This PR refactors all internal js files (except core) to be written as
ES modules.
`__bootstrap`has been mostly replaced with static imports in form in
`internal:[path to file from repo root]`.
To specify if files are ESM, an `esm` method has been added to
`Extension`, similar to the `js` method.
A new ModuleLoader called `InternalModuleLoader` has been added to
enable the loading of internal specifiers, which is used in all
situations except when a snapshot is only loaded, and not a new one is
created from it.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Updated third_party dlint to v0.37.0 for GitHub Actions. This PR
includes following changes:
* fix(prefer-primordials): Stop using array pattern assignments
* fix(prefer-primordials): Stop using global intrinsics except for
`SharedArrayBuffer`
* feat(guard-for-in): Apply new guard-for-in rule
Uses SeqOneByteString optimization to do zero-copy `&str` arguments in
fast calls.
- [x] Depends on https://github.com/denoland/rusty_v8/pull/1129
- [x] Depends on
https://chromium-review.googlesource.com/c/v8/v8/+/4036884
- [x] Disable in async ops
- [x] Make it work with owned `String` with an extra alloc in fast path.
- [x] Support `Cow<'_, str>`. Owned for slow case, Borrowed for fast
case
```rust
#[op]
fn op_string_len(s: &str) -> u32 {
str.len() as u32
}
```
Welcome to better optimised op calls! Currently opSync is called with parameters of every type and count. This most definitely makes the call megamorphic. Additionally, it seems that spread params leads to V8 not being able to optimise the calls quite as well (apparently Fast Calls cannot be used with spread params).
Monomorphising op calls should lead to some improved performance. Now that unwrapping of sync ops results is done on Rust side, this is pretty simple:
```
opSync("op_foo", param1, param2);
// -> turns to
ops.op_foo(param1, param2);
```
This means sync op calls are now just directly calling the native binding function. When V8 Fast API Calls are enabled, this will enable those to be called on the optimised path.
Monomorphising async ops likely requires using callbacks and is left as an exercise to the reader.
This commit updates the custom inspect function for URL objects
to pass the inspect options through so that the context is
propagated and the resulting indentation is correct.
Fixes: https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/14171
This splits the previous `op_url_parse` into:
- `op_url_parse`: parses a href with an optional base
- `op_url_reparse`: reparses a href with a modifier
This is a cleaner separation of concerns and it allows us to optimize & simplify args passed. Resulting in a 25% reduction in call overhead (~5000ns/call => ~3700ns/call in url_ops bench on my M1 Air)