel/test-https-ci-reneg-attack.js
Make the 'listening' event handler in the master process see the actual port
that the worker bound to when the worker specified port 0, i.e. a random port.
Encoding failures can be somewhat confusing, especially when they are due to
control flow frameworks auto-filling parameters from the previous step output
values to functions (such as toString and write) that developers don't expect
to take an encoding parameter. By outputting the value as part of the message,
should make it easier to track down these sort of bugs.
This reverts commit 790d651f0d.
This makes Duplex streams unworkable, and would only ever be a special
case for HTTP responses, which is not ideal.
Intead, we're going to just bless the 'finish' event for all Writable
streams in 0.10
Just as the 'WWW-Authenticate' HTTP header the 'Proxy-Authenticate' header might
be received several times as well. Currently only one value is preserved. This
change allows to receive multiple values concatenated by space and comma.
Just as the 'WWW-Authenticate' HTTP header the 'Proxy-Authenticate' header might
be received several times as well. Currently only one value is preserved. This
change allows to receive multiple values concatenated by space and comma.
When perlasm generates MASM code it sets the assembler target to 468.
In this mode MASM refuses to assemble the CPUID instruction. Bumping
the target to 586 solves this problem.
A child process created with .fork() needed to call `process.exit()` explicitly
because the communication channel with the parent kept the event loop alive.
Fix that by only ref'ing the channel when there are 'message' event listeners.
Fixes#3799.
This addresses #4034. There are two problems happening:
1. The domain is not exited automatically when calling dispose() on it.
Then, since the domain is disposed, attempting to exit it again will do
nothing.
2. The active domain is stored on process.domain. Since thrown errors
call `process.emit('uncaughtException', er)`, and the process is an
event emitter with a `.domain` member, it re-enters the domain a second
time before calling the error handler, pushing it onto the stack again.
Thus, if the handler calls `domain.dispose()`, then the domain is now on
the stack twice, and cannot be exited properly. Since the domain is
disposed, any subsequent IO will be no-op'ed, since we've declared that
this context is done and best forgotten.
The solution here is twofold:
1. In EventEmitter.emit, do not enter the domain if `this===process`.
2. Automatically exit the domain when calling `domain.dispose()`.
Make sure the deletion event gets reported in the following scenario:
1. Watch a file.
2. The initial stat() goes okay.
3. Something deletes the watched file.
4. The second stat() fails with ENOENT.
The second stat() translates into the first 'change' event but a logic error
stopped it from getting emitted.
Fixes#4027.
Update the tls and https tests to explicitly set rejectUnauthorized instead of
relying on the NODE_TLS_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED environment variable getting set.
This commit changes the default value of the rejectUnauthorized option from
false to true.
What that means is that tls.connect(), https.get() and https.request() will
reject invalid server certificates from now on, including self-signed
certificates.
There is an escape hatch: if you set the NODE_TLS_REJECT_UNAUTHORIZED
environment variable to the literal string "0", node.js reverts to its
old behavior.
Fixes#3949.
Fix the following error:
FSEventWrap: Aborting due to unwrap failure at ../../src/fs_event_wrap.cc:169
It's possible and legal for a handle to be closed twice. HandleWrap::Close()
deals with that by ignoring the second close. Now FSEventWrap::Close() does
too.
Fixes#3997.
Check that the calls to Integer::New() and Date::New() succeed and bail out if
they don't.
V8 returns an empty handle on stack overflow. Trying to set the empty handle as
a property on an object results in a NULL pointer dereference in release builds
and an assert in debug builds.
Fixes#4015.
These patches were provided by Android and Chromium. In this form they
are not useful. The ones that we need are landed as separate commits.
As of openssl 1.0.1c, three of them made it upstream:
* npn.patch (Next Protocol Negotiation support)
* tls_exporter.patch (RFC 5705 Keying Material Exporters for TLS)
* openssl_no_dtls1.patch (minor bugfix)
Use a empty implementation for function OPENSSL_cpuid_setup to resolve link
error. We should figure out how to geenrate platform specific implementation
of OPENSSL_cpuid_setup by leveraging crypto/*cpuid.pl.
This patch is taken from Chromium.
ASN1_STRING_to_UTF8() passes an ASN1_STRING to ASN1_STRING_set() but
forgot to initialize the `length` field.
Fixes the following valgrind error:
$ valgrind -q --track-origins=yes --num-callers=19 \
out/Debug/node test/simple/test-tls-client-abort.js
==2690== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
==2690== at 0x784B69: ASN1_STRING_set (asn1_lib.c:382)
==2690== by 0x809564: ASN1_mbstring_ncopy (a_mbstr.c:204)
==2690== by 0x8090F0: ASN1_mbstring_copy (a_mbstr.c:86)
==2690== by 0x782F1F: ASN1_STRING_to_UTF8 (a_strex.c:570)
==2690== by 0x78F090: asn1_string_canon (x_name.c:409)
==2690== by 0x78EF17: x509_name_canon (x_name.c:354)
==2690== by 0x78EA7D: x509_name_ex_d2i (x_name.c:210)
==2690== by 0x788058: ASN1_item_ex_d2i (tasn_dec.c:239)
==2690== by 0x7890D4: asn1_template_noexp_d2i (tasn_dec.c:746)
==2690== by 0x788CB6: asn1_template_ex_d2i (tasn_dec.c:607)
==2690== by 0x78877A: ASN1_item_ex_d2i (tasn_dec.c:448)
==2690== by 0x7890D4: asn1_template_noexp_d2i (tasn_dec.c:746)
==2690== by 0x788CB6: asn1_template_ex_d2i (tasn_dec.c:607)
==2690== by 0x78877A: ASN1_item_ex_d2i (tasn_dec.c:448)
==2690== by 0x787C93: ASN1_item_d2i (tasn_dec.c:136)
==2690== by 0x78F5E4: d2i_X509 (x_x509.c:141)
==2690== by 0x7C9B91: PEM_ASN1_read_bio (pem_oth.c:81)
==2690== by 0x7CA506: PEM_read_bio_X509 (pem_x509.c:67)
==2690== by 0x703C9A: node::crypto::SecureContext::AddRootCerts(v8::Arguments const&) (node_crypto.cc:497)
==2690== Uninitialised value was created by a stack allocation
==2690== at 0x782E89: ASN1_STRING_to_UTF8 (a_strex.c:560)
There are many symbolic links under /etc/ssl/certs created by using hash of
the pem certificates in order for OpenSSL to find those certificate.
Openssl has a tool to help you create hash symbolic links. (See tools/c_rehash)
However the new openssl changed the hash algorithm, Unless you compile/install
the latest openssl library and re-create all related symbolic links, the new
openssl can not find some certificates because the links of those certificates
were created by using old hash algorithm, which causes some tests failed.
This patch gives a way to find a certificate according to its hash by using both
new algorithm and old algorithm.
crbug.com/111045 is used to track this issue.
This patch is taken from the Chromium project.
Enables SSL3+ clients to send application data immediately following the
Finished message even when negotiating full-handshakes. With this patch,
clients can negotiate SSL connections in 1-RTT even when performing
full-handshakes.
This patch is taken from the Android Open Source Project.
SSL records may be as large as 16K, but are typically < 2K. In
addition, a historic bug in Windows allowed records to be as large
32K. OpenSSL statically allocates read and write buffers (34K and
18K respectively) used for processing records.
With this patch, OpenSSL statically allocates 4K + 4K buffers, with
the option of dynamically growing buffers to 34K + 4K, which is a
saving of 44K per connection for the typical case.
This patch is taken from the Android Open Source Project.
A HTTP/1.0 client does not support 'Transfer-Encoding: chunked' unless it
explicitly requests it by sending a 'TE: chunked' header.
Before this commit, node.js always disabled chunked encoding for HTTP/1.0
clients. Now it will scan for the TE header and turn on chunked encoding if
requested and applicable.
Fixes#940.
Don't execute the callback in the context of the global object.
MakeCallback() tries to apply the active domain to the callback. If the user
polluted the global object with a 'domain' property, as in the code example
below, MakeCallback() will try to apply that.
Example:
domain = {}; // missing var keyword is intentional
crypto.randomBytes(8, cb); // TypeError: undefined is not a function
Fixes#3956.
pthread_t is a pointer type on OS X but an unsigned long on most other
platforms. Use a C style cast because reinterpret_cast nor static_cast
work in all cases.
With this patch the IPC socket is no longer available in the
ChildProcess.stdio array. This shouldn't be very problematic, since
this socket was effectively non-functional; it would never emit any
events.
Throw an exception in the tls.Server constructor when the options object
doesn't contain either a PFX or a key/certificate combo.
Said change exposed a bug in simple/test-tls-junk-closes-server. Addressed.
Fixes#3941.
It takes an optional "expected exception" argument that is not used meaningfully
but is nevertheless documented. Undocument it, it confuses casual readers of the
documentation.
Fixes#3935.
* buffer: Add Buffer.isEncoding(enc) to test for valid encoding values (isaacs)
* Raise UV_ECANCELED on premature close. (Ben Noordhuis)
* Remove c-ares from libuv, move to a top-level node dependency (Bert Belder)
* ref/unref for all HandleWraps, timers, servers, and sockets (Timothy J Fontaine)
* addon: remove node-waf, superseded by node-gyp (Ben Noordhuis)
* child_process: emit error on exec failure (Ben Noordhuis)
* cluster: do not use internal server API (Andreas Madsen)
* constants: add O_DIRECT (Ian Babrou)
* crypto: add sync interface to crypto.pbkdf2() (Ben Noordhuis)
* darwin: emulate fdatasync() (Fedor Indutny)
* dgram: make .bind() always asynchronous (Ben Noordhuis)
* events: Make emitter.listeners() side-effect free (isaacs, Joe Andaverde)
* fs: Throw early on invalid encoding args (isaacs)
* fs: fix naming of truncate/ftruncate functions (isaacs)
* http: bubble up parser errors to ClientRequest (Brian White)
* linux: improve cpuinfo parser on ARM and MIPS (Ben Noordhuis)
* net: add support for IPv6 addresses ending in :: (Josh Erickson)
* net: support Server.listen(Pipe) (Andreas Madsen)
* node: don't scan add-on for "init" symbol (Ben Noordhuis)
* remove process.uvCounters() (Ben Noordhuis)
* repl: console writes to repl rather than process stdio (Nathan Rajlich)
* timers: implement setImmediate (Timothy J Fontaine)
* tls: fix segfault in pummel/test-tls-ci-reneg-attack (Ben Noordhuis)
* tools: Move gyp addon tools to node-gyp (Nathan Rajlich)
* unix: preliminary signal handler support (Ben Noordhuis)
* unix: remove dependency on ev_child (Ben Noordhuis)
* unix: work around darwin bug, don't poll() on pipe (Fedor Indutny)
* util: Formally deprecate util.pump() (Ben Noordhuis)
* windows: make active and closing handle state independent (Bert Belder)
* windows: report spawn errors to the exit callback (Bert Belder)
* windows: signal handling support with uv_signal_t (Bert Belder)
Removed NO_CAST, NO_MD2 and NO_STORE because otherwise there were build errors.
Added NO_CAMELLIA, NO_MDC2, and NO_CMS because otherwise there were linker errors.
* V8: upgrade to 3.11.10.19
* npm: upgrade to 1.1.59
* windows: fix uninitialized memory access in uv_update_time() (Bert Belder)
* unix, windows: fix memory corruption in fs-poll.c (Ben Noordhuis)
* unix: fix integer overflow in uv_hrtime (Tim Holy)
* sunos: fix uv_cpu_info() on x86_64 (Ben Noordhuis)
* tls: update default cipher list (Ben Noordhuis)
* unix: Fix llvm and older gcc duplicate symbol warnings (Bert Belder)
* fs: fix use after free in stat watcher (Ben Noordhuis)
* build: Fix using manually compiled gcc on OS X (Nathan Rajlich)
* windows: make junctions work again (Bert Belder)
Update the default cipher list from RC4-SHA:AES128-SHA:AES256-SHA
to ECDHE-RSA-AES128-SHA256:AES128-GCM-SHA256:RC4:HIGH:!MD5:!aNULL:!EDH
in order to mitigate BEAST attacks.
The documentation suggested AES256-SHA but unfortunately that's a CBC cipher
and therefore susceptible to attacks.
Fixes#3900.
These explicit instantiations were added to make MSVC happy. It turns
out that some older versions of gcc and llvm now complain about duplicate
symbols, so we instantiate these templates only when MSVC is used.
These explicit instantiations were added to make MSVC happy. It turns
out that some older versions of gcc and llvm now complain about duplicate
symbols, so we instantiate these templates only when MSVC is used.
This is the only thing preventing a manually compiled version of GCC
(rather than Apple's provided llvm-gcc or heavily modified gcc 4.2)
from working properly, so we might as well enable support for that.
With this patch I was able to compile node using a manually compiled
gcc 4.7.1.
Closes#3887.
Ensure that the delay >= 0 when detaching the timer from the queue. Fixes the
following assertion:
uv_timer_start: Assertion `timeout >= 0' failed.
No test included, it's timing sensitive.
Just install whatever's best for the OS.
Detect host os and architecture from the navigator properties. If we
can't make a good guess, then they get the tarball, and of course
everything we have is on the full download page.
- Improved styling of download links.
- index.html#download now redirects to /download/
- Added missing hyphens, and added the missing "and 64-bit" for the Mac
Installer.
ASN1_STRING_to_UTF8() passes an ASN1_STRING to ASN1_STRING_set() but forgot to
initialize the `length` field.
Fixes the following valgrind error:
$ valgrind -q --track-origins=yes --num-callers=19 \
out/Debug/node test/simple/test-tls-client-abort.js
==2690== Conditional jump or move depends on uninitialised value(s)
==2690== at 0x784B69: ASN1_STRING_set (asn1_lib.c:382)
==2690== by 0x809564: ASN1_mbstring_ncopy (a_mbstr.c:204)
==2690== by 0x8090F0: ASN1_mbstring_copy (a_mbstr.c:86)
==2690== by 0x782F1F: ASN1_STRING_to_UTF8 (a_strex.c:570)
==2690== by 0x78F090: asn1_string_canon (x_name.c:409)
==2690== by 0x78EF17: x509_name_canon (x_name.c:354)
==2690== by 0x78EA7D: x509_name_ex_d2i (x_name.c:210)
==2690== by 0x788058: ASN1_item_ex_d2i (tasn_dec.c:239)
==2690== by 0x7890D4: asn1_template_noexp_d2i (tasn_dec.c:746)
==2690== by 0x788CB6: asn1_template_ex_d2i (tasn_dec.c:607)
==2690== by 0x78877A: ASN1_item_ex_d2i (tasn_dec.c:448)
==2690== by 0x7890D4: asn1_template_noexp_d2i (tasn_dec.c:746)
==2690== by 0x788CB6: asn1_template_ex_d2i (tasn_dec.c:607)
==2690== by 0x78877A: ASN1_item_ex_d2i (tasn_dec.c:448)
==2690== by 0x787C93: ASN1_item_d2i (tasn_dec.c:136)
==2690== by 0x78F5E4: d2i_X509 (x_x509.c:141)
==2690== by 0x7C9B91: PEM_ASN1_read_bio (pem_oth.c:81)
==2690== by 0x7CA506: PEM_read_bio_X509 (pem_x509.c:67)
==2690== by 0x703C9A: node::crypto::SecureContext::AddRootCerts(v8::Arguments const&) (node_crypto.cc:497)
==2690== Uninitialised value was created by a stack allocation
==2690== at 0x782E89: ASN1_STRING_to_UTF8 (a_strex.c:560)
* valgrind complained too much about memory leaks from the V8 heap to be
useful, run it with --leak-check=no. Not ideal, needs to be revisited,
preferably with a suppression file.
* tools/run-valgrind.py didn't deal with tests that logged to stderr, rewrite
the heuristic and make valgrind write to a socket instead of stderr.
Fixes#3869.
pummel/test-net-throttle assumes that a couple of big write requests result in
some of them getting queued because the kernel's send buffer fills up.
Said assumption breaks on systems with large send buffers. Raise the size of
the write request to ameliorate the issue.
This is a back-port of commit 6770555 from the master branch.
Before this commit, DecodeWrite() mistakenly tried to convert buffers to
UTF-8 strings which:
a) produced invalid character sequences when the buffer contained
octets > 127, and
b) lead to spurious test failures because DecodeWrite() wrote less bytes
than DecodeBytes() said it would, with the remainder either containing
zeros or garbage
Fix that by simply copying the buffer's data to the target buffer when the
encoding is BINARY or by converting the buffer to a binary string when it's
UTF8 or ASCII.
Fixes#3651, #3866.
Commit 4e5fe2d changed the way how process.nextTick() works:
process.nextTick(function foo() {
process.nextTick(function bar() {
// ...
});
});
Before said commit, foo() and bar() used to run on separate event loop ticks
but that is no longer the case.
However, that's exactly the behavior that the TLS renegotiation attack guard
relies on. It gets called by OpenSSL and needs to defer the 'error' event to a
later tick because the default action is to destroy the TLS context - the same
context that OpenSSL currently operates on.
When things change underneath your feet, bad things happen and OpenSSL is no
exception. Ergo, use setImmediate() instead of process.nextTick() to ensure
that the 'error' event is actually emitted at a later tick.
Fixes#3840.
The test relied on a peculiarity of process.nextTick() that was changed in
commit 4e5fe2d. Before that commit, each nextTick callback corresponded with
the event loop moving forward one tick. That's no longer the case.
pummel/test-net-throttle assumes that a couple of big write requests result in
some of them getting queued because the kernel's send buffer fills up.
Said assumption breaks on systems with large send buffers. Raise the size of
the write request to ameliorate the issue.
Fixes a minor oversight introduced in 168a555, resulting in the following error:
fs.js:467
return fs.ftruncateSync(path, len, callback);
^
ReferenceError: callback is not defined
at Object.fs.truncateSync (fs.js:467:40)
This commit reverts the following commits (in reverse chronological order):
74d076c errnoException must be done immediately
ddb02b9 net: support Server.listen(Pipe)
085a098 cluster: do not use internal server API
d138875 net: lazy listen on handler
Commit d138875 introduced a backwards incompatible change that broke the
simple/test-net-socket-timeout and simple/test-net-lazy-listen tests - it
defers listening on the target port until the `net.Server` instance has at
least one 'connection' event listener.
The other patches had to be reverted in order to revert d138875.
Fixes#3832.
This target compiles node with "/" as the prefix and installs into a directory
like: "node-v0.8.6-darwin-x86_64". Then it creates a gzipped-tarball of that
directory, called something like: "node-v0.8.6-darwin-x86_64.tar.gz".
This "portable" mode rewrites the npm shebang to use the "node" executable
in the same directory relative to the "npm" script. This makes the "npm"
script "just work" even when "node" is not in the user's $PATH.
This mode is necessary for the precompiled binary packages that may potentially
be extracted to anywhere. The regular shebang-rewriting logic would normally
set the npm script's shebang to "/bin/node" which will not be present on anyone's
machine. In the end, we want the precompiled packages to be as user-friendly as
possible.
The destroy() method of fs.ReadStream and fs.WriteStream takes a callback.
It's a leftover from the node 0.1 days, undocumented and not part of the
streams API. Remove it.
Previously, a command with a short stdio array would result in the child's
stdout and stderr objects set to null. For example:
var c = child_process.spawn(cmd, args, {stdio: ['pipe']});
// results in c.stdout === null.
The expected behavior is the above line functioning the same as this one:
var c = child_process.spawn(cmd, args, {stdio: ['pipe', null, null]});
// provides correct (non-null) c.stdout; as does the above, after this fix.
The installer does what amounts to `cp -p`. If the node binary is in use at
the time of the copy, it'd fail with a ETXTBSY error. That's why it's unlinked
first now.
* honor the --without-waf and --without-npm configure switches
* a small logic bug made the installer script install to $PWD instead of
/usr/local if --prefix= was not passed to configure
This fixes the problem that calling pause() on a socket would not
actually prevent 'data' events from being emitted. It also replaces
the existing test by a more elaborate one.
Ref: #3118
* node: tag Encode and friends NODE_EXTERN (Ben Noordhuis)
* fs: fix ReadStream / WriteStream missing callback (Gil Pedersen)
* fs: fix readFileSync("/proc/cpuinfo") regression (Ben Noordhuis)
* installer: don't assume bash is installed (Ben Noordhuis)
* Report errors properly from --eval and stdin (isaacs)
* assert: fix throws() throws an error without message property (koichik)
* cluster: fix libuv assert in net.listen() (Ben Noordhuis)
* build: always link sunos builds with libumem (Trent Mick)
* build: improve armv7 / hard-float detection (Adam Malcontenti-Wilson)
* https: Use host header as effective servername (isaacs)
* sunos: work around OS bug to prevent fs.watch() from spinning (Bryan Cantrill)
* linux: fix 'two watchers, one path' segfault (Ben Noordhuis)
* windows: fix memory leaks in many fs functions (Bert Belder)
* windows: don't allow directories to be opened for writing/appending (Bert Belder)
* windows: make fork() work even when not all stdio handles are valid (Bert Belder)
* windows: make unlink() not remove mount points, and improve performance (Bert Belder)
* build: Sign pkg installer for OS X (isaacs)
The old installer was a JS script, which didn't work if node had been
cross-compiled for another architecture. Replace it with a python script.
Fixes#3807.
Problem: calling `server.listen()` (no port) on a net.Server triggered the
following libuv assertion:
node: ../deps/uv/src/unix/stream.c:406: uv__write: Assertion `fd_to_send >= 0'
failed.
Cause: uv_tcp_t handles are lazily initialized. Omitting the port made the
handle get initialized even more lazily. Too lazily - it wasn't initialized
when the handle was sent over to the child process.
Solution: implicitly bind to a random port in listen() when the port number
is omitted, it forces the handle to initialize. This is not a change in
behavior, listen() has always been identical to listen(0).
Fixes#3325.
Bump NODE_MODULE_VERSION so old modules won't load without recompiling when
the next major release (v0.10) comes out.
This is necessary because the ABI changes between major releases.
AssertionError already inherits from Error above using util.inherits(),
so this extra line was redundant.
test/simple/test-assert.js already tests for `instanceof`, and still passes.
* V8: Upgrade to 3.11.10.17
* npm: Upgrade to 1.1.45
* net: fix Socket({ fd: 42 }) api (Ben Noordhuis)
* readline: Remove event listeners on close (isaacs)
* windows: correctly prep long path for fs.exists(Sync) (Bert Belder)
* debugger: wake up the event loop when a debugger command is dispatched (Peter Rybin)
* tls: verify server's identity (Fedor Indutny)
* net: ignore socket.setTimeout(Infinity or NaN) (Fedor Indutny)
When the event loop was blocked in epoll / kqueue or similar, debugger
commands wouldn't be processed. This patch fixes that by adding an
uv_async handle which is triggered when a debugger command is
dispatched. The async handle's callback makes sure that V8 is entered.
Closes GH-3626
Closes GH-3718
* punycode: update to v1.1.1 (Mathias Bynens)
* c-ares: upgrade to 1.9.0 (Saúl Ibarra Corretgé)
* dns: ignore rogue DNS servers reported by windows (Saúl Ibarra Corretgé)
* unix: speed up uv_async_send() (Ben Noordhuis)
* darwin: get cpu model correctly on mac (Xidorn Quan)
* nextTick: Handle tick callbacks before any other I/O (isaacs)
* Enable color customization of `util.inspect` (Pavel Lang)
* tls: Speed and memory improvements (Fedor Indutny)
* readline: Use one history item for reentered line (Vladimir Beloborodov)
* Fix#3521 Make process.env more like a regular Object (isaacs)
When there is an error that is thrown in a nextTick function, which is
then handled by a domain or other process.on('uncaughtException')
handler, if the error handler *also* adds a nextTick and triggers
multiple MakeCallback events (ie, by doing some I/O), then it would
skip over the tickDepth check, resulting in an infinite spin.
Solution: Check the tickDepth at the start of the tick processing, and
preserve it when we are cleaning up in the error case or exiting early
in the re-entry case.
In order to make sure that tick callbacks are *eventually* handled, any
callback triggered by the underlying spinner in libuv will be processed
as if starting from a tick depth of 0.
I disabled the -ffunction-sections and -fdata-sections switches in 202df30
because they're horribly buggy with some gcc/binutils combos.
However, it turns out that the dtrace/ustack post-processing tool requires
that V8 is compiled with said switches and was broken because of it.
This commit turns them on again on SunOS systems. Let's hope for the best.
Unconditionally compile V8 with -fno-strict-aliasing on all platforms.
gcc 4.5.2 on sunos generates bad code when -fstrict-aliasing is enabled, which
undoubtedly means that there are more buggy versions of gcc out there.
-fstrict-aliasing does not give a significant performance boost so let's just
disable it.
Fixes#3736.
Explicitly cast double to int64_t, it was making add-ons that compile with
`-Wall -Wextra -Werror` fail to build.
Don't use fully variadic macros, gcc in uber-strict mode rejects them.
This is rewrite of #3701 and #3603 before.
This patch introduce `util.inspect.styles`
and `util.inspect.colors` objects, which enables customization
of color sequences.
This allows us to run npm's scripts/relocate.sh script whenever
necessary, if for example node has been 'make install'ed into one
folder, and then you wish to move it into another one.
Link with -Wl,--export-dynamic, makes symbols from the node binary visible to
binary add-ons.
Fixes "undefined symbol: _ZN2v811HandleScopeC1Ev" errors when loading add-ons
on FreeBSD and likely other BSDs.
Fixes#3623.
This reverts commit 928ea564d1.
Keeping the original Array instance in-place essentially causes a memory leak
on EventEmitters that use an infinite number of event names (an incrementing
counter, for example), which isn't an unreasonable thing to want to do.
Fixes#3702.
V8 on ARM requires that armv7 is set. We don't have a good way to detect the
CPU model right now so we pick a default and hope that it works okay for the
majority of people.
Non-scientific sampling - the ARM hardware I have lying around the house -
suggests that ARMv5 and ARMv6 are still most common so armv7=0 it is.
This obviously needs to be revisited sometime in the future.
Compile at -O2 and disable optimizations that trigger gcc bugs.
Some people still reported mksnapshot crashes after commit b40f813 ("build: fix
spurious mksnapshot crashes for good" - so much for that).
Average performance of the -O2 binary is on par with the -O3 binary. Variance
on the http_simple bytes/8 benchmark appears to be slightly greater but small
enough that the possibly of it being noise cannot be excluded.
The new binary very slightly but consistently outperforms the -O3 binary (by
about 0.5%) on the mostly CPU-bound bytes/102400 benchmark. That could be an
artifact of the system I benchmarked it on, a Core 2 Duo with a puny 32 kB of
L1 instruction cache. The smaller binary seems to play nicer with the cache.
A variety of gcc bugs made mksnapshot crash with either a segmentation fault
or a 'pure virtual method callled' run-time error.
After much wailing and gnashing of teeth I managed to deduce that the bugs
show up when:
1. gcc 4.5.2 for i386-pc-solaris2.11 is used and -fstrict-aliasing is
enabled, or
2. gcc version 4.4.6 for x86_64-redhat-linux is used and
-ffunction-sections -finline-functions at -O2 or higher is enabled
Therefore, disable -ffunction-sections and -fdata-sections unconditionally
and disable -fstrict-aliasing only on Solaris.
The -ffunction-sections and -fdata-sections switches were nonsense anyway
because we don't link with -Wl,--gc-sections.
* npm: Upgrade to 1.1.37 (isaacs)
* benchmark: Backport improvements made in master (isaacs)
* build: always link with -lz (Trent Mick)
* core: use proper #include directives (Ben Noordhuis)
* cluster: don't silently drop messages when the write queue gets big (Bert Belder)
* windows: don't print error when GetConsoleTitleW returns an empty string (Bert Belder)
* A mailmap makes it easier to keep track of contributors.
* Changes to the AUTHORS file:
- fix misspellings
- add missing/incomplete names
- remove duplicate mentions
* No names were added to or removed from the AUTHORS list.
Before this commit, `fs.unwatchFile(path)` removed *all* listeners for `path`.
The function is overloaded now: `fs.unwatchFile(path)` still removes all
listeners, but `fs.unwatchFile(path, cb)` lets you remove a specific listener.
Fixes#3660.
Don't use the double-negate trick to coalesce the timeout argument into a
number, it produces the wrong result for very large timeouts.
Example:
setTimeout(cb, 1e10); // doesn't work, ~~1e10 == 1410065408
Wrong order of operands was causing problems while trying to use command
buffering:
> {
... a: 3,
...
repl.js:284
if (cmd.trim().match(/^npm /) && !self.bufferedCommand) {
^
TypeError: Cannot call method 'trim' of undefined
at finish (repl.js:284:17)
at REPLServer.self.eval (repl.js:118:5)
at rli.on.e (repl.js:260:20)
at REPLServer.self.eval (repl.js:118:5)
at Interface.<anonymous> (repl.js:250:12)
at Interface.EventEmitter.emit (events.js:88:17)
at Interface._onLine (readline.js:183:10)
at Interface._line (readline.js:502:8)
at Interface._ttyWrite (readline.js:720:14)
at ReadStream.<anonymous> (readline.js:105:12)
Test included.
Closes#3515.
Closes#3517.
Closes#3621.
It has been conclusively demonstrated that the -fstrict-aliasing bugs in gcc's
optimizer are not limited to the 4.5.x releases only.
Fixes#3601 among others.
The heuristic introduced in f78ce08 ("build: handle output of localized gcc or
clang") does not handle "branded" versions of gcc, i.e. a gcc whose output has
been customized by the distro vendor.
Fixes#3601.
Before this commit, we used to scan the output of `$CC -v` for strings like
"gcc version x.y.z".
It was pointed out that this approach fails with localized versions of gcc
because those print (for example) "gcc versión x.y.z".
Use the output of `$CC --version` instead and only look at the first line.
For consistency's sake, rename:
--openssl-use-sys
--openssl-includes
--openssl-libpath
To:
--shared-openssl
--shared-openssl-includes
--shared-openssl-libpath
And add --shared-openssl-libname while we're at it.
The old switches still work but `./configure --help` won't print them.
Fixes#3591.
* V8: upgrade to v3.11.10.12
* npm: upgrade to v1.1.33
- Support for parallel use of the cache folder
- Retry on registry timeouts or network failures (Trent Mick)
- Reduce 'engines' failures to a warning
- Use new zsh completion if aviailable (Jeremy Cantrell)
* Fix#3577 Un-break require('sys')
* util: speed up formatting of large arrays/objects (Ben Noordhuis)
* windows: make fs.realpath(Sync) work with UNC paths (Bert Belder)
* build: fix --shared-v8 option (Ben Noordhuis)
* doc: `detached` is a boolean (Andreas Madsen)
* build: use proper python interpreter (Ben Noordhuis)
* build: expand ~ in `./configure --prefix=~/a/b/c` (Ben Noordhuis)
* build: handle CC env var with spaces (Gabriel de Perthuis)
* build: fix V8 build when compiling with gcc 4.5 (Ben Noordhuis)
* build: fix --shared-v8 option (Ben Noordhuis)
* windows msi: Fix icon issue which caused huge file size (Bert Belder)
* unix: assume that dlopen() may clobber dlerror() (Ben Noordhuis)
* sunos: fix memory corruption bugs (Ben Noordhuis)
* windows: better (f)utimes and (f)stat (Bert Belder)
Support for parallel use of the cache folder
Retry on registry timeouts or network failures
Reduce 'engines' failures to a warning
Use new zsh completion if aviailable
This reverts commit 6d98524609.
This reverts commit 60ff789618.
closure_linter now depends on the gflags module and not everyone will have that
installed by default.
Make configure start gyp with the same python interpreter that is used to
run configure itself.
Fixes an issue where configure fails with a SyntaxError because the user
has multiple python binaries on his $PATH and the default one is too old.
For some reason, though, it looks like EnvGetter is not called for the
key `__proto__`, so I can't make the info->Data() accessible. However,
putting the Object.prototype keys there, in such a way that they are not
OwnProperties, and are supersceded by environs, makes process.env much
less weird.
We already enable -fstrict-aliasing when gcc >= 4.6.0 but let's enable it for
gcc < 4.5.0 as well. The aliasing bugs that we ran into in the past are all
particular to the 4.5.x releases.
- Fix: it didn't work for the x86 version of node
- Also add NPM to path
- Also print node version
- Don't change dir to home dir if not started from the start menu
There is no need for fs.readFile() to be using pread rather than read.
The default semantics of read() are such that subsequent reads are where
we want them anyway.
On Windows, full pathnames are stored in the Error object when
a file i/o error happens. This is not the case on Unix. Before
this fix the test would break because of these full paths.
This reverts commit f80513974e.
The reverted commit made DESTDIR behave more like we want it to but it was
pointed out in #3489 that it makes life a lot harder for distro package
maintainers.
Those guys and gals already have a hard enough time as it is, let's not make
their jobs even more hellish.
No one has complained about it so far but I'm sure MSVC doesn't like things
like __attribute__((unused)). Include the libev and libeio shims only on
non-Windows platforms.
Fix building with a shared zlib: ensure link with '-lz'.
Configuring for a shared zlib:
LDFLAGS="-L/opt/local/lib -R/opt/local/lib" \
./configure --shared-zlib \
--shared-zlib-includes=/opt/local/include \
--shared-zlib-libpath=/opt/local/lib
and building would fail on SmartOS because the link would not include '-lz'.
This doesn't fail on Mac (at least in my setup) because you get lucky with the
openssl libs reported from the Homebrew pkg-config:
$ pkg-config --libs openssl
-lssl -lcrypto -lz
On SmartOS, the pkgsrc libs for openssl are:
$ pkg-config --libs openssl
-Wl,-R/opt/local/lib -L/opt/local/lib -lssl -lcrypto -lsocket -lnsl -ldl
The patch has no adverse effect on the Mac build (by control case).
Drop vestigial `process.installPrefix`, `node --vars`, NODE_CFLAGS and
NODE_PREFIX.
Also removed unused node_config.h.in (replaced with config.gypi a while back).
Make CLIENT_RENEG_LIMIT inclusive instead of exclusive, i.e. a limit of 2
means the peer can renegotiate twice, not just once.
Update pummel/test-tls-ci-reneg-attack accordingly and make it less timing
sensitive (and run faster) while we're at it.
DH_size returns number of bytes in a prime number, DH_compute_key returns number
of bytes in a remainder of exponent, which may have less bytes than a prime
number. Therefore add 0-padding to the allocated buffer.
Fixes#3372
Fix#3455.
The remoteAddress and remotePort properties are
dynamically retrieved from _getpeername().
While _getpeername() checks if the _handle is
null, it is also possible for the tcp_wrapped
_handle.getpeername() to return null on error.
Such a condition happens when the remote closes
and one of these properties is accessed before
_handle is set to null.
* V8: Upgrade to v3.11.10
* npm: Upgrade to 1.1.26
* doc: Improve cross-linking in API docs markdown (Ben Kelly)
* Fix#3425: removeAllListeners should delete array (Reid Burke)
* cluster: don't silently drop messages when the write queue gets big (Bert Belder)
* Add Buffer.concat method (isaacs)
* windows: make symlinks tolerant to forward slashes (Bert Belder)
* build: Add node.d and node.1 to installer (isaacs)
* cluster: rename worker.unqiueID to worker.id (Andreas Madsen)
* Windows: Enable ETW events on Windows for existing DTrace probes. (Igor Zinkovsky)
* test: bundle node-weak in test/gc so that it doesn't need to be downloaded (Nathan Rajlich)
* Make many tests pass on Windows (Bert Belder)
* Fix#3388 Support listening on file descriptors (isaacs)
* Fix#3407 Add os.tmpDir() (isaacs)
* Unbreak the snapshotted build on Windows (Bert Belder)
* Clean up child_process.kill throws (Bert Belder)
* crypto: make cipher/decipher accept buffer args (Ben Noordhuis)
The error message is slightly different on windows. However there was no
need to verify the exact error message - there are assert()s that check
all the properties of the error object.
When removeAllListeners is called, the listeners array
is deleted to maintain compatibility with v0.6.
Reverts "events: don't delete the listeners array"
This reverts commit 78dc13fbf9.
Conflicts:
test/simple/test-event-emitter-remove-all-listeners.js
Also, in the process, fix a bug in fs.realpath on Windows.
If the user has permission to create symlinks, then use symlinks. If
not, then skip over all the tests that cannot be run using Junctions
instead.
The v8 team apparently decided that all build products should go
into ./build/«type», and updated their common.gypi file to do so.
Unfortunately v8's common.gypi is only used for some targets. All
the other targets would still look in the old place to find their
their dependencies, which effectively broke the build.
In the long run it would be good for node to send all build
output to ./build too, on all platforms.
This commit enables ETW events to be fired on Windows for existing
DTrace probes. ETW instrumentation is enabled by default. It
is possible to build node.exe without ETW instrumentation by
using --without-etw option with configure script.
It wasn't waiting for the child process' stderr to close, so not an
assertion was made *before* all the data that the child process sent
was received by node.
This implements server.listen({ fd: <filedescriptor> }). The fd should
refer to an underlying resource that is already bound and listening, and
causes the new server to also accept connections on it.
Not supported on Windows. Raises ENOTSUP.
The test would fail if the child process writes anything to the stdout.
This doesn't happen on unix, since `cat` is spawned. However, on Windows
`cmd` is started, which *does* write stuff to it's stdout. This
meanlingless assert is now removed.
* When the process is already dead, but the `exit` signal wasn't raised
yet, the ESRCH error should be ignored.
* When an invalid signal is specified, kill() should throw.
* Like process.kill(), child_process.kill() now preserves a `0` signal
which can be used to check the liveliness of the child process.
* process.kill() and child_process.kill() will now return true if the
signal was actually delivered, and false otherwise.
* When an `exec`-ed process is automatically killed because a time or
buffer limit is exceeded, and the kill() fails, this error should be
reported through the `exec` callback.
Fixes: #3409
In Windows the callbacks arrive in slightly different order. A bunch
of write operations complete immediately, and after that there is a
gap of a few hundred ms. This causes the timeout timer to fire, which
is not really warranted; the first few write operations just finished a
little quicker than expected.
* Roll V8 back to 3.9.24.31
* build: x64 target should always pass -m64 (Robert Mustacchi)
* add NODE_EXTERN to node::Start (Joel Brandt)
* repl: Warn about running npm commands (isaacs)
* slab_allocator: fix crash in dtor if V8 is dead (Ben Noordhuis)
* slab_allocator: fix leak of Persistent handles (Shigeki Ohtsu)
* windows/msi: add node.js prompt to startmenu (Jeroen Janssen)
* windows/msi: fix adding node to PATH (Jeroen Janssen)
* windows/msi: add start menu links when installing (Jeroen Janssen)
* windows: don't install x64 version into the 'program files (x86)' folder (Matt Gollob)
* domain: Fix#3379 domain.intercept no longer passes error arg to cb (Marc Harter)
* fs: make callbacks run in global context (Ben Noordhuis)
* fs: enable fs.realpath on windows (isaacs)
* child_process: expose UV_PROCESS_DETACHED as options.detached (Charlie McConnell)
* child_process: new stdio API for .spawn() method (Fedor Indutny)
* child_process: spawn().ref() and spawn().unref() (Fedor Indutny)
* Upgrade npm to 1.1.25
- Enable npm link on windows
- Properly remove sh-shim on Windows
- Abstract out registry client and logger
The old error handling code checked if the return value of Socket::Send() != 0,
which is wrong because Socket::Send() can write less bytes than requested or
return -1 on error.
The v8 team apparently decided that all build products should go
into ./build/«type», and updated their common.gypi file to do so.
Unfortunately v8's common.gypi is only used for some targets. All
the other targets would still look in the old place to find their
their dependencies, which effectively broke the build.
In the long run it would be good for node to send all build
output to ./build too, on all platforms.
Conflicts:
deps/v8/build/common.gypi
The old error handling code checked if the return value of Socket::Send() != 0,
which is wrong because Socket::Send() can write less bytes than requested or
return -1 on error.
Callbacks that were passed to the binding layer ran in the context of the
(internal) binding object. Make sure they run in the global context.
Before:
fs.symlink('a', 'b', function() {
console.log(this); // prints "{ oncomplete: [Function] }"
});
After:
fs.symlink('a', 'b', function() {
console.log(this); // prints "{ <global object> }"
});
Create slab allocator when binding is initialized.
Add an AtExit handler to destroy the slab before the VM shuts down, it can't be
disposed when V8 is dead and Valgrind will complain about memory leaks.
The current WiX project files do some manual processing and generation
which WiX supports doing out of the box. This patch will use the
HeatDirectory task to generate the npm.wxs file and use the auto GUID
generation. I also changed the msi filename generation to include the
version number to match the currently used name for released msi files.
Closes#3360
The v8 team apparently decided that all build products should go
into ./build/«type», and updated their common.gypi file to do so.
Unfortunately v8's common.gypi is only used for some targets. All
the other targets would still look in the old place to find their
their dependencies, which effectively broke the build.
In the long run it would be good for node to send all build
output to ./build too, on all platforms.
The old error handling code checked if the return value of Socket::Send() != 0,
which is wrong because Socket::Send() can write less bytes than requested or
return -1 on error.
* Update nodemsi.sln and .wixproj to include support for x64 platform
- Add ProgramFilesFolderId to the DefineConstants property for each
configuration/platform's property group with the appropriate value
(ProgramFilesFolder for x86 builds, ProgramFiles64Folder for x64
builds)
* Update product.wxs:
- update the Id value for the "Program Files" Directory element to
use a preprocessor constant.
- remove hard-coded platform from the Package element. MSI platform
will be automatically detected based on MSBuild's Platform property.
(This was already supported in the Wix MSBuild targets, we just
weren't taking advantage of it.)
* Update vcbuild.bat to set MSBuild's Platform property appropriately,
defaulting to x86 if not explicitly supplied by the user. Note that
creating an x64 build requires that vcbuild.bat be run from a VS
64-bit command prompt.
Closes#3312Closes#3356
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.
The server 'close' event was emitted before the last client 'close' event. Not
exactly fatal but potentially confusing.
Before this commit the order looked something like [client, server, client],
now it looks like [client, client, server].
See #3340 for more details.
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.
Said test relies a great deal on internals and implementation details (I should
know, I wrote it). Patch it up to work with libuv's new refcounting scheme.
In case a worker would spawn a new subprocess with process.env, NODE_UNIQUE_ID
would have been a part of the env. Making the new subprocess believe it is a
worker, this would result in some confusion if the subprocess where to listen to
a port, since the server handle request would then be relayed to the worker.
This patch removes the NODE_UNIQUE_ID flag from process.env on startup so any
subprocess spawned by a worker is a normal process with no cluster stuff.
There are some paths here that led to dangling contexts. By being smarter with
handle management we can get rid of all the cleanup code and fix those issues.
This is a backport of commit 7063575.
request.end() would sometimes try to write a zero-length buffer to the socket.
Don't do that, it triggers an unnecessary EPIPE when the other end has closed
the connection.
Fixes#3257.
Before this commit, process._getActiveHandles() returned a list of internal
handles. Now, it returns the user objects that handles are attached to.
For example, a tcp_wrap handle will now return its parent net.Socket object.
It works for all handle types except timers because timer handles are shared
across multiple user objects.
* process._getActiveHandles() returns a list containing all active handles
(timers, sockets, etc.) that have not been unref'd.
* process._getActiveRequests() returns a list of active requests (in-flight
actions like connecting to a remote host, writing data to a socket, etc.).
Share persistent strings process_symbol and domain_symbol across compilation
units. Avoids redefinition errors when src/node.cc includes src/req_wrap.h.
child_process.fork() support sending native hander object, this patch add support for sending
net.Server and net.Socket object by converting the object to a native handle object and back
to a useful object again.
Note when sending a Socket there was emitted by a net Server object, the server.connections
property becomes null, because it is no longer possible to known when it is destroyed.
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.
This frees us from manually having to copy over functions to SlowBuffer's
prototype (which has bitten us multiple times in the past).
As an added bonus, the `inspect()` function is now shared between Buffer
and SlowBuffer, removing some duplicate code.
Closes#3228.
So instead of:
node.js:201
throw e; // process.nextTick error, or 'error' event on first tick
^
You will now see:
path/to/foo.js:1
throw new Error('bar');
^
This is a sub-set of isaacs patch here:
https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/3235
The difference is that this patch purely adresses the exception output,
but does not try to make any behavior changes / improvements.
This patch now reports the proper throw call site for exceptions
triggered within process.nextTick. So instead of this:
node.js:201
throw e; // process.nextTick error, or 'error' event on first tick
^
You will now see:
mydir/myscript.js:15
throw new Error('My Error');
^
From my testing this patch causes no performance regressions, but does
greatly simplify processing the nextTickQueue.
Add a clear warning about known issues with the module and a pointer to the
GitHub issues list for the module. Describe some of the biggest known issues
with the module.
This is an incredibly useful thing to know about, and it
will likely never change. I can't remember why we
didn't ever document it, and people keep suggesting we
do so.
Regarding discussion in #3198. Passing the worker as an argument
to an event emitted on the worker is redundant, and an unnecessary
break in consistency vs the events on the ChildProcess objects.
It was removed from 'exit', but 'listening' and others were
overlooked. This corrects that oversight.
test: fixes due to new cluster api.
- changed worker `death` to `exit`.
- corrected argument type expected by worker `exit` handler.
test: more tests of cluster.worker death
cluster: fixed arguments on worker 'exit' event
worker 'exit' event now emits arguments consistent with the
corresponding event in child_process module.
The crashes in debug mode after adding Locker are *not* caused by
Locker. Locker is merely exposing issues that already existed. Some of
these issues have since been fixed in 70635753.
This reverts commit 407181538b.
This reapplies commit 9a6012edd9.
Conflicts:
src/node.cc
Move parsers.free(parser) to a single function, which also
nulls all of the various references we hang on them.
Also, move the parser.on* methods out of the closure, so that
there's one shared definition of each, instead of re-defining
for each parser in a spot where they can close over references
to other request-specific objects.
Conflicts:
lib/http.js
Move parsers.free(parser) to a single function, which also
nulls all of the various references we hang on them.
Also, move the parser.on* methods out of the closure, so that
there's one shared definition of each, instead of re-defining
for each parser in a spot where they can close over references
to other request-specific objects.
* 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.
Check for potentially exploitable overflows in asn1_d2i_read_bio
BUF_mem_grow and BUF_mem_grow_clean. Refuse attempts to shrink buffer
in CRYPTO_realloc_clean.
Taken from OpenSSL CVS. Addresses CVE-2012-2110.
Upon "normal" exiting of Node (i.e. the event loop completes naturally),
the "code" parameter was not being passed to the "exit" event listeners.
Be consistent. Tests included.
There are some paths here that led to dangling contexts. By being
smarter with handle management we can get rid of all the cleanup code
and fix those issues.
Reusing the same logic for both places for the behavior is consistent.
For example:
$ ./node -p -e "'Hello World'"
Hello World
$ echo "'Hello World'" | ./node -p
Hello World
The old error handling code checked if the return value of Socket::Send() != 0,
which is wrong because Socket::Send() can write less bytes than requested or
return -1 on error.
In practice, it's not important to lint tests. We lint src/
and lib/, which is where we're more prone to make mistakes that
affect real-world situations in subtle ways, and where more
changes are made that ought to be kept in a consistent style.
Tests are a mess anyways, and no one cares.
This is a squashed commit of the main work done on the domains-wip branch.
The original commit messages are preserved for posterity:
* Implicitly add EventEmitters to active domain
* Implicitly add timers to active domain
* domain: add members, remove ctor cb
* Don't hijack bound callbacks for Domain error events
* Add dispose method
* Add domain.remove(ee) method
* A test of multiple domains in process at once
* Put the active domain on the process object
* Only intercept error arg if explicitly requested
* Typo
* Don't auto-add new domains to the current domain
While an automatic parent/child relationship is sort of neat,
and leads to some nice error-bubbling characteristics, it also
results in keeping a reference to every EE and timer created,
unless domains are explicitly disposed of.
* Explicitly adding one domain to another is still fine, of course.
* Don't allow circular domain->domain memberships
* Disposing of a domain removes it from its parent
* Domain disposal turns functions into no-ops
* More documentation of domains
* More thorough dispose() semantics
* An example using domains in an HTTP server
* Don't handle errors on a disposed domain
* Need to push, even if the same domain is entered multiple times
* Array.push is too slow for the EE Ctor
* lint domain
* domain: docs
* Also call abort and destroySoon to clean up event emitters
* domain: Wrap destroy methods in a try/catch
* Attach tick callbacks to active domain
* domain: Only implicitly bind timers, not explicitly
* domain: Don't fire timers when disposed.
* domain: Simplify naming so that MakeCallback works on Timers
* Add setInterval and nextTick to domain test
* domain: Make stack private
The idea here is to reduce the number of times that `setRawMode()` is called
on the `input` stream, since it is expensive, and simply pause()/resume()
should not call it.
So now `setRawMode()` only gets called at the beginning of the Interface
instance, and then when `Interface#close()` is called.
Test case included.
The OPENSSL_NO_SOCK macro in OpenSSL missed a couple of networking functions
that called other functions that OPENSSL_NO_SOCK *had* filtered out. None of
the functions (filtered or not) were actually used but it was enough to trip
up the Solaris linker.
For some reason, aa5961a445 caused
'make test' to rebuild the entire project every time. Applying
the fix to the other place where gyp chops up the argument list
makes it behave properly.
Don't assume that the libcrypto and libssl that we're linked against is the same
version as the openssl command line tool. This is important because the tool has
a bug in all pre-1.0.0 versions that makes it unusable for these tests.
* compile with -DOPENSSL_NO_SOCK and -DOPENSSL_NO_DGRAM, we don't need it
* compile with -DOPENSSL_NO_GOST and -DOPENSSL_NO_HW_PADLOCK, works around the
brain dead linker on solaris and maybe others
* compile with -DTERMIOS, OS X doesn't have <termio.h>
* compile with -D__EXTENSIONS__ on solaris, makes siginfo_t available
* compile without -ansi on linux, it hides a number of POSIX declarations
(sigaction, NI_MAXHOST, etc.)
This reverts commit 0db4dc0024.
This commit makes a lot of tests fail due to reference counting errors. It's
not worth it to debug because the reference counting scheme is due to change
soon anyway.
* Update npm to 1.1.16
* Show licenses in binary installers.
* unix: add uv_fs_read64, uv_fs_write64 and uv_fs_ftruncate64 (Ben Noordhuis)
* add 64bit offset fs functions (Igor Zinkovsky)
* windows: don't report ENOTSOCK when attempting to bind an udp handle twice (Bert Belder)
* windows: backport pipe-connect-to-file fixes from master (Bert Belder)
* windows: never call fs event callbacks after closing the watcher (Bert Belder)
* fs.readFile: don't make the callback before the fd is closed (Bert Belder)
* windows: use 64bit offsets for uv_fs apis (Igor Zinkovsky)
* Fix#2061: segmentation fault on OS X due to stat size mismatch (Ben Noordhuis)
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.
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.
* fixes#2110
* includes V8 postmortem metadata in Solaris builds
* adds GYP support for DTrace probes and ustack helper
* ustack helper derives constants dynamically from libv8_base.a
* build with DTrace support by default on SunOS
The locker makes node crash in debug mode sometimes.
For example, test/simple/test-repl.js triggers it.
This reverts commit 9a6012edd9.
Conflicts:
src/node.cc
* net: don't crash when queued write fails (Igor Zinkovsky)
* sunos: fix EMFILE on process.memoryUsage() (Bryan Cantrill)
* crypto: fix compile-time error with openssl 0.9.7e (Ben Noordhuis)
* unix: ignore ECONNABORTED errors from accept() (Ben Noordhuis)
* Add UV_ENOSPC and mappings to it (Bert Belder)
* http-parser: Fix response body is not read (koichik)
* Upgrade npm to 1.1.12
- upgrade node-gyp to 0.3.7
- work around AV-locked directories on Windows
- Fixisaacs/npm#2293 Don't try to 'uninstall' /
- Exclude symbolic links from packages.
- Fixisaacs/npm#2275 Spurious 'unresolvable cycle' error.
- Exclude/include dot files as if they were normal files
Evented I/O for V8 javascript. [](http://travis-ci.org/joyent/node)
===
### To build:
This repository is an archive of Node.js before the move to [nodejs/node](https://github.com/nodejs/node).
Unix/Macintosh (requires python 2.6 or 2.7):
It still contains issues and pull requests that are relevant to Node versions v0.10 and v0.12, and that were opened before the move to [nodejs/node](https://github.com/nodejs/node).
New issues and pull requests, for all branches, should be opened at [nodejs/node](https://github.com/nodejs/node).
New issues and pull requests opened here will automatically be rejected.
./configure
make
make install
Windows:
vcbuild.bat
### To run the tests:
Unix/Macintosh:
make test
Windows:
vcbuild.bat test
### To build the documentation:
make doc
### To read the documentation:
man doc/node.1
Resources for Newcomers
---
- [The Wiki](https://github.com/joyent/node/wiki)
- [nodejs.org](http://nodejs.org/)
- [how to install node.js and npm (node package manager)](http://joyeur.com/2010/12/10/installing-node-and-npm/)
- [list of modules](https://github.com/joyent/node/wiki/modules)
- [searching the npm registry](http://search.npmjs.org/)
- [list of companies and projects using node](https://github.com/joyent/node/wiki/Projects,-Applications,-and-Companies-Using-Node)
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