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util: fix .format() not always calling toString when it should be
This makes sure that `util.format('%s', object)` will always call a user defined `toString` function. It was formerly not the case when the object had the function declared on the super class. At the same time this also makes sure that getters won't be triggered accessing the `constructor` property. PR-URL: #30343 Fixes: #30333 Reviewed-By: James M Snell <jasnell@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Denys Otrishko <shishugi@gmail.com> Reviewed-By: Jeremiah Senkpiel <fishrock123@rocketmail.com>
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Original file line number | Diff line number | Diff line change |
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@@ -1572,6 +1572,31 @@ function reduceToSingleString( | |
return `${braces[0]}${ln}${join(output, `,\n${indentation} `)} ${braces[1]}`; | ||
} | ||
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function hasBuiltInToString(value) { | ||
// Count objects that have no `toString` function as built-in. | ||
if (typeof value.toString !== 'function') { | ||
return true; | ||
} | ||
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// The object has a own `toString` property. Thus it's not not a built-in one. | ||
if (ObjectPrototypeHasOwnProperty(value, 'toString')) { | ||
return false; | ||
} | ||
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// Find the object that has the `toString` property as own property in the | ||
// prototype chain. | ||
let pointer = value; | ||
do { | ||
pointer = ObjectGetPrototypeOf(pointer); | ||
} while (!ObjectPrototypeHasOwnProperty(pointer, 'toString')); | ||
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// Check closer if the object is a built-in. | ||
const descriptor = ObjectGetOwnPropertyDescriptor(pointer, 'constructor'); | ||
return descriptor !== undefined && | ||
typeof descriptor.value === 'function' && | ||
builtInObjects.has(descriptor.value.name); | ||
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BridgeAR
Author
Member
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} | ||
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const firstErrorLine = (error) => error.message.split('\n')[0]; | ||
let CIRCULAR_ERROR_MESSAGE; | ||
function tryStringify(arg) { | ||
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@@ -1630,29 +1655,17 @@ function formatWithOptionsInternal(inspectOptions, ...args) { | |
tempStr = formatNumber(stylizeNoColor, tempArg); | ||
} else if (typeof tempArg === 'bigint') { | ||
tempStr = `${tempArg}n`; | ||
} else if (typeof tempArg !== 'object' || | ||
tempArg === null || | ||
!hasBuiltInToString(tempArg)) { | ||
tempStr = String(tempArg); | ||
} else { | ||
let constr; | ||
if (typeof tempArg !== 'object' || | ||
tempArg === null || | ||
(typeof tempArg.toString === 'function' && | ||
// A direct own property. | ||
(ObjectPrototypeHasOwnProperty(tempArg, 'toString') || | ||
// A direct own property on the constructor prototype in | ||
// case the constructor is not an built-in object. | ||
((constr = tempArg.constructor) && | ||
!builtInObjects.has(constr.name) && | ||
constr.prototype && | ||
ObjectPrototypeHasOwnProperty(constr.prototype, | ||
'toString'))))) { | ||
tempStr = String(tempArg); | ||
} else { | ||
tempStr = inspect(tempArg, { | ||
...inspectOptions, | ||
compact: 3, | ||
colors: false, | ||
depth: 0 | ||
}); | ||
} | ||
tempStr = inspect(tempArg, { | ||
...inspectOptions, | ||
compact: 3, | ||
colors: false, | ||
depth: 0 | ||
}); | ||
} | ||
break; | ||
case 106: // 'j' | ||
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I'm not especially familiar with the node.js codebase, but in isolation it is surprising to me that you would check to see if an object was a built-in by looking at the value of its
.constructor
property, since its value is arbitrary and not generally used (e.g., in the ES5 spec, no specification operation ever reads the value of this property of an object, and even in ES6+ it is only consulted in certain fairly arcane circumstances).I would have thought it would be better to have a set containing the builtin objects themselves (i.e., the ones referred to by the spec as %ObjectPrototype%, %ArrayPrototype%, etc.) and test to see if
pointer
is itself in that set.