This commit adds granular `--unstable-*` flags:
- "--unstable-broadcast-channel"
- "--unstable-ffi"
- "--unstable-fs"
- "--unstable-http"
- "--unstable-kv"
- "--unstable-net"
- "--unstable-worker-options"
- "--unstable-cron"
These flags are meant to replace a "catch-all" flag - "--unstable", that
gives a binary control whether unstable features are enabled or not. The
downside of this flag that allowing eg. Deno KV API also enables the FFI
API (though the latter is still gated with a permission).
These flags can also be specified in `deno.json` file under `unstable`
key.
Currently, "--unstable" flag works the same way - I will open a follow
up PR that will print a warning when using "--unstable" and suggest to use
concrete "--unstable-*" flag instead. We plan to phase out "--unstable"
completely in Deno 2.
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`.
To fix bugs around detection of when node emulation is required, we will
just eagerly initialize it. The improvements we make to reduce the
impact of the startup time:
- [x] Process stdin/stdout/stderr are lazily created
- [x] node.js global proxy no longer allocates on each access check
- [x] Process checks for `beforeExit` listeners before doing expensive
shutdown work
- [x] Process should avoid adding global event handlers until listeners
are added
Benchmarking this PR (`89de7e1ff`) vs main (`41cad2179`)
```
12:36 $ third_party/prebuilt/mac/hyperfine --warmup 100 -S none './deno-41cad2179 run ./empty.js' './deno-89de7e1ff run ./empty.js'
Benchmark 1: ./deno-41cad2179 run ./empty.js
Time (mean ± σ): 24.3 ms ± 1.6 ms [User: 16.2 ms, System: 6.0 ms]
Range (min … max): 21.1 ms … 29.1 ms 115 runs
Benchmark 2: ./deno-89de7e1ff run ./empty.js
Time (mean ± σ): 24.0 ms ± 1.4 ms [User: 16.3 ms, System: 5.6 ms]
Range (min … max): 21.3 ms … 28.6 ms 126 runs
```
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/20142
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/15826
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/20028
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 addresses issue #19918.
## Issue description
Event messages have the wrong isTrusted value when they are not
triggered by user interaction, which differs from the browser. In
particular, all MessageEvents created by Deno have isTrusted set to
false, even though it should be true.
This is my first ever contribution to Deno, so I might be missing
something.
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 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
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 commit changes how data required to bootstrap main and worker
runtime is serialized.
Instead of relying on serde_v8 and using JSON object,
we're doing manual serialization to a "v8::Array". This limits number
of V8 strings that need to be serialized by 16.
It also made it clear that some data could be obtained during
snapshotting instead of during bootstrap.
Since we can preserve ops in the snapshot these days, we no longer
need to have "Deno[Deno.internal].nodeUnstable" namespace.
Instead, various built-in Node.js modules can use appropriate APIs
directly.
This commit adds unstable "Deno.openKv()" API that allows to open
a key-value database at a specified path.
---------
Co-authored-by: Luca Casonato <hello@lcas.dev>
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
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 how "unload" event is handled - before
this commit an event listener was added unconditionally in
the runtime bootstrapping function, which for some reason was
very expensive (0.3ms). Instead of adding an event listener,
a check was added to "dispatchEvent" function that performs
the same action (so it's only called if there's an event dispatched).
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
This commit moves some of the code from "99_main.js" to
be executed during the snapshot time instead of on each
worker bootstrap. These should minimally help with startup
time benchmark.