This commits adds support for "--config" flag in "deno install"
subcommand. Specified configuration file is copied alongside
source code to installation directory.
- Add more support for generics
- Add the --private flag - displays documentation for
not exported and private nodes
- Display more attributes like abstract, static and readonly
- Display type aliases
- Refactor module to use the Display trait
- Use a bit more color
This commit adds a "--no-check" option to following subcommands:
- "deno cache"
- "deno info"
- "deno run"
- "deno test"
The "--no-check" options allows to skip type checking step and instead
directly transpiles TS sources to JS sources.
This solution uses `ts.transpileModule()` API and is just an interim
solution before implementing it fully in Rust.
Currently, the documentation makes it sound like the test subcommand's filter
flag could accept some kind of pattern matching value like a glob or a regex,
although the function "createFilterFn" accepts a regex as an argument, there's
no way to pass an actual regex value from the CLI.
This commit makes it possible to pass a string that could be cast as regex
when string matches "^/.*/$".
With this change, a user can use the filter flag as follow:
deno test --filter "/test-.+/"
Also tested that `\` get escaped properly, on MacOS at least, and this is
also a valid flag:
deno test --filter "/test-\d+/"
This commit:
* added default file globs so "deno lint" can be run
without arguments (just like "deno fmt")
* added test for globs in "deno lint"
* upgrade "deno_lint" crate to v0.1.9
This PR removes the hack in CLI that allows to run scripts with shorthand: deno script.ts.
Removing this functionality because it hacks around short-comings of clap our CLI parser. We agree that this shorthand syntax is desirable, but it needs to be rethinked and reimplemented. For 1.0 we should go with conservative approach that is correct.
This is a first pass implementation which is still missing several important
features:
- support for --inspect-brk (#4503)
- support for source maps (#4501)
- support for piping console.log to devtools console (#4502)
Co-authored-by: Bert Belder <bertbelder@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Matt Harrison <mt.harrison86@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
* rewrite test runner in Rust
* migrate "test" and "runTests" functions from std to "Deno" namespace
* use "Deno.test()" to run internal JS unit tests
* remove std downloads for Deno subcommands
* Use PathBuf for DenoSubcommand::Bundle's out_file
* Use PathBuf for DenoSubcommand::Format's files
* Use PathBuf for DenoSubcommand::Install's dir
* Use PathBuf for read/write whitelists
This flag was added to evaluate performance relative to tokio's threaded
runtime. Although it's faster in the HTTP benchmark, it's clear the runtime
is not the only perf problem.
Removing this flag will simplify further refactors, in particular
adopting the #[tokio::main] macro. This will be done in a follow up.
Ultimately we expect to move to the current thread runtime with Isolates
pinned to specific threads, but that will be a much larger refactor. The
--current-thread just complicates that effort.
- Remove ability to specify run arguments like `--allow-net` after the
script argument. It's too hacky to make work with clap.
- Remove `--v8-options`, instead use `--v8-flags=--help`
- Give more descriptive names to unit tests in flags.rs
- Assume argv and subcommand into DenoFlags struct so the output of
flags module is only DenoFlags rather than the tuple (subcommand, flags,
argv).
- Improve CLI help text
- Make `deno run` specific args like `--allow-net` only show up in 'deno
help run' instead of as global flags in `deno help`.
- Removes `deno version` to simplify our implementation and be closer to
clap defaults. `deno -V` now only shows Deno's version and not V8's nor
TypeScript. `Deno.versions` can be used to see that information.
- Prevent clap from auto-detecting terminal width and attempting to wrap
text.
- Bundles are fully standalone. They now include the shared loader with
`deno_typescript`.
- Refactor of the loader in `deno_typescript` to perform module
instantiation in a more
- Change of behaviour when an output file is not specified on the CLI.
Previously a default name was determined and the bundle written to that
file, now the bundle will be sent to `stdout`.
- Refactors in the TypeScript compiler to be able to support the concept
of a request type. This provides a cleaner abstraction and makes it
easier to support things like single module transpiles to the userland.
- Remove a "dangerous" circular dependency between `os.ts` and `deno.ts`,
and define `pid` and `noColor` in a better way.
- Don't bind early to `console` in `repl.ts`.
- Add an integration test for generating a bundle.
* rename `ModuleMetaData` to `SourceFile` and remove TS specific
functionality
* add `TsCompiler` struct encapsulating processing of TypeScript files
* move `SourceMapGetter` trait implementation to `//cli/compiler.rs`
* add low-level `DiskCache` API for general purpose caches and use it in
`DenoDir` and `TsCompiler` for filesystem access
* don't use hash-like filenames for compiled modules, instead use
metadata file for storing compilation hash
* add `SourceFileCache` for in-process caching of loaded files for fast
subsequent access
* define `SourceFileFetcher` trait encapsulating loading of local and
remote files and implement it for `DenoDir`
* define `use_cache` and `no_fetch` flags on `DenoDir` instead of using
in fetch methods
The rules are now as follows:
* In `import` statements, as mandated by the WHATWG specification,
the import specifier is always treated as a URL.
If it is a relative URL, it must start with either / or ./ or ../
* A script name passed to deno as a command line argument may be either
an absolute URL or a local path.
- If the name starts with a valid URI scheme followed by a colon, e.g.
'http:', 'https:', 'file:', 'foo+bar:', it always interpreted as a
URL (even if Deno doesn't support the indicated protocol).
- Otherwise, the script name is interpreted as a local path. The local
path may be relative, and operating system semantics determine how
it is resolved. Prefixing a relative path with ./ is not required.