/** * Tests util.defineSecureProp * * Copyright (C) 2010, 2011 Mike Gerwitz * * This file is part of ease.js. * * ease.js is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the * terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free * Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) * any later version. * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT * ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or * FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License * for more details. * * You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License * along with this program. If not, see . * * @author Mike Gerwitz */ var common = require( './common' ), assert = require( 'assert' ), util = common.require( 'util' ); var obj = {}, val = 'bar'; var expected = ( ( Object.defineProperty instanceof Function ) ? false : true ), fallback = util.definePropertyFallback(); // IE 8 will fall back on first failure if ( !expected && fallback ) { try { util.definePropertyFallback( false ); util.defineSecureProp( {}, 'foo', 1 ); // If the fallback was changed on us, then there was a problem (and this // is likely IE8). Change the value we're expecting so our tests don't // fail. if ( util.definePropertyFallback() === true ) { expected = true; } } catch ( e ) {} } assert.equal( expected, fallback, "util.definePropertyFallback() returns whether defining a secure property is " + "unsupported" ); assert.equal( util.definePropertyFallback( fallback ), util, "util.definePropertyFallback() returns self when used as a setter" ); // perform secure property tests only if our parser supports it if ( fallback === false ) { util.defineSecureProp( obj, 'foo', val ); assert.equal( obj.foo, val, "Defining a secure prop creates a property with the correct value on " + "the given object" ); // Our assertions below are going to use the data from the following method. // We're not going to test directly whether they're writable, etc, because // different engines may have different interpretations at this stage. (Or // it may not yet be implemented.) Therefore, we'll simply see if what we // requested has been set, and leave the problems up to the engine // developers. // // This is a case of ensuring we're testing our own functionality. We do not // want to test engine functionality. var desc = Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor( obj, 'foo' ); assert.equal( desc.writable, false, "Secure property is not writable" ); assert.equal( desc.configurable, false, "Secure property is not configurable" ); assert.equal( desc.enumerable, false, "Secure property is not enumerable" ); } // be naughty so we can test the alternative implementation util.definePropertyFallback( true ); var obj2 = {}, val2 = 'baz'; // this should fall back on defining a normal property util.defineSecureProp( obj2, 'foo', val2 ); assert.equal( obj2.foo, val2, "Secure property fallback still creates a property with the correct " + "value on the given object" ); // if we have the ES5 functions available, ensure that the property was not // defined securely if ( fallback === false ) { var desc2 = Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor( obj2, 'foo' ); assert.equal( desc2.writable, true, "Secure property is writable when falling back" ); assert.equal( desc2.configurable, true, "Secure property is configurable when falling back" ); assert.equal( desc2.enumerable, true, "Secure property is enumerable when falling back" ); } // restore in case the tests are not being run in separate processes util.definePropertyFallback( fallback );