Instead of using core/snapshot_creator.rs, instead two crates are
introduced which allow building the snapshot during build.rs.
Rollup is removed and replaced with our own bundler. This removes
the Node build dependency. Modules in //js now use Deno-style imports
with file extensions, rather than Node style extensionless imports.
This improves incremental build time when changes are made to //js files
by about 40 seconds.
* Revert "port more ops to JSON (#2809)"
This reverts commit 137f33733d.
* Revert "port ops to JSON: compiler, errors, fetch, files (#2804)"
This reverts commit 79f82cf10e.
* Revert "Port rest of os ops to JSON (#2802)"
This reverts commit 5b2baa5c99.
groupCollapsed alias to group, remove noTrailingNewline, move newline
out of stringifyArgs, fix console.dir, add tests, and fix a repl log quirk.
For repl logging quirks, I believe we should not indent repl logging. If
we really want such indentation, we probably also want to indent "> "
prompts.
Fixes some sed errors introduced in c43cfe.
Unfortunately moving libdeno required splitting build.rs into two parts,
one for cli and one for core.
I've also removed the arm64 build - it's complicating things at this
re-org and we're not even testing it. I need to swing back to it and get
tools/test.py running for it.
Resolves #1705
This PR adds the Deno APIs as a global namespace named `Deno`. For backwards
compatibility, the ability to `import * from "deno"` is preserved. I have tried
to convert every test and internal code the references the module to use the
namespace instead, but because I didn't break compatibility I am not sure.
On the REPL, `deno` no longer exists, replaced only with `Deno` to align with
the regular runtime.
The runtime type library includes both the namespace and module. This means it
duplicates the whole type information. When we remove the functionality from the
runtime, it will be a one line change to the library generator to remove the
module definition from the type library.
I marked a `TODO` in a couple places where to remove the `"deno"` module, but
there are additional places I know I didn't mark.