We were indeterministically including packages in the top level
`node_modules/` folder when using a local node_modules directory. This
change aligns with pnpm and only includes top level packages in this
folder. This should be faster for initializing the folder, but may
expose issues in packages that reference other packages not defined in
their dependencies. That said, the behaviour previously was previously
broken.
This has exposed a bug in the require implementation where it doesn't
find a package (which is the main underlying issue here). There is a
failing test already for this in the test suite after this change.
Closes #18822
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This is just a straight refactor and I didn't do any cleanup in
ext/node. After this PR we can start to clean it up and make things
private that don't need to be public anymore.
1. Breaks up functionality within `ProcState` into several other structs
to break out the responsibilities (`ProcState` is only a data struct
now).
2. Moves towards being able to inject dependencies more easily and have
functionality only require what it needs.
3. Exposes `Arc<T>` around the "service structs" instead of it being
embedded within them. The idea behind embedding them was to reduce the
verbosity of needing to pass around `Arc<...>`, but I don't think it was
exactly working and as we move more of these structs to be more
injectable I don't think the extra verbosity will be a big deal.
This reloads an npm package's dependency's information when a
version/version req/tag is not found.
This PR applies only to dependencies of npm packages. It does NOT yet
cause npm specifiers to have their dependency information cache busted.
That requires a different solution, but this should help cache bust in
more scenarios.
Part of #16901, but doesn't close it yet
This commit adds associated type to "NodeEnv" trait, called "Fs".
The "Fs" type has a trait bound on "NodeFs", which specifies APIs
required for all ops and resolution APIs to function.
A "RealFs" implementation of "NodeFs" is exported from the "deno_node"
crate, that provides a default implementation for the trait.
All code in "deno_node" extension was changed to use the "NodeFs" trait
to handle file system operations, instead of relying on APIs from the
standard library.
Creating the node_modules folder when the packages are already
downloaded can take a bit of time and not knowing what is going on can
be confusing. It's better to show a progress bar.
This has been bothering me for a while and it became more painful while
working on #18136 because injecting the shared progress bar became very
verbose. Basically we should move the creation of all these npm structs
up to a higher level.
This is a stepping stone for a future refactor where we can improve how
we create all our structs.
This improves peer dependency resolution yet again. We did not handle
scenarios like the following:
```
// a -> b -> c -> d -> c -> b (peer)
```
...which would maybe work ok the first time its run in some cases, but
then lead to a lockfile that would error on load.
This now keeps track of circular dependencies and updates nodes
accordingly. That said, there is still a lurking bug in this code
somewhere that I've added a comment for (there is a mitigation on the
tail end that seems to work well). The current state is much better than
before and I can look into it later. I think it's something small that's
incorrect.
This is implemented in such a way that it should still allow processes
to go through when a file lock wasn't properly cleaned up and the OS
hasn't released it yet (but with a 200ms-ish delay).
Closes #18039
This lazily does an "npm install" when any package name matches what's
found in the package.json or when running a script from package.json
with deno task.
Part of #17916
Closes #17928
This is a super basic initial implementation. We don't create a
`node_modules/.bin` folder at the moment and add it to the PATH like we
should which is necessary to make command name resolution in the
subprocess work properly (ex. you run a script that launches another
script that then tries to launch an "npx command"... this won't work
atm).
Closes #17492
This changes npm specifiers to be handled by deno_graph and resolved to
an npm package name and version when the specifier is encountered. It
also slightly changes how npm specifier resolution occurs—previously it
would collect all the npm specifiers and resolve them all at once, but
now it resolves them on the fly as they are encountered in the module
graph.
https://github.com/denoland/deno_graph/pull/232
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This PR fixes peer dependency resolution to only resolve peers based on
the current graph traversal path. Previously, it would resolve a peers
by looking at a graph node's ancestors, which is not correct because
graph nodes are shared by different resolutions.
It also stores more information about peer dependency resolution in the
lockfile.
This commits adds auto-discovery of "package.json" file when running
"deno run" and "deno task" subcommands. In case of "deno run" the
"package.json" is being looked up starting from the directory of the
script that is being run, stopping early if "deno.json(c)" file is found
(ie. FS tree won't be traversed "up" from "deno.json").
When "package.json" is discovered the "--node-modules-dir" flag is
implied, leading to creation of local "node_modules/" directory - we
did that, because most tools relying on "package.json" will expect
"node_modules/" directory to be present (eg. Vite). Additionally
"dependencies" and "devDependencies" specified in the "package.json"
are downloaded on startup.
This is a stepping stone to supporting bare specifier imports, but
the actual integration will be done in a follow up commit.
---------
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@gmail.com>
The `NpmPackageId` struct is being renamed to `NpmPackageNodeId`. In a
future PR it will be moved down into only npm dependency resolution and
a `NpmPackageId` struct will be introduced in `deno_graph` that only has
the name and version of the package (no peer dependency identifier
information). So a `NpmPackageReq` will map to an `NpmPackageId`, which
will map to an `NpmPackageNodeId` in the npm resolution.
- Generalizes the npm version code (ex. `NpmVersion` -> `Version`,
`NpmVersionReq` -> `VersionReq`). This is a slow refactor towards
extracting out this code for deno specifiers and better usage in
deno_graph.
- Removes `SpecifierVersionReq`. Consolidates `NpmVersionReq` and
`SpecifierVersionReq` to just `VersionReq`
- Removes `NpmVersionMatcher`. This now just looks at `VersionReq`.
- Paves the way to allow us to create `NpmPackageReference`'s from a
package.json's dependencies/dev dependencies
(`VersionReq::parse_from_npm`).
I'm not sure this properly handles scenarios where an npm package uses
an alias that resolves to itself, we can fix that if we find a package
that actually depends on that behavior.
Closes #17420
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.
If an optional peer dependency entry previously wasn't resolved and it's
now being resolved, then it will add it as if it were a dependency of
the previously resolved package instead of creating a new "copy package"
(seems to be what npm and pnpm does).
Closes #17240
If "--lock-write" flag was present we never passed instance of the lockfile to
the npm resolver, which made it skip adding discovered npm packages to
the lockfile. This commit fixes that, by always passing lockfile to the npm
resolver and only regenerating resolver snapshot is "--lock-write" is not
present.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/16666
Supports package names that aren't all lowercase.
This stores the package with a leading underscore (since that's not
allowed in npm's registry and no package exists with a leading
underscore) then base32 encoded (A-Z0-9) so it can be lowercased and
avoid collisions.
Global cache dir:
```
$DENO_DIR/npm/registry.npmjs.org/_{base32_encode(package_name).to_lowercase()}/{version}
```
node_modules dir `.deno` folder:
```
node_modules/.deno/_{base32_encode(package_name).to_lowercase()}@{version}/node_modules/<package-name>
```
Within node_modules folder:
```
node_modules/<package-name>
```
So, direct childs of the node_modules folder can have collisions between
packages like `JSON` vs `json`, but this is already something npm itself
doesn't handle well. Plus, Deno doesn't actually ever resolve to the
`node_modules/<package-name>` folder, but just has that for
compatibility. Additionally, packages in the `.deno` dir could have
collissions if they have multiple dependencies that only differ in
casing or a dependency that has different casing, but if someone is
doing that then they're already going to have trouble with npm and they
are asking for trouble in general.
Peer dependency resolution wasn't handling a peer dependency being
resolved without a dep higher in the tree and then with one being found
higher in the tree.
1. There was a lot of cloning going on with `NpmPackageInfo`. This is
now stored in an `Arc<NpmPackageInfo>` and cloning only happens on the
individual version.
2. The package cache is now cleared from memory after resolution.
3. This surfaced a bug in `deno cache` and I noticed it can be more
efficient if we have multiple root specifiers if we provide all the
specifiers as roots.
This commit makes "npm:" specifiers not require "--unstable" flag.
At the moment some APIs used by Node polyfills still require
"--unstable" which will be addressed in follow up PRs.
This adds support for peer dependencies in npm packages.
1. If not found higher in the tree (ancestor and ancestor siblings),
peer dependencies are resolved like a dependency similar to npm 7.
2. Optional peer dependencies are only resolved if found higher in the
tree.
3. This creates "copy packages" or duplicates of a package when a
package has different resolution due to peer dependency resolution—see
https://pnpm.io/how-peers-are-resolved. Unlike pnpm though, duplicates
of packages will have `_1`, `_2`, etc. added to the end of the package
version in the directory in order to minimize the chance of hitting the
max file path limit on Windows. This is done for both the local
"node_modules" directory and also the global npm cache. The files are
hard linked in this case to reduce hard drive space.
This is a first pass and the code is definitely more inefficient than it
could be.
Closes #15823
This commit changes lockfile to be "additive" - ie. integrity check only fails if
file/package is already specified in the lockfile, but its integrity doesn't match.
If file/package is not present in the lockfile, it will be added to the lockfile and
the lockfile will be written to disk.
This commit adds a cache for CJS and ESM analysis that is backed by an
SQLite file.
The connection to the DB is lazily created on first use, so shouldn't
have impact on the startup time.
Benched with running Vite
Deno v1.26:
```
$ deno task dev
Warning deno task is unstable and may drastically change in the future
Task dev deno run -A --unstable --node-modules-dir npm:vite
VITE v3.1.4 ready in 961 ms
➜ Local: http://localhost:5173/
➜ Network: use --host to expose
```
This branch:
```
../deno/target/release/deno task dev
Warning deno task is unstable and may drastically change in the future
Task dev deno run -A --unstable --node-modules-dir npm:vite
VITE v3.1.4 ready in 330 ms
➜ Local: http://localhost:5173/
➜ Network: use --host to expose
```
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This commit changes "npm:" specifier handling to respect "--cached-only" flags and adds "Download" messages for npm registry api calls.
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@gmail.com>