This PR introduces the ability to exclude certain paths from the file watcher
in Deno. This is particularly useful when running scripts in watch mode,
as it allows developers to prevent unnecessary restarts when changes are
made to files that do not affect the running script, or when executing
scripts that generate new files which results in an infinite restart
loop.
---------
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@gmail.com>
In preparation for upcoming changes to `deno install` in Deno 2.
If `-g` or `--global` flag is not provided a warning will be emitted:
```
⚠️ `deno install` behavior will change in Deno 2. To preserve the current behavior use `-g` or `--global` flag.
```
The same will happen for `deno uninstall` - unless `-g`/`--global` flag
is provided
a warning will be emitted.
Towards https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/23062
---------
Signed-off-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit changes "deno init" subcommand to use "jsr:" specifier for
standard library "assert" module. It is unversioned, but we will change
it to `@^1` once `@std/assert` release version 1.0.
This allows us to start decoupling `deno` and `deno_std` release. The
release scripts have been updated to take that into account.
Fixes #23053.
Two small bugs here:
- the existing condition for printing out the group header was broken.
it worked in the reproducer (in the issue above) without filtering only
by accident, due to setting `self.has_ungrouped = true` once we see the
warmup bench. Knowing that we sort benchmarks to put ungrouped benches
first, there are only two cases: 1) we are starting the first group 2)
we are ending the previous group and starting a new group
- when you passed `--filter` we were applying that filter to the warmup
bench (which is not visible to users), so we suffered from jit bias if
you were filtering (unless your filter was `<warmup>`)
TLDR;
Running
```bash
deno bench main.js --filter="G"
```
```js
// main.js
Deno.bench({
group: "G1",
name: "G1-A",
fn() {},
});
Deno.bench({
group: "G1",
name: "G1-B",
fn() {},
});
```
Before this PR:
```
benchmark time (avg) iter/s (min … max) p75 p99 p995
--------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------
G1-A 303.52 ps/iter3,294,726,102.1 (254.2 ps … 7.8 ns) 287.5 ps 391.7 ps 437.5 ps
G1-B 3.8 ns/iter 263,360,635.9 (2.24 ns … 8.36 ns) 3.84 ns 4.73 ns 4.94 ns
summary
G1-A
12.51x faster than G1-B
```
After this PR:
```
benchmark time (avg) iter/s (min … max) p75 p99 p995
--------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------
group G1
G1-A 3.85 ns/iter 259,822,096.0 (2.42 ns … 9.03 ns) 3.83 ns 4.62 ns 4.83 ns
G1-B 3.84 ns/iter 260,458,274.5 (3.55 ns … 7.05 ns) 3.83 ns 4.45 ns 4.7 ns
summary
G1-B
1x faster than G1-A
```
This change removes deprecated methods from the `Deno.*` namespace when
the `DENO_FUTURE=1` environment variable is used.
Note: this does not address deprecated class properties and methods.
E.g. `Deno.Conn.rid`.
Before this PR, we didn't have any integration tests set up for the
`jupyter` subcommand.
This PR adds a basic jupyter client and helpers for writing integration
tests for the jupyter kernel. A lot of the code here is boilerplate,
mainly around the message format for jupyter.
This also adds a few basic integration tests, most notably for
requesting execution of a snippet of code and getting the correct
results.
This patch gets JUnit reporter to output more detailed information for
test steps (subtests).
## Issue with previous implementation
In the previous implementation, the test hierarchy was represented using
several XML tags like the following:
- `<testsuites>` corresponds to the entire test (one execution of `deno
test` has exactly one `<testsuites>` tag)
- `<testsuite>` corresponds to one file, such as `main_test.ts`
- `<testcase>` corresponds to one `Deno.test(...)`
- `<property>` corresponds to one `t.step(...)`
This structure describes the test layers but one problem is that
`<property>` tag is used for any use cases so some tools that can ingest
a JUnit XML file might not be able to interpret `<property>` as
subtests.
## How other tools address it
Some of the testing frameworks in the ecosystem address this issue by
fitting subtests into the `<testcase>` layer. For instance, take a look
at the following Go test file:
```go
package main_test
import "testing"
func TestMain(t *testing.T) {
t.Run("child 1", func(t *testing.T) {
// OK
})
t.Run("child 2", func(t *testing.T) {
// Error
t.Fatal("error")
})
}
```
Running [gotestsum], we can get the output like this:
```xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<testsuites tests="3" failures="2" errors="0" time="1.013694">
<testsuite tests="3" failures="2" time="0.510000" name="example/gosumtest" timestamp="2024-03-11T12:26:39+09:00">
<properties>
<property name="go.version" value="go1.22.1 darwin/arm64"></property>
</properties>
<testcase classname="example/gosumtest" name="TestMain/child_2" time="0.000000">
<failure message="Failed" type="">=== RUN TestMain/child_2
 main_test.go:12: error
--- FAIL: TestMain/child_2 (0.00s)
</failure>
</testcase>
<testcase classname="example/gosumtest" name="TestMain" time="0.000000">
<failure message="Failed" type="">=== RUN TestMain
--- FAIL: TestMain (0.00s)
</failure>
</testcase>
<testcase classname="example/gosumtest" name="TestMain/child_1" time="0.000000"></testcase>
</testsuite>
</testsuites>
```
This output shows that nested test cases are squashed into the
`<testcase>` layer by treating them as the same layer as their parent,
`TestMain`. We can still distinguish nested ones by their `name`
attributes that look like `TestMain/<subtest_name>`.
As described in #22795, [vitest] solves the issue in the same way as
[gotestsum].
One downside of this would be that one test failure that happens in a
nested test case will end up being counted multiple times, because not
only the subtest but also its wrapping container(s) are considered to be
failures. In fact, in the [gotestsum] output above, `TestMain/child_2`
failed (which is totally expected) while its parent, `TestMain`, was
also counted as failure. As
https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/20273#discussion_r1307558757
pointed out, there is a test runner that offers flexibility to prevent
this, but I personally don't think the "duplicate failure count" issue
is a big deal.
## How to fix the issue in this patch
This patch fixes the issue with the same approach as [gotestsum] and
[vitest].
More specifically, nested test cases are put into the `<testcase>` level
and their names are now represented as squashed test names concatenated
by `>` (e.g. `parent 2 > child 1 > grandchild 1`). This change also
allows us to put a detailed error message as `<failure>` tag within the
`<testcase>` tag, which should be handled nicely by third-party tools
supporting JUnit XML.
## Extra fix
Also, file paths embedded into XML outputs are changed from absolute
path to relative path, which is helpful when running the test suites in
several different environments like CI.
Resolves #22795
[gotestsum]: https://github.com/gotestyourself/gotestsum
[vitest]: https://vitest.dev/
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Fixes #22941.
In that case, the only file with coverage was the `test.ts` file. The
coverage reporter filters out test files before compiling its report, so
after filtering we were left with an empty set of files. Later on it's
assumed that there is at least 1 file to be reported on, and we panic.
Instead of panicking, just issue an error after filtering.
This commit fixes passing `MessagePort` instances to
`WorkerOptions.workerData`.
Before they were not serialized and deserialized properly when spawning
a worker thread.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/22935
Fixes #22158.
Basically reimplements the whole `StringDecoder` with a much more direct
translation (read like one-to-one) of node's current logic. The old
implementation was closer to node's super old impl and it was too hard
to keep the code structure while matching the behavior of their new
logic.
This adds support for UTF-16LE, ascii, and latin1.
This also enables the node_compat test, which now passes without
modification.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/18972
Support for web-push VAPID keys & jws signing
- Fixes EC keygen to return raw private key and uncompressed public key
point.
- Support for `EC PRIVATE KEY`
Stub implementation of getCipherInfo(). Good enough for most cases.
Note: We do not support all OpenSSL ciphers (likely never will)
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/21805
Fixes #19214.
We were using the `idna` crate to implement our polyfill for
`punycode.toASCII` and `punycode.toUnicode`. The `idna` crate is
correct, and adheres to the IDNA2003/2008 spec, but it turns out
`node`'s implementations don't really follow any spec! Instead, node
splits the domain by `'.'` and punycode encodes/decodes each part. This
means that node's implementations will happily work on codepoints that
are disallowed by the IDNA specs, causing the error in #19214.
While fixing this, I went ahead and matched the node behavior on all of
the punycode functions and enabled node's punycode test in our
`node_compat` suite.
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Fixes #22724. Fixes #7164.
This does add a dependency on `signal-hook`, but it's just a higher
level API on top of `signal-hook-registry` (which we and `tokio` already
depend on) and doesn't add any transitive deps.
Modify `_http_outgoing.ts` to support the extended signature of
`validateHeaderName()` used since node v19.5.0/v18.14.0 by adding the
`label` parameter. (see:
https://nodejs.org/api/http.html#httpvalidateheadernamename-label)
Making both validation functions accessible as public exports of
`node:http`
Fixes: #22614
Fixes #21660
Adds a basic `Immediate` class to mirror `NodeJS.Immediate`, and changes
`setImmediate` and `clearImmediate` to return and accept (respectively)
`Immediate` objects.
Note that for now {ref,unref,hasRef} are effectively stubs, as deno_core
doesn't really natively support immediates (they're currently modeled as
timers with delay of 0). Eventually we probably want to actually
implement these properly.
This is an unrealistic scenario, but it's still a good thing to fix and
have a test for because it probably fixes some other underlying issues
with how the gitignore was being resolved for the root directory.
From https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/22720#issuecomment-1986134425
This allows explicitly overriding a .gitignore by specifying files and
directories in "include". This does not apply to globs in an include as
files matching those will still be gitignored. Additionally,
individually gitignored files within an included directory will still be
ignored.
1. Stops `deno publish` using some custom include/exclude behaviour from
other sub commands
2. Takes ancestor directories into account when resolving gitignore
3. Backards compatible change that adds ability to unexclude an exclude
by using a negated glob at a more specific level for all sub commands
(see https://github.com/denoland/deno_config/pull/44).
An undocumented "DENO_DISABLE_PEDANTIC_NODE_WARNINGS" env
var can be used to silence warnings for sloppy imports and node builtins
without `node:` prefix.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/18127https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/17248
SvelteKit works now!
```
$ deno run -A npm:create-svelte@latest my-app
create-svelte version 6.0.9
┌ Welcome to SvelteKit!
│
◇ Which Svelte app template?
│ SvelteKit demo app
│
◇ Add type checking with TypeScript?
│ Yes, using JavaScript with JSDoc comments
│
◇ Select additional options (use arrow keys/space bar)
│ none
│
└ Your project is ready!
✔ Type-checked JavaScript
https://www.typescriptlang.org/tsconfig#checkJs
Install community-maintained integrations:
https://github.com/svelte-add/svelte-add
Next steps:
1: cd my-app
2: npm install
3: git init && git add -A && git commit -m "Initial commit" (optional)
4: npm run dev -- --open
To close the dev server, hit Ctrl-C
Stuck? Visit us at https://svelte.dev/chat
$ cd my-app/
$ deno task dev
Task dev vite dev
VITE v5.1.4 ready in 1632 ms
➜ Local: http://localhost:5173/
➜ Network: use --host to expose
➜ press h + enter to show help
```
The diagnostic was incorrect when importing a `.js` file with a
corresponding `.d.ts` file with sloppy imports because it would say to
change the `.js` extension to `.d.ts`, which is incorrect. We might as
well just hide this diagnostic.
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
fixes #22627
This PR fixes a node compat issue that is preventing `serverless-http`
and `serverless-express` npm modules from working with Deno. These
modules are useful for running apps on AWS Lambda (and other serverless
infra).
---------
Signed-off-by: Igor Zinkovsky <igor@deno.com>
This commit adds "deno add" subcommand that has a basic support for
adding "jsr:" packages to "deno.json" file.
This currently doesn't support "npm:" specifiers and specifying version
constraints.
Some `deno_std` tests were failing to print output that was resolved
after the last test finished. In addition, output printed before tests
began would sometimes appear above the "running X tests ..." line, and
sometimes below it depending on timing.
We now guarantee that all output is flushed before and after tests run,
making the output consistent.
Pre-test and post-test output are captured in `------ pre-test output
------` and `------ post-test output ------` blocks to differentiate
them from the regular output blocks.
Here's an example of a test (that is much noisier than normal, but an
example of what the output will look like):
```
Check ./load_unload.ts
------- pre-test output -------
load
----- output end -----
running 1 test from ./load_unload.ts
test ...
------- output -------
test
----- output end -----
test ... ok ([WILDCARD])
------- post-test output -------
unload
----- output end -----
```
A security feature of JSR is that it is self contained other than npm
dependencies. At publish time, the registry rejects packages that write
code like this:
```ts
const data = await import("https://example.com/evil.js");
```
However, this can be trivially bypassed by writing code that the
registry cannot statically analyze for. This PR prevents Deno from
loading dynamic imports that do this.
As we add tracing to more types of runtime activity, `--trace-ops` is
less useful of a name. `--trace-leaks` better reflects that this feature
traces both ops and timers, and will eventually trace resource opening
as well.
This keeps `--trace-ops` as an alias for `--trace-leaks`, but prints a
warning to the console suggesting migration to `--trace-leaks`.
One test continues to use `--trace-ops` to test the deprecation warning.
---------
Signed-off-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.com>
- Removes the origin call, since all origins are the same for an isolate
(ie: the main module)
- Collects the `TestDescription`s and sends them all at the same time
inside of an Arc, allowing us to (later on) re-use these instead of
cloning.
Needs a follow-up pass to remove all the cloning, but that's a thread
that is pretty long to pull
---------
Signed-off-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.com>
Supply chain security for JSR.
```
$ deno publish --provenance
Successfully published @divy/test_provenance@0.0.3
Provenance transparency log available at https://search.sigstore.dev/?logIndex=73657418
```
0. Package has been published.
1. Fetches the version manifest and verifies it's matching with uploaded
files and exports.
2. Builds the attestation SLSA payload using Github actions env.
3. Creates an ephemeral key pair for signing the github token
(aud=sigstore) and DSSE pre authentication tag.
4. Requests a X.509 signing certificate from Fulcio using the challenge
and ephemeral public key PEM.
5. Prepares a DSSE envelop for Rekor to witness. Posts an intoto entry
to Rekor and gets back the transparency log index.
6. Builds the provenance bundle and posts it to JSR.
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This PR enhances the `deno publish` command to infer dependencies from
`package.json` if present.
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).
1. Renames zap/fast-check to instead be a `no-slow-types` lint rule.
1. This lint rule is automatically run when doing `deno lint` for
packages (deno.json files with a name, version, and exports field)
1. This lint rules still occurs on publish. It can be skipped by running
with `--no-slow-types`
If we strip out unprintable chars, we don't see the full filename being
requested by permission prompts. Instead, we highlight and escape them
to make them visible.
This change deprecates
`Deno.CreateHttpClientOptions.{certChain,privateKey}` in favour of
`Deno.CreateHttpClientOptions.{cert,key}`.
Closes #22278
Co-authored-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.com>
The format of the sanitizers will change a little bit:
- If multiple async ops leak and traces are on, we repeat the async op
header once per stack trace.
- All leaks are aggregated under a "Leaks detected:" banner as the new
timers are eventually going to be added, and these are neither ops nor
resources.
- `1 async op` is now `An async op`
- If ops and resources leak, we show both (rather than op leaks masking
resources)
Follow-on to https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/22226
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.
Based on #21074 and #20741 I was looking for further potential use cases
of `TransformStream` `cancel()` method, so here go `CompressionStream`
and `DecompressionStream`.
Fixes #14212
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 implementation heavily depends on there being a lockfile, meaning
JSR specifiers will always diagnose as uncached unless it's there. In
practice this affects cases where a `deno.json` isn't being used. Our
NPM specifier support isn't subject to this.
The reason for this is that the version constraint solving code is
currently buried in `deno_graph` and not usable from the LSP, so the
only way to reuse that logic is the solved-version map in the lockfile's
`packages.specifiers`.
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.
This ensures the deno executable is properly created before running the integration tests.
Also allows deno_cli to be used as a lib. Docs are now properly generated: https://docs.rs/deno_cli/0.18.4/deno_cli/
Towards #2933
Prep for #2955
Instead of using core/snapshot_creator.rs, instead two crates are
introduced which allow building the snapshot during build.rs.
Rollup is removed and replaced with our own bundler. This removes
the Node build dependency. Modules in //js now use Deno-style imports
with file extensions, rather than Node style extensionless imports.
This improves incremental build time when changes are made to //js files
by about 40 seconds.
This removes dispatch_flatbuffers as it is now unused. There are still a
few places where msg_generated is used: ErrorKind and MediaType. These
will be dealt with later.
* Revert "port more ops to JSON (#2809)"
This reverts commit 137f33733d.
* Revert "port ops to JSON: compiler, errors, fetch, files (#2804)"
This reverts commit 79f82cf10e.
* Revert "Port rest of os ops to JSON (#2802)"
This reverts commit 5b2baa5c99.