When a cron name is invalid, it wasn't necessarily clear why. This
change-set improves the error message to inform the user of the valid
characters in a cron name.
Originally landed in
f6fd6619e7.
Reverted in https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/24574.
This reland contains a fix that sends "Accept: */*" header for calls made
from "FileFetcher". Absence of this header made downloading source code
from JSR broken. This is tested by ensuring this header is present in the
test server that servers JSR packages.
---------
Co-authored-by: Sean McArthur <sean@seanmonstar.com>
This makes bare specifiers for npm packages work when inside a
workspace, which emulates the same behaviour as when there's a
node_modules directory. The bare specifier can be overwritten by
specifying an import map entry or package.json dependency entry.
* https://github.com/denoland/deno_config/pull/88
Closes #24605
Use `access` on *nix and `GetFileAttributesW` on Windows.
[Benchmark](https://paste.divy.work/p/-gq8Ark.js):
```
$ deno run -A bench.mjs # main (568dd)
existsSync: 8980.636629ms
$ target/release/deno run -A bench.mjs # this PR
existsSync: 6448.7604519999995ms
$ bun bench.mjs
existsSync: 6562.88671ms
$ node bench.mjs
existsSync: 7740.064653ms
```
Ref https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/24434#discussion_r1679777912
This makes it easier to tell what kind of error something is (even for
deeply nested errors) and will help in the future once we add error
codes to the JS errors this returns.
This commit re-implements `ext/fetch` and all dependent crates
using `hyper` and `hyper-util`, instead of `reqwest`.
The reasoning is that we want to have greater control and access
to low level `hyper` APIs when implementing `fetch` API as well
as `node:http` module.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Ensure that the prefix is properly adjusted when dealing with IPv4
addresses mapped to IPv6. This fixes inconsistencies in network
range calculations for mapped addresses.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/24525
Reason is that `e` may contain an invalid package target nested deeply
in the returned errors. We should probably add a `.code()` to all errors
to make matching easier or make the errors flatter.
NPM inserts a default install script when a package has a `binding.gyp`
file.
It's possible, however, for the package to exclude the `binding.gyp`
file when they publish, and in this case the install script will never
succeed for a user of the package.
This happens with `fsevents`, for instance. They don't include the
`binding.gyp` file in their published tarball, but the default install
script appears in the manifest served by `npm`.
This causes us to warn that `fsevents` has an install script, but when
you try to run it it fails due to `binding.gyp` not existing.
This is a temporary fix, which is not perfect - specifying
`--import-map`
will break resolution of packages defined in `workspace` setting, but
erroring on `--import-map` currently causes regression in code that
worked fine in v1.44.x.
Previously when we printed out the packages that skipped install
scripts, we didn't prefix them with `npm:`. When you pass
`--allow-scripts` though, we require `npm:`, which means you can't just
copy paste the package name from the warning message.
This PR stubs `perf_hooks.eventLoopUtilization` to make the tests of
[hapi](https://github.com/hapijs/hapi) start. Previously, they'd all
error because of this function throwing a not implemented error. This
brings down the test failures in their suite from 982 to 68 failures.