Although not easy to replicate in the wild, the `deno test` op sanitizer
can fail when there are intervals that started before a test runs, since
the op sanitizer can end up running in the time between the timer op for
an interval's run resolves and the op for the next run starts.
This change fixes that by adding a new macrotask callback that will run
after the timer macrotask queue has drained. This ensures that there is
a timer op if there are any timers which are unresolved by the time the
op sanitizer runs.
Set the exit code to use if none is provided to Deno.exit(), or when
Deno exits naturally.
Needed for process.exitCode Node compat. Paves the way for #12888.
This commit adds an ability to "ref" or "unref" pending ops.
Up to this point Deno had a notion of "async ops" and "unref async ops";
the former keep event loop alive, while the latter do not block event loop
from finishing. It was not possible to change between op types after
dispatching, one had to decide which type to use before dispatch.
Instead of storing ops in two separate "FuturesUnordered" collections,
now ops are stored in a single collection, with supplemental "HashSet"
storing ids of promises that were "unrefed".
Two APIs were added to "Deno.core":
"Deno.core.refOp(promiseId)" which allows to mark promise id
to be "refed" and keep event loop alive (the default behavior)
"Deno.core.unrefOp(promiseId)" which allows to mark promise
id as "unrefed" which won't block event loop from exiting
In tests, the function to format errors would assume that any error with
a property `errors` would be an `AggregateError`, and therefore the
property `errors` would contain an error. This is not necessarily the
case.
This allows resources to be "streams" by implementing read/write/shutdown. These streams are implicit since their nature (read/write/duplex) isn't known until called, but we could easily add another method to explicitly tag resources as streams.
`op_read/op_write/op_shutdown` are now builtin ops provided by `deno_core`
Note: this current implementation is simple & straightforward but it results in an additional alloc per read/write call
Closes #12556
`Window`'s `self` property and `DedicatedWorkerGlobalScope`'s `name`
property are defined as Web IDL read-only attributes with the
`[Replaceable]` extended attribute, meaning that their setter will
redefine the property as a data property with the set value, rather than
changing some internal state. Deno currently defines them as read-only
data properties instead.
Given that Web IDL requires all attributes to be accessor properties
rather than data properties, but Deno exposes almost all of those
properties as either read-only or writable data properties, it makes
sense to expose `[Replaceable]` properties as writable as well – as is
already the case with `WindowOrWorkerGlobalScope`'s `performance`
property.
* perf(runtime/fs): optimize readFile by using a single large buffer
* handle extended/truncated files during read
Allocate an extra byte in our read buffer to detect "overflow" then fallback to unsized readAll for remainder of extended file, this is a slowpath that should rarely happen in practice
A comment in `runtime.js` reads that `console` seems to be "the only one
that should be writable and non-enumerable", which explains why it is
declared with `util.writable` but then has its property descriptor's
`enumerable` key changed to false.
But it is not in fact true that `console` is the only global property
for which this holds, and it wasn't even when this behavior was
introduced in denoland#9013. All WebIDL interfaces are also writable and
non-enumerable – the only difference here being that `console` is a
namespace rather than an interface.
Since WebIDL interfaces are defined with `util.nonEnumerable`, and
`console` uses the same descriptor keys, this PR changes the definition
of `console` to use `util.nonEnumerable` as well.
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 >
When `worker.terminate()` is called, the spec requires that the
corresponding port message queue is emptied, so no messages can be
received after the call, even if they were sent from the worker before
it was terminated.
The spec doesn't require this of `self.close()`, and since Deno uses
different channels to send messages and to notify that the worker was
closed, messages might still arrive after the worker is known to be
closed, which are currently being dropped. This change fixes that.
The fix involves two parts: one on the JS side and one on the Rust side.
The JS side was using the `#terminated` flag to keep track of whether
the worker is known to be closed, without distinguishing whether further
messages should be dropped or not. This PR changes that flag to an
enum `#state`, which can be one of `"RUNNING"`, `"CLOSED"` or
`"TERMINATED"`.
The Rust side was removing the `WorkerThread` struct from the workers
table when a close control was received, regardless of whether there
were any messages left to read, which made any subsequent calls to
`op_host_recv_message` to return `Ok(None)`, as if there were no more
mesasges. This change instead waits for both a close control and for
the message channel's sender to be closed before the worker thread is
removed from the table.
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 removes implementation of "native plugins" and replaces
it with FFI API.
Effectively "Deno.openPlugin" API was replaced with "Deno.dlopen" API.
The WebAssembly streaming APIs used to be enabled, but used to take
buffer sources as their first argument (see #6154 and #7259). This
change re-enables them, requiring a Promise<Response> instead, as well as
enabling asynchronous compilation of WebAssembly modules.
This commits moves implementation of net related APIs available on "Deno"
namespace to "deno_net" extension.
Following APIs were moved:
- Deno.listen()
- Deno.connect()
- Deno.listenTls()
- Deno.serveHttp()
- Deno.shutdown()
- Deno.resolveDns()
- Deno.listenDatagram()
- Deno.startTls()
- Deno.Conn
- Deno.Listener
- Deno.DatagramConn
This commit adds support for piping console messages to inspector.
This is done by "wrapping" Deno's console implementation with default
console provided by V8 by the means of "Deno.core.callConsole" binding.
Effectively each call to "console.*" methods calls a method on Deno's
console and V8's console.
This commit removes all JS based text encoding / text decoding. Instead
encoding now happens in Rust via encoding_rs (already in tree). This
implementation retains stream support, but adds the last missing
encodings. We are incredibly close to 100% WPT on text encoding now.
This should reduce our baseline heap by quite a bit.
This commit adds support for running test in parallel.
Entire test runner functionality has been rewritten
from JavaScript to Rust and a set of ops was added to support reporting in Rust.
A new "--jobs" flag was added to "deno test" that allows to configure
how many threads will be used. When given no value it defaults to 2.
This commits adds adds "permissions" option to the test definitions
which allows tests to run with different permission sets than
the process's permission.
The change will only be in effect within the test function, once the
test has completed the original process permission set is restored.
Test permissions cannot exceed the process's permission.
You can only narrow or drop permissions, failure to acquire a
permission results in an error being thrown and the test case will fail.
Even if bootstrapping the JS runtime is low level, it's an abstraction leak of
core to require users to call `Deno.core.ops()` in JS space.
So instead we're introducing a `JsRuntime::sync_ops_cache()` method,
once we have runtime extensions a new runtime will ensure the ops
cache is setup (for the provided extensions) and then loading/unloading
plugins should be the only operations that require op cache syncs
- register builtin v8 errors in core.js so consumers don't have to
- remove complexity of error args handling (consumers must provide a
constructor with custom args, core simply provides msg arg)
This commit aligns the `fetch` API and the `Request` / `Response`
classes belonging to it to the spec. This commit enables all the
relevant `fetch` WPT tests. Spec compliance is now at around 90%.
Performance is essentially identical now (within 1% of 1.9.0).
This commit introduces a performance optimization for the native HTTP
server. From my testing it is about 2-6% faster than `main`. Request
headers in the HTTP servers are now lazilly instatated when they are
accessed, rather than being preemptively wrapped in the `Headers` class.
This stabilizes Deno.ftruncate and Deno.ftruncateSync.
This is a well known system call and the interface is
not going to change. Implicitly requires write permissions
as the file has to be opened with write to be truncated.
This commit marks the `Deno.Buffer` / `Deno.readAll` /
`Deno.readAllSync` / `Deno.writeAll` / `Deno.writeAllSync` utils as
deprecated, and schedules them for removal in Deno 2.0. These
utilities are implemented in pure JS, so should not be part of the
Deno namespace.
These utilities are now available in std/io/buffer and std/io/util:
https://github.com/denoland/deno_std/pull/808.
This additionallty removes all internal dependance on Deno.Buffer.
This commit moves implementation of bin ops to "deno_core" crates
as well as unifying logic between bin ops and json ops to reuse
as much code as possible (both in Rust and JavaScript).
Change `Console.#printFunc` to pass a log level as the second argument
(0 = debug, 3 = error), instead of a boolean for `isErr`. This does not
change the Deno runtime behaviour at all.
This commit rewrites "dispatch_minimal" into "dispatch_buffer".
It's part of an effort to unify JS interface for ops for both json
and minimal (buffer) ops.
Before this commit "minimal ops" could be either sync or async
depending on the return type from the op, but this commit changes
it to have separate signatures for sync and async ops (just like
in case of json ops).