Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

process: move POSIX credential accessors into node_credentials.cc #25066

Closed
wants to merge 1 commit into from

Conversation

joyeecheung
Copy link
Member

Expose the POSIX credential accessors through
internalBinding('credentials') instead of setting them on the
process or bootstrapper object from C++ directly. Also moves
SafeGetEnv from internalBinding('util') to
internalBinding('credentials') since it's closely related to
the credentials.

In the JS land, instead of wrapping the bindings then writing
to the process object directly in main_thread_only.js, return
the wrapped functions back to bootstrap/node.js where they get
written to the process object conditionally for clarity.

Refs: #24961

Checklist
  • make -j4 test (UNIX), or vcbuild test (Windows) passes
  • commit message follows commit guidelines

@nodejs-github-bot nodejs-github-bot added the lib / src Issues and PRs related to general changes in the lib or src directory. label Dec 15, 2018
Expose the POSIX credential accessors through
`internalBinding('credentials')` instead of setting them on the
process or bootstrapper object from C++ directly. Also moves
`SafeGetEnv` from `internalBinding('util')` to
`internalBinding('credentials')` since it's closely related to
the credentials.

In the JS land, instead of wrapping the bindings then writing
to the process object directly in main_thread_only.js, return
the wrapped functions back to bootstrap/node.js where they get
written to the process object conditionally for clarity.

Refs: nodejs#24961
@joyeecheung
Copy link
Member Author

@joyeecheung joyeecheung added process Issues and PRs related to the process subsystem. author ready PRs that have at least one approval, no pending requests for changes, and a CI started. labels Dec 18, 2018
@joyeecheung
Copy link
Member Author

CI is green. Landed in 321e296, thanks!

joyeecheung added a commit that referenced this pull request Dec 18, 2018
Expose the POSIX credential accessors through
`internalBinding('credentials')` instead of setting them on the
process or bootstrapper object from C++ directly. Also moves
`SafeGetEnv` from `internalBinding('util')` to
`internalBinding('credentials')` since it's closely related to
the credentials.

In the JS land, instead of wrapping the bindings then writing
to the process object directly in main_thread_only.js, return
the wrapped functions back to bootstrap/node.js where they get
written to the process object conditionally for clarity.

Refs: #24961

PR-URL: #25066
Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <[email protected]>
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
@MylesBorins
Copy link
Contributor

this does not land cleanly on v11.x, should it be backported?

@BridgeAR
Copy link
Member

BridgeAR commented Jan 9, 2019

Ping @joyeecheung

@addaleax
Copy link
Member

addaleax commented Jan 14, 2019

Applies cleanly now.

Edit: But once again, I had to adjust test/parallel/test-bootstrap-modules.js slightly.

addaleax pushed a commit that referenced this pull request Jan 14, 2019
Expose the POSIX credential accessors through
`internalBinding('credentials')` instead of setting them on the
process or bootstrapper object from C++ directly. Also moves
`SafeGetEnv` from `internalBinding('util')` to
`internalBinding('credentials')` since it's closely related to
the credentials.

In the JS land, instead of wrapping the bindings then writing
to the process object directly in main_thread_only.js, return
the wrapped functions back to bootstrap/node.js where they get
written to the process object conditionally for clarity.

Refs: #24961

PR-URL: #25066
Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <[email protected]>
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
refack pushed a commit to refack/node that referenced this pull request Jan 14, 2019
Expose the POSIX credential accessors through
`internalBinding('credentials')` instead of setting them on the
process or bootstrapper object from C++ directly. Also moves
`SafeGetEnv` from `internalBinding('util')` to
`internalBinding('credentials')` since it's closely related to
the credentials.

In the JS land, instead of wrapping the bindings then writing
to the process object directly in main_thread_only.js, return
the wrapped functions back to bootstrap/node.js where they get
written to the process object conditionally for clarity.

Refs: nodejs#24961

PR-URL: nodejs#25066
Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <[email protected]>
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
@BridgeAR BridgeAR mentioned this pull request Jan 16, 2019
BridgeAR pushed a commit to BridgeAR/node that referenced this pull request Jan 16, 2019
Expose the POSIX credential accessors through
`internalBinding('credentials')` instead of setting them on the
process or bootstrapper object from C++ directly. Also moves
`SafeGetEnv` from `internalBinding('util')` to
`internalBinding('credentials')` since it's closely related to
the credentials.

In the JS land, instead of wrapping the bindings then writing
to the process object directly in main_thread_only.js, return
the wrapped functions back to bootstrap/node.js where they get
written to the process object conditionally for clarity.

Refs: nodejs#24961

PR-URL: nodejs#25066
Reviewed-By: Anna Henningsen <[email protected]>
Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
@MylesBorins MylesBorins mentioned this pull request Jan 24, 2019
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
author ready PRs that have at least one approval, no pending requests for changes, and a CI started. lib / src Issues and PRs related to general changes in the lib or src directory. process Issues and PRs related to the process subsystem.
Projects
None yet
Development

Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues.

7 participants