Our oneshot receiver in `HyperService::call` would unwrap and panic, the `.await` on the oneshot receiver happens when the sender is dropped.
The sender is dropped in `op_http_response` because:
1. We take `ResponseSenderResource`
2. Then get `ConnResource` and early exit on failure (conn already closed)
3. The taken sender then gets dropped in this early exit before any response is sent over the channel
Fallbacking to returning a dummy response to hyper seems to be a fine quickfix
Check for expected headers more rigorously and check that it's a
HTTP/1.1 GET request. The logic mirrors what Deno Deploy and the
tungstenite crate do.
The presence of "Sec-Websocket-Version: 13" is now also enforced.
I don't expect that to break anything: conforming clients already
send it and tungstenite can't talk to older clients anyway.
The new code is more efficient due to heap-allocating less and aligns
more closely with the checks in ext/http/01_http.js now.
* perf(ext/fetch): skip USVString webidl conv on string constructor
* Rename webidl convert to RequestInfo_DOMString
To disambiguate and hint that it normalizes to DOMString instead of USVString since DOMString => USVString is handled by `op_url_parse` when calling `new URL(...)`
Default to None if UnsafelyIgnoreCertificateErrors is not present in the
OpState.
Embedders may not have a need for restricting outgoing TLS connections
and having them hunt through the source code for the magic incantation
that makes the borrow panics go away, is less user friendly.
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
Async WebAssembly compilation was implemented by adding two
bindings: `set_wasm_streaming_callback`, which registered a callback to
be called whenever a streaming wasm compilation was started, and
`wasm_streaming_feed`, which let the JS callback modify the state of the
v8 wasm compiler.
`set_wasm_streaming_callback` cannot currently be implemented as
anything other than a binding, but `wasm_streaming_feed` does not really
need to use anything specific to bindings, and could indeed be
implemented as one or more ops. This PR does that, resulting in a
simplification of the relevant code.
There are three operations on the state of the v8 wasm compiler that
`wasm_streaming_feed` allowed: feeding new bytes into the compiler,
letting it know that there are no more bytes coming from the network,
and aborting the compilation. This PR provides `op_wasm_streaming_feed`
to feed new bytes into the compiler, and `op_wasm_streaming_abort` to
abort the compilation. It doesn't provide an op to let v8 know that the
response is finished, but closing the resource with `Deno.core.close()`
will achieve that.
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.
This adds support for the URLPattern API.
The API is added in --unstable only, as it has not yet shipped in any
browser. It is targeted for shipping in Chrome 95.
Spec: https://wicg.github.io/urlpattern/
Co-authored-by: crowlKats < crowlkats@toaxl.com >
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)
The streaming WASM support code inspects the Response object's
Content-Type header but if that was missing, it failed with a fairly
inscrutable "String.prototype.toLowerCase called on null or undefined"
exception. Now it raises a more legible "Invalid WebAssembly content
type" exception.
This commit implements classic workers, but only when the `--enable-testing-features-do-not-use` flag is provided. This change is not user facing. Classic workers are used extensively in WPT tests. The classic workers do not support loading from disk, and do not support TypeScript.
Co-authored-by: Luca Casonato <hello@lcas.dev>
This commit adds a test case for "Http: connection closed before
message completed" error as well as fixing an edge with resource
leak when the error is raised.
* refactor(ops): return BadResource errors in ResourceTable calls
Instead of relying on callers to map Options to Results via `.ok_or_else(bad_resource_id)` at over 176 different call sites ...
This PR improves localStorage write throughput by around 150x by caching
the prepared statements for SQLite and adding some DB pragmas.
Co-authored-by: Divy Srivastava <dj.srivastava23@gmail.com>
cleanup(ext/http): simplify cookie header handling
Use `Vec::join` instead of essentially reimplementing it. There should be no meaningful performance delta