Closes #25210 .
Removed --unstable-http from being displayed on deno run --help=unstable
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This commit rewrites the internal `version` module that exported
various information about the current executable. Instead of exporting
several consts, we are now exporting a single const structure that
contains all the necessary information.
This is the first step towards cleaning up how we use this information
and should allow us to use SUI to be able to patch this information
in already produced binary making it easier to cut new releases.
---------
Co-authored-by: Divy Srivastava <dj.srivastava23@gmail.com>
Adds a `parallel` flag to `deno serve`. When present, we spawn multiple
workers to parallelize serving requests.
```bash
deno serve --parallel main.ts
```
Currently on linux we use `SO_REUSEPORT` and rely on the fact that the
kernel will distribute connections in a round-robin manner.
On mac and windows, we sort of emulate this by cloning the underlying
file descriptor and passing a handle to each worker. The connections
will not be guaranteed to be fairly distributed (and in practice almost
certainly won't be), but the distribution is still spread enough to
provide a significant performance increase.
---
(Run on an Macbook Pro with an M3 Max, serving `deno.com`
baseline::
```
❯ wrk -d 30s -c 125 --latency http://127.0.0.1:8000
Running 30s test @ http://127.0.0.1:8000
2 threads and 125 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 239.78ms 13.56ms 330.54ms 79.12%
Req/Sec 258.58 35.56 360.00 70.64%
Latency Distribution
50% 236.72ms
75% 248.46ms
90% 256.84ms
99% 268.23ms
15458 requests in 30.02s, 2.47GB read
Requests/sec: 514.89
Transfer/sec: 84.33MB
```
this PR (`with --parallel` flag)
```
❯ wrk -d 30s -c 125 --latency http://127.0.0.1:8000
Running 30s test @ http://127.0.0.1:8000
2 threads and 125 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 117.40ms 142.84ms 590.45ms 79.07%
Req/Sec 1.33k 175.19 1.77k 69.00%
Latency Distribution
50% 22.34ms
75% 223.67ms
90% 357.32ms
99% 460.50ms
79636 requests in 30.07s, 12.74GB read
Requests/sec: 2647.96
Transfer/sec: 433.71MB
```
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
As suggested in
https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/24355#discussion_r1657875422.
I wasn't able to hide the mutex stuff as much as I'd like (ended up just
adding an escape hatch `inner()` method that locks the inner mutex),
because you can't return references to the inner fields through a mutex.
This is mostly motivated by the frozen lockfile changes
Also removes permissions being passed in for node resolution. It was
completely useless because we only checked it for reading package.json
files, but Deno reading package.json files for resolution is perfectly
fine.
My guess is this is also a perf improvement because Deno is doing less
work.
Construct a new module graph container for workers instead of sharing it
with the main worker.
Fixes #17248
Fixes #23461
---------
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@gmail.com>
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.
By default, `deno serve` will assign port 8000 (like `Deno.serve`).
Users may choose a different port using `--port`.
`deno serve /tmp/file.ts`
`server.ts`:
```ts
export default {
fetch(req) {
return new Response("hello world!\n");
},
};
```
This PR enables V8 code cache for ES modules and for `require` scripts
through `op_eval_context`. Code cache artifacts are transparently stored
and fetched using sqlite db and are passed to V8. `--no-code-cache` can
be used to disable.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This commit moves logic of dispatching lifecycle events (
"load", "beforeunload", "unload") to be triggered from Rust.
Before that we were executing scripts from Rust, but now we
are storing references to functions from "99_main.js" and calling
them directly.
Prerequisite for https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/23342
Skips the access check if the specific unary permission is in an
all-granted state. Generally prevents an allocation or two.
Hooks up a quiet "all" permission that is automatically inherited. This
permission will be used in the future to indicate that the user wishes
to accept all side-effects of the permissions they explicitly granted.
The "all" permission is an "ambient flag"-style permission that states
whether "allow-all" was passed on the command-line.
This commit fixes race condition in "node:worker_threads" module were
the first message did a setup of "threadId", "workerData" and
"environmentData".
Now this data is passed explicitly during workers creation and is set up
before any user code is executed.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/22783
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/22672
---------
Co-authored-by: Satya Rohith <me@satyarohith.com>
This introduces the `denort` binary - a slim version of deno without
tooling. The binary is used as the default for `deno compile`.
Improves `deno compile` final size by ~2.5x (141 MB -> 61 MB) on Linux
x86_64.
This commit introduces deprecation warnings for "Deno.*" APIs.
This is gonna be quite noisy, but should tremendously help with user
code updates to ensure
smooth migration to Deno 2.0. The warning is printed at each unique call
site to help quickly
identify where code needs to be adjusted. There's some stack frame
filtering going on to
remove frames that are not useful to the user and would only cause
confusion.
The warning can be silenced using "--quiet" flag or
"DENO_NO_DEPRECATION_WARNINGS" env var.
"Deno.run()" API is now using this warning. Other deprecated APIs will
start warning
in follow up PRs.
Example:
```js
import { runEcho as runEcho2 } from "http://localhost:4545/run/warn_on_deprecated_api/mod.ts";
const p = Deno.run({
cmd: [
Deno.execPath(),
"eval",
"console.log('hello world')",
],
});
await p.status();
p.close();
async function runEcho() {
const p = Deno.run({
cmd: [
Deno.execPath(),
"eval",
"console.log('hello world')",
],
});
await p.status();
p.close();
}
await runEcho();
await runEcho();
for (let i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
await runEcho();
}
await runEcho2();
```
```
$ deno run --allow-read foo.js
Warning
├ Use of deprecated "Deno.run()" API.
│
├ This API will be removed in Deno 2.0. Make sure to upgrade to a stable API before then.
│
├ Suggestion: Use "Deno.Command()" API instead.
│
└ Stack trace:
└─ at file:///Users/ib/dev/deno/foo.js:3:16
hello world
Warning
├ Use of deprecated "Deno.run()" API.
│
├ This API will be removed in Deno 2.0. Make sure to upgrade to a stable API before then.
│
├ Suggestion: Use "Deno.Command()" API instead.
│
└ Stack trace:
├─ at runEcho (file:///Users/ib/dev/deno/foo.js:8:18)
└─ at file:///Users/ib/dev/deno/foo.js:13:7
hello world
Warning
├ Use of deprecated "Deno.run()" API.
│
├ This API will be removed in Deno 2.0. Make sure to upgrade to a stable API before then.
│
├ Suggestion: Use "Deno.Command()" API instead.
│
└ Stack trace:
├─ at runEcho (file:///Users/ib/dev/deno/foo.js:8:18)
└─ at file:///Users/ib/dev/deno/foo.js:14:7
hello world
Warning
├ Use of deprecated "Deno.run()" API.
│
├ This API will be removed in Deno 2.0. Make sure to upgrade to a stable API before then.
│
├ Suggestion: Use "Deno.Command()" API instead.
│
└ Stack trace:
├─ at runEcho (file:///Users/ib/dev/deno/foo.js:8:18)
└─ at file:///Users/ib/dev/deno/foo.js:17:9
hello world
hello world
hello world
hello world
hello world
hello world
hello world
hello world
hello world
hello world
Warning
├ Use of deprecated "Deno.run()" API.
│
├ This API will be removed in Deno 2.0. Make sure to upgrade to a stable API before then.
│
├ Suggestion: Use "Deno.Command()" API instead.
│
├ Suggestion: It appears this API is used by a remote dependency.
│ Try upgrading to the latest version of that dependency.
│
└ Stack trace:
├─ at runEcho (http://localhost:4545/run/warn_on_deprecated_api/mod.ts:2:18)
└─ at file:///Users/ib/dev/deno/foo.js:20:7
hello world
```
Closes #21839
This PR implements the child_process IPC pipe between parent and child.
The implementation uses Windows named pipes created by parent and passes
the inheritable file handle to the child.
I've also replace parts of the initial implementation which passed the
raw parent fd to JS with resource ids instead. This way no file handle
is exposed to the JS land (both parent and child).
`IpcJsonStreamResource` can stream upto 800MB/s of JSON data on Win 11
AMD Ryzen 7 16GB (without `memchr` vectorization)
This PR implements the Node child_process IPC functionality in Deno on
Unix systems.
For `fd > 2` a duplex unix pipe is set up between the parent and child
processes. Currently implements data passing via the channel in the JSON
serialization format.