- register builtin v8 errors in core.js so consumers don't have to
- remove complexity of error args handling (consumers must provide a
constructor with custom args, core simply provides msg arg)
This commit aligns the `fetch` API and the `Request` / `Response`
classes belonging to it to the spec. This commit enables all the
relevant `fetch` WPT tests. Spec compliance is now at around 90%.
Performance is essentially identical now (within 1% of 1.9.0).
This commit fixes the URL returned from `request.url` in the HTTP server
to be fully qualified. This previously existed, but was removed and
accidentially not readded during optimizations of the HTTP ops.
Returning a non fully qualified URL from `Request#url` is not spec
compliant.
The panic was caused by the lack of an error class mapping for
futures::channel::TrySendError, but it shouldn't have been throwing an error in
the first place - when a worker has terminated, postMessage should just return.
The issue was that the termination message hadn't yet been recieved, so it was
carrying on with trying to send the message. This adds another check on the Rust
side for if the channel is closed, and if it is the worker is treated as
terminated.
This commit aligns `Headers` to spec. It also removes the now unused
03_dom_iterable.js file. We now pass all relevant `Headers` WPT. We do
not implement any sort of header filtering, as we are a server side
runtime.
This is likely not the most efficient implementation of `Headers` yet.
It is however spec compliant. Once all the APIs in the `HTTP` hot loop
are correct we can start optimizing them. It is likely that this commit
reduces bench throughput temporarily.
Raise the soft limit to the hard limit when possible. This is similar
to what Node.js does to avoid running into "out of file descriptors"
errors too quickly.
On most Linux systems, raises the limit from 1,024 to 1,048,576.
On most macOS systems, raises the limit from 256 to 10,240.
Fixes #10148.