Adds an experimental unstable built-in package manager to Deno, but it is
currently not usable because the registry infrastructure hasn't been
setup and it points to a non-existent url by default. The default
registry url can be configured via the `DENO_REGISTRY_URL` environment
variable.
This commit changes ordering of quickfix actions, by sorting them in
following order:
- TSC fixes
- Deno fixes
- deno_lint fixes
Co-authored-by: Nayeem Rahman <nayeemrmn99@gmail.com>
This commit improves async op sanitizer speed by only delaying metrics
collection if there are pending ops. This
results in a speedup of around 30% for small CPU bound unit tests.
It performs this check and possible delay on every collection now,
fixing an issue with parent test leaks into steps.
This commit adds "deno jupyter" subcommand which
provides a Deno kernel for Jupyter notebooks.
The implementation is mostly based on Deno's REPL and
reuses large parts of it (though there's some clean up that
needs to happen in follow up PRs). Not all functionality of
Jupyter kernel is implemented and some message type
are still not implemented (eg. "inspect_request") but
the kernel is fully working and provides all the capatibilities
that the Deno REPL has; including TypeScript transpilation
and npm packages support.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/13016
---------
Co-authored-by: Adam Powers <apowers@ato.ms>
Co-authored-by: Kyle Kelley <rgbkrk@gmail.com>
This commit improves compatibility of "node:http2" module by polyfilling
"connect" method and "ClientHttp2Session" class. Basic operations like
streaming, header and trailer handling are working correctly.
Refing/unrefing is still a TODO and "npm:grpc-js/grpc" is not yet working
correctly.
---------
Co-authored-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.com>
This adds the ability to pattern match unordered lines. For example, the
downloading messages may appear in any order
```
[UNORDERED_START]
Download https://localhost:4546/a.ts
Download https://localhost:4546/b.ts
[UNORDERED_END]
Hello!
```
Additionally, I've made the pattern matching slightly more strict and the output better.
### What
Skip writing files from the template if the files already exist in the
project directory.
### Why
When I run deno init in a directory that already has a main.ts, or one
of the other template files, I usually want to initialize a workspace
around a file I've started working in. A hard error in this case seems
counter productive. An informational message about what's being skipped
seems sufficient.
Close #20433
This PR implements a graceful shutdown API for Deno.serve, allowing all
current connections to drain from the server before shutting down, while
preventing new connections from being started or new transactions on
existing connections from being created.
We split the cancellation handle into two parts: a listener handle, and
a connection handle. A graceful shutdown cancels the listener only,
while allowing the connections to drain. The connection handle aborts
all futures. If the listener handle is cancelled, we put the connections
into graceful shutdown mode, which disables keep-alive on http/1.1 and
uses http/2 mechanisms for http/2 connections.
In addition, we now guarantee that all connections are complete or
cancelled, and all resources are cleaned up when the server `finished`
promise resolves -- we use a Rust-side server refcount for this.
Performance impact: does not appear to affect basic serving performance
by more than 1% (~126k -> ~125k)
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/19816
In that issue, I suggest switching over the other brotli functionality
to the Rust API provided by the `brotli` crate. Here, I only do that
with the `brotli_decompress` function to fix the bug with buffers longer
than 4096 bytes.
Keys are expensive metadata. We track it for various purposes, e.g.
transaction conflict check, and key expiration.
This patch limits the total key size in an atomic operation to 80 KiB
(81920 bytes). This helps ensure efficiency in implementations.
Fixes #19802.
Properly respect when clients do not have the `workspace/configuration`
capability, a.k.a. when an editor cannot provide scoped settings on
request from the LSP.
- Fix one spot where we weren't checking for the capability before
sending this request.
- For `enablePaths`, fall back to the settings passed in the
initialization options in more cases.
- Respect the `workspace/configuration` capability in the test harness
client.
See:
https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specifications/lsp/3.17/specification/#workspace_configuration.
Closes #14122.
Adds two extensions to `--allow-run` behaviour:
- When `--allow-run=foo` is specified and `foo` is found in the `PATH`
at startup, `RunDescriptor::Path(which("foo"))` is added to the
allowlist alongside `RunDescriptor::Name("foo")`. Currently only the
latter is.
- When run permission for `foo` is queried and `foo` is found in the
`PATH` at runtime, either `RunDescriptor::Path(which("foo"))` or
`RunDescriptor::Name("foo")` would qualify in the allowlist. Currently
only the latter does.
We never want tests to hit the real npm registry because this causes
test flakes. In addition, we set a sentinal "unset" value for
`NPM_CONFIG_REGISTRY` to ensure that all tests requiring npm go through
the test server.
The fix for #20188 was not entirely correct -- we were unlocking the
global buffer incorrectly. This PR introduces a lock state that ensures
we only unlock a lock we have taken out.
When a TCP connection is force-closed (ie: browser refresh), the
underlying future we pass to Hyper is dropped which may cause us to try
to drop the body resource while the OpState lock is still held.
Preconditions for this bug to trigger:
- The body resource must have been taken
- The response must return a resource (which requires us to take the
OpState lock)
- The TCP connection must have been dropped before this
Fixes #20315 and #20298
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2. Ensure there is a related issue and it is referenced in the PR text.
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As the title.
---------
Co-authored-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.com>
Disables `BenchContext::start()` and `BenchContext::end()` for low
precision benchmarks (less than 0.01s per iteration). Prints a warning
when they are used in such benchmarks, suggesting to remove them.
```ts
Deno.bench("noop", { group: "noops" }, () => {});
Deno.bench("noop with start/end", { group: "noops" }, (b) => {
b.start();
b.end();
});
```
Before:
```
cpu: 12th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i9-12900K
runtime: deno 1.36.2 (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu)
file:///home/nayeem/projects/deno/temp3.ts
benchmark time (avg) iter/s (min … max) p75 p99 p995
----------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------
noop 2.63 ns/iter 380,674,131.4 (2.45 ns … 27.78 ns) 2.55 ns 4.03 ns 5.33 ns
noop with start and end 302.47 ns/iter 3,306,146.0 (200 ns … 151.2 µs) 300 ns 400 ns 400 ns
summary
noop
115.14x faster than noop with start and end
```
After:
```
cpu: 12th Gen Intel(R) Core(TM) i9-12900K
runtime: deno 1.36.1 (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu)
file:///home/nayeem/projects/deno/temp3.ts
benchmark time (avg) iter/s (min … max) p75 p99 p995
----------------------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------
noop 3.01 ns/iter 332,565,561.7 (2.73 ns … 29.54 ns) 2.93 ns 5.29 ns 7.45 ns
noop with start and end 7.73 ns/iter 129,291,091.5 (6.61 ns … 46.76 ns) 7.87 ns 13.12 ns 15.32 ns
Warning start() and end() calls in "noop with start and end" are ignored because it averages less than 0.01s per iteration. Remove them for better results.
summary
noop
2.57x faster than noop with start and end
```
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/vscode_deno/issues/743.
```ts
const items: string[] = ['foo', 'bar', 'baz'];
items.map
// ->
items.map(callbackfn) // auto-completes with argument placeholders.
```
---
We have our own setting for `suggest.completeFunctionCalls`, which must
be enabled:
```js
{
"deno.suggest.completeFunctionCalls": true,
// Re-implementation of:
// "javascript.suggest.completeFunctionCalls": true,
// "typescript.suggest.completeFunctionCalls": true,
}
```
But before this commit the actual implementation had been left as a TODO.
This PR adds a test reporter for the [Test Anything
Protocol](https://testanything.org).
It makes the following implementation decisions:
- No TODO pragma, as there is no such marker in `Deno.test`
- SKIP pragma for `ignore`d tests
- Test steps are treated as TAP14 subtests
- Support for this in consumers seems spotty
- Some consumers will incorrectly interpret these markers, resulting in
unexpected output
- Considering the lack of support, and to avoid implementation
complexity,
subtests are at most one level deep (all test steps are in the same
subtest)
- To accommodate consumers that use comments to indicate test-suites
(unspecced)
- The test module path is output as a comment
- This is disabled for `--parallel` testing
- Failure diagnostics are output as JSON, which is also valid YAML
- The structure is not specified, so the format roughly follows the spec
example:
```
---
message: "Failed with error 'hostname peebles.example.com not found'"
severity: fail
found:
hostname: 'peebles.example.com'
address: ~
wanted:
hostname: 'peebles.example.com'
address: '85.193.201.85'
at:
file: test/dns-resolve.c
line: 142
...
```
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/vscode_deno/issues/843.
Prevents step results from being reported twice. Refactors
`LspTestReporter` to use a complete `(test_id, descriptor)` map instead
of a brittle `LspTestReporter::stack`.
This patch adds a `remote` backend for `ext/kv`. This supports
connection to Deno Deploy and potentially other services compatible with
the KV Connect protocol.
Deno.serve's fast streaming implementation was not keeping the request
body resource ID alive. We were taking the `Rc<Resource>` from the
resource table during the response, so a hairpin duplex response that
fed back the request body would work.
However, if any JS code attempted to read from the request body (which
requires the resource ID to be valid), the response would fail with a
difficult-to-diagnose "EOF" error.
This was affecting more complex duplex uses of `Deno.fetch` (though as
far as I can tell was unreported).
Simple test:
```ts
const reader = request.body.getReader();
return new Response(
new ReadableStream({
async pull(controller) {
const { done, value } = await reader.read();
if (done) {
controller.close();
} else {
controller.enqueue(value);
}
},
}),
```
And then attempt to use the stream in duplex mode:
```ts
async function testDuplex(
reader: ReadableStreamDefaultReader<Uint8Array>,
writable: WritableStreamDefaultWriter<Uint8Array>,
) {
await writable.write(new Uint8Array([1]));
const chunk1 = await reader.read();
assert(!chunk1.done);
assertEquals(chunk1.value, new Uint8Array([1]));
await writable.write(new Uint8Array([2]));
const chunk2 = await reader.read();
assert(!chunk2.done);
assertEquals(chunk2.value, new Uint8Array([2]));
await writable.close();
const chunk3 = await reader.read();
assert(chunk3.done);
}
```
In older versions of Deno, this would just lock up. I believe after
23ff0e722e, it started throwing a more
explicit error:
```
httpServerStreamDuplexJavascript => ./cli/tests/unit/serve_test.ts:1339:6
error: TypeError: request or response body error: error reading a body from connection: Connection reset by peer (os error 54)
at async Object.pull (ext:deno_web/06_streams.js:810:27)
```
Some people might get think they need to import from this directory,
which could cause confusion and duplicate dependencies. Additionally,
the `vendor` directory has special behaviour in the language server, so
importing from the folder will definitely cause confusion and issues
there.
Properly handle the `SQLITE_BUSY` error code by retrying the
transaction.
Also wraps database initialization logic in a transaction to protect
against incomplete/concurrent initializations.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/20116.
The goal of this PR is to address issue #20106 where a `TypeError`
occurs when the variables `uid` and `gid` from `userInfo()` in `node:os`
are reassigned if the user is on Windows. Both `uid` and `gid` are
marked as `const` therefore producing a `TypeError` when the two are
reassigned.
This PR achieves that goal by marking `uid` and `gid` as `let`
The goal of this PR is to address issue #19520 where Deno panics when
encountering an invalid SSL certificate.
This PR achieves that goal by removing an `.expect()` statement and
implementing a match statement on `tsl_config` (found in
[/ext/net/ops_tsl.rs](e071382768/ext/net/ops_tls.rs (L1058)))
to check whether the desired configuration is valid
---------
Co-authored-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.com>
Handles ASCCI espace chars in test and bench name making
test and bench reporting more reliable. This one is also tested
in the fixture of "node:test" module.
This commit moves `snapshot_from_lockfile` function to [deno_npm
crate](https://github.com/denoland/deno_npm). This allows this function
to be called outside Deno CLI (in particular, Deno Deploy).
Renames the unstable `deno_modules` directory and corresponding settings
to `vendor` after feedback. Also causes the vendoring of the
`node_modules` directory which can be disabled via
`--node-modules-dir=false` or `"nodeModulesDir": false`.
This changes the design of the manifest.json file to have a separate
"folders" map for mapping hashed directories. This allows, for example,
to add files in a folder like `http_localhost_8000/#testing_5de71/` and
have them be resolved automatically as long as their remaining
components are identity-mappable to the file system (not hashed). It
also saves space in the manifest.json file by only including the hashed
directory instead of each descendant file.
```
// manifest.json
{
"folders": {
"https://localhost/NOT_MAPPABLE/": "localhost/#not_mappable_5cefgh"
},
"modules": {
"https://localhost/folder/file": {
"headers": {
"content-type": "application/javascript"
}
},
}
}
// folder structure
localhost
- folder
- #file_2defn (note: I've made up the hashes in these examples)
- #not_mappable_5cefgh
- mod.ts
- etc.ts
- more_files.ts
```
This commit adds new "--deny-*" permission flags. These are complimentary to
"--allow-*" flags.
These flags can be used to restrict access to certain resources, even if they
were granted using "--allow-*" flags or the "--allow-all" ("-A") flag.
Eg. specifying "--allow-read --deny-read" will result in a permission error,
while "--allow-read --deny-read=/etc" will allow read access to all FS but the
"/etc" directory.
Runtime permissions APIs ("Deno.permissions") were adjusted as well, mainly
by adding, a new "PermissionStatus.partial" field. This field denotes that
while permission might be granted to requested resource, it's only partial (ie.
a "--deny-*" flag was specified that excludes some of the requested resources).
Eg. specifying "--allow-read=foo/ --deny-read=foo/bar" and then querying for
permissions like "Deno.permissions.query({ name: "read", path: "foo/" })"
will return "PermissionStatus { state: "granted", onchange: null, partial: true }",
denoting that some of the subpaths don't have read access.
Closes #18804.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Nayeem Rahman <nayeemrmn99@gmail.com>
This commit adds a "dot" reporter to "deno test" subcommand,
that can be activated using "--dot" flag.
It provides a concise output using:
- "." for passing test
- "," for ignored test
- "!" for failing test
User output is silenced and not printed to the console.
In non-TTY environments each result is printed on a separate line.
This commit provides basic polyfill for "node:test" module. Currently
only top-level "test" function is polyfilled, all remaining functions from
that module throw not implemented errors.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/17251
Closes #19970
This commits adds logic to retry failed module downloads once.
Both request and server errors are handled and the retry is done after
50 ms wait time.
I'm not sure why, but sending SIGABRT to Deno on my machine as part of
this test causes it to lock up very badly, leaving it in an unkillable
`UE+` state.
This showed up after #19333, but was not caused by it.
Closes #17589.
```ts
Deno.bench("foo", async (t) => {
const resource = setup(); // not included in measurement
t.start();
measuredOperation(resource);
t.end();
resource.close(); // not included in measurement
});
```
This PR fixes #19818. The problem was that the new InnerRequest class does not initialize the fields urlList and urlListProcessed that are used during a request clone. The solution aims to be straightforward by simply initializing the missing properties during the clone process. I also implemented a "cache" to the url getter of the new InnerRequest, avoiding the cost of calling op_http_get_request_method_and_url.
We weren't auto-discovering the deno.json in two cases:
1. A project that didn't have a deno.json and just added one.
2. After a syntax error in the deno.json.
This now rediscovers it in both these cases.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/vscode_deno/issues/867
Code run within Deno-mode and Node-mode should have access to a
slightly different set of globals. Previously this was done through a
compile time code-transform for Node-mode, but this is not ideal and has
many edge cases, for example Node's globalThis having a different
identity than Deno's globalThis.
This commit makes the `globalThis` of the entire runtime a semi-proxy.
This proxy returns a different set of globals depending on the caller's
mode. This is not a full proxy, because it is shadowed by "real"
properties on globalThis. This is done to avoid the overhead of a full
proxy for all globalThis operations.
The globals between Deno-mode and Node-mode are now properly segregated.
This means that code running in Deno-mode will not have access to Node's
globals, and vice versa. Deleting a managed global in Deno-mode will
NOT delete the corresponding global in Node-mode, and vice versa.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Aapo Alasuutari <aapo.alasuutari@gmail.com>
This commit adds some regression tests for using `jsxImportSource` in
the config file in combination with an import map.
These underlying issues were fixed by #15561.
Closes #13389
Closes #14723
---------
Co-authored-by: Aapo Alasuutari <aapo.alasuutari@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This commit stabilizes "Deno.serve()", which becomes the
preferred way to create HTTP servers in Deno.
Documentation was adjusted for each overload of "Deno.serve()"
API and the API always binds to "127.0.0.1:8000" by default.
This PR changes Web IDL interfaces to be declared with `var` instead of
`class`, so that accessing them via `globalThis` does not raise type
errors.
Closes #13390.
This is a fix for issue #19644, concerning the `parseCssColor` function
in the file `ext/console/01_console.js`. Changes made on lines
2756-2758. To sum it up:
> The internal `parseCssColor` function currently parses 3/4-digit hex
colors incorrectly. For example, it parses the string `#FFFFFF` as
`[255, 255, 255]` (as expected), but returns `[240, 240, 240]` for
`#FFF`, when it should return the same triplet as the former.
While it's not going to cause a fatal runtime error, it did bug me
enough to fix it real quick.
Fixes #19568
Values are not coerced to the desired type during deserialisation. This
makes serde_v8 stricter.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This prevents documents specified in a deno.json's "exclude" from being
pre-loaded by the lsp.
For example, someone may have something like:
```jsonc
// deno.json
{
"exclude": [
"dist" // build directory
]
}
```