Right now an error in a request body stream causes an uncatchable
global promise rejection. This PR fixes this to instead propagate the
error correctly into the promise returned from `fetch`.
It additionally fixes errored readable stream bodies being treated as
successfully completed bodies by Rust.
In our `require()` implementation we use a special logic to resolve
"base path" when looking for matching packages, however this logic
is in contradiction to what needs to happen if there's a local
"node_modules"
directory used. This commit changes require implementation to be aware
if we're running off of global node modules cache or a local one.
- [x] `dlfcn.rs` - `dlopen()`-related code.
- [x] `turbocall.rs` - Call trampoline JIT compiler.
- [x] `repr.rs` - Pointer representation. Home of the UnsafePointerView
ops.
- [x] `symbol.rs` - Function symbol related code.
- [x] `callback.rs` - Home of `Deno.UnsafeCallback` ops.
- [x] `ir.rs` - Intermediate representation for values. Home of the
`NativeValue` type.
- [x] `call.rs` - Generic call ops. Home to everything related to
calling FFI symbols.
- [x] `static.rs` - static symbol support
I find easier to work with this setup, I eventually want to expand
TurboCall to unroll type conversion loop in generic calls, generate code
for individual symbols (lazy function pointers), etc.
Previously the inner request object of the original and the new request
were the same, causing the requests to be entangled and mutable changes
to one to be visible to the other. This fixes that.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/16934
Example compiler error:
```
error: mutable opstate is not supported in async ops
--> core/ops_builtin.rs:122:1
|
122 | #[op]
| ^^^^^
|
= note: this error originates in the attribute macro `op` (in Nightly builds, run with -Z macro-backtrace for more info)
```
Uses SeqOneByteString optimization to do zero-copy `&str` arguments in
fast calls.
- [x] Depends on https://github.com/denoland/rusty_v8/pull/1129
- [x] Depends on
https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/v8/v8/+/4036884
- [x] Disable in async ops
- [x] Make it work with owned `String` with an extra alloc in fast path.
- [x] Support `Cow<'_, str>`. Owned for slow case, Borrowed for fast
case
```rust
#[op]
fn op_string_len(s: &str) -> u32 {
str.len() as u32
}
```
* Introduces `ReadableStreamDefaultReadResult` and modifies
`ReadableStreamDefaultReader.read` to return this type (closes #15269).
* Adds the missing `ReadableStreamBYOBReader` constructor.
* Removes the nonexistent `ReadableStreamReader` class.
Currently, slow call path will always create a dangling pointer to
replace a null pointer when called with eg. a `new Uint8Array()`
parameter, which V8 initialises as a null pointer backed buffer.
However, the fast call path will never change the pointer value and will
thus expose a null pointer. Thus, it's possible that the pointer value
that a native call sees coming from Deno changes between two sequential
invocations of the same function with the exact same parameters.
Since null pointers can be quite important, and `Uint8Array` is the
chosen fast path for Deno FFI `"buffer"` parameters, I think it is
fairly important that the null pointer be properly exposed to the native
code. Thus this PR.
### `*mut c_void`
While here, I also changed the type of our pointer values to `*mut
c_void`. This is mainly due to JS buffers always being `*mut`, and
because we offer a way to turn a pointer into a JS `ArrayBuffer`
(`op_ffi_get_buf`) which is read-write. I'm not exactly sure which way
we should really go here, we have pointers that are definitely mut but
we also cannot assume all of our pointers are. So, do we go with the
maxima or the minima?
### `optimisedCall(new Uint8Array())`
V8 seems to have a bug where calling an optimised function with a newly
created empty `Uint8Array` (no argument or 0) will not see the data
pointer being null but instead it's some stable pointer, perhaps
pointing to some internal null-backing-store. The pointer value is also
an odd (not even) number, so it might specifically be a tagged pointer.
This will probably be an issue for some users, if they try to use eg.
`method(cstr("something"), new Uint8Array())` as a way to do a fast call
to `method` with a null pointer as the second parameter.
If instead of a `new Uint8Array()` the user instead uses some `const
NULL = new Uint8Array()` where the `NULL` buffer has been passed to a
slow call previously, then the fast call will properly see a null
pointer.
I'll take this up with some V8 engineers to see if this couldn't be
fixed.
…ed promises in mind (#16616)"
This reverts commit fd023cf793.
There are reports saying that Vite is often hanging in 1.28.2 and this
is
the only PR that changed something with HTTP server. I think we should
hold off on trying to fix this and instead focus on #16787
CC @magurotuna
This PR resets the revert commit made by #16610, bringing back #16383
which attempts to fix the issue happening when we use the flash server
with `--watch` option enabled.
Also, some code changes are made to pass the regression test added in
#16610.
For CommonJS packages we were not trying different extensions for files
specified as subpath of the package ([package_name]/[subpath]).
This commit fixes that.
**This patch**
```
benchmark time (avg) (min … max) p75 p99 p995
------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------
echo deno 23.99 ms/iter (22.51 ms … 33.61 ms) 23.97 ms 33.61 ms 33.61 ms
cat 16kb 24.27 ms/iter (22.5 ms … 35.21 ms) 24.2 ms 35.21 ms 35.21 ms
cat 1mb 25.88 ms/iter (25.04 ms … 30.28 ms) 26.12 ms 30.28 ms 30.28 ms
cat 15mb 38.41 ms/iter (35.7 ms … 50 ms) 38.31 ms 50 ms 50 ms
```
**main**
```
benchmark time (avg) (min … max) p75 p99 p995
------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------
echo deno 35.66 ms/iter (34.53 ms … 41.84 ms) 35.79 ms 41.84 ms 41.84 ms
cat 16kb 35.99 ms/iter (34.52 ms … 44.94 ms) 36.05 ms 44.94 ms 44.94 ms
cat 1mb 38.68 ms/iter (36.67 ms … 50.44 ms) 37.95 ms 50.44 ms 50.44 ms
cat 15mb 48.4 ms/iter (46.19 ms … 58.41 ms) 49.16 ms 58.41 ms 58.41 ms
```
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- [x] Avoid copying buffers.
https://encoding.spec.whatwg.org/#dom-textdecoder-decode
> Implementations are strongly encouraged to use an implementation
strategy that avoids this copy. When doing so they will have to make
sure that changes to input do not affect future calls to
[decode()](https://encoding.spec.whatwg.org/#dom-textdecoder-decode).
- [x] Special op to avoid string label deserialization and parsing.
(Ideally we should map labels to integers in JS)
- [x] Avoid webidl `Object.assign` when options is undefined.
This PR adds copies of several unstable APIs that are available
in "Deno[Deno.internal].nodeUnstable" namespace.
These copies do not perform unstable check (ie. don't require
"--unstable" flag to be present). Otherwise they work exactly
the same, including permission checks.
These APIs are not meant to be used by users directly and
can change at any time.
Copies of following APIs are available in that namespace:
- Deno.spawnChild
- Deno.spawn
- Deno.spawnSync
- Deno.serve
- Deno.upgradeHttpRaw
- Deno.listenDatagram
This commit makes "npm:" specifiers not require "--unstable" flag.
At the moment some APIs used by Node polyfills still require
"--unstable" which will be addressed in follow up PRs.
This commit fixes CJS resolution when there's a local "node_modules/"
directory.
Before this commit relative imports from CJS files where resolved
relative to
root directory of the package instead of relative to referrer file.
When streaming a resource in ext/http, with compression enabled, we
didn't flush individual chunks. This became very problematic when we
enabled `req.body` from `fetch` for FastStream recently.
This commit now correctly flushes each resource chunk after compression.
Previously `op_net_listen`, `op_net_accept`, and various other ops in
ext/net where variadic on the transport. This created a lot of code
bloat. This commit updates the code to instead have separate ops for
each transport.
This commit adds a `reuseAddress` option for UDP sockets. When this
option is enabled, one can listen on an address even though it is
already being listened on from a different process or thread. The new
socket will steal the address from the existing socket.
On Windows and Linux this uses the `SO_REUSEADDR` option, while on other
Unixes this is done with `SO_REUSEPORT`.
This behavior aligns with what libuv does.
TCP sockets still unconditionally set the `SO_REUSEADDR` flag - this
behavior matches Node.js and Go. This PR does not change this behaviour.
Co-authored-by: Luca Casonato <hello@lcas.dev>
When listening on a UNIX socket path, Deno currently tries to unlink
this path prior to actually listening. The implementation of this
behaviour is VERY racy, involves 2 additional syscalls, and does not
match the behaviour of any other runtime (Node.js, Go, Rust, etc).
This commit removes this behaviour. If a user wants to listen on an
existing socket, they must now unlink the file themselves prior to
listening.
This change in behaviour only impacts --unstable APIs, so it is not
a breaking change.
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Makes `op_ffi_ptr_of` fast. One of the tests changed from printing
`false` to `true` as the fast `&[u8]` slice path creates the slice with
a null pointer. Thus the `op_ffi_ptr_of` will now return a null pointer
value whereas previously it returned a dangling pointer value.
This PR makes pointer read methods of `Deno.UnsafePointerView` Fast API
compliant, with the exception of `getCString` which cannot be made fast
with current V8 Fast API.
This commit removes the calls to `expect()` on `std::rc::Rc`, which caused
Deno to panic under certain situations. We now return an error if `Rc`
is referenced by other variables.
Fixes #9360
Fixes #13345
Fixes #13926
Fixes #16241
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: bartlomieju <bartlomieju@users.noreply.github.com>
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Co-authored-by: denobot <33910674+denobot@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: bartlomieju <bartlomieju@users.noreply.github.com>
https://fetch.spec.whatwg.org/#http-network-or-cache-fetch
> If httpRequest’s header list contains `Range`, then append
(`Accept-Encoding`, `identity`)
> to httpRequest’s header list.
>
> This avoids a failure when handling content codings with a part of an
encoded response.
> Additionally, many servers mistakenly ignore `Range` headers if a
non-identity encoding is accepted.
Fixes #15136
Currently `UnsafeCallback` class' `ref()` and `unref()` methods rely on
the `event_loop_middleware` implementation in core. If even a single
`UnsafeCallback` is ref'ed, then the FFI event loop middleware will
always return `true` to signify that there may still be more work for
the event loop to do.
The middleware handling in core does not wait a moment to check again,
but will instead synchronously directly re-poll the event loop and
middlewares for more work. This becomes a live-loop.
This PR introduces a `Future` implementation for the `CallbackInfo`
struct that acts as the intermediary data storage between an
`UnsafeCallback` and the `libffi` C callback. Ref'ing a callback now
means calling an async op that binds to the `CallbackInfo` Future and
only resolves once the callback is unref'ed. The `libffi` C callback
will call the waker of this Future when it fires to make sure that the
main thread wakes up to receive the callback.
The return type checking for `"function"` type FFI values was incorrect
and presumed that functions were still being registered as objects
containing a "function" key.
While here, I also removed the whole return type checking logic as it
was needed for optionally creating BigInts on return when needed, but
serde_v8 does this automatically now (I think).
This PR fixes invalid header parsing which is flaky because `g` flag is
being used in the regex, which keeps track of `lastIndex`
```javascript
try {
new Headers([["x", "\u0000x"]]); // error
} catch(e) {}
new Headers([["x", "\u0000x"]]); // no error
```
This issue affects `Response` & `Request` constructors as well
This commit adds a new op_write_all to core that allows writing an
entire chunk in a single async op call. Internally this calls
`Resource::write_all`.
The `writableStreamForRid` has been moved to `06_streams.js` now, and
uses this new op. Various other code paths now also use this new op.
Closes #16227
This commit introduces two new buffer wrapper types to `deno_core`. The
main benefit of these new wrappers is that they can wrap a number of
different underlying buffer types. This allows for a more flexible read
and write API on resources that will require less copying of data
between different buffer representations.
- `BufView` is a read-only view onto a buffer. It can be backed by
`ZeroCopyBuf`, `Vec<u8>`, and `bytes::Bytes`.
- `BufViewMut` is a read-write view onto a buffer. It can be cheaply
converted into a `BufView`. It can be backed by `ZeroCopyBuf` or
`Vec<u8>`.
Both new buffer views have a cursor. This means that the start point of
the view can be constrained to write / read from just a slice of the
view. Only the start point of the slice can be adjusted. The end point
is fixed. To adjust the end point, the underlying buffer needs to be
truncated.
Readable resources have been changed to better cater to resources that
do not support BYOB reads. The basic `read` method now returns a
`BufView` instead of taking a `ZeroCopyBuf` to fill. This allows the
operation to return buffers that the resource has already allocated,
instead of forcing the caller to allocate the buffer. BYOB reads are
still very useful for resources that support them, so a new `read_byob`
method has been added that takes a `BufViewMut` to fill. `op_read`
attempts to use `read_byob` if the resource supports it, which falls
back to `read` and performs an additional copy if it does not. For
Rust->JS reads this change should have no impact, but for Rust->Rust
reads, this allows the caller to avoid an additional copy in many
scenarios. This combined with the support for `BufView` to be backed by
`bytes::Bytes` allows us to avoid one data copy when piping from a
`fetch` response into an `ext/http` response.
Writable resources have been changed to take a `BufView` instead of a
`ZeroCopyBuf` as an argument. This allows for less copying of data in
certain scenarios, as described above. Additionally a new
`Resource::write_all` method has been added that takes a `BufView` and
continually attempts to write the resource until the entire buffer has
been written. Certain resources like files can override this method to
provide a more efficient `write_all` implementation.
Mea culpa. Back when I re-introduced parameter and return value types to
FFI callbacks I failed to properly account for the change in match arm
logic. As a result, usize and isize parameters in FFI callbacks
currently enter the branch meant for void only.
This PR changes the match arms to all be explicit, making sure that void
is the only arm marked unreachable and that it stays that way.
The current location was causing failures during v1.26.1 publication.
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This is the release commit being forwarded back to main for 1.26.1
Please ensure:
- [x] Everything looks ok in the PR
- [x] The release has been published
To make edits to this PR:
```shell
git fetch upstream forward_v1.26.1 && git checkout -b forward_v1.26.1 upstream/forward_v1.26.1
```
Don't need this PR? Close it.
cc @cjihrig
Co-authored-by: cjihrig <cjihrig@users.noreply.github.com>
This PR implements the NAPI for loading native modules into Deno.
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: DjDeveloper <43033058+DjDeveloperr@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Ryan Dahl <ry@tinyclouds.org>
Currently Content-Length is sent when the status code is 204. However,
according to the spec, this should not be sent.
Modify the if statement below to prevent the Content-Length from being
sent.
This commit adds a fast path to `Request` and `Response` that
make consuming request bodies much faster when using `Body#text`,
`Body#arrayBuffer`, and `Body#blob`, if the body is a FastStream.
Because the response bodies for `fetch` are FastStream, this speeds up
consuming `fetch` response bodies significantly.
We can use Resource::read_return & op_read instead. This allows HTTP
request bodies to participate in FastStream.
To make this work, `readableStreamForRid` required a change to allow non
auto-closing resources to be handled. This required some minor changes
in our FastStream paths in ext/http and ext/flash.