Improves #19100
Fixes #20356
Replaces #20428
Changes made in deno_core to support this:
- [x] Errors must be handled in setTimeout callbacks
- [x] Microtask ordering is not-quite-right
- [x] Timer cancellation must be checked right before dispatch
- [x] Timer sanitizer
- [x] Move high-res timer to deno_core
- [x] Timers need opcall tracing
Updates dependent crates which includes an investigation fix by @irbull
in Deno's LSP when linting code. Huge thanks to Ian for tracking down
this issue.
Also includes Divy's deno_graph executor change, which reduces memory
usage when loading jsr specifiers and makes them faster.
Co-authored-by: irbull <irbull@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: littledivy <littledivy@users.noreply.github.com>
When using a prefix or suffix containing an invalid filename character,
it's not entirely clear where the errors come from. We make these errors
more consistent across platforms.
In addition, all permission prompts for tempfile and tempdir were
printing the same API name.
We also take the opportunity to make the tempfile random space larger by
2x (using a base32-encoded u64 rather than a hex-encoded u32).
This changes the lockfile to not store JSR specifiers in the "remote"
section. Instead a single JSR integrity is stored per package in the
lockfile, which is a hash of the version's `x.x.x_meta.json` file, which
contains hashes for every file in the package. The hashes in this file
are then compared against when loading.
Additionally, when using `{ "vendor": true }` in a deno.json, the files
can be modified without causing lockfile errors—the checksum is only
checked when copying into the vendor folder and not afterwards
(eventually we should add this behaviour for non-jsr specifiers as
well). As part of this change, the `vendor` folder creation is not
always automatic in the LSP and running an explicit cache command is
necessary. The code required to track checksums in the LSP would have
been too complex for this PR, so that all goes through deno_graph now.
The vendoring is still automatic when running from the CLI.
Note: tests are not the only part of the codebase that uses `std`. Other
parts, like `tools/`, do too. So, it could be argued that this is a
little misleading. Either way, I'm doing this as discussed with
@mmastrac.
This looks like a massive PR, but it's only a move from cli/tests ->
tests, and updates of relative paths for files.
This is the first step towards aggregate all of the integration test
files under tests/, which will lead to a set of integration tests that
can run without the CLI binary being built.
While we could leave these tests under `cli`, it would require us to
keep a more complex directory structure for the various test runners. In
addition, we have a lot of complexity to ignore various test files in
the `cli` project itself (cargo publish exclusion rules, autotests =
false, etc).
And finally, the `tests/` folder will eventually house the `test_ffi`,
`test_napi` and other testing code, reducing the size of the root repo
directory.
For easier review, the extremely large and noisy "move" is in the first
commit (with no changes -- just a move), while the remainder of the
changes to actual files is in the second commit.
Removes the `FileFetcher`'s internal cache because I don't believe it's
necessary (we already cache this kind of stuff in places like deno_graph
or config files in different places). Removing it fixes this bug because
this functionality was already implemented in deno_graph and lowers
memory usage of the CLI a little bit.
This PR separates integration tests from CLI tests into a new project
named `cli_tests`. This is a prerequisite for an integration test runner
that can work with either the CLI binary in the current project, or one
that is built ahead of time.
## Background
Rust does not have the concept of artifact dependencies yet
(https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/issues/9096). Because of this, the
only way we can ensure a binary is built before running associated tests
is by hanging tests off the crate with the binary itself.
Unfortunately this means that to run those tests, you _must_ build the
binary and in the case of the deno executable that might be a 10 minute
wait in release mode.
## Implementation
To allow for tests to run with and without the requirement that the
binary is up-to-date, we split the integration tests into a project of
their own. As these tests would not require the binary to build itself
before being run as-is, we add a stub integration `[[test]]` target in
the `cli` project that invokes these tests using `cargo test`.
The stub test runner we add has `harness = false` so that we can get
access to a `main` function. This `main` function's sole job is to
`execvp` the command `cargo test -p deno_cli`, effectively "calling"
another cargo target.
This ensures that the deno executable is always correctly rebuilt before
running the stub test runner from `cli`, and gets us closer to be able
to run the entire integration test suite on arbitrary deno executables
(and therefore split the build into multiple phases).
The new `cli_tests` project lives within `cli` to avoid a large PR. In
later PRs, the test data will be split from the `cli` project. As there
are a few thousand files, it'll be better to do this as a completely
separate PR to avoid noise.
This moves the op sanitizer descriptions into Rust code and prepares for
eventual op import from `ext:core/ops`. We cannot import these ops from
`ext:core/ops` as the testing infrastructure ops are not always present.
Changes:
- Op descriptions live in `cli` code and are currently accessible via an
op for the older sanitizer code
- `phf` dep moved to workspace root so we can use it here
- `ops.op_XXX` changed to to `op_XXX` to prepare for op imports later
on.
Migrations:
- Error registration no longer required for Interrupted or BadResource
(these are core exception)
- `include_js_files!`/`ExtensionFileSource` changes
Introduces the first cppgc backed Resource into Deno.
This fixes the memory leak when using `X509Certificate`
**Comparison**:
```js
import { X509Certificate } from 'node:crypto';
const r = Deno.readFileSync('cli/tests/node_compat/test/fixtures/keys/agent1-cert.pem');
setInterval(() => {
for (let i = 0; i < 10000; i++) {
const cert = new X509Certificate(r);
}
}, 1000);
```
Memory usage after 5 secs
`main`: 1692MB
`cppgc`: peaks at 400MB
Part 1 of #21713
Changes:
- Remove `.present()` and add a `presentGPUCanvasContext` (not exposed
yet to users)
- Move lazy load logic to `00_init.js`. This can be used to use webgpu
on-demand from future code (OffScreenCanvas)
Main change is that:
- "hyper" has been renamed to "hyper_v014" to signal that it's legacy
- "hyper1" has been renamed to "hyper" and should be the default
Bumped versions for 1.39.0
Please ensure:
- [x] Target branch is correct (`vX.XX` if a patch release, `main` if
minor)
- [x] Crate versions are bumped correctly
- [x] deno_std version is incremented in the code (see
`cli/deno_std.rs`)
- [x] Releases.md is updated correctly (think relevancy and remove
reverts)
To make edits to this PR:
```shell
git fetch upstream release_1_39.0 && git checkout -b release_1_39.0 upstream/release_1_39.0
```
cc @mmastrac
---------
Co-authored-by: mmastrac <mmastrac@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.com>
This commit brings back usage of primordials in "40_testing.js" by
turning it back into an ES module and using new "lazy loading" functionality
of ES modules coming from "deno_core".
The same approach was applied to "40_jupyter.js".
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Landing changes required for
https://github.com/denoland/deno_core/pull/359
We needed to update 99_main.js and a whole load of tests.
API changes:
- setPromiseRejectCallback becomes setUnhandledPromiseRejectionHandler.
The function is now called from eventLoopTick.
- The promiseRejectMacrotaskCallback no longer exists, as this is
automatically handled in eventLoopTick.
- ops.op_dispatch_exception now takes a second parameter: in_promise.
The preferred way to call this op is now reportUnhandledException or
reportUnhandledPromiseRejection.
This commit adds support for a new `kv.watch()` method that allows
watching for changes to a key-value pair. This is useful for cases
where you want to be notified when a key-value pair changes, but
don't want to have to poll for changes.
---------
Co-authored-by: losfair <zhy20000919@hotmail.com>
Rust 1.74 may have made this code temporarily valid in [#113126 Replace
old private-in-public diagnostic with type privacy
lints](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/113126), so we didn't
catch it at build time.
It fails in 1.73 and +nightly, however.
Fixes #21121 and #19498
Migrates fully to rustls_tokio_stream. We no longer need to maintain our
own TlsStream implementation to properly support duplex.
This should fix a number of errors with TLS and websockets, HTTP and
"other" places where it's failing.
We only want one zlib dependency.
Zlib dependencies are reorganized so they use a hidden
`__vendored_zlib_ng` flag in cli that enables zlib-ng for both libz-sys
(used by ext/node) and flate2 (used by deno_web).
This is the release commit being forwarded back to main for 1.38.1
Co-authored-by: Divy Srivastava <dj.srivastava23@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: littledivy <littledivy@users.noreply.github.com>
We can move all promise ID knowledge to deno_core, allowing us to better
experiment with promise implementation in deno_core.
`{un,}refOpPromise(promise)` is equivalent to
`{un,}refOp(promise[promiseIdSymbol])`
Remove tokio-rustls as a direct dependency of Deno and refactor
test_server to reduce code duplication.
All tcp and tls listener paths go through the same streams now, with the
exception of the simpler Hyper http-only handlers (those can be done in
a later follow-up).
Minor bugs fixed:
- gRPC server should only serve h2
- WebSocket over http/2 had a port overlap
- Restored missing eye-catchers for some servers (still missing on Hyper
ones)
Implements `WebSocket` over http/2. This requires a conformant http/2
server supporting the extended connect protocol.
Passes approximately 100 new WPT tests (mostly `?wpt_flags=h2` versions
of existing websockets APIs).
This is implemented as a fallback when http/1.1 fails, so a server that
supports both h1 and h2 WebSockets will still end up on the http/1.1
upgrade path.
The patch also cleas up the websockets handshake to split it up into
http, https+http1 and https+http2, making it a little less intertwined.
This uncovered a likely bug in the WPT test server:
https://github.com/web-platform-tests/wpt/issues/42896
This PR adds unstable `Deno.cron` API to trigger execution of cron jobs.
* State: All cron state is in memory. Cron jobs are scheduled according
to the cron schedule expression and the current time. No state is
persisted to disk.
* Time zone: Cron expressions specify time in UTC.
* Overlapping executions: not permitted. If the next scheduled execution
time occurs while the same cron job is still executing, the scheduled
execution is skipped.
* Retries: failed jobs are automatically retried until they succeed or
until retry threshold is reached. Retry policy can be optionally
specified using `options.backoffSchedule`.
Use new https://github.com/denoland/rustls-tokio-stream project instead
of tokio-rustls for direct websocket connections. This library was
written from the ground up to be more reliable and should help with
various bugs that may occur due to underlying bugs in the old library.
Believed to fix #20355, #18977, #20948
This commit updates the ext/kv module to use the denokv_* crates for
the protocol and the sqlite backend. This also fixes a couple of bugs in
the sqlite backend, and updates versionstamps to be updated less
linearly.
Adds an experimental unstable built-in package manager to Deno, but it is
currently not usable because the registry infrastructure hasn't been
setup and it points to a non-existent url by default. The default
registry url can be configured via the `DENO_REGISTRY_URL` environment
variable.
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 commit improves compatibility of "node:http2" module by polyfilling
"connect" method and "ClientHttp2Session" class. Basic operations like
streaming, header and trailer handling are working correctly.
Refing/unrefing is still a TODO and "npm:grpc-js/grpc" is not yet working
correctly.
---------
Co-authored-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.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.
This PR implements a graceful shutdown API for Deno.serve, allowing all
current connections to drain from the server before shutting down, while
preventing new connections from being started or new transactions on
existing connections from being created.
We split the cancellation handle into two parts: a listener handle, and
a connection handle. A graceful shutdown cancels the listener only,
while allowing the connections to drain. The connection handle aborts
all futures. If the listener handle is cancelled, we put the connections
into graceful shutdown mode, which disables keep-alive on http/1.1 and
uses http/2 mechanisms for http/2 connections.
In addition, we now guarantee that all connections are complete or
cancelled, and all resources are cleaned up when the server `finished`
promise resolves -- we use a Rust-side server refcount for this.
Performance impact: does not appear to affect basic serving performance
by more than 1% (~126k -> ~125k)
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This allows us to opt in to extremely detailed tracing from dependency
libraries, like so:
```
cargo run --features tracing/log,tracing/max_level_trace -- test --log-level=trace -A --unstable ./cli/tests/unit/serve_test.ts
```
It will not impact normal operation as it requires the
`tracing/max_level_trace` and `tracing/log` to be active.
Note that tracing is already a dependency -- this just makes it a direct
dep of cli so we can access its features more easily.
This patch adds a `remote` backend for `ext/kv`. This supports
connection to Deno Deploy and potentially other services compatible with
the KV Connect protocol.
This commit moves `snapshot_from_lockfile` function to [deno_npm
crate](https://github.com/denoland/deno_npm). This allows this function
to be called outside Deno CLI (in particular, Deno Deploy).
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 bumps `async-compression` dependency in `deno_http` to latest, in
order to avoid having multiple duplicate versions.
Related, it also unpin a stale `flate2` dependency so that the whole
chain of `async-compression` -> `flate2` -> `miniz_oxide` can surface up
to current versions.
The lockfile entries for all of the above crates have been update
accordingly; the new tree of dependencies looks like this:
```
$ cargo tree -i -p miniz_oxide
miniz_oxide v0.7.1
└── flate2 v1.0.26
└── async-compression v0.4.1
```
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.
This commit adds ability to print metrics of the Tokio
runtime to the console by passing "DENO_TOKIO_METRICS=1"
env var.
Metrics will be printed every second, but this can be changed
by "DENO_TOKIO_METRICS_INTERVAL=500" env var.