From 49bb7ded2c78ea6b714b5e3640584ee37a1f6668 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Chris Dickinson Date: Fri, 17 Apr 2015 20:13:32 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] deps: fix git case sensitivity issue in npm MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Remove Readme.md, as the subsequent npm update commit creates a README.md. Combining the create and delete operations into the same commit leads to OSX machines running into issues – they don't detect it as a rename, instead trying to create a new README.md, which fails because Readme.md hasn't been deleted yet. This causes the entire operation to fail spectacularly. Thus, the delete operation is performed first, in this commit, then the create operation follows in the npm update commit. PR-URL: https://github.com/iojs/io.js/pull/1456 Reviewed-By: Jeremiah Senkpiel --- .../request/node_modules/qs/Readme.md | 233 ------------------ 1 file changed, 233 deletions(-) delete mode 100755 deps/npm/node_modules/request/node_modules/qs/Readme.md diff --git a/deps/npm/node_modules/request/node_modules/qs/Readme.md b/deps/npm/node_modules/request/node_modules/qs/Readme.md deleted file mode 100755 index 2d7e7f5a0d0297..00000000000000 --- a/deps/npm/node_modules/request/node_modules/qs/Readme.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,233 +0,0 @@ -# qs - -A querystring parsing and stringifying library with some added security. - -[![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/hapijs/qs.svg)](http://travis-ci.org/hapijs/qs) - -Lead Maintainer: [Nathan LaFreniere](https://github.com/nlf) - -The **qs** module was originally created and maintained by [TJ Holowaychuk](https://github.com/visionmedia/node-querystring). - -## Usage - -```javascript -var Qs = require('qs'); - -var obj = Qs.parse('a=c'); // { a: 'c' } -var str = Qs.stringify(obj); // 'a=c' -``` - -### Parsing Objects - -```javascript -Qs.parse(string, [options]); -``` - -**qs** allows you to create nested objects within your query strings, by surrounding the name of sub-keys with square brackets `[]`. -For example, the string `'foo[bar]=baz'` converts to: - -```javascript -{ - foo: { - bar: 'baz' - } -} -``` - -URI encoded strings work too: - -```javascript -Qs.parse('a%5Bb%5D=c'); -// { a: { b: 'c' } } -``` - -You can also nest your objects, like `'foo[bar][baz]=foobarbaz'`: - -```javascript -{ - foo: { - bar: { - baz: 'foobarbaz' - } - } -} -``` - -By default, when nesting objects **qs** will only parse up to 5 children deep. This means if you attempt to parse a string like -`'a[b][c][d][e][f][g][h][i]=j'` your resulting object will be: - -```javascript -{ - a: { - b: { - c: { - d: { - e: { - f: { - '[g][h][i]': 'j' - } - } - } - } - } - } -} -``` - -This depth can be overridden by passing a `depth` option to `Qs.parse(string, [options])`: - -```javascript -Qs.parse('a[b][c][d][e][f][g][h][i]=j', { depth: 1 }); -// { a: { b: { '[c][d][e][f][g][h][i]': 'j' } } } -``` - -The depth limit helps mitigate abuse when **qs** is used to parse user input, and it is recommended to keep it a reasonably small number. - -For similar reasons, by default **qs** will only parse up to 1000 parameters. This can be overridden by passing a `parameterLimit` option: - -```javascript -Qs.parse('a=b&c=d', { parameterLimit: 1 }); -// { a: 'b' } -``` - -An optional delimiter can also be passed: - -```javascript -Qs.parse('a=b;c=d', { delimiter: ';' }); -// { a: 'b', c: 'd' } -``` - -Delimiters can be a regular expression too: - -```javascript -Qs.parse('a=b;c=d,e=f', { delimiter: /[;,]/ }); -// { a: 'b', c: 'd', e: 'f' } -``` - -### Parsing Arrays - -**qs** can also parse arrays using a similar `[]` notation: - -```javascript -Qs.parse('a[]=b&a[]=c'); -// { a: ['b', 'c'] } -``` - -You may specify an index as well: - -```javascript -Qs.parse('a[1]=c&a[0]=b'); -// { a: ['b', 'c'] } -``` - -Note that the only difference between an index in an array and a key in an object is that the value between the brackets must be a number -to create an array. When creating arrays with specific indices, **qs** will compact a sparse array to only the existing values preserving -their order: - -```javascript -Qs.parse('a[1]=b&a[15]=c'); -// { a: ['b', 'c'] } -``` - -Note that an empty string is also a value, and will be preserved: - -```javascript -Qs.parse('a[]=&a[]=b'); -// { a: ['', 'b'] } -Qs.parse('a[0]=b&a[1]=&a[2]=c'); -// { a: ['b', '', 'c'] } -``` - -**qs** will also limit specifying indices in an array to a maximum index of `20`. Any array members with an index of greater than `20` will -instead be converted to an object with the index as the key: - -```javascript -Qs.parse('a[100]=b'); -// { a: { '100': 'b' } } -``` - -This limit can be overridden by passing an `arrayLimit` option: - -```javascript -Qs.parse('a[1]=b', { arrayLimit: 0 }); -// { a: { '1': 'b' } } -``` - -To disable array parsing entirely, set `arrayLimit` to `-1`. - -If you mix notations, **qs** will merge the two items into an object: - -```javascript -Qs.parse('a[0]=b&a[b]=c'); -// { a: { '0': 'b', b: 'c' } } -``` - -You can also create arrays of objects: - -```javascript -Qs.parse('a[][b]=c'); -// { a: [{ b: 'c' }] } -``` - -### Stringifying - -```javascript -Qs.stringify(object, [options]); -``` - -When stringifying, **qs** always URI encodes output. Objects are stringified as you would expect: - -```javascript -Qs.stringify({ a: 'b' }); -// 'a=b' -Qs.stringify({ a: { b: 'c' } }); -// 'a%5Bb%5D=c' -``` - -Examples beyond this point will be shown as though the output is not URI encoded for clarity. Please note that the return values in these cases *will* be URI encoded during real usage. - -When arrays are stringified, by default they are given explicit indices: - -```javascript -Qs.stringify({ a: ['b', 'c', 'd'] }); -// 'a[0]=b&a[1]=c&a[2]=d' -``` - -You may override this by setting the `indices` option to `false`: - -```javascript -Qs.stringify({ a: ['b', 'c', 'd'] }, { indices: false }); -// 'a=b&a=c&a=d' -``` - -You may use the `arrayFormat` option to specify the format of the output array - -```javascript -Qs.stringify({ a: ['b', 'c'] }, { arrayFormat: 'indices' }) -// 'a[0]=b&a[1]=c' -Qs.stringify({ a: ['b', 'c'] }, { arrayFormat: 'brackets' }) -// 'a[]=b&a[]=c' -Qs.stringify({ a: ['b', 'c'] }, { arrayFormat: 'repeat' }) -// 'a=b&a=c' -``` - -Empty strings and null values will omit the value, but the equals sign (=) remains in place: - -```javascript -Qs.stringify({ a: '' }); -// 'a=' -``` - -Properties that are set to `undefined` will be omitted entirely: - -```javascript -Qs.stringify({ a: null, b: undefined }); -// 'a=' -``` - -The delimiter may be overridden with stringify as well: - -```javascript -Qs.stringify({ a: 'b', c: 'd' }, { delimiter: ';' }); -// 'a=b;c=d' -```