Fixes denoland#16922.
The error messages in the `ffi` module are somewhat cryptic when passing
functions that have invalid `parameters` or `result` type strings. While
the generated serializer for the `ForeignFunction` struct correctly
outputs a correct and verbose message, the user sees a far less helpful
`data did not match any variant` message instead.
The underlying cause appears to be the fallback message in the
auto-derived deserializer for untagged enums [1] generated as a result
of `ForeignSymbol` being marked as `#[serde(untagged)]` [2]. Passing an
unexpected value for `NativeType` causes it to error out while
attempting to deserialize both enum variants -- once because it's not a
match for the `ForeignStatic` variant, and once because the
`ForeignFunction` deserializer rejects the invalid type for the
parameters/return type. This is currently open as [serde
#773](https://github.com/serde-rs/serde/issues/773), and not a trivial
exercise to fix generically.
[1]
https://github.com/serde-rs/serde/blob/v0.9.7/serde_derive/src/de.rs#L730
[2] https://github.com/denoland/deno/blob/main/ext/ffi/dlfcn.rs#L102
[3] https://github.com/serde-rs/serde/issues/773
Note that the auto-generated deserializer for untagged enums uses a
private API to buffer deserializer content that we don't have access to.
Instead, we can make use of the `serde_value` crate to buffer the
values. This can likely be removed once the official buffering API lands
(see [4] and [5]). In addition, this crate pulls in `serde_json` as a
cheap way to test that the deserializer works properly.
[4] https://github.com/serde-rs/serde/issues/741
[5] https://github.com/serde-rs/serde/pull/2348
This commit moves "deno_std/node" in "ext/node" crate. The code is
transpiled and snapshotted during the build process.
During the first pass a minimal amount of work was done to create the
snapshot, a lot of code in "ext/node" depends on presence of "Deno"
global. This code will be gradually fixed in the follow up PRs to migrate
it to import relevant APIs from "internal:" modules.
Currently the code from snapshot is not used in any way, and all
Node/npm compatibility still uses code from
"https://deno.land/std/node" (or from the location specified by
"DENO_NODE_COMPAT_URL"). This will also be handled in a follow
up PRs.
---------
Co-authored-by: crowlkats <crowlkats@toaxl.com>
Co-authored-by: Divy Srivastava <dj.srivastava23@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Yoshiya Hinosawa <stibium121@gmail.com>
This commit stabilizes Node-API, the "--unstable" flag is no longer
required to load native extensions. "--allow-ffi" permission is still
required to load them.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/17761
Tugstenite already sends a pong for a recieved ping. This automatically
happens when the socket read is being driven. From
https://github.com/snapview/tokio-tungstenite/issues/88
> You need to read from the read-side of the socket so that it
receives/handles pings, and on the next write it would then send the
corresponding pong.
Here's the source:
e1033afd95/src/protocol/mod.rs (L374-L380)
```rust
// Upon receipt of a Ping frame, an endpoint MUST send a Pong frame in
// response, unless it already received a Close frame. It SHOULD
// respond with Pong frame as soon as is practical. (RFC 6455)
if let Some(pong) = self.pong.take() {
trace!("Sending pong reply");
self.send_one_frame(stream, pong)?;
}
```
WIth this patch, all Autobahn tests from 1-8 pass. Fixed cases: 2.1,
2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.6, 2.9, 2.10, 2.11, 5.6, 5.7, 5.8, 5.19, 5.20
To run the test yourself, follow
https://www.notion.so/denolandinc/Autobahn-WebSocket-testsuite-723a86f450ce4823b4ef9cb3dc4c7869?pvs=4
This was not caught in the previous test case, as the response body was
smaller than the size of `HEAD` response.
This made `nwritten < responseLen` check in `writeFixedResponse` to
fail, and not trigger `op_flash_respond_async` as a result.
When the response body is larger than the `HEAD` though, as in the
updated test case (`HEAD` i 120 bytes, where our response is 300 bytes),
it would think that we still have something to send, and effectively
panic, as `op_flash_respond` already removed the request from the pool.
This change, makes the `handleResponse` function always calculate the
number of bytes to transmit when `HEAD` request is encountered.
Effectively ignoring `Content-Length` of the body, but still setting it
correctly in the request header itself.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/17737
This commit moves some code around from "cli/node/mod.rs" to
"ext/node". Additionally "ext/node" was changed to factor out
"ops.rs" and "polyfill.rs" modules.
This commit does preparatory work to allow snapshotting Node.js
compatibility layer, that currently lives in `std/node`. The logic was
changed to allow loading some modules from the snapshot and
some from the remote URL.
Additionally "module_es_shim.js" that provides exports for "node:module"
is now snapshotted.
This PR refactors all internal js files (except core) to be written as
ES modules.
`__bootstrap`has been mostly replaced with static imports in form in
`internal:[path to file from repo root]`.
To specify if files are ESM, an `esm` method has been added to
`Extension`, similar to the `js` method.
A new ModuleLoader called `InternalModuleLoader` has been added to
enable the loading of internal specifiers, which is used in all
situations except when a snapshot is only loaded, and not a new one is
created from it.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Currently fast ops will always check for the alignment of a TypedArray
when getting a slice out of them. A match is then done to ensure that
some slice was received and if not a fallback will be requested.
For Uint8Arrays (and WasmMemory which is equivalent to a Uint8Array) the
alignment will always be okay. Rust probably optimises this away for the
most part (since the Uint8Array check is `x % 1 != 0`), but what it
cannot optimise away is the fast ops path's request for fallback options
parameter.
The extra parameter's cost is likely negligible but V8 will need to
check if a fallback was requested and prepare the fallback call just in
case it was. In the future the lack of a fallback may also enable V8 to
much better optimise the result handling.
For V8 created buffers, it seems like all buffers are actually always
guaranteed to be properly aligned: All buffers seem to always be created
8-byte aligned, and creating a 32 bit array or 64 bit array with a
non-aligned offset from an ArrayBuffer is not allowed. Unfortunately,
Deno FFI cannot give the same guarantees, and it is actually possible
for eg. 32 bit arrays to be created unaligned using it. These arrays
work fine (at least on Linux) so it seems like this is not illegal, it
just means that we cannot remove the alignment checking for 32 bit
arrays.
This patch makes `NativeType` to `libffi::middle::Type` conversion
failliable and w.t disallows struct with empty fields. libffi does not
handle "empty" struct because they don't exist in C (or Rust).
Fixes #17481
Bump the rsa crate to 0.7.0
The API for the `rsa` crate has changed significantly, but I have
verified that tests continue to pass throughout this update.
I mistakenly held on to a RefCell's borrow for the whole time of
iteration, but since these counters can be refed/unrefed from any
thread that is a mistake.
Updated third_party dlint to v0.37.0 for GitHub Actions. This PR
includes following changes:
* fix(prefer-primordials): Stop using array pattern assignments
* fix(prefer-primordials): Stop using global intrinsics except for
`SharedArrayBuffer`
* feat(guard-for-in): Apply new guard-for-in rule
If the JS handler gets a POST, PUT, or PATCH request, but doesn't
`await` the body, deno would panic because it will try to read the body
even though the request has already been handled.
Not sure how/where to test this case, so I could use some help with
that.
The leading cause of the problem was that `handleResponse` has
`tryRespondChunked` passed as an argument, which in turn is implemented
as a call to `core.ops.op_try_flash_respond_chuncked`, that throws in
the repro code.
`handleResponse` was not handled correctly, as it not returned any
value, and had no `catch` attached to it.
It also effectively was never correctly handled inside two other blocks
with `resp.then` and `PromisePrototypeCatch(PromisePrototypeThen(resp,
"..."))` as well, as it just short-circuited the promise with an empty
resolve, instead of relying on the last `(async () => {})` block.
This change makes `handleResponse` return a correct value and attach
`onError` handler to the "non-thenable" variant of response handling
code.
This commit fixes "cleanup hooks" in NAPI integration in two ways:
- don't hold to RefCell's borrow while iterating over hooks
- allow a hook to remove itself when being called
This commit changes signature of "deno_core::ModuleLoader::resolve" to pass
an enum indicating whether or not we're resolving a specifier for dynamic import.
Additionally "CliModuleLoader" was changes to store both "parent permissions" (or
"root permissions") as well as "dynamic permissions" that allow to check for permissions
in top-level module load an dynamic imports.
Then all code paths that have anything to do with Node/npm compat are now checking
for permissions which are passed from module loader instance associated with given
worker.
Adds support for passing and returning structs as buffers to FFI. This does not implement fastapi support for structs. Needed for certain system APIs such as AppKit on macOS.
The whole point of creating this alternative operation was to allow
usage in node, without `--unstable` flag.
Introduced and I believe missed in
https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/16520/
This commit adds "Deno.Conn.ref()" and "Deno.Conn.unref()" methods.
These methods can be used to make connection block or not block the
event loop from finishing. Refing/unrefing only influences "read"
operations - ie. scheduling writes to a connection _do_ keep event
loop alive.
Required for https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/16710
Previously, errored streaming response bodies did not cause the HTTP
stream to be aborted. It instead caused the stream to be closed gracefully,
which had the result that the client could not detect the difference
between a successful response and an errored response.
This commit fixes the issue by aborting the stream on error.
Right now an error in a request body stream causes an uncatchable
global promise rejection. This PR fixes this to instead propagate the
error correctly into the promise returned from `fetch`.
It additionally fixes errored readable stream bodies being treated as
successfully completed bodies by Rust.
In our `require()` implementation we use a special logic to resolve
"base path" when looking for matching packages, however this logic
is in contradiction to what needs to happen if there's a local
"node_modules"
directory used. This commit changes require implementation to be aware
if we're running off of global node modules cache or a local one.
- [x] `dlfcn.rs` - `dlopen()`-related code.
- [x] `turbocall.rs` - Call trampoline JIT compiler.
- [x] `repr.rs` - Pointer representation. Home of the UnsafePointerView
ops.
- [x] `symbol.rs` - Function symbol related code.
- [x] `callback.rs` - Home of `Deno.UnsafeCallback` ops.
- [x] `ir.rs` - Intermediate representation for values. Home of the
`NativeValue` type.
- [x] `call.rs` - Generic call ops. Home to everything related to
calling FFI symbols.
- [x] `static.rs` - static symbol support
I find easier to work with this setup, I eventually want to expand
TurboCall to unroll type conversion loop in generic calls, generate code
for individual symbols (lazy function pointers), etc.
Previously the inner request object of the original and the new request
were the same, causing the requests to be entangled and mutable changes
to one to be visible to the other. This fixes that.