parcoursup/node_modules/mocha/lib/esm-utils.js
lalBi94 7bc56c09b5 $
2023-03-05 13:23:23 +01:00

59 lines
1.8 KiB
JavaScript

const path = require('path');
const url = require('url');
const formattedImport = async file => {
if (path.isAbsolute(file)) {
try {
return await import(url.pathToFileURL(file));
} catch (err) {
// This is a hack created because ESM in Node.js (at least in Node v15.5.1) does not emit
// the location of the syntax error in the error thrown.
// This is problematic because the user can't see what file has the problem,
// so we add the file location to the error.
// This `if` should be removed once Node.js fixes the problem.
if (
err instanceof SyntaxError &&
err.message &&
err.stack &&
!err.stack.includes(file)
) {
const newErrorWithFilename = new SyntaxError(err.message);
newErrorWithFilename.stack = err.stack.replace(
/^SyntaxError/,
`SyntaxError[ @${file} ]`
);
throw newErrorWithFilename;
}
throw err;
}
}
return import(file);
};
exports.requireOrImport = async file => {
if (path.extname(file) === '.mjs') {
return formattedImport(file);
}
// This is currently the only known way of figuring out whether a file is CJS or ESM.
// If Node.js or the community establish a better procedure for that, we can fix this code.
// Another option here would be to always use `import()`, as this also supports CJS, but I would be
// wary of using it for _all_ existing test files, till ESM is fully stable.
try {
return require(file);
} catch (err) {
if (err.code === 'ERR_REQUIRE_ESM') {
return formattedImport(file);
} else {
throw err;
}
}
};
exports.loadFilesAsync = async (files, preLoadFunc, postLoadFunc) => {
for (const file of files) {
preLoadFunc(file);
const result = await exports.requireOrImport(path.resolve(file));
postLoadFunc(file, result);
}
};