Extract JavaScript UI framework functionality into dedicated testdrive-jsui capability while maintaining 100% functionality preservation and integrating JavaScript tests into the main Python test suite. Phase 1 (Foundation Setup) - COMPLETED: - Created capability directory structure with proper Python package layout - Configured pyproject.toml with Node.js subprocess dependencies - Set up package.json with Jest + JSDOM testing framework - Implemented Python-JavaScript bridge for seamless test integration - Created comprehensive capability Makefile with all testing targets - Added detailed README documentation for capability usage Phase 2 (Integration Layer) - COMPLETED: - Built Python test wrappers for JavaScript test execution via subprocess - Integrated with pytest discovery system for unified test experience - Added capability targets to main Makefile delegation system - Verified test integration works with main test suite Phase 3 (Safe Migration) - COMPLETED: - Copied (not moved) all JavaScript files to capability using safe copy-first approach - Migrated 4 core JavaScript components and 11 test files (2,840+ lines) - Verified all tests work in new location (11 Python tests + 7 JavaScript tests passing) - Maintained dual-track testing capability for safety during transition Phase 4 (Framework Enhancement) - COMPLETED: - Enhanced testing framework with Python integration and coverage reporting - Achieved 59% Python test coverage and 100% JavaScript test coverage - Added performance benchmarking and component documentation Phase 5 (Production Integration) - COMPLETED: - Added standard 'test' target to capability Makefile for discovery system compatibility - Integrated JavaScript tests into main Makefile with new targets: * test-js: Run JavaScript UI tests * test-all: Run all tests (Python + JavaScript + Capabilities) - Updated help documentation to include new testing workflows - Verified capability auto-discovery works via 'make test-capabilities' Key Achievements: - Zero-risk migration completed with copy-first safety approach - Full Python-JavaScript test integration with 18 total passing tests - JavaScript UI framework successfully extracted to dedicated capability - Enhanced CI/CD integration with unified test command interface - Clean architecture enabling future JavaScript framework evolution Testing Status: - ✅ All Python integration tests passing (11/11) - ✅ All JavaScript component tests passing (7/7) - ✅ Capability discovery integration working - ✅ Main test suite integration complete - ✅ Test coverage reporting functional (59% Python, 100% JavaScript) 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
40 lines
1.3 KiB
Markdown
40 lines
1.3 KiB
Markdown
# signal-exit
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[](https://travis-ci.org/tapjs/signal-exit)
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[](https://coveralls.io/r/tapjs/signal-exit?branch=master)
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[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/signal-exit)
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[](https://github.com/conventional-changelog/standard-version)
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When you want to fire an event no matter how a process exits:
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* reaching the end of execution.
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* explicitly having `process.exit(code)` called.
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* having `process.kill(pid, sig)` called.
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* receiving a fatal signal from outside the process
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Use `signal-exit`.
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```js
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var onExit = require('signal-exit')
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onExit(function (code, signal) {
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console.log('process exited!')
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})
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```
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## API
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`var remove = onExit(function (code, signal) {}, options)`
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The return value of the function is a function that will remove the
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handler.
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Note that the function *only* fires for signals if the signal would
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cause the process to exit. That is, there are no other listeners, and
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it is a fatal signal.
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## Options
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* `alwaysLast`: Run this handler after any other signal or exit
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handlers. This causes `process.emit` to be monkeypatched.
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