- Update ffi turbocall to use revised fast call api
- Remove `v8_version` function calls
- `*mut OwnedIsolate` is no longer stored in OpCtx gotham store
This PR addresses a regression introduced in
https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/25021 that would cause the
`req.url` parameter in Node's http server to always be a single
character instead of the expected value. The regression was caused by
effectively calling `.indexOf()` on an empty string and thus passing the
wrong index for slicing.
```js
"".indexOf("/") // -> -1
request.url.slice(-1) // effectively only giving us the last character
```
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/25080
PrismJS uses `WorkerGlobalScope` and `self` for detecting browser's Web
Worker context:
59e5a34713/prism.js (L11)
Now the detection logic above is broken when it's imported from Deno's
Web Worker context because we only hide `self` (Prism assumes when
`WorkerGlobalScope` is available, `self` is also available).
This change fixes the above by also hiding `WorkerGlobalScope` global in
Node compat mode.
closes #25008
My fix in #25030 was buggy, I forgot to pass the `byteOffset` and
`byteLength`. Whoops.
I also discovered that fs.read was not respecting the `offset` argument,
and we were constructing a new `Buffer` for the callback instead of just
passing the original one (which is what node does, and the @types/node
definitions also indicate the callback should get the same type).
Fixes #25028.
Linux/macos only currently.
Part of https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/23524 (fixes it on
platforms other than windows).
Part of #16899 (fixes it on platforms other than windows).
After this PR, playwright is functional on mac/linux.
Adds a `parallel` flag to `deno serve`. When present, we spawn multiple
workers to parallelize serving requests.
```bash
deno serve --parallel main.ts
```
Currently on linux we use `SO_REUSEPORT` and rely on the fact that the
kernel will distribute connections in a round-robin manner.
On mac and windows, we sort of emulate this by cloning the underlying
file descriptor and passing a handle to each worker. The connections
will not be guaranteed to be fairly distributed (and in practice almost
certainly won't be), but the distribution is still spread enough to
provide a significant performance increase.
---
(Run on an Macbook Pro with an M3 Max, serving `deno.com`
baseline::
```
❯ wrk -d 30s -c 125 --latency http://127.0.0.1:8000
Running 30s test @ http://127.0.0.1:8000
2 threads and 125 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 239.78ms 13.56ms 330.54ms 79.12%
Req/Sec 258.58 35.56 360.00 70.64%
Latency Distribution
50% 236.72ms
75% 248.46ms
90% 256.84ms
99% 268.23ms
15458 requests in 30.02s, 2.47GB read
Requests/sec: 514.89
Transfer/sec: 84.33MB
```
this PR (`with --parallel` flag)
```
❯ wrk -d 30s -c 125 --latency http://127.0.0.1:8000
Running 30s test @ http://127.0.0.1:8000
2 threads and 125 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 117.40ms 142.84ms 590.45ms 79.07%
Req/Sec 1.33k 175.19 1.77k 69.00%
Latency Distribution
50% 22.34ms
75% 223.67ms
90% 357.32ms
99% 460.50ms
79636 requests in 30.07s, 12.74GB read
Requests/sec: 2647.96
Transfer/sec: 433.71MB
```
Part of #25028.
Our underlying read/write operations in `io` assume the buffer is a
Uint8Array, but we were passing in other typed arrays (in the case above
it was `Int8Array`).
There is no constructor code when creating an inspector `Session`
instance in Node. Also get rid of some symbols which should've been
private properties. This PR doesn't yet add any new implementations
though as these are mostly cosmetic changes.
For some reason we didn't register the `node:inspector` module, which
lead to a panic when trying to import it. This PR registers it.
Related: https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/25004
This is commonly used to register loading non standard file types. But
some libs also register TS loaders which Deno supports natively, like
the npm `payload` package. This PR unblocks those.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/24902
- Return auth tag for GCM ciphers from auto padding shortcircuit
- Use _ring_ for ed25519 signing
---------
Co-authored-by: Divy Srivastava <dj.srivastava23@gmail.com>
This commit makes `fetch` error messages include source and destination TCP
socket info i.e. port number and IP address for better debuggability.
Closes #24922
This PR ensures that we forward a `rename` event in our file watcher.
The rust lib we use combines that with the `modify` event.
This fixes a compatibility issue with Node too, which sends the `rename`
event as well.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/24880
This completely rewrites how we handle key material in ext/node. Changes
in this
PR:
- **Signing**
- RSA
- RSA-PSS 🆕
- DSA 🆕
- EC
- ED25519 🆕
- **Verifying**
- RSA
- RSA-PSS 🆕
- DSA 🆕
- EC 🆕
- ED25519 🆕
- **Private key import**
- Passphrase encrypted private keys 🆕
- RSA
- PEM
- DER (PKCS#1) 🆕
- DER (PKCS#8) 🆕
- RSA-PSS
- PEM
- DER (PKCS#1) 🆕
- DER (PKCS#8) 🆕
- DSA 🆕
- EC
- PEM
- DER (SEC1) 🆕
- DER (PKCS#8) 🆕
- X25519 🆕
- ED25519 🆕
- DH
- **Public key import**
- RSA
- PEM
- DER (PKCS#1) 🆕
- DER (PKCS#8) 🆕
- RSA-PSS 🆕
- DSA 🆕
- EC 🆕
- X25519 🆕
- ED25519 🆕
- DH 🆕
- **Private key export**
- RSA 🆕
- DSA 🆕
- EC 🆕
- X25519 🆕
- ED25519 🆕
- DH 🆕
- **Public key export**
- RSA
- DSA 🆕
- EC 🆕
- X25519 🆕
- ED25519 🆕
- DH 🆕
- **Key pair generation**
- Overhauled, but supported APIs unchanged
This PR adds a lot of new individual functionality. But most importantly
because
of the new key material representation, it is now trivial to add new
algorithms
(as shown by this PR).
Now, when adding a new algorithm, it is also widely supported - for
example
previously we supported ED25519 key pair generation, but we could not
import,
export, sign or verify with ED25519. We can now do all of those things.
I noticed
[`set_response_body`](ce42f82b5a/ext/http/service.rs (L439-L443))
was unexpectedly hot in profiles, with most of the time being spent in
`memmove`.
It turns out that `ResponseBytesInner` was _massive_ (5624 bytes), so
every time we moved a `ResponseBytesInner` (for instance in
`set_response_body`) we were doing a >5kb memmove, which adds up pretty
quickly.
This PR boxes the two larger variants (the compression streams),
shrinking `ResponseBytesInner` to a reasonable 48 bytes.
---
Benchmarked with a simple hello world server:
```ts
// hello-server.ts
Deno.serve((_req) => {
return new Response("Hello world");
});
// run with `deno run -A hello-server.ts`
// in separate terminal `wrk -d 10s http://127.0.0.1:8000`
```
Main:
```
Running 10s test @ http://127.0.0.1:8000/
2 threads and 10 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 53.39us 9.53us 0.98ms 92.78%
Req/Sec 86.57k 3.56k 91.58k 91.09%
1739319 requests in 10.10s, 248.81MB read
Requests/sec: 172220.92
Transfer/sec: 24.64MB
```
This PR:
```
Running 10s test @ http://127.0.0.1:8000/
2 threads and 10 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 45.44us 8.49us 0.91ms 90.04%
Req/Sec 100.65k 2.26k 102.65k 96.53%
2022296 requests in 10.10s, 289.29MB read
Requests/sec: 200226.20
Transfer/sec: 28.64MB
```
So a nice ~15% bump. (With response body compression, the gain is ~10%
for gzip and neutral for brotli)