In the `transform` function to `TextEncoderStream`'s internal
`TransformStream`, if `chunk` is the empty string and
`this.#pendingHighSurrogate` is null, then `lastCodeUnit` will be NaN.
As it turns out, this does not cause a bug because the comparison to
check for lone surrogates turns out to be false for NaN, but to rely on
it makes the code brittle.
The Web IDL conversion to `BufferSource` and similar types shouldn't
check whether the buffer is detached.
In the case of `TextDecoder`, our implementation would still throw after
the Web IDL conversions because we're creating a new `Uint8Array` from
the buffer source's buffer, which throws if it's detached. This change
also fixes this bug.
The implementation of `TextDecoder` had a bug where it was copying the
input data in every case. This change removes that copy in
non-`SharedArrayBuffer` cases.
Since passing a shared buffer source to Rust would fail, this copy of
the input data was making `TextDecoder` work in cases where the input
is shared. In order to avoid a breaking change, the copy is retained in
those cases.
Currently all async ops are polled lazily, which means that op
initialization code is postponed until control is yielded to the event
loop. This has some weird consequences, e.g.
```js
let listener = Deno.listen(...);
let conn_promise = listener.accept();
listener.close();
// `BadResource` is thrown. A reasonable error would be `Interrupted`.
let conn = await conn_promise;
```
JavaScript promises are expected to be eagerly evaluated. This patch
makes ops actually do that.
and all its subclasses including `AbortSignal` ...
Instead of storing associated data in a global `WeakMap` we store them as private attributes (via a Symbol) on the object instances
In the spec, a URL record has an associated "blob URL entry", which for
`blob:` URLs is populated during parsing to contain a reference to the
`Blob` object that backs that object URL. It is this blob URL entry that
the `fetch` API uses to resolve an object URL.
Therefore, since the `Request` constructor parses URL inputs, it will
have an associated blob URL entry which will be used when fetching, even
if the object URL has been revoked since the construction of the
`Request` object. (The `Request` constructor takes the URL as a string
and parses it, so the object URL must be live at the time it is called.)
This PR adds a new `blobFromObjectUrl` JS function (backed by a new
`op_blob_from_object_url` op) that, if the URL is a valid object URL,
returns a new `Blob` object whose parts are references to the same Rust
`BlobPart`s used by the original `Blob` object. It uses this function to
add a new `blobUrlEntry` field to inner requests, which will be `null`
or such a `Blob`, and then uses `Blob.prototype.stream()` as the
response's body. As a result of this, the `blob:` URL resolution from
`op_fetch` is now useless, and has been removed.