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inspector: document bad usage for --inspect-port #12581
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doc/api/cli.md
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Set the host:port to be used when the inspector is activated. | ||
Useful when the activating the inspector by sending the `SIGUSR1` signal. |
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Extra the
.
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Needs tests. Also, I would handle it in node_debug_options.cc, not node.cc.
The only way to do that is to The structure of the code suggests to me that is not intended, but I don't understand why the debug options parsing was broken out into of the main option parsing loop in the first place. Because it was broken out into a function that returns boolean it can only indicate consumed/not consumed, and has no way of returning an error state. I could change the return to an int: 0 = consumed, 1 = not consumed, -1 means error -- but then how to return the specific error string? Add a return string arg, too? Seems a mess. |
Yes. There is at least one other exit statement in that file. |
IIRC I didn't document |
I think inspect-port is for use with SIGUSR1, ultimately, whereas --inspect=9999 will actually activate the inspector. |
node/src/node_debug_options.cc Line 29 in ef6a7cf
exit(9) ? What's with the 12 ? This and node_revert.cc seem to be the only uses of 12 in node, the other CLI arg errors I've found are 9 .
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Exit code |
@sam-github Rebase needed. |
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@bnoordhuis PTAL |
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argh, lint error if you don't require common, lint error if you require it and don't use it. |
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// Tests that node exits consistently on bad option syntax. | ||
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common.noop(); // Avoid lint errors if common is not required, or not used. |
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Instead of doing this, you can just write require('../common');
on the line 2 and don't assign the result of require
anywhere.
Document --inspect-port, and fix the reporting for when it is misused. The option requires an argument, but when the argument was omitted, the error message incorrectly reported --inspect-port as being bad, as if was not supported at all: % node --inspect-port node: bad option: --inspect-port % node --none-such node: bad option: --none-such It is now correctly reported as requiring an argument: % ./node --inspect-port ./node: --inspect-port requires an argument
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OK, nice and green, @bnoordhuis |
Document --inspect-port, and fix the reporting for when it is misused. The option requires an argument, but when the argument was omitted, the error message incorrectly reported --inspect-port as being bad, as if was not supported at all: % node --inspect-port node: bad option: --inspect-port % node --none-such node: bad option: --none-such It is now correctly reported as requiring an argument: % ./node --inspect-port ./node: --inspect-port requires an argument PR-URL: #12581 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
Document --inspect-port, and fix the reporting for when it is misused. The option requires an argument, but when the argument was omitted, the error message incorrectly reported --inspect-port as being bad, as if was not supported at all: % node --inspect-port node: bad option: --inspect-port % node --none-such node: bad option: --none-such It is now correctly reported as requiring an argument: % ./node --inspect-port ./node: --inspect-port requires an argument PR-URL: #12581 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
Document --inspect-port, and fix the reporting for when it is misused. The option requires an argument, but when the argument was omitted, the error message incorrectly reported --inspect-port as being bad, as if was not supported at all: % node --inspect-port node: bad option: --inspect-port % node --none-such node: bad option: --none-such It is now correctly reported as requiring an argument: % ./node --inspect-port ./node: --inspect-port requires an argument PR-URL: #12581 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <[email protected]>
I don't believe this is applicable to v6.x Please feel free to change label if I am mistaken |
Document --inspect-port, and fix the reporting for when it is misused.
The option requires an argument, but when the argument was omitted, the
error message incorrectly reported --inspect-port as being bad, as if
was not supported at all:
It is now correctly reported as requiring an argument:
Checklist
make -j4 test
(UNIX), orvcbuild test
(Windows) passesAffected core subsystem(s)
inspector