The WHATWG DOM specification has corrected the spelling of "slotable" to
"slottable".[1] This commit aligns our implementation accordingly.
[1]: https://github.com/whatwg/dom/pull/845
Fixes #19568
Values are not coerced to the desired type during deserialisation. This
makes serde_v8 stricter.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
`ZeroCopyBuf` was convenient to use, but sometimes it did hide details
that some copies were necessary in certain cases. Also it made it way to easy
for the caller to pass around and convert into different values. This commit
splits `ZeroCopyBuf` into `JsBuffer` (an array buffer coming from V8) and
`ToJsBuffer` (a Rust buffer that will be converted into a V8 array buffer).
As a result some magical conversions were removed (they were never used)
limiting the API surface and preparing for changes in #19534.
Fixes a bug I noticed when deriving a key based from `ECDH`. Similar
issue is also mentioned in #14693, where they derive a key using
`PBKDF2`
- In the WebCrypto API, `deriveKey()` is equivalent to `deriveBits()`
followed by `importKey()`
- But, `deriveKey()` requires just `deriveKey` in the `usages` of the
`baseKey` parameter. The `deriveBits` usage is not required to be
allowed. This is the uniform behaviour in Node, Chrome and Firefox.
- The impl currently has userland-accessible `SubtleCrypto.deriveKey()`
and `SubtleCrypto.deriveBits()`, as well as an internal `deriveBits()`
(this is the one that accesses the ffi).
- Also, `SubtleCrypto.deriveKey()` checks if `deriveKey` is an allowed
usage and `SubtleCrypto.deriveBits()` checks if `deriveBits` is an
allowed usage, as required.
- However, the impl currently calls the userland accessible
`SubtleCrypto.deriveBits()` in `SubtleCrypto.deriveKey()`, leading to an
error being thrown if the `deriveBits` usage isn't present.
- Fixed this by making it call the internal `deriveBits()`
instead.
A few easy migrations of module code from the runtime to the module map.
The module map already has a few places where it needs a handle scope,
so we're not coupling it any further with the v8 runtime.
`init_runtime_module_map` is replaced with an option to reduce API
surface of JsRuntime.
`module_resolve_callback` now lives in the `ModuleMap` and we use a
annex data to avoid having to go through the `Rc<RefCell<...>>` stored
in the `JsRuntime`'s isolate.
This is a quick first refactoring to split the tests out of runtime and
move runtime-related code to a top-level runtime module.
There will be a followup to refactor imports a bit, but this is the
major change that will most likely conflict with other work and I want
to merge it early.
… (#19463)"
This reverts commit ceb03cfb03.
This is being reverted because it causes 3.5Mb increase in the binary
size,
due to runtime JS code being included in the binary, even though it's
already snapshotted.
CC @nayeemrmn
This prevents documents specified in a deno.json's "exclude" from being
pre-loaded by the lsp.
For example, someone may have something like:
```jsonc
// deno.json
{
"exclude": [
"dist" // build directory
]
}
```
Use `Map` to cache validated HTTP headers. Cache
has a capacity of 4096 elements and it's cleared
once that capacity is reached.
In `preactssr` benchmark it lowers the time spent
when adding headers from 180ms to 2.5ms.
Remove `ExtensionFileSourceCode::LoadedFromFsDuringSnapshot` and feature
`include_js_for_snapshotting` since they leak paths that are only
applicable in this repo to embedders. Replace with feature
`exclude_js_sources`. Additionally the feature
`force_include_js_sources` allows negating it, if both features are set.
We need both of these because features are additive and there must be a
way of force including sources for snapshot creation while still having
the `exclude_js_sources` feature. `force_include_js_sources` is only set
for build deps, so sources are still excluded from the final binary.
You can also specify `force_include_js_sources` on any extension to
override the above features for that extension. Towards #19398.
But there was still the snapshot-from-snapshot situation where code
could be executed twice, I addressed that by making `mod_evaluate()` and
scripts like `core/01_core.js` behave idempotently. This allowed
unifying `ext::init_ops()` and `ext::init_ops_and_esm()` into
`ext::init()`.