This commit improves async op sanitizer speed by only delaying metrics
collection if there are pending ops. This
results in a speedup of around 30% for small CPU bound unit tests.
It performs this check and possible delay on every collection now,
fixing an issue with parent test leaks into steps.
This commit adds "deno jupyter" subcommand which
provides a Deno kernel for Jupyter notebooks.
The implementation is mostly based on Deno's REPL and
reuses large parts of it (though there's some clean up that
needs to happen in follow up PRs). Not all functionality of
Jupyter kernel is implemented and some message type
are still not implemented (eg. "inspect_request") but
the kernel is fully working and provides all the capatibilities
that the Deno REPL has; including TypeScript transpilation
and npm packages support.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/13016
---------
Co-authored-by: Adam Powers <apowers@ato.ms>
Co-authored-by: Kyle Kelley <rgbkrk@gmail.com>
This adds the ability to pattern match unordered lines. For example, the
downloading messages may appear in any order
```
[UNORDERED_START]
Download https://localhost:4546/a.ts
Download https://localhost:4546/b.ts
[UNORDERED_END]
Hello!
```
Additionally, I've made the pattern matching slightly more strict and the output better.
Closes #14122.
Adds two extensions to `--allow-run` behaviour:
- When `--allow-run=foo` is specified and `foo` is found in the `PATH`
at startup, `RunDescriptor::Path(which("foo"))` is added to the
allowlist alongside `RunDescriptor::Name("foo")`. Currently only the
latter is.
- When run permission for `foo` is queried and `foo` is found in the
`PATH` at runtime, either `RunDescriptor::Path(which("foo"))` or
`RunDescriptor::Name("foo")` would qualify in the allowlist. Currently
only the latter does.
Disables `BenchContext::start()` and `BenchContext::end()` for low
precision benchmarks (less than 0.01s per iteration). Prints a warning
when they are used in such benchmarks, suggesting to remove them.
```ts
Deno.bench("noop", { group: "noops" }, () => {});
Deno.bench("noop with start/end", { group: "noops" }, (b) => {
b.start();
b.end();
});
```
Before:
```
cpu: 12th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i9-12900K
runtime: deno 1.36.2 (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu)
file:///home/nayeem/projects/deno/temp3.ts
benchmark time (avg) iter/s (min … max) p75 p99 p995
----------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------
noop 2.63 ns/iter 380,674,131.4 (2.45 ns … 27.78 ns) 2.55 ns 4.03 ns 5.33 ns
noop with start and end 302.47 ns/iter 3,306,146.0 (200 ns … 151.2 µs) 300 ns 400 ns 400 ns
summary
noop
115.14x faster than noop with start and end
```
After:
```
cpu: 12th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i9-12900K
runtime: deno 1.36.1 (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu)
file:///home/nayeem/projects/deno/temp3.ts
benchmark time (avg) iter/s (min … max) p75 p99 p995
----------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------
noop 3.01 ns/iter 332,565,561.7 (2.73 ns … 29.54 ns) 2.93 ns 5.29 ns 7.45 ns
noop with start and end 7.73 ns/iter 129,291,091.5 (6.61 ns … 46.76 ns) 7.87 ns 13.12 ns 15.32 ns
Warning start() and end() calls in "noop with start and end" are ignored because it averages less than 0.01s per iteration. Remove them for better results.
summary
noop
2.57x faster than noop with start and end
```
This PR adds a test reporter for the [Test Anything
Protocol](https://testanything.org).
It makes the following implementation decisions:
- No TODO pragma, as there is no such marker in `Deno.test`
- SKIP pragma for `ignore`d tests
- Test steps are treated as TAP14 subtests
- Support for this in consumers seems spotty
- Some consumers will incorrectly interpret these markers, resulting in
unexpected output
- Considering the lack of support, and to avoid implementation
complexity,
subtests are at most one level deep (all test steps are in the same
subtest)
- To accommodate consumers that use comments to indicate test-suites
(unspecced)
- The test module path is output as a comment
- This is disabled for `--parallel` testing
- Failure diagnostics are output as JSON, which is also valid YAML
- The structure is not specified, so the format roughly follows the spec
example:
```
---
message: "Failed with error 'hostname peebles.example.com not found'"
severity: fail
found:
hostname: 'peebles.example.com'
address: ~
wanted:
hostname: 'peebles.example.com'
address: '85.193.201.85'
at:
file: test/dns-resolve.c
line: 142
...
```
The goal of this PR is to address issue #19520 where Deno panics when
encountering an invalid SSL certificate.
This PR achieves that goal by removing an `.expect()` statement and
implementing a match statement on `tsl_config` (found in
[/ext/net/ops_tsl.rs](e071382768/ext/net/ops_tls.rs (L1058)))
to check whether the desired configuration is valid
---------
Co-authored-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.com>
Handles ASCCI espace chars in test and bench name making
test and bench reporting more reliable. This one is also tested
in the fixture of "node:test" module.
This changes the design of the manifest.json file to have a separate
"folders" map for mapping hashed directories. This allows, for example,
to add files in a folder like `http_localhost_8000/#testing_5de71/` and
have them be resolved automatically as long as their remaining
components are identity-mappable to the file system (not hashed). It
also saves space in the manifest.json file by only including the hashed
directory instead of each descendant file.
```
// manifest.json
{
"folders": {
"https://localhost/NOT_MAPPABLE/": "localhost/#not_mappable_5cefgh"
},
"modules": {
"https://localhost/folder/file": {
"headers": {
"content-type": "application/javascript"
}
},
}
}
// folder structure
localhost
- folder
- #file_2defn (note: I've made up the hashes in these examples)
- #not_mappable_5cefgh
- mod.ts
- etc.ts
- more_files.ts
```
This commit adds new "--deny-*" permission flags. These are complimentary to
"--allow-*" flags.
These flags can be used to restrict access to certain resources, even if they
were granted using "--allow-*" flags or the "--allow-all" ("-A") flag.
Eg. specifying "--allow-read --deny-read" will result in a permission error,
while "--allow-read --deny-read=/etc" will allow read access to all FS but the
"/etc" directory.
Runtime permissions APIs ("Deno.permissions") were adjusted as well, mainly
by adding, a new "PermissionStatus.partial" field. This field denotes that
while permission might be granted to requested resource, it's only partial (ie.
a "--deny-*" flag was specified that excludes some of the requested resources).
Eg. specifying "--allow-read=foo/ --deny-read=foo/bar" and then querying for
permissions like "Deno.permissions.query({ name: "read", path: "foo/" })"
will return "PermissionStatus { state: "granted", onchange: null, partial: true }",
denoting that some of the subpaths don't have read access.
Closes #18804.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Nayeem Rahman <nayeemrmn99@gmail.com>
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.
We never properly added support for this. This fixes vendoring when it
has npm or node specifiers. Vendoring occurs by adding a
`"nodeModulesDir": true` property to deno.json then it uses a local
node_modules directory. This can be opted out by setting
`"nodeModulesDir": false` or running with `--node-modules-dir=false`.
Closes #18090
Closes #17210
Closes #17619
Closes #16778
Note: If the package information has already been cached, then this
requires running with `--reload` or for the registry information to be
fetched some other way (ex. the cache busting).
Closes #15544
---------
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
Fixes #18979.
This changes the predicate for allowing `ext:` specifier resolution from
`snapshot_loaded_and_not_snapshotting` to `ext_resolution_allowed` which
is only set to true during the extension module loading phase. Module
loaders as used in core
are now declared as `ExtModuleLoader` rather than `dyn ModuleLoader`.
This commit changes how paths for npm packages are handled,
by canonicalizing them when resolving. This is done so that instead
of returning
"node_modules/<package_name>@<version>/node_modules/<dep>/index.js"
(which is a symlink) we "node_modules/<dep>@<dep_version>/index.js.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/18924
Fixes https://github.com/bluwy/create-vite-extra/issues/31
---------
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@gmail.com>
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.
- Do not use `ReflectHas` in `isNode`.
- Avoid copying handler array when handlers.length == 1
- Avoid searching for path target when path.length == 1
```
Linux divy-2 5.19.0-1022-gcp #24~22.04.1-Ubuntu SMP Sun Apr 23 09:51:08 UTC 2023 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
32GiB System memory
Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU @ 3.10GHz
# main + https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/18904
Msg/sec: 89326.750000
Msg/sec: 90320.000000
Msg/sec: 89576.250000
# this patch
Msg/sec: 97250.000000
Msg/sec: 97125.500000
Msg/sec: 97964.500000
```
This commit refactors "deno_core" to do fewer boundary crossings
from Rust to V8. In other words we are now calling V8 from Rust fewer
times.
This is done by merging 3 distinct callbacks into a single one. Instead
of having "op resolve" callback, "next tick" callback and "macrotask
queue" callback, we now have only "Deno.core.eventLoopTick" callback,
which is responsible for doing the same actions previous 3 callbacks.
On each of the event loop we were doing at least 2 boundary crosses
(timers macrotask queue callback and unhandled promise rejection
callback) and up to 4 crosses if there were op response and next tick
callbacks coming from Node.js compatibility layer. Now this is all done
in a single callback.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/18620
Stores the test/bench functions in rust op state during registration.
The functions are wrapped in JS first so that they return a directly
convertible `TestResult`/`BenchResult`. Test steps are still mostly
handled in JS since they are pretty much invoked by the user. Allows
removing a bunch of infrastructure for communicating between JS and
rust. Allows using rust utilities for things like shuffling tests
(`Vec::shuffle`). We can progressively move op and resource sanitization
to rust as well.
Fixes #17122.
Fixes #17312.
Fixes #6259.
Adds the location for v8 syntax errors to the message (`message += " at
{location}"`) when rethrowing them for dynamic imports.
Discussing with @bartlomieju on discord I proposed just preserving v8's
error and not reconstructing it, allowing the standard stack trace to
just point to the syntax error instead of the dynamic import. But on
further thought this way has parity with SWC's syntax errors + has the
advantage of showing both the syntax error and dynamic import location.
```ts
// temp.js
await import("./temp2.js");
// temp2.js
function foo() {
await Promise.resolve();
}
// Before:
// error: Uncaught (in promise) SyntaxError: Unexpected reserved word
// await import("./temp2.js");
// ^
// at async file:///.../temp.js:1:1
// After:
// error: Uncaught (in promise) SyntaxError: Unexpected reserved word at file:///.../temp2.js:2:3
// await import("./temp2.js");
// ^
// at async file:///.../temp.js:1:1
```
This reloads an npm package's dependency's information when a
version/version req/tag is not found.
This PR applies only to dependencies of npm packages. It does NOT yet
cause npm specifiers to have their dependency information cache busted.
That requires a different solution, but this should help cache bust in
more scenarios.
Part of #16901, but doesn't close it yet
Turns out `autoprefixer` is a better reproduction case then
`microbundle`.
Fixes #18535
Fixes #18600
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
1. Rewrites the tests to be more back and forth rather than getting the
output all at once (which I believe was causing the hangs on linux and
maybe mac)
2. Runs the pty tests on the linux ci.
3. Fixes a bunch of tests that were just wrong.
4. Adds timeouts on the pty tests.
This PR changes the inspect result of anonymous functions from
`[Function]` to `[Function (anonymous)]`. This behavior is aligned
to `util.inspect` of Node.js.
Moving some code around in `ext/node` is it's a bit better well defined
and makes it possible for others to embed it.
I expect to see no difference in startup perf with this change.
This commit adds support for spawning Web Workers in self-contained
binaries created with "deno compile" subcommand.
As long as module requested in "new Worker" constructor is part of the
eszip (by means of statically importing it beforehand, or using "--include"
flag), then the worker can be spawned.
This change will enable dynamic imports and web workers to use modules
not reachable from the main module, by passing a list of extra side
module roots as options to `deno compile`.
This can be done by specifying "--include" flag that accepts a file path or a
URL. This flag can be specified multiple times, to include several modules.
The modules specified with "--include" flag, will be added to the produced
"eszip".
This PR _**temporarily**_ removes WebGPU (which has behind the
`--unstable` flag in Deno), due to performance complications due to its
presence.
It will be brought back in the future; as a point of reference, Chrome
will ship WebGPU to stable on 26/04/2023.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This commit changes "deno_core" to not rely on implicitly calling
"std::env::current_dir()" when resolving module specifiers using
APIs from "deno_core::modules_specifier".
Supersedes https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/15454
Creating the node_modules folder when the packages are already
downloaded can take a bit of time and not knowing what is going on can
be confusing. It's better to show a progress bar.
This commit renames "deno_core::InternalModuleLoader" to
"ExtModuleLoader" and changes the specifiers used by the
modules loaded from this loader to "ext:".
"internal:" scheme was really ambiguous and it's more characters than
"ext:", which should result in slightly smaller snapshot size.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/18020
We use information about build in several extension crates like
"ext/node" or "runtime/". In an effort to move "fs" APIs to a separate
crate it is a prerequisite to have this information available outside
of the "runtime/" crate.
This commit moves definition of "build" object to "Deno.core" that is
later forwarded to "Deno.build".
This commit changes "include_js_files!" macro from "deno_core"
in a way that "dir" option doesn't cause specifiers to be rewritten
to include it.
Example:
```
include_js_files! {
dir "js",
"hello.js",
}
```
The above definition required embedders to use:
`import ... from "internal:<ext_name>/js/hello.js"`.
But with this change, the "js" directory in which the files are stored
is an implementation detail, which for embedders results in:
`import ... from "internal:<ext_name>/hello.js"`.
The directory the files are stored in, is an implementation detail and
in some cases might result in a significant size difference for the
snapshot. As an example, in "deno_node" extension, we store the
source code in "polyfills" directory; which resulted in each specifier
to look like "internal:deno_node/polyfills/<module_name>", but with
this change it's "internal:deno_node/<module_name>".
Given that "deno_node" has over 100 files, many of them having
several import specifiers to the same extension, this change removes
10 characters from each import specifier.
denoland/eszip#115 added support for statically-analyzed dynamic imports
in eszip, which made `deno compile` support dynamic imports starting
from #17858. This PR adds a test for it.
----
This test is adapted from PR #17663.
Closes #17908
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