Related: https://github.com/denoland/eszip/pull/181
eszip < v0.69.0 hashes all its contents to ensure data integrity. This
feature is not necessary in Deno CLI as the binary integrity guarantee
is deemed an external responsibility (ie it is to be assumed that, if
necessary, the compiled binary will be checksumed externally prior to
being executed).
eszip >= v0.69.0 no longer performs this checksum by default. This
reduces the cold-start time of the compiled binaries, proportionally to
their size.
VScode will typically send a `textDocument/semanticTokens/full` request
followed by `textDocument/semanticTokens/range`, and occassionally
request semantic tokens even when we know nothing has changed. Semantic
tokens also get refreshed on each change. Computing semantic tokens is
relatively heavy in TSC, so we should avoid it as much as possible.
Caches the semantic tokens for open documents, to avoid making TSC do
unnecessary work. Results in a noticeable improvement in local
benchmarking
before:
```
Starting Deno benchmark
-> Start benchmarking lsp
- Simple Startup/Shutdown
(10 runs, mean: 383ms)
- Big Document/Several Edits
(5 runs, mean: 1079ms)
- Find/Replace
(10 runs, mean: 59ms)
- Code Lens
(10 runs, mean: 440ms)
- deco-cx/apps Multiple Edits + Navigation
(5 runs, mean: 9921ms)
<- End benchmarking lsp
```
after:
```
Starting Deno benchmark
-> Start benchmarking lsp
- Simple Startup/Shutdown
(10 runs, mean: 395ms)
- Big Document/Several Edits
(5 runs, mean: 1024ms)
- Find/Replace
(10 runs, mean: 56ms)
- Code Lens
(10 runs, mean: 438ms)
- deco-cx/apps Multiple Edits + Navigation
(5 runs, mean: 8927ms)
<- End benchmarking lsp
```
This PR directly addresses the issue raised in #23282 where Deno panics
if `deno coverage` is called with `--include` regex that returns no
matches.
I've opted not to change the return value of `collect_summary` for
simplicity and return an empty `HashMap` instead
Moves sloppy import resolution from the loader to the resolver.
Also adds some test helper functions to make the lsp tests less verbose
---------
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@gmail.com>
1. Generally we should prefer to use the `log` crate.
2. I very often accidentally commit `eprintln`s.
When we should use `println` or `eprintln`, it's not too bad to be a bit
more verbose and ignore the lint rule.
**THIS PR HAS GIT CONFLICTS THAT MUST BE RESOLVED**
This is the release commit being forwarded back to main for 1.43.2
Please ensure:
- [x] Everything looks ok in the PR
- [x] The release has been published
To make edits to this PR:
```shell
git fetch upstream forward_v1.43.2 && git checkout -b forward_v1.43.2 upstream/forward_v1.43.2
```
Don't need this PR? Close it.
cc @nathanwhit
Co-authored-by: nathanwhit <nathanwhit@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Nathan Whitaker <nathan@deno.com>
This PR implements the changes we plan to make to `deno install` in deno
2.0.
- `deno install` without arguments caches dependencies from
`package.json` / `deno.json` and sets up the `node_modules` folder
- `deno install <pkg>` adds the package to the config file (either
`package.json` or `deno.json`), i.e. it aliases `deno add`
- `deno add` can also add deps to `package.json` (this is gated behind
`DENO_FUTURE` due to uncertainty around handling projects with both
`deno.json` and `package.json`)
- `deno install -g <bin>` installs a package as a globally available
binary (the same as `deno install <bin>` in 1.0)
---------
Co-authored-by: Nathan Whitaker <nathan@deno.com>
Fixes the `Debug Failure` errors described in
https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/23643#issuecomment-2094552765 .
The issue here was that we were passing diagnostic codes as strings but
TSC expects the codes to be numbers. This resulted in some quick fixes
not working (as illustrated by the test added here which fails before
this PR).
The first commit is the actual fix. The rest are just test related.
Fixes #23643.
We weren't catching the cancellation exception thrown by TSC on the JS
side, so the rust side was catching this exception and then attempting
to print out the exception via `toString`. That last bit resulted in a
cryptic `[object Object]` showing up in the logs like so:
```
Error during TS request "getCompletionEntryDetails":
[object Object]
```
I'm not 100% sure how we weren't seeing this in the past. My guess is
that #23409 and the subsequent PR to improve the exception catching and
logging surfaced this, but I'm still not quite clear on it.
My initial fix here returned `null` to rust when a server request was
cancelled, but this resulted in a deserialization error when we
attempted to deserialize that into the expected response type. So now,
as soon as the request's cancellation token signals we'll stop waiting
for a response and return an error (which will get swallowed as the LSP
request is being cancelled).
I was a bit surprised to find that [this
branch](0c671c9792/cli/lsp/tsc.rs (L1093))
actually executes sometimes, I believe due to the fact that aborting a
future may not [immediately stop its
execution](https://docs.rs/futures/latest/futures/stream/struct.AbortHandle.html#method.abort).
This makes `create_runtime_snapshot` more useful for embedders who add
their own extension(s) to the runtime in build scripts.
---------
Signed-off-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.com>
Co-authored-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.com>
Before this PR, there would just be an uninformative "Error occurred"
message, after this PR you'll get a stack trace in the LSP output window
like this:
```text
Error during TS request "$getSupportedCodeFixes":
Error: i threw an exception
at serverRequest (ext:deno_tsc/99_main_compiler.js:1089:11)
```
By default, `deno serve` will assign port 8000 (like `Deno.serve`).
Users may choose a different port using `--port`.
`deno serve /tmp/file.ts`
`server.ts`:
```ts
export default {
fetch(req) {
return new Response("hello world!\n");
},
};
```
When the response has been successfully send, we abort the
`Request.signal` property to indicate that all resources associated with
this transaction may be torn down.
This commit changes the workspace support to provide all workspace
members to be available as imports based on their names and versions.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/23343
<!--
Before submitting a PR, please read
https://docs.deno.com/runtime/manual/references/contributing
1. Give the PR a descriptive title.
Examples of good title:
- fix(std/http): Fix race condition in server
- docs(console): Update docstrings
- feat(doc): Handle nested reexports
Examples of bad title:
- fix #7123
- update docs
- fix bugs
2. Ensure there is a related issue and it is referenced in the PR text.
3. Ensure there are tests that cover the changes.
4. Ensure `cargo test` passes.
5. Ensure `./tools/format.js` passes without changing files.
6. Ensure `./tools/lint.js` passes.
7. Open as a draft PR if your work is still in progress. The CI won't
run
all steps, but you can add '[ci]' to a commit message to force it to.
8. If you would like to run the benchmarks on the CI, add the 'ci-bench'
label.
-->
This PR wires up a new `jsxPrecompileSkipElements` option in
`compilerOptions` that can be used to exempt a list of elements from
being precompiled with the `precompile` JSX transform.
The actual handling of `$projectChanged` is quick, but JS requests are
not. The cleared caches only get repopulated on the next actual request,
so just batch the change notification in with the next actual request.
No significant difference in benchmarks on my machine, but this speeds
up `did_change` handling and reduces our total number of JS requests (in
addition to coalescing multiple JS change notifs into one).
Embedders may have special requirements around file opening, so we add a
new `check_open` permission check that is called as part of the file
open process.
Adds an `addr` field to `HttpServer` to simplify the pattern
`Deno.serve({ onListen({ port } => listenPort = port })`. This becomes:
`const server = Deno.serve({}); port = server.addr.port`.
Changes:
- Refactors `serve` overloads to split TLS out (in preparation for
landing a place for the TLS SNI information)
- Adds an `addr` field to `HttpServer` that matches the `addr` field of
the corresponding `Deno.Listener`s.
This PR enables V8 code cache for ES modules and for `require` scripts
through `op_eval_context`. Code cache artifacts are transparently stored
and fetched using sqlite db and are passed to V8. `--no-code-cache` can
be used to disable.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This allows people to use imports like:
```ts
import "./app.css";
```
...with `deno check` in systems where there's a bundle step (ex. Vite).
This will still error when using it with `deno run` or if the referenced
file does not exist.
See test cases for behaviour.
This PR adds a benchmark intended to measure how the LSP handles larger
repos, as well as its performance on a more realistic workload.
The repo being benchmarked is
[deco-cx/apps](https://github.com/deco-cx/apps) which has been vendored
along with its dependencies. It's included as a git submodule as its
fairly large. The LSP requests used in the benchmark are the actual
requests sent by VSCode as I opened, modified, and navigated around a
file (to simulate an actual user interaction).
The main motivation is to have a more realistic benchmark that measures
how we do with a large number of files and dependencies. The
improvements made from 1.42 to 1.42.3 mostly improved performance with
larger repos, so none of our existing benchmarks showed an improvement.
Here are the results for the changes made from 1.42 to 1.42.3 (the new
benchmark is the last one listed):
**1.42.0**
```test
Starting Deno benchmark
-> Start benchmarking lsp
- Simple Startup/Shutdown
(10 runs, mean: 379ms)
- Big Document/Several Edits
(5 runs, mean: 1142ms)
- Find/Replace
(10 runs, mean: 51ms)
- Code Lens
(10 runs, mean: 443ms)
- deco-cx/apps Multiple Edits + Navigation
(5 runs, mean: 25121ms)
<- End benchmarking lsp
```
**1.42.3**
```text
Starting Deno benchmark
-> Start benchmarking lsp
- Simple Startup/Shutdown
(10 runs, mean: 383ms)
- Big Document/Several Edits
(5 runs, mean: 1135ms)
- Find/Replace
(10 runs, mean: 55ms)
- Code Lens
(10 runs, mean: 440ms)
- deco-cx/apps Multiple Edits + Navigation
(5 runs, mean: 11675ms)
<- End benchmarking lsp
```
`TestEventSender` should not be Clone so we don't end up with multiple
copies of the same writer FD. This is probably not the cause of the test
channel lockups, but it's a lot easier to reason about.
Due to a terminating NUL that was placed in a `r#` string, we were not
actually NUL-terminating pipe names on Windows. While this has no
security implications due to the random nature of the prefix, it would
occasionally cause random failures when the trailing garbage would make
the pipe name invalid.
This commit moves logic of dispatching lifecycle events (
"load", "beforeunload", "unload") to be triggered from Rust.
Before that we were executing scripts from Rust, but now we
are storing references to functions from "99_main.js" and calling
them directly.
Prerequisite for https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/23342
I'm running into a node resolution bug in the lsp only and while
tracking it down I noticed this one.
Fixed by moving the project version out of `Documents`.
…faces (#23296)"
This reverts commit e190acbfa8.
Reverting because it broke stable API type declarations. We will reland
it for v1.43 with updated interfaces
Fixes the regression described in
https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/23293#issuecomment-2049819724.
This affected jupyter notebooks, as the LSP was passing in already
denormalized specifiers, while the jupyter kernel was not. We need to
denormalize the specifiers to evict the proper keys from our caches.
Currently we evict a lot of the caches on the JS side of things on every
request, namely script versions, script file names, and compiler
settings (as of #23283, it's not quite every request but it's still
unnecessarily often).
This PR reports changes to the JS side, so that it can evict exactly the
caches that it needs too. We might want to do some batching in the
future so as not to do 1 request per change.
This is PR a smaller retry of #23066 that simply ensures all async
`ext/fs` ops are accounted for if left hanging in tests. This also sorts
the `OP_DETAILS` in alphabetical order for easy future reading.
When reviewing, it might be best to look at the commits in order for
better understanding.
Removes the certificate options from all the interfaces and replaces
them with a new `TlsCertifiedKeyOptions`. This allows us to centralize
the documentation for TLS key management for both client and server, and
will allow us to add key object support in the future.
Also adds an option `keyFormat` field to the cert/key that must be
omitted or set to `pem`. This will allow us to load other format keys in
the future `der`, `pfx`, etc.
In a future PR, we will add a way to load a certified key object, and we
will add another option to `TlsCertifiedKeyOptions` like so:
```ts
export interface TlsCertifiedKeyOptions =
| TlsCertifiedKeyPem
| TlsCertifiedKeyFromFile
| TlsCertifiedKeyConnectTls
| { key: Deno.CertifiedKey }
```
Previously we locked the entire `FileSystemDocuments` even for lookups,
causing contention. This was particularly bad because some of the hot
ops (namely `op_resolve`) can end up hitting that lock under contention.
This PR replaces the mutex with synchronization internal to
`FileSystemDocuments` (an `AtomicBool` for the dirty flag, and then a
`DashMap` for the actual documents).
I need to think a bit more about whether or not this introduces any
problematic race conditions.
Changes `discreet` in the documentation for `discrete`
"Discreet" means careful to avoid being noticed, "discrete" means
separate parts, and is what the documentation refers to.