- rewrite flag help
- use gray for indentation
- reorganize permission flags and split them up
- make help subcommand act like help flag
- `deno run` outputs list of tasks
- Fixes #25120
error handling for `deno run` in case of no config file being found
needs to be improved
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Permission flags are unified in a clearer and concise output.
Unstable flags are hidden by default with exception of the `unstable`
flag itself. the remaining unstable flags can be seen with a
`--help=unstable`.
This also cleans up to show unstable flags only for subcommands that
actually need them.
Also sorts flags alphabetically, and gorups various flags together in a
set of categories.
---------
Co-authored-by: crowlkats <crowlkats@toaxl.com>
This PR updates `deno run` to fallback to executing tasks when there is
no script with the specified name. If there are both script and a task
with the same name then `deno run` will prioritise executing the script.
```
> deno upgrade
error: Unsupported lockfile version 'invalid'. Try upgrading Deno or recreating the lockfile.
V:\scratch
> V:\deno\target\debug\deno upgrade
Looking up latest version
Local deno version 1.45.3 is the most recent release
```
Closes #24517
Closes #20729
Adds support for running npm package lifecycle scripts, opted into via a
new `--allow-scripts` flag.
With this PR, when running `deno cache` (or `DENO_FUTURE=1 deno
install`) you can specify the `--allow-scripts=pkg1,pkg2` flag to run
lifecycle scripts attached to the given packages.
Note at the moment this only works when `nodeModulesDir` is true (using
the local resolver).
When a package with un-run lifecycle scripts is encountered, we emit a
warning suggesting things may not work and to try running lifecycle
scripts. Additionally, if a package script implicitly requires
`node-gyp` and it's not found on the system, we emit a warning.
Extra things in this PR:
- Extracted out bits of `task.rs` into a separate module for reuse
- Added a couple fields to `process.config` in order to support
`node-gyp` (it relies on a few variables being there)
- Drive by fix to downloading new npm packages to test registry
---
TODO:
- [x] validation for allow-scripts args (make sure it looks like an npm
package)
- [x] make allow-scripts matching smarter
- [ ] figure out what issues this closes
---
Review notes:
- This adds a bunch of deps to our test registry due to using
`node-gyp`, so it's pretty noisy
Adds much better support for the unstable Deno workspaces as well as
support for npm workspaces. npm workspaces is still lacking in that we
only install packages into the root node_modules folder. We'll make it
smarter over time in order for it to figure out when to add node_modules
folders within packages.
This includes a breaking change in config file resolution where we stop
searching for config files on the first found package.json unless it's
in a workspace. For the previous behaviour, the root deno.json needs to
be updated to be a workspace by adding `"workspace":
["./path-to-pkg-json-folder-goes-here"]`. See details in
https://github.com/denoland/deno_config/pull/66
Closes #24340
Closes #24159
Closes #24161
Closes #22020
Closes #18546
Closes #16106
Closes #24160
1. Generally we should prefer to use the `log` crate.
2. I very often accidentally commit `eprintln`s.
When we should use `println` or `eprintln`, it's not too bad to be a bit
more verbose and ignore the lint rule.
A bit hacky, but it works. Essentially, this will check for all the
scripts in the node_modules/.bin directory then force them to run with
Deno via deno_task_shell.
This makes `CliNpmResolver` a trait. The terminology used is:
- **managed** - Deno manages the node_modules folder and does an
auto-install (ex. `ManagedCliNpmResolver`)
- **byonm** - "Bring your own node_modules" (ex. `ByonmCliNpmResolver`,
which is in this PR, but unimplemented at the moment)
Part of #18967
Partially supersedes #19016.
This migrates `spawn` and `spawn_blocking` to `deno_core`, and removes
the requirement for `spawn` tasks to be `Send` given our single-threaded
executor.
While we don't need to technically do anything w/`spawn_blocking`, this
allows us to have a single `JoinHandle` type that works for both cases,
and allows us to more easily experiment with alternative
`spawn_blocking` implementations that do not require tokio (ie: rayon).
Async ops (+~35%):
Before:
```
time 1310 ms rate 763358
time 1267 ms rate 789265
time 1259 ms rate 794281
time 1266 ms rate 789889
```
After:
```
time 956 ms rate 1046025
time 954 ms rate 1048218
time 924 ms rate 1082251
time 920 ms rate 1086956
```
HTTP serve (+~4.4%):
Before:
```
Running 10s test @ http://localhost:4500
2 threads and 10 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 68.78us 19.77us 1.43ms 86.84%
Req/Sec 68.78k 5.00k 73.84k 91.58%
1381833 requests in 10.10s, 167.36MB read
Requests/sec: 136823.29
Transfer/sec: 16.57MB
```
After:
```
Running 10s test @ http://localhost:4500
2 threads and 10 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 63.12us 17.43us 1.11ms 85.13%
Req/Sec 71.82k 3.71k 77.02k 79.21%
1443195 requests in 10.10s, 174.79MB read
Requests/sec: 142921.99
Transfer/sec: 17.31MB
```
Suggested-By: alice@ryhl.io
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This is the initial support for npm and node specifiers in `deno
compile`. The npm packages are included in the binary and read from it via
a virtual file system. This also supports the `--node-modules-dir` flag,
dependencies specified in a package.json, and npm binary commands (ex.
`deno compile --unstable npm:cowsay`)
Closes #16632
This removes `ProcState` and replaces it with a new `CliFactory` which
initializes our "service structs" on demand. This isn't a performance
improvement at the moment for `deno run`, but might unlock performance
improvements in the future.
This is just a straight refactor and I didn't do any cleanup in
ext/node. After this PR we can start to clean it up and make things
private that don't need to be public anymore.
This lazily does an "npm install" when any package name matches what's
found in the package.json or when running a script from package.json
with deno task.
Part of #17916
Closes #17928
This is a super basic initial implementation. We don't create a
`node_modules/.bin` folder at the moment and add it to the PATH like we
should which is necessary to make command name resolution in the
subprocess work properly (ex. you run a script that launches another
script that then tries to launch an "npx command"... this won't work
atm).
Closes #17492