A replacement for process.exit that ensures stdio are fully drained before exiting.
To make a long story short, if process.exit
is called on Windows, script output is often truncated when pipe-redirecting stdout
or stderr
. This module attempts to work around this issue by waiting until those streams have been completely drained before actually calling process.exit
.
See Node.js issue #3584 for further reference.
Tested in OS X 10.8, Windows 7 on Node.js 0.8.25 and 0.10.18.
Based on some code by @vladikoff.
Install the module with: npm install exit
var exit = require('exit');
// These lines should appear in the output, EVEN ON WINDOWS.
console.log("omg");
console.error("yay");
// process.exit(5);
exit(5);
// These lines shouldn't appear in the output.
console.log("wtf");
console.error("bro");
In Windows, clone the repo and cd to the test\fixtures
directory. The only difference between log.js and log-broken.js is that the former uses exit
while the latter calls process.exit
directly.
This test was done using cmd.exe, but you can see the same results using | grep "std"
in either PowerShell or git-bash.
C:\node-exit\test\fixtures>node log.js 0 10 stdout stderr 2>&1 | find "std"
stdout 0
stderr 0
stdout 1
stderr 1
stdout 2
stderr 2
stdout 3
stderr 3
stdout 4
stderr 4
stdout 5
stderr 5
stdout 6
stderr 6
stdout 7
stderr 7
stdout 8
stderr 8
stdout 9
stderr 9
C:\node-exit\test\fixtures>node log-broken.js 0 10 stdout stderr 2>&1 | find "std"
C:\node-exit\test\fixtures>
In lieu of a formal styleguide, take care to maintain the existing coding style. Add unit tests for any new or changed functionality. Lint and test your code using Grunt.
2013-11-26 - v0.1.2 - Fixed a bug with hanging processes.
2013-09-26 - v0.1.1 - Fixed some bugs. It seems to actually work now!
2013-09-20 - v0.1.0 - Initial release.
Copyright (c) 2013 "Cowboy" Ben Alman
Licensed under the MIT license.
# exit [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/cowboy/node-exit.png?branch=master)](http://travis-ci.org/cowboy/node-exit) A replacement for process.exit that ensures stdio are fully drained before exiting. To make a long story short, if `process.exit` is called on Windows, script output is often truncated when pipe-redirecting `stdout` or `stderr`. This module attempts to work around this issue by waiting until those streams have been completely drained before actually calling `process.exit`. See [Node.js issue #3584](https://github.com/joyent/node/issues/3584) for further reference. Tested in OS X 10.8, Windows 7 on Node.js 0.8.25 and 0.10.18. Based on some code by [@vladikoff](https://github.com/vladikoff). ## Getting Started Install the module with: `npm install exit` ```javascript var exit = require('exit'); // These lines should appear in the output, EVEN ON WINDOWS. console.log("omg"); console.error("yay"); // process.exit(5); exit(5); // These lines shouldn't appear in the output. console.log("wtf"); console.error("bro"); ``` ## Don't believe me? Try it for yourself. In Windows, clone the repo and cd to the `test\fixtures` directory. The only difference between [log.js](test/fixtures/log.js) and [log-broken.js](test/fixtures/log-broken.js) is that the former uses `exit` while the latter calls `process.exit` directly. This test was done using cmd.exe, but you can see the same results using `| grep "std"` in either PowerShell or git-bash. ``` C:\node-exit\test\fixtures>node log.js 0 10 stdout stderr 2>&1 | find "std" stdout 0 stderr 0 stdout 1 stderr 1 stdout 2 stderr 2 stdout 3 stderr 3 stdout 4 stderr 4 stdout 5 stderr 5 stdout 6 stderr 6 stdout 7 stderr 7 stdout 8 stderr 8 stdout 9 stderr 9 C:\node-exit\test\fixtures>node log-broken.js 0 10 stdout stderr 2>&1 | find "std" C:\node-exit\test\fixtures> ``` ## Contributing In lieu of a formal styleguide, take care to maintain the existing coding style. Add unit tests for any new or changed functionality. Lint and test your code using [Grunt](http://gruntjs.com/). ## Release History 2013-11-26 - v0.1.2 - Fixed a bug with hanging processes. 2013-09-26 - v0.1.1 - Fixed some bugs. It seems to actually work now! 2013-09-20 - v0.1.0 - Initial release. ## License Copyright (c) 2013 "Cowboy" Ben Alman Licensed under the MIT license.