This commit adds a "dot" reporter to "deno test" subcommand,
that can be activated using "--dot" flag.
It provides a concise output using:
- "." for passing test
- "," for ignored test
- "!" for failing test
User output is silenced and not printed to the console.
In non-TTY environments each result is printed on a separate line.
This commit provides basic polyfill for "node:test" module. Currently
only top-level "test" function is polyfilled, all remaining functions from
that module throw not implemented errors.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/17251
Closes #19970
This commits adds logic to retry failed module downloads once.
Both request and server errors are handled and the retry is done after
50 ms wait time.
Closes #17589.
```ts
Deno.bench("foo", async (t) => {
const resource = setup(); // not included in measurement
t.start();
measuredOperation(resource);
t.end();
resource.close(); // not included in measurement
});
```
Code run within Deno-mode and Node-mode should have access to a
slightly different set of globals. Previously this was done through a
compile time code-transform for Node-mode, but this is not ideal and has
many edge cases, for example Node's globalThis having a different
identity than Deno's globalThis.
This commit makes the `globalThis` of the entire runtime a semi-proxy.
This proxy returns a different set of globals depending on the caller's
mode. This is not a full proxy, because it is shadowed by "real"
properties on globalThis. This is done to avoid the overhead of a full
proxy for all globalThis operations.
The globals between Deno-mode and Node-mode are now properly segregated.
This means that code running in Deno-mode will not have access to Node's
globals, and vice versa. Deleting a managed global in Deno-mode will
NOT delete the corresponding global in Node-mode, and vice versa.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Aapo Alasuutari <aapo.alasuutari@gmail.com>
This commit adds some regression tests for using `jsxImportSource` in
the config file in combination with an import map.
These underlying issues were fixed by #15561.
Closes #13389
Closes #14723
---------
Co-authored-by: Aapo Alasuutari <aapo.alasuutari@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Fixes #19568
Values are not coerced to the desired type during deserialisation. This
makes serde_v8 stricter.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Rather than disallowing `ext:` resolution, clear the module map after
initializing extensions so extension modules are anonymized. This
operation is explicitly called in `deno_runtime`. Re-inject `node:`
specifiers into the module map after doing this.
Fixes #17717.
If a symlink within the `node_modules` directory lies outside that
directory, it will now warn and inline the file. For directories, it
will just warn for now.
Probably fixes #19251 (I'm still unable to reproduce).
This is what pnpm does and we were missing it. It makes modules work
which have a dependency on something, but don't say they have that
dependency, but that dep is still in the tree somewhere.
This commit fixes emitting "unhandledrejection" event when there are
"node:" or "npm:" imports.
Before this commit the Node "unhandledRejection" event was emitted
using a regular listener for Web "unhandledrejection" event. This
listener was installed before any user listener had a chance to be
installed which effectively prevent emitting "unhandledrejection"
events to user code.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/16928
Follow up to https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/19084.
This commit adds support for globs in the configuration file as well
as CLI arguments for files.
With this change users can now use glob syntax for "include" and
"exclude" fields, like so:
```json
{
"lint": {
"include": [
"directory/test*.ts",
"other_dir/"
],
"exclude": [
"other_dir/foo*.ts",
"nested/nested2/*"
]
},
"test": {
"include": [
"data/test*.ts",
"nested/",
"tests/test[1-9].ts"
],
"exclude": [
"nested/foo?.ts",
"nested/nested2/*"
]
}
}
```
Or in CLI args like so:
```
// notice quotes here; these values will be passed to Deno verbatim
// and deno will perform glob expansion
$ deno fmt --ignore="data/*.ts"
$ deno lint "data/**/*.ts"
```
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/17971
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/6365
We don't need to use the `deno` command here to test kill permissions
and it's awkward to get right without passing `-A`. `cat` works, but for
platforms other than windows. This test should have plenty of coverage
on other platforms.