This makes the implementation of "AsyncLocalStorage" from
"node:async_hooks" 3.5x faster than before for noop benchmark
(measuring baseline overhead). It's still 3.5x slower than not
using `AsyncLocalStorage` and 1.64x slower than using
noop promise hooks.
This commit stabilizes "Deno.serve()", which becomes the
preferred way to create HTTP servers in Deno.
Documentation was adjusted for each overload of "Deno.serve()"
API and the API always binds to "127.0.0.1:8000" by default.
This PR changes Web IDL interfaces to be declared with `var` instead of
`class`, so that accessing them via `globalThis` does not raise type
errors.
Closes #13390.
Fixes #19687 by adding a rejection handler to the write inside the
setTimeout. There is a small window where the promise is actually not
awaited and may reject without a handler.
Implementation of generics for `#[op2]`, along with some refactoring to
improve the ergonomics of ops with generics parameters:
- The ops have generics on the struct rather than the associated
methods, which allows us to trait-ify ops (impossible when they are on
the methods)
- The decl() method can become a trait-associated const field which
unlocks future optimizations
Callers of ops need to switch from:
`op_net_connect_tcp::call::<TestPermission>(conn_state, ip_addr)` to
`op_net_connect_tcp::<TestPermission>::call(conn_state, ip_addr)`.
Fixes the WPT tests that test w/invalid codes. Also explicitly ignoring
some h2 tests to hopefully prevent flakes.
The previous changes to WebSocketStream introduced a bug where the close
errors were not made available if the `pull` method was re-entrant.
This is a fix for issue #19644, concerning the `parseCssColor` function
in the file `ext/console/01_console.js`. Changes made on lines
2756-2758. To sum it up:
> The internal `parseCssColor` function currently parses 3/4-digit hex
colors incorrectly. For example, it parses the string `#FFFFFF` as
`[255, 255, 255]` (as expected), but returns `[240, 240, 240]` for
`#FFF`, when it should return the same triplet as the former.
While it's not going to cause a fatal runtime error, it did bug me
enough to fix it real quick.
…nclusion" (#19519)"
This reverts commit 28a4f3d0f5.
This change causes failures when used outside Deno repo:
```
============================================================
Deno has panicked. This is a bug in Deno. Please report this
at https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/new.
If you can reliably reproduce this panic, include the
reproduction steps and re-run with the RUST_BACKTRACE=1 env
var set and include the backtrace in your report.
Platform: linux x86_64
Version: 1.34.3+b37b286
Args: ["/opt/hostedtoolcache/deno/0.0.0-b37b286f7fa68d5656f7c180f6127bdc38cf2cf5/x64/deno", "test", "--doc", "--unstable", "--allow-all", "--coverage=./cov"]
thread 'main' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: Failed to read "/home/runner/work/deno/deno/core/00_primordials.js"
Caused by:
No such file or directory (os error 2)', core/runtime/jsruntime.rs:699:8
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
```
Relands #19463. This time the `ExtensionFileSourceCode` enum is
preserved, so this effectively just splits feature
`include_js_for_snapshotting` into `exclude_js_sources` and
`runtime_js_sources`, adds a `force_include_js_sources` option on
`extension!()`, and unifies `ext::Init_ops_and_esm()` and
`ext::init_ops()` into `ext::init()`.
This is a new op system that will eventually replace `#[op]`.
Features
- More maintainable, generally less-coupled code
- More modern Rust proc-macro libraries
- Enforces correct `fast` labelling for fast ops, allowing for visual
scanning of fast ops
- Explicit marking of `#[string]`, `#[serde]` and `#[smi]` parameters.
This first version of op2 supports integer and Option<integer>
parameters only, and allows us to start working on converting ops and
adding features.
The WHATWG DOM specification has corrected the spelling of "slotable" to
"slottable".[1] This commit aligns our implementation accordingly.
[1]: https://github.com/whatwg/dom/pull/845
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>
`ZeroCopyBuf` was convenient to use, but sometimes it did hide details
that some copies were necessary in certain cases. Also it made it way to easy
for the caller to pass around and convert into different values. This commit
splits `ZeroCopyBuf` into `JsBuffer` (an array buffer coming from V8) and
`ToJsBuffer` (a Rust buffer that will be converted into a V8 array buffer).
As a result some magical conversions were removed (they were never used)
limiting the API surface and preparing for changes in #19534.
Fixes a bug I noticed when deriving a key based from `ECDH`. Similar
issue is also mentioned in #14693, where they derive a key using
`PBKDF2`
- In the WebCrypto API, `deriveKey()` is equivalent to `deriveBits()`
followed by `importKey()`
- But, `deriveKey()` requires just `deriveKey` in the `usages` of the
`baseKey` parameter. The `deriveBits` usage is not required to be
allowed. This is the uniform behaviour in Node, Chrome and Firefox.
- The impl currently has userland-accessible `SubtleCrypto.deriveKey()`
and `SubtleCrypto.deriveBits()`, as well as an internal `deriveBits()`
(this is the one that accesses the ffi).
- Also, `SubtleCrypto.deriveKey()` checks if `deriveKey` is an allowed
usage and `SubtleCrypto.deriveBits()` checks if `deriveBits` is an
allowed usage, as required.
- However, the impl currently calls the userland accessible
`SubtleCrypto.deriveBits()` in `SubtleCrypto.deriveKey()`, leading to an
error being thrown if the `deriveBits` usage isn't present.
- Fixed this by making it call the internal `deriveBits()`
instead.