Currently, the documentation makes it sound like the test subcommand's filter
flag could accept some kind of pattern matching value like a glob or a regex,
although the function "createFilterFn" accepts a regex as an argument, there's
no way to pass an actual regex value from the CLI.
This commit makes it possible to pass a string that could be cast as regex
when string matches "^/.*/$".
With this change, a user can use the filter flag as follow:
deno test --filter "/test-.+/"
Also tested that `\` get escaped properly, on MacOS at least, and this is
also a valid flag:
deno test --filter "/test-\d+/"
This commit adds incremental compilation capabilities to internal TS compiler.
Instead of using "ts.createProgram()" API for compilation step (during deno
startup), "ts.createIncrementalProgram()" API is used instead.
Thanks to TS' ".tsbuildinfo" file that already stores all necessary metadata
for compilation I was able to remove our own invention that is ".graph" file.
".tsbuildinfo" file is stored alongside compiled source and is used to
cache-bust outdated dependencies, facilitated by the "version" field.
The value for "version" field is computed in Rust during loading of module
graph and is basically a hash of the file contents.
Please keep in mind that incremental compilation is only used for initial
compilation (or dynamic imports compilation) - bundling and runtime compiler
APIs haven't been changed at all.
Due to problems with source map I changed compilation settings to inline
source map (inlineSourceMap instead of sourceMap).
The following used to fail in Deno despite working in the browser:
```javascript
new Request('http://localhost/', {method: 'POST', body: new URLSearchParams({hello: 'world'})}).text().then(console.log)
```
* refactor "compile" and "runtimeCompile" in "compiler.ts" and factor out
separate methods for "compile" and "bundle" operations
* remove noisy debug output from "compiler.ts"
* provide "Serialize" implementations for enums in "msg.rs"
* rename "analyze_dependencies_and_references" to "pre_process_file" and
move it to "tsc.rs"
* refactor ModuleGraph to use more concrete types and properly annotate
locations where errors occur
* remove dead code from "file_fetcher.rs" - "SourceFile.types_url" is no
longer needed, as type reference parsing is done in "ModuleGraph"
* remove unneeded field "source_path" from ".meta" files stored for
compiled source file (towards #6080)
This commit provides a "system_loader_es5.js" bundle loader which will be added
to the bundle when the target is < ES2017, which is the minimum target syntax
required for "system_loader.js".
Supports #5913 (via Deno.bundle()) with a couple caveats:
* Allowing "deno bundle" to take a different target is not supported, as we
specifically ignore "target" when passed in a TypeScript config file. This is
because deno bundle is really intended to generate bundles that work in Deno.
It is an unintentional side effect that some bundles are loadable in browsers.
* While a target of "es3" will be accepted, the module loader will still only be
compatible with ES5 or later. Realistically no one should be expecting bundles
generated by Deno to be used on IE8 and prior, and there is just too much
"baggage" to support that at this point.
This is a minor variation of 75bb9d, which exposed some sort of internal V8 bug.
Ref #6358
This is 100% authored by Kitson Kelly. Github might change the author when landing
so I'm leaving this in:
Co-authored-by: Kitson Kelly <me@kitsonkelly.com>
This commit provides a "system_loader_es5.js" bundle loader which will be added
to the bundle when the target is < ES2017, which is the minimum target syntax
required for "system_loader.js".
Supports #5913 (via Deno.bundle()) with a couple caveats:
* Allowing "deno bundle" to take a different target is not supported, as we
specifically ignore "target" when passed in a TypeScript config file. This is
because deno bundle is really intended to generate bundles that work in Deno.
It is an unintentional side effect that some bundles are loadable in browsers.
* While a target of "es3" will be accepted, the module loader will still only be
compatible with ES5 or later. Realistically no one should be expecting bundles
generated by Deno to be used on IE8 and prior, and there is just too much
"baggage" to support that at this point.