Newer versions of gyp do not support files with the same basenames (example:
core.c and linux/core.c).
The nominal reason is consistency across build systems. Apparently, msbuild
doesn't support it either.
Somewhere, someplace, baby Jesus cries sad little tears...
Fixes#464.
Demonstrates temporary event loop stall with uv-unix. The issue is that pending
requests aren't processed until the next event (I/O, timeout, etc.) happens.
See #446, #447 and #448.
This commit changes how the event loop determines if it needs to stay alive.
Previously, an internal counter was increased whenever a handle got created
and decreased again when the handle was closed.
While conceptually simple, it turned out hard to work with: you often want
to keep the event loop alive only if the handle is actually doing something.
Stopped or inactive handles were a frequent source of hanging event loops.
That's why this commit changes the reference counting scheme to a model where
a handle only references the event loop when it's active. 'Active' means
different things for different handle types, e.g.:
* timers: ticking
* sockets: reading, writing or listening
* processes: always active (for now, subject to change)
* idle, check, prepare: only active when started
This commit also changes how the uv_ref() and uv_unref() functions work: they
now operate on the level of individual handles, not the whole event loop.
The Windows implementation was done by Bert Belder.
Previously, a new inotify fd was created for each watcher, making it quite easy
to run into the system-wide fs.inotify.max_user_instances limit (usually 128).
Fixes#300.
Not needed anymore now that support for isolates has been removed from Node.
This commit reverts the following commits:
812e410 test: fix up stream import/export test
e34dc13 unix: implement uv_import() and uv_export()
d1a0e8e test: fix undefined macro error
2ce0058 import/export streams accross loops