Issue was main does canary builds, which broke this test because it
didn't handle searching for a canary release. Tested by building as
canary locally.
This PR updates the deprecation notices to point to the same replacement
APIs that the Standard Library points to. I've also tweaked the notices
to be a little more presentable/navigatable.
In particular, a follow-up PR in std will be made that documents the use
of `toArrayBuffer()`.
Closes #21193
Towards #20976
This commit adds unstable workspace support. This is extremely
bare-bones and
minimal first-pass at this.
With this change `deno.json` supports specifying `workspaces` key, that
accepts a list of subdirectories. Each workspace can have its own import
map. It's required to specify a `"name"` and `"version"` properties in the
configuration file for the workspace:
```jsonc
// deno.json
{
"workspaces": [
"a",
"b"
},
"imports": {
"express": "npm:express@5"
}
}
```
``` jsonc
// a/deno.json
{
"name": "a",
"version": "1.0.2",
"imports": {
"kleur": "npm:kleur"
}
}
```
```jsonc
// b/deno.json
{
"name": "b",
"version": "0.51.0",
"imports": {
"chalk": "npm:chalk"
}
}
```
`--unstable-workspaces` flag is required to use this feature:
```
$ deno run --unstable-workspaces mod.ts
```
---------
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@gmail.com>
This PR changes the `Deno.cron` API:
* Marks the existing function as deprecated
* Introduces 2 new overloads, where the handler arg is always last:
```ts
Deno.cron(
name: string,
schedule: string,
handler: () => Promise<void> | void,
)
Deno.cron(
name: string,
schedule: string,
options?: { backoffSchedule?: number[]; signal?: AbortSignal },
handler: () => Promise<void> | void,
)
```
This PR also fixes a bug, when other crons continue execution after one
of the crons was closed using `signal`.
Fixes #21121 and #19498
Migrates fully to rustls_tokio_stream. We no longer need to maintain our
own TlsStream implementation to properly support duplex.
This should fix a number of errors with TLS and websockets, HTTP and
"other" places where it's failing.
This PR uses the new `cancel` method of `TransformStream` to properly
clean up the internal `TextDecoder` used in `TextDecoderStream` if the
stream is cancelled.
Fixes #13142
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
We only want one zlib dependency.
Zlib dependencies are reorganized so they use a hidden
`__vendored_zlib_ng` flag in cli that enables zlib-ng for both libz-sys
(used by ext/node) and flate2 (used by deno_web).
This also updates deno_graph, which has the JSR change to use "exports".
It's not yet useful atm, so I've made this PR a fix about the deno doc
--lint error message improvements. I'll do a follow-up PR that adds
exports to the deno.json
This is the release commit being forwarded back to main for 1.38.1
Co-authored-by: Divy Srivastava <dj.srivastava23@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: littledivy <littledivy@users.noreply.github.com>
This PR reduces the time to run `queue persistence with inflight
messages` test from 60 seconds down to about 6 seconds.
The test simulates a crash to ensure that inflight messages are cleaned
up and re-queued when the new process starts. Since messages are
considered dead after 5 seconds of being queued, reopening the db within
5 seconds does not re-queue the messages on startup (they do get
re-queued after 60 seconds, which is the cleanup frequency). By waiting
for 5 seconds before reopening the db, the test ensures that the cleanup
happens quickly when the db is opened.
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])`
Remove tokio-rustls as a direct dependency of Deno and refactor
test_server to reduce code duplication.
All tcp and tls listener paths go through the same streams now, with the
exception of the simpler Hyper http-only handlers (those can be done in
a later follow-up).
Minor bugs fixed:
- gRPC server should only serve h2
- WebSocket over http/2 had a port overlap
- Restored missing eye-catchers for some servers (still missing on Hyper
ones)
This commit moves all Chrome Devtools Protocol messages to `cli/cdp.rs`
and refactors all places using these types to pull them from a common
place.
No functional changes.
As pointed out in https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/21067 , it's
confusing that `deno doc --lint mod.ts` outputs the documentation to
stdout on success. Instead, it would be better if it outputted how many
files were checked similar to what `deno lint` does on success. It still
outputs the documentation if `--lint` or `--html` are provided so this
is non-breaking.
This commit adds granular `--unstable-*` flags:
- "--unstable-broadcast-channel"
- "--unstable-ffi"
- "--unstable-fs"
- "--unstable-http"
- "--unstable-kv"
- "--unstable-net"
- "--unstable-worker-options"
- "--unstable-cron"
These flags are meant to replace a "catch-all" flag - "--unstable", that
gives a binary control whether unstable features are enabled or not. The
downside of this flag that allowing eg. Deno KV API also enables the FFI
API (though the latter is still gated with a permission).
These flags can also be specified in `deno.json` file under `unstable`
key.
Currently, "--unstable" flag works the same way - I will open a follow
up PR that will print a warning when using "--unstable" and suggest to use
concrete "--unstable-*" flag instead. We plan to phase out "--unstable"
completely in Deno 2.
Implements `WebSocket` over http/2. This requires a conformant http/2
server supporting the extended connect protocol.
Passes approximately 100 new WPT tests (mostly `?wpt_flags=h2` versions
of existing websockets APIs).
This is implemented as a fallback when http/1.1 fails, so a server that
supports both h1 and h2 WebSockets will still end up on the http/1.1
upgrade path.
The patch also cleas up the websockets handshake to split it up into
http, https+http1 and https+http2, making it a little less intertwined.
This uncovered a likely bug in the WPT test server:
https://github.com/web-platform-tests/wpt/issues/42896
This PR adds unstable `Deno.cron` API to trigger execution of cron jobs.
* State: All cron state is in memory. Cron jobs are scheduled according
to the cron schedule expression and the current time. No state is
persisted to disk.
* Time zone: Cron expressions specify time in UTC.
* Overlapping executions: not permitted. If the next scheduled execution
time occurs while the same cron job is still executing, the scheduled
execution is skipped.
* Retries: failed jobs are automatically retried until they succeed or
until retry threshold is reached. Retry policy can be optionally
specified using `options.backoffSchedule`.
This change adds the `--env=[FILE]` flag to the `run`, `compile`,
`eval`, `install` and `repl` subcommands. Environment variables set in
the CLI overwrite those defined in the `.env` file.
Adds a new `--lint` flag to `deno doc` that surfaces three kinds of
diagnostics:
1. Diagnostic for non-exported type referenced in an exported type.
* Why? People often forget to export types from a module in TypeScript.
To supress this diagnostic, add an `@internal` jsdoc tag to the internal
type.
1. Diagnostic for missing return type or missing property type on a
**public** type.
* Why? Otherwise `deno doc` will not display good documentation. Adding
explicit types also helps with type checking performance.
1. Diagnostic for missing jsdoc on a **public** type.
* Why? Everything should be documented. This diagnostic can be supressed
by adding a jsdoc comment description.
If the lint passes, `deno doc` generates documentation as usual.
For example, checking for deno doc diagnostics on the CI:
```shellsession
$ deno doc --lint mod.ts second_entrypoint.ts > /dev/null
```
This feature is incredibly useful for library authors.
## Why not include this in `deno lint`?
1. The command needs the documenation output in order to figure out the
diagnostics.
1. `deno lint` doesn't understand where the entrypoints are. That's
critical for the diagnostics to be useful.
1. It's much more performant to do this while generating documentation.
1. There is precedence in rustdoc (ex. `#![warn(missing_docs)]`).
## Why not `--check`?
It is confusing with `deno run --check`, since that means to run type
checking (and confusing with `deno check --docs`).
## Output Future Improvement
The output is not ideal atm, but it's fine for a first pass. We will
improve it in the future.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno_lint/pull/972
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno_lint/issues/970
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/19356
Use new https://github.com/denoland/rustls-tokio-stream project instead
of tokio-rustls for direct websocket connections. This library was
written from the ground up to be more reliable and should help with
various bugs that may occur due to underlying bugs in the old library.
Believed to fix #20355, #18977, #20948
This commit updates the ext/kv module to use the denokv_* crates for
the protocol and the sqlite backend. This also fixes a couple of bugs in
the sqlite backend, and updates versionstamps to be updated less
linearly.
This commit adds `--unstable-hmr` flag, that enabled Hot Module Replacement.
This flag works like `--watch` and accepts the same arguments. If
HMR is not possible the process will be restarted instead.
Currently HMR is only supported in `deno run` subcommand.
Upon HMR a `CustomEvent("hmr")` will be dispatched that contains
information which file was changed in its `details` property.
---------
Co-authored-by: Valentin Anger <syrupthinker@gryphno.de>
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@gmail.com>
This commit adds support for multiple entry points to `deno doc`.
Unfortunately to achieve that, I had to change the semantics of the
command to explicitly require `--filter` parameter for filtering
symbols, instead of treating second free argument as the filter argument.
`deno doc --builtin` is still supported, but cannot be mixed with
actual entrypoints.
Upgrades to deno_doc 0.70 which includes the feature for showing
non-exported types referenced in exported types as well as a much more
advanced deno doc that uses a symbol graph.
As title. This will help use the two independently from the other, which
will help in an upcoming deno doc PR where I need to parse the source
files with scope analysis.
This PR adds a new unstable "bring your own node_modules" (BYONM)
functionality currently behind a `--unstable-byonm` flag (`"unstable":
["byonm"]` in a deno.json).
This enables users to run a separate install command (ex. `npm install`,
`pnpm install`) then run `deno run main.ts` and Deno will respect the
layout of the node_modules directory as setup by the separate install
command. It also works with npm/yarn/pnpm workspaces.
For this PR, the behaviour is opted into by specifying
`--unstable-byonm`/`"unstable": ["byonm"]`, but in the future we may
make this the default behaviour as outlined in
https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/18967#issuecomment-1761248941
This is an extremely rough initial implementation. Errors are
terrible in this and the LSP requires frequent restarts. Improvements
will be done in follow up PRs.
This commit introduces "WatcherCommunicator" struct that
is used facilitate bi-directional communication between CLI
file watcher and the watched function.
Prerequisite for https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/20876
This brings in [`display`](https://github.com/rgbkrk/display.js) as part
of the `Deno.jupyter` namespace.
Additionally these APIs were added:
- "Deno.jupyter.md"
- "Deno.jupyter.html"
- "Deno.jupyter.svg"
- "Deno.jupyter.format"
These APIs greatly extend capabilities of rendering output in Jupyter
notebooks.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@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
Otherwise you can not return `Deno.Server` from async functions.
Co-authored-by: Yoshiya Hinosawa <stibium121@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This fixes #20767.
We were losing `this` and then when an exception was happening, it
didn't show up in the output because we weren't bubbling up exceptions
from within a user defined function for displaying. I thought about
doing a `.call(object)` but didn't want to get in the way of a bound
`this` that a user or library was already putting on the function.
Adds `buffers` to the `Deno.jupyter.broadcast` API to send binary data
via comms. This affords the ability to send binary data via websockets
to the jupyter widget frontend.
fixes #20454
Current KV queues implementation assumes that `enqueue` and
`listenQueue` are called on the same instance of `Deno.Kv`. It's
possible that the same Deno process opens multiple KV instances pointing
to the same fs path, and in that case `listenQueue` should still get
notified of messages enqueued through a different KV instance.
This makes `CliNpmResolver` a trait. The terminology used is:
- **managed** - Deno manages the node_modules folder and does an
auto-install (ex. `ManagedCliNpmResolver`)
- **byonm** - "Bring your own node_modules" (ex. `ByonmCliNpmResolver`,
which is in this PR, but unimplemented at the moment)
Part of #18967
This API is providing hoops to jump through with undergoing migration to
`#[op2]` macro.
The overhead of supporting this API is non-trivial and besides internal
use of it in test sanitizers is very rarely used in the wild.
This helps reduce flakes where a test starts an HTTP server and makes a
request using fetch, then shuts down the server, then starting a new
test with a new server, but the connection pool still has a "not quite
closed yet" connection to the old server, and a new request to the new
server gets sent on the closed connection, which obviously errors out.
Previously could flake on the op sanitizer because the
`await makeTempFile()` promise could leak out of the test. Now we ensure
the request is fully handled before returning.
We can go one level down in abstraction and avoid using the public
`ReadableStream` APIs.
This patch ~5% perf boost on small ReadableStream:
```
Running 10s test @ http://localhost:8080/
2 threads and 10 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 148.32us 108.95us 3.88ms 95.71%
Req/Sec 33.24k 2.68k 37.94k 73.76%
668188 requests in 10.10s, 77.74MB read
Requests/sec: 66162.91
Transfer/sec: 7.70MB
```
main:
```
Running 10s test @ http://localhost:8080/
2 threads and 10 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 150.23us 67.61us 4.39ms 94.80%
Req/Sec 31.81k 1.55k 35.56k 83.17%
639078 requests in 10.10s, 74.36MB read
Requests/sec: 63273.72
Transfer/sec: 7.36MB
```
When sending configuration requests to the client, reads `javascript`
and `typescript` sections in addition to `deno`.
The LSP's initialization options now accepts `javascript` and
`typescript` namespaces.
Give auto-import completion entries a sort-text suffix depending on if
the specifier parses as a URL. This will favour relative and bare
(likely import-mapped) specifiers.
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>
Closes #20535.
# Screenshots
## JSON
<img width="779" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/denoland/deno/assets/836375/668bb1a6-3f76-4b36-974e-cdc6c93f94c3">
## Vegalite
<img width="558" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/denoland/deno/assets/836375/a5e70908-6b87-42d8-85c3-1323ad52a00f">
# Implementation
Instead of going the route of recursively getting all the objects under
`application/.*json` keys, I went with `JSON.stringify`ing in denospace
then parsing it from rust. One of the key benefits of serializing and
deserializing is that non-JSON-able entries will get stripped
automatically. This also keeps the code pretty simple.
In the future we should _only_ do this for `application/.*json` keys.
cc @mmastrac
"Fixes" the exception display issue of #20524 on older versions of
Jupyter that required `evalue` to be truthy. For now, until we can do
proper processing of the `ExceptionDetails` this will make Jupyter
Notebook 6.5.1 and below happy.
This is the alternative "just work now" PR to #20530
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.
TaskQueue is being removed from `deno_core` and replaced with an unsync
version in deno_unsyc.
https://github.com/denoland/deno_core/pull/193
This is a change in preparation for that. The remaining
`deno_core::TaskQueue` usage in this repo should be replaced with
`deno_core::unsync::TaskQueue` once upgraded.
### 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
Removes usage of `serde_json::Value` in several ops used in TSC, in
favor of using strongly typed structs. This will unblock more
changes in https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/20462.
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>
LSP testing APIs now obey the various file inclusion settings:
- Modules shown in the text explorer now respect the `exclude`,
`test.exclude` and `test.include` fields in `deno.json`, as well as
`deno.enablePaths` in VSCode settings.
- Modules with testing code lens now respect the `"exclude"`,
`test.exclude` and `test.include` fields in `deno.json`. Code lens
already respects `deno.enablePaths`.
This allows us to opt in to extremely detailed tracing from dependency
libraries, like so:
```
cargo run --features tracing/log,tracing/max_level_trace -- test --log-level=trace -A --unstable ./cli/tests/unit/serve_test.ts
```
It will not impact normal operation as it requires the
`tracing/max_level_trace` and `tracing/log` to be active.
Note that tracing is already a dependency -- this just makes it a direct
dep of cli so we can access its features more easily.
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.
Previously we pre-computed enabled paths into `Config::enabled_paths`,
and had to keep updating it. Now we determine enabled paths directly
from `Config::settings` on demand as a single source of truth.
Removes `Config::root_uri`. If `InitializeParams::rootUri` is given, and
it doesn't correspond to a folder in
`InitializeParams::workspaceFolders`, prepend it to
`Config::workspace_folders` as a mocked folder.
Includes groundwork for
https://github.com/denoland/vscode_deno/issues/908. In a minor version
cycle or two we can fix that in vscode_deno, and it won't break for Deno
versions post this patch due to the corrected deserialization logic for
`enablePaths`.
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.