This commit starts splitting out the deno_web op crate into multiple
smaller crates. This commit splits out WebIDL and URL API, but in the
future I want to split out each spec into its own crate. That means we
will have (in rough order of loading): `webidl`, `dom`, `streams`,
`console`, `encoding`, `url`, `file`, `fetch`, `websocket`, and
`webgpu` crates.
This commit rewrites implementation of "JsRuntime::mod_evaluate".
Event loop is no longer polled automatically and users must manually
drive event loop forward after calling "mod_evaluate".
Co-authored-by: Nayeem Rahman <nayeemrmn99@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This commit updates implementation of import maps to
align it to current revision of the spec.
Existing tests were removed in favor of using suite from
WPT.
This commit changes formatting of JS errors; by not showing
source lines for internal code. Where possible, instead using
the top stack frame associated with user code i.e. the first
location that is colourful and not a "deno:" URL.
This commit makes "Deno.link" and "Deno.linkSync" stable.
The permission required has been changed to read-write to
ensure one cannot escape the sandbox.
This commit adds support for type definitions in "deno doc";
with this change "deno doc" is able to leverage the same directives
as TS compiler.
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This commit adds a new subcommand called "coverage"
which can generate code coverage reports to stdout in
multiple formats from code coverage profiles collected to disk.
Currently this supports outputting a pretty printed diff and
the lcov format for interoperability with third-party services and tools.
Code coverage is still collected via other subcommands
that run and collect code coverage such as
"deno test --coverage=<directory>" but that command no
longer prints a pretty printed report at the end of a test
run with coverage collection enabled.
The restrictions on which files that can be reported on has
also been relaxed and are fully controllable with the include
and exclude regular expression flags on the coverage subcommand.
Co-authored-by: Luca Casonato <lucacasonato@yahoo.com>
This commit removes redundant "--reload" args because "util::deno_cmd"
recreates "DENO_DIR".
This commit also fixes ta_reload in integration tests to actually test reload.
This adds an exit sanitizer to ensure that code being tested or
dependencies of that code can't accidentally call "Deno.exit"
leading to partial test runs and false results.
This commit rewrites "JsRuntime::poll" function to fix a corner case that
might caused "overflown_response" to be overwritten by other overflown response.
The logic has been changed to allow returning multiple overflown response
alongside responses from shared queue.
This PR deprecates the "--ts"/"-T" flag of "deno eval" (which will later be removed in 2.0)
and introduces "--ext" which is used by "deno fmt" for content type selection.
This is to ensure we have a single flag that can be used across subcommands
to select the language (JS/TS).
Currently if WebSocket is closed without code, it will error
while on Chrome it would close with code 1005 instead.
Co-authored-by: crowlKats <13135287+crowlKats@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit adds support for formatting JSON and JSONC
in "deno fmt".
New values "json" and "jsonc" are added to "--ext" flag for
standard input processing.
This commit adds support for loading import maps from URLs,
both remote and local.
This feature is supported in CLI flag as well as in runtime
compiler API.
This PR makes json_op_sync/async generic to all Deserialize/Serialize types
instead of the loosely-typed serde_json::Value. Since serde_json::Value
implements Deserialize/Serialize, very little existing code needs to be updated,
however as json_op_sync/async are now generic, type inference is broken in some
cases (see cli/build.rs:146). I've found this reduces a good bit of boilerplate,
as seen in the updated deno_core examples.
This change may also reduce serialization and deserialization overhead as serde
has a better idea of what types it is working with. I am currently working on
benchmarks to confirm this and I will update this PR with my findings.
When we migrated away from all the locks, there was a regression that
was not caught immediately. The tsc::get_asset() would attempt to modify
the snapshot, but the problem was that the snapshot was a .clone() of
the inner language server's assets, which meant that modifications to
that where lost. When we then attempted to do a hover on those assets,
the inner language servers assets didn't have the retrieved asset, and
therefore would throw an error.
Commit 2828690fc ("fix(lsp): fix deadlocks, use one big mutex") from
last month introduced a regression in asset cache lookups where results
of lazy caching were lost due to operating on a copy of the asset cache.
This commit fixes that by copying the asset from the copy to the real
cache.
The mutex was used to hide the fact that the Sources object mutates
itself when it's queried. Be honest about that and mark everything that
directly or indirectly mutates it as `mut`.
This is a follow-up to commit 2828690fc7
from last month ("fix(lsp): fix deadlocks, use one big mutex (#9271)")
Include the lower-level error message in the generic error message.
No test because I can't actually make it fail by passing it bad PEM.
I checked and `reqwest::Certificate::from_pem()` always returns `Ok()`.
Fixes #9364.
This removes the std folder from the tree.
Various parts of the tests are pretty tightly dependent
on std (47 direct imports and 75 indirect imports, not
counting the cli tests that use them as fixtures) so I've
added std as a submodule for now.
This commit reorganises cli/tests/integration_tests.rs.
All integration tests had been moved into integration module,
which allows to run only integration tests by "cargo test integration".
Additionally some tests were further grouped under nested modules
like "inspector", "file_watcher" or "repl".
This commits makes use of source maps and the original source
when printing lacking line coverage in the pretty printer.
Only the executable lines are checked as before (as non-executable
lines will always be ignored anyways). The lines then mapped to the
appropriate source line when a source map is present.
The LSP code had numerous places where competing threads could take out
out locks in different orders, making it very prone to deadlocks.
This commit sidesteps the entire issue by switching to a single lock.
The above is a little white lie: the Sources struct still uses a mutex
internally to avoid having to boil the ocean (because being honest about
what it does involves changing all its methods to `&mut self` but that
ripples out extensively...) I'll save that one for another day.