kqueue(2) on osx doesn't work (emits EINVAL error) with specific fds
(i.e. /dev/tty, /dev/null, etc). When given such descriptors - start
select(2) watcher thread that will emit io events.
Readable tty handles need to be able to update the virtual window,
so if uv_tty_t is initialized with a console input fd, additionally
open the console output.
Formerly spawn errors would be reported as a message printed to the
process' stderr, to match unix behaviour. Unix has now been fixed to
be more sensible, so this hack can now be removed.
This also fixes a race condition that could occur when the user closes
a process handle before the exit callback has been made.
OS X has no public API for fdatasync. And as pointed out in `man fsync(2)`:
For applications that require tighter guarantees about the integrity of
their data, Mac OS X provides the F_FULLFSYNC fcntl. The F_FULLFSYNC
fcntl asks the drive to flush all buffered data to permanent storage.
Applications, such as databases, that require a strict ordering of writes
should use F_FULLFSYNC to ensure that their data is written in the order
they expect. Please see fcntl(2) for more detail.
Problem: registering two uv_fs_event_t watchers for the same path, then closing
them, caused a segmentation fault. While active, the watchers didn't work right
either, only one would receive events.
Cause: each watcher has a wd (watch descriptor) that's used as its key in a
binary tree. When you call inotify_watch_add() twice with the same path, the
second call doesn't return a new wd - it returns the existing one. That in turn
resulted in the first handle getting ousted from the binary tree, leaving
dangling pointers.
This commit addresses that by storing the watchers in a queue and storing the
queue in the binary tree instead of storing the watchers directly in the tree.
Fixesjoyent/node#3789.
* the callback gets called only once on error, not repeatedly...
* ...unless the error reason changes from e.g. UV_ENOENT to UV_EACCES
* the callback receives pointers to uv_statbuf_t objects so it can inspect what
changed
* replace libev backed timers with a pure libuv implementation
* gut ev_run() and make it take a timeout instead of flags
Incidentally speeds up the loop_count_timed benchmark by about 100%.
Makes the uv__io code a little more obscure but has the advantage that
sizeof(uv__io_t) == sizeof(ev_io), i.e. the sizes of embedding handles
don't change.
The new idle watcher was temporarily disabled in 073a48d due to some semantic
incompatibilities with the previous implementation. This commit resolves those
issues and reactivates the new implementation.
One outstanding bug is that idle watchers can run in a different order
(relative to other handle types) than the old implementation, e.g. (timer, idle)
instead of the expected (idle, timer). This will be fixed in an upcoming commit.