Testing once again if the crates are being properly released.
---------
Co-authored-by: bartlomieju <bartlomieju@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Test run before Deno 2.0 release to make sure that the publishing
process passes correctly.
---------
Co-authored-by: bartlomieju <bartlomieju@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Aligns the error messages in the ext folder to be in-line with the Deno
style guide.
https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/25269
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Adds a `parallel` flag to `deno serve`. When present, we spawn multiple
workers to parallelize serving requests.
```bash
deno serve --parallel main.ts
```
Currently on linux we use `SO_REUSEPORT` and rely on the fact that the
kernel will distribute connections in a round-robin manner.
On mac and windows, we sort of emulate this by cloning the underlying
file descriptor and passing a handle to each worker. The connections
will not be guaranteed to be fairly distributed (and in practice almost
certainly won't be), but the distribution is still spread enough to
provide a significant performance increase.
---
(Run on an Macbook Pro with an M3 Max, serving `deno.com`
baseline::
```
❯ wrk -d 30s -c 125 --latency http://127.0.0.1:8000
Running 30s test @ http://127.0.0.1:8000
2 threads and 125 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 239.78ms 13.56ms 330.54ms 79.12%
Req/Sec 258.58 35.56 360.00 70.64%
Latency Distribution
50% 236.72ms
75% 248.46ms
90% 256.84ms
99% 268.23ms
15458 requests in 30.02s, 2.47GB read
Requests/sec: 514.89
Transfer/sec: 84.33MB
```
this PR (`with --parallel` flag)
```
❯ wrk -d 30s -c 125 --latency http://127.0.0.1:8000
Running 30s test @ http://127.0.0.1:8000
2 threads and 125 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 117.40ms 142.84ms 590.45ms 79.07%
Req/Sec 1.33k 175.19 1.77k 69.00%
Latency Distribution
50% 22.34ms
75% 223.67ms
90% 357.32ms
99% 460.50ms
79636 requests in 30.07s, 12.74GB read
Requests/sec: 2647.96
Transfer/sec: 433.71MB
```
This is the release commit being forwarded back to main for 1.45.3
---------
Co-authored-by: bartlomieju <bartlomieju@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This is the release commit being forwarded back to main for 1.44.3
Co-authored-by: bartlomieju <bartlomieju@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
I was able to use my experience with some of the Deno extensions to
flesh out their documentation a bit
I've provided docs for the following:
- web
- fetch
- net
- webidl
- url
- io
- crypto
- console
---------
Signed-off-by: Richard Carson <Rscarson@rogers.com>
This commit updates Deno to use `reqwest` at 0.12.4
and `rustls` at 0.22. Other related crates were updated
as well to match versions accepted by `reqwest` and `rustls`.
Note: we are not using the latest available `rustls` yet,
but this upgrade was non-trivial already, so a bump to
0.23 for `rustls` will be done in a separate commit.
Closes #23370
---------
Signed-off-by: Ryan Dahl <ry@tinyclouds.org>
Signed-off-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Ryan Dahl <ry@tinyclouds.org>
Co-authored-by: Divy Srivastava <dj.srivastava23@gmail.com>
Also removes permissions being passed in for node resolution. It was
completely useless because we only checked it for reading package.json
files, but Deno reading package.json files for resolution is perfectly
fine.
My guess is this is also a perf improvement because Deno is doing less
work.
This is the release commit being forwarded back to main for 1.44.1
Co-authored-by: devsnek <devsnek@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Divy Srivastava <dj.srivastava23@gmail.com>