This PR implements the child_process IPC pipe between parent and child.
The implementation uses Windows named pipes created by parent and passes
the inheritable file handle to the child.
I've also replace parts of the initial implementation which passed the
raw parent fd to JS with resource ids instead. This way no file handle
is exposed to the JS land (both parent and child).
`IpcJsonStreamResource` can stream upto 800MB/s of JSON data on Win 11
AMD Ryzen 7 16GB (without `memchr` vectorization)
This PR implements the Node child_process IPC functionality in Deno on
Unix systems.
For `fd > 2` a duplex unix pipe is set up between the parent and child
processes. Currently implements data passing via the channel in the JSON
serialization format.
This commit adds a no-op flushHeaders method to the ServerResponse
object. It is a nop because the ServerResponse implementation is based
on top of the Deno server API instead of the Node `OutgoingMessage`
base.
Fixes #21509
This PR is an attempt to fix
https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/20293, in which node modules
connecting to databases fail due to TLS errors. I ran into this
attempting to use
[node-postgres](https://github.com/brianc/node-postgres) to connect to a
[Neon](https://neon.tech) database.
Investigating via `--inspect-brk` led me to notice that the hostname
eventually passed to `Deno.startTls` was null. The hostname is
determined by the following code:
f6b889b432/ext/node/polyfills/_tls_wrap.ts (L87-L89)
This logic doesn't appear to be correct. I couldn't find reference to
`servername` existing on the `secureContext` in either Node's or Deno's
docs. There's a lot of scope here, and it's my first time reading
through this code, so I could be missing something!
Node uses [the following
logic](2e458d9736/lib/_tls_wrap.js (L1679-L1682)
) to determine the hostname for certificate validation:
```
const hostname = options.servername ||
options.host ||
(options.socket && options.socket._host) ||
'localhost';
```
This PR updates the `TLSSocket` polyfill to use behave similarly (though
I omitted the default to `localhost` at the end; I'm not sure if
including it is necessary or correct). With this change, `node-postgres`
connects to my TLS endpoint successfully (aside: Neon requires SNI,
which also works as expected).
---
I tried to update the tests in
https://github.com/denoland/deno/blob/main/cli/tests/unit_node/tls_test.ts
to exercise this change, but the test fails for me on `main` on Linux. I
investigated briefly and noticed that the test fixture
`cli/tests/testdata/tls/localhost.crt` doesn't appear to include the
`subjectAltName` specified in `domains.txt`. I believe the certificate
isn't matching `localhost`, but that's where I ended investigating.
This commit refactors how we access "core", "internals" and
"primordials" objects coming from `deno_core`, in our internal JavaScript code.
Instead of capturing them from "globalThis.__bootstrap" namespace, we
import them from recently added "ext:core/mod.js" file.
Add support for signing with a RSA PEM private key: `pkcs8` and `pkcs1`.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/18972
Ref #21124
Verified fix with `npm:sshpk`. Unverfied but fixes
`npm:google-auth-library`, `npm:web-push` & `oracle/oci-typescript-sdk`
---------
Signed-off-by: Divy Srivastava <dj.srivastava23@gmail.com>
Switch `ext/fetch` over to `resourceForReadableStream` to simplify and
unify implementation with `ext/serve`. This allows us to work in Rust
with resources only.
Two additional changes made to `resourceForReadableStream` were
required:
- Add an optional length to `resourceForReadableStream` which translates
to `size_hint`
- Fix a bug where writing to a closed stream that was full would panic
We can move all promise ID knowledge to deno_core, allowing us to better
experiment with promise implementation in deno_core.
`{un,}refOpPromise(promise)` is equivalent to
`{un,}refOp(promise[promiseIdSymbol])`
Workaround the circular references issue by using a initializer function
to give tty stream class to `initStdin`.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/21024
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/20611
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/20890
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/20336
`create-svelte` works now:
```
divy@mini /t/a> ~/gh/deno/target/debug/deno run -A --unstable --reload npm:create-svelte@latest sveltekit-deno
create-svelte version 5.1.1
┌ Welcome to SvelteKit!
│
◇ Which Svelte app template?
│ Skeleton project
│
◇ Add type checking with TypeScript?
│ Yes, using JavaScript with JSDoc comments
│
◇ Select additional options (use arrow keys/space bar)
│ none
│
└ Your project is ready!
✔ Type-checked JavaScript
https://www.typescriptlang.org/tsconfig#checkJs
Install community-maintained integrations:
https://github.com/svelte-add/svelte-add
Next steps:
1: cd sveltekit-deno
2: npm install
3: git init && git add -A && git commit -m "Initial commit" (optional)
4: npm run dev -- --open
To close the dev server, hit Ctrl-C
Stuck? Visit us at https://svelte.dev/chat
```
---------
Signed-off-by: Divy Srivastava <dj.srivastava23@gmail.com>
This commit improves "node:http2" module implementation, by enabling
to use "options.createConnection" callback when starting an HTTP2
session.
This change enables to pass basic client-side test with "grpc-js/grpc"
package.
Smaller fixes like "Http2Session.unref()" and "Http2Session.setTimeout()"
were handled as well.
Fixes #16647