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Errors have never had a stack trace attached in the language spec — however, implementations have very consistently provided one on a property named “stack” on instantiated Error objects. There has long been concern about standardizing stack traces improperly - such that implementations could not claim to be fully compliant while also providing security guarantees. This proposal is an attempt to standardize the intersection of existing browser behavior, in a way that addresses these security concerns.
V8 in Node 7+ and Chrome 54+: stack is an own property on Error instances which claims to be a value property ({"value":"(stack here)","writable":true,"enumerable":false,"configurable":true), but V8's Error has exotic behavior for [[GetOwnProperty]] that acts like a getter the first time (if there's been no set first) by triggering prepareStackTrace and setting stack, as discussed in this thread. After that, it behaves like a standard value property.
V8 in Node <= 6 and Chrome <= 53: stack is an own property on Error instances with a getter/setter: { configurable: true, enumerable: false }
The getter returns undefined with a non-Error receiver, and returns the stack property (whatever its current value may be) otherwise.
The setter is a no-op with a non-Error object receiver, and sets the return of the stack getter otherwise.
Safari: stack is an own string data property on Error instances: { configurable: true, enumerable: false, writable: true }
Firefox: stack is an own property on Error.prototype: { configurable: true, enumerable: false }
The getter throws on a non-Error receiver, and returns the original stack trace otherwise.
The setter sets the stack property on a non-Error receiver, and is a no-op on an Error receiver.
Naming
Error.prototype.stack is set in stone - this is a defacto reality, and will be implemented in Annex B.