'use strict'; // These testcases are specific to one uncommon behavior in path module. Few // of the functions in path module, treat '' strings as current working // directory. This test makes sure that the behavior is intact between commits. // See: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/2106 require('../common'); const assert = require('assert'); const path = require('path'); const pwd = process.cwd(); // Join will internally ignore all the zero-length strings and it will return // '.' if the joined string is a zero-length string. assert.strictEqual(path.posix.join(''), '.'); assert.strictEqual(path.posix.join('', ''), '.'); assert.strictEqual(path.win32.join(''), '.'); assert.strictEqual(path.win32.join('', ''), '.'); assert.strictEqual(path.join(pwd), pwd); assert.strictEqual(path.join(pwd, ''), pwd); // Normalize will return '.' if the input is a zero-length string assert.strictEqual(path.posix.normalize(''), '.'); assert.strictEqual(path.win32.normalize(''), '.'); assert.strictEqual(path.normalize(pwd), pwd); // Since '' is not a valid path in any of the common environments, return false assert.strictEqual(path.posix.isAbsolute(''), false); assert.strictEqual(path.win32.isAbsolute(''), false); // Resolve, internally ignores all the zero-length strings and returns the // current working directory assert.strictEqual(path.resolve(''), pwd); assert.strictEqual(path.resolve('', ''), pwd); // Relative, internally calls resolve. So, '' is actually the current directory assert.strictEqual(path.relative('', pwd), ''); assert.strictEqual(path.relative(pwd, ''), ''); assert.strictEqual(path.relative(pwd, pwd), '');