Step 1 of the Rustification of sanitizers, which unblocks the faster
timers.
This replaces the resource sanitizer with a Rust one, using the new APIs
in deno_core.
This commit changes LSP log names by prefixing them, we now have these
prefixes:
- `lsp.*` - requests coming from the client
- `tsc.request.*` - requests coming from clients that are routed to TSC
- `tsc.op.*` - ops called by the TS host
- `tsc.host.*` - requests that call JavaScript runtime that runs
TypeScript compiler host
Additionall `Performance::mark` was split into `Performance::mark` and
`Performance::mark_with_args` to reduce verbosity of code and logs.
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`.
Previously:
```rust
pub struct TestDefinition {
pub id: String,
pub name: String,
pub range: SourceRange,
pub steps: Vec<TestDefinition>,
}
pub struct TestDefinitions {
pub discovered: Vec<TestDefinition>,
pub injected: Vec<lsp_custom::TestData>,
pub script_version: String,
}
```
Now:
```rust
pub struct TestDefinition {
pub id: String,
pub name: String,
pub range: Option<Range>,
pub is_dynamic: bool, // True for 'injected' module, not statically detected but added at runtime.
pub parent_id: Option<String>,
pub step_ids: HashSet<String>,
}
pub struct TestModule {
pub specifier: ModuleSpecifier,
pub script_version: String,
pub defs: HashMap<String, TestDefinition>,
}
```
Storing the test tree as a literal tree diminishes the value of IDs,
even though vscode stores them that way. This makes all data easily
accessible from `TestModule`. It unifies the interface between
'discovered' and 'injected' tests. This unblocks some enhancements wrt
syncing tests between the LSP and extension, such as this TODO:
61f08d5a71/client/src/testing.ts (L251-L259)
and https://github.com/denoland/vscode_deno/issues/900. We should also
get more flexibility overall.
`TestCollector` is cleaned up, now stores a `&mut TestModule` directly
and registers tests as it comes across them with
`TestModule::register()`. This method ensures sanity in the redundant
data from having both of `TestDefinition::{parent_id,step_ids}`.
All of the messy conversions between `TestDescription`,
`LspTestDescription`, `TestDefinition`, `TestData` and `TestIdentifier`
are cleaned up. They shouldn't have been using `impl From` and now the
full list of tests is available to their implementations.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/vscode_deno/issues/843.
Prevents step results from being reported twice. Refactors
`LspTestReporter` to use a complete `(test_id, descriptor)` map instead
of a brittle `LspTestReporter::stack`.
This commit adds a "dot" reporter to "deno test" subcommand,
that can be activated using "--dot" flag.
It provides a concise output using:
- "." for passing test
- "," for ignored test
- "!" for failing test
User output is silenced and not printed to the console.
In non-TTY environments each result is printed on a separate line.
Partially supersedes #19016.
This migrates `spawn` and `spawn_blocking` to `deno_core`, and removes
the requirement for `spawn` tasks to be `Send` given our single-threaded
executor.
While we don't need to technically do anything w/`spawn_blocking`, this
allows us to have a single `JoinHandle` type that works for both cases,
and allows us to more easily experiment with alternative
`spawn_blocking` implementations that do not require tokio (ie: rayon).
Async ops (+~35%):
Before:
```
time 1310 ms rate 763358
time 1267 ms rate 789265
time 1259 ms rate 794281
time 1266 ms rate 789889
```
After:
```
time 956 ms rate 1046025
time 954 ms rate 1048218
time 924 ms rate 1082251
time 920 ms rate 1086956
```
HTTP serve (+~4.4%):
Before:
```
Running 10s test @ http://localhost:4500
2 threads and 10 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 68.78us 19.77us 1.43ms 86.84%
Req/Sec 68.78k 5.00k 73.84k 91.58%
1381833 requests in 10.10s, 167.36MB read
Requests/sec: 136823.29
Transfer/sec: 16.57MB
```
After:
```
Running 10s test @ http://localhost:4500
2 threads and 10 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 63.12us 17.43us 1.11ms 85.13%
Req/Sec 71.82k 3.71k 77.02k 79.21%
1443195 requests in 10.10s, 174.79MB read
Requests/sec: 142921.99
Transfer/sec: 17.31MB
```
Suggested-By: alice@ryhl.io
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This removes `ProcState` and replaces it with a new `CliFactory` which
initializes our "service structs" on demand. This isn't a performance
improvement at the moment for `deno run`, but might unlock performance
improvements in the future.
Stores the test/bench functions in rust op state during registration.
The functions are wrapped in JS first so that they return a directly
convertible `TestResult`/`BenchResult`. Test steps are still mostly
handled in JS since they are pretty much invoked by the user. Allows
removing a bunch of infrastructure for communicating between JS and
rust. Allows using rust utilities for things like shuffling tests
(`Vec::shuffle`). We can progressively move op and resource sanitization
to rust as well.
Fixes #17122.
Fixes #17312.
This implements two macros to simplify extension registration and centralize a lot of the boilerplate as a base for future improvements:
* `deno_core::ops!` registers a block of `#[op]`s, optionally with type
parameters, useful for places where we share lists of ops
* `deno_core::extension!` is used to register an extension, and creates
two methods that can be used at runtime/snapshot generation time:
`init_ops` and `init_ops_and_esm`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Turns out we were cloning permissions which after prompting were discarded,
so the state of permissions was never preserved. To handle that we need to store
all permissions behind "Arc<Mutex<>>" (because there are situations where we
need to send them to other thread).
Testing and benching code still uses "Permissions" in most places - it's undesirable
to share the same permission set between various test/bench files - otherwise
granting or revoking permissions in one file would influence behavior of other test
files.