Ensure that when HasBinding of an Object environment record returns an
abrupt completion, that same completion is returned to the runtime.
Update the meta-data of related tests for consistency with this new
test.
The latest revision of ECMA262 makes special provisions for classes
which extend the `null` value [1]. Update the relevant tests
accordingly.
[1] https://github.com/tc39/ecma262/issues/543
Utilize the test generation tool to increase coverage of destructuring
assignment semantics. Previously, only destructuring assignment in the
AssignmentExpression position was tested. With this change applied, the
same tests will assert expected behavior for destructuring assignment in
`for..of` statements, as well.
A limited number of tests are applied to the `for..in` statement as
well, but due to the iteration protocol observed by that statement, many
destructuring tests are not relevant, and others cannot be automatically
generated from this format.
This change set does not include a test for restrictions relating to
template literals because such a test already exists in the project.
While a form of this test for string literals in strict mode code
existed previously, it is less precise and relies on unrelated
semantics. Remove the previous form and replace with a more direct
version.
Add tests that assert the management of the running execution context's
LexicalEnvironment and VariableEnvironment components, as created by the
following abstract operations:
- NewDeclarativeEnvironment
- NewObjectEnvironment
- NewFunctionEnvironment
Many tests require the use of non-strict direct eval, meaning they may
not be run in strict mode. This does not effect coverage because the
semantics in these cases are not observable from strict mode code.
Some situations require the creation of a binding, but this binding has
no relevance to the test itself. In these cases, use names consisting
solely of the underscore character (`_`).
Avoid the use of Block statements wherever possible, as these trigger
the creation of additional environments which may interfere with the
behavior under test.
Closes#572
Introduce tests for new semantics for ES2015 features such as
lexically-scoped bindings. Also add tests for semantics defined in prior
editions of the specification but not yet covered in this test suite.
Limit tests in `language/expressions/call/` and `built-ins/eval/` to
only assert details that are directly related to the invocation pattern.
Re-organize all other tests within the `language/eval-code/` directory,
further categorizing each as `direct` or `indirect` as appropriate.
Remove the extraneous "executable" flag from those files which carried
it.
This harness function is not necessary in the majority of cases in which
it is used. Remove its usage to simplify tests and decrease the amount
of domain-specific knowledge necessary to contribute to the test suite.
Persist the harness function itself for use by future tests for ES2015
modules (such a helper is necessary for tests that are interpreted as
module code).
Except for a small set of expected input/output pairs, both ES5 and
ES2015 define the expected return value of these methods in terms of an
"implementation-dependent approximation." This makes it inappropriate to
enforce expectations for specific values, even if expressed imprecisely.
The files in this patch are organized according to the following naming
scheme:
Prefix | Grammar production
-------------------|-------------------
`array-empty-` | ArrayAssignmentPattern : [ ]
`array-elision-` | ArrayAssignmentPattern : [ Elision ]
`array-rest-` | ArrayAssignmentPattern : [ Elisionopt AssignmentRestElement ]
`array-elem-` | ArrayAssignmentPattern : [ AssignmentElementList ]
`array-elem-trlg-` | ArrayAssignmentPattern : [ AssignmentElementList , Elisionopt AssignmentRestElementopt ]
Suffix | Intent
-------------------|-------
`-abpt-close-err` | The assignment evaluation returns an abrupt completion, and the iterator's `return` method throws an error
`-abpt-close-skip` | The assignment evaluation returns an abrupt completion, but IteratorClose is not invoked
`-abpt-close` | The assignment evaluation returns an abrupt completion, and IteratorClose is invoked as specified
`-get-err` | Abrupt completion returned from GetIterator
`-nrml-close-err` | The assignment evaluation completes, and the iterator's `return` method throws an error
`-nrml-close-null` | The assignment evaluation completes, and the iterator's `return` method returns a non-Object value (there is no corresponding `-abpt-` suffix because the algorithm does not reference the return value in those cases)
`-nrml-close-skip` | The assignment evaluation completes, but IteratorClose is not invoked
`-nrml-close` | The assignment evaluation completes, and IteratorClose is invoked as specified
Not all suffixes are appropriate for all productions. Suffixes have been
simplified in cases where less specificity is necessary to disambiguate
test cases.
Some tests for `eval` assert the equality of key enumeration on the
global object, comparing the ordering when the object is referenced
through eval.
Based on the test bodies and the "info" field in their metadata, these
tests appear to have been written under the mistaken impression that
erroneous creation of an environment record would be observable through
the `this` value.
In reality, the value in such cases resolves to the global object. That
renders these tests redundant and overly complex--none of the
distinctions between each test actually demonstrates a different
behavior.
Remove the redundant tests and introduce three new tests asserting the
correct resolution of the `this` keyword for direct eval code from
within the global scope and from within function scope.