Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/26177
The significant delay was caused by Nagel's algorithm + delayed ACKs in
Linux kernels. Here's the [kernel
patch](https://lwn.net/Articles/502585/) which added 40ms
`tcp_default_delack_min`
```
$ deno run -A pg-bench.mjs # main
Tue Oct 15 2024 12:27:22 GMT+0530 (India Standard Time): 42ms
$ target/release/deno run -A pg-bench.mjs # this patch
Tue Oct 15 2024 12:28:02 GMT+0530 (India Standard Time): 1ms
```
```js
import { Buffer } from "node:buffer";
import pg from 'pg'
const { Client } = pg
const client = new Client({
connectionString: 'postgresql://postgres:postgres@127.0.0.1:5432/postgres'
})
await client.connect()
async function fetch() {
const startPerf = performance.now();
const res = await client.query(`select
$1::int as int,
$2 as string,
$3::timestamp with time zone as timestamp,
$4 as null,
$5::bool as boolean,
$6::bytea as bytea,
$7::jsonb as json
`, [
1337,
'wat',
new Date().toISOString(),
null,
false,
Buffer.from('awesome'),
JSON.stringify([{ some: 'json' }, { array: 'object' }])
])
console.log(`${new Date()}: ${Math.round(performance.now() - startPerf)}ms`)
}
for(;;) await fetch();
```
Closes #20613.
Reimplements the serialization on top of the v8 APIs instead of
deno_core. Implements `v8.Serializer`, `v8.DefaultSerializer`,
`v8.Deserializer`, and `v8.DefaultSerializer`.
Support `MessagePort.once` in Node mode and enable relevant
`worker_threads` test. Noticed that another Node test was passing as
well, so I enabled that too.
The intent is that those tests will be executed, but our check that the
files are up to date won't overwrite the contents of the tests. This is
useful when a test needs some manual edits to work.
It turns out we weren't actually running them.
---
This ended up turning into a couple of small bug fixes to get the tests
passing:
- We weren't canonicalizing the exec path properly (it sometimes still
had `..` or `.` in it)
- We weren't accepting strings in `process.exit`
There was one failure I couldn't figure out quickly, so I disabled the
test for now, and filed a follow up issue: #24694
Previously we had many different code paths all
handling digests in different places, all with
wildly different digest support. This commit
rewrites this to use a single digest handling
mechanism for all digest operations.
It adds various aliases for digest algorithms,
like node does. For example
`sha1WithRSAEncryption` is an alias for `sha1`.
It also adds support for `md5-sha1` digests in
various places.
Part of #18218
- Adds `fs.lutimes` and `fs.lutimesSync` to our node polyfills. To do
this I added methods to the `FileSystem` trait + ops to expose the
functionality to JS.
- Exports `fs._toUnixTimestamp`. Node exposes an internal util
`toUnixTimestamp` from the fs module to be used by unit tests (so we
need it for the unit test to pass unmodified). It's weird because it's
only supposed to be used internally but it's still publicly accessible
- Matches up error handling and timestamp handling for fs.futimes and
fs.utimes with node
- Enables the node_compat utimes test - this exercises futimes, lutimes,
and utimes.
Changes in this PR:
- Added new fixed size hash algorithms (blake2b512, blake2s256,
sha512-224, sha512-256, sha3-224, sha3-256, sha3-384, sha3-512, sm3)
- Added variable size hash algorithms (the concept), with the algorithms
shake128 and shake256
- Use cppgc instead of resources for the hasher
- Enable Node's crypto.Hash tests and fix found bugs
This commit updates Deno to use `reqwest` at 0.12.4
and `rustls` at 0.22. Other related crates were updated
as well to match versions accepted by `reqwest` and `rustls`.
Note: we are not using the latest available `rustls` yet,
but this upgrade was non-trivial already, so a bump to
0.23 for `rustls` will be done in a separate commit.
Closes #23370
---------
Signed-off-by: Ryan Dahl <ry@tinyclouds.org>
Signed-off-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Ryan Dahl <ry@tinyclouds.org>
Co-authored-by: Divy Srivastava <dj.srivastava23@gmail.com>
The `tools/node_compat/node` submodule has been moved to
`tests/node_compat/runner/suite` and the remaining files within
`tools/node_compat` to `tests/node_compat/runner`.
Most of the changes are of the header within `tests/node_compat/test`
files. The `setup` and `test` tasks within `tests/node_comapt` execute
successfully.
Towards #22525
CC @mmastrac
Fixes #22158.
Basically reimplements the whole `StringDecoder` with a much more direct
translation (read like one-to-one) of node's current logic. The old
implementation was closer to node's super old impl and it was too hard
to keep the code structure while matching the behavior of their new
logic.
This adds support for UTF-16LE, ascii, and latin1.
This also enables the node_compat test, which now passes without
modification.
Fixes #19214.
We were using the `idna` crate to implement our polyfill for
`punycode.toASCII` and `punycode.toUnicode`. The `idna` crate is
correct, and adheres to the IDNA2003/2008 spec, but it turns out
`node`'s implementations don't really follow any spec! Instead, node
splits the domain by `'.'` and punycode encodes/decodes each part. This
means that node's implementations will happily work on codepoints that
are disallowed by the IDNA specs, causing the error in #19214.
While fixing this, I went ahead and matched the node behavior on all of
the punycode functions and enabled node's punycode test in our
`node_compat` suite.
Modify `_http_outgoing.ts` to support the extended signature of
`validateHeaderName()` used since node v19.5.0/v18.14.0 by adding the
`label` parameter. (see:
https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#httpvalidateheadernamename-label)
Making both validation functions accessible as public exports of
`node:http`
Fixes: #22614
This looks like a massive PR, but it's only a move from cli/tests ->
tests, and updates of relative paths for files.
This is the first step towards aggregate all of the integration test
files under tests/, which will lead to a set of integration tests that
can run without the CLI binary being built.
While we could leave these tests under `cli`, it would require us to
keep a more complex directory structure for the various test runners. In
addition, we have a lot of complexity to ignore various test files in
the `cli` project itself (cargo publish exclusion rules, autotests =
false, etc).
And finally, the `tests/` folder will eventually house the `test_ffi`,
`test_napi` and other testing code, reducing the size of the root repo
directory.
For easier review, the extremely large and noisy "move" is in the first
commit (with no changes -- just a move), while the remainder of the
changes to actual files is in the second commit.