* perf(runtime/fs): optimize readFile by using a single large buffer
* handle extended/truncated files during read
Allocate an extra byte in our read buffer to detect "overflow" then fallback to unsized readAll for remainder of extended file, this is a slowpath that should rarely happen in practice
A comment in `runtime.js` reads that `console` seems to be "the only one
that should be writable and non-enumerable", which explains why it is
declared with `util.writable` but then has its property descriptor's
`enumerable` key changed to false.
But it is not in fact true that `console` is the only global property
for which this holds, and it wasn't even when this behavior was
introduced in denoland#9013. All WebIDL interfaces are also writable and
non-enumerable – the only difference here being that `console` is a
namespace rather than an interface.
Since WebIDL interfaces are defined with `util.nonEnumerable`, and
`console` uses the same descriptor keys, this PR changes the definition
of `console` to use `util.nonEnumerable` as well.
This adds support for the URLPattern API.
The API is added in --unstable only, as it has not yet shipped in any
browser. It is targeted for shipping in Chrome 95.
Spec: https://wicg.github.io/urlpattern/
Co-authored-by: crowlKats < crowlkats@toaxl.com >
When `worker.terminate()` is called, the spec requires that the
corresponding port message queue is emptied, so no messages can be
received after the call, even if they were sent from the worker before
it was terminated.
The spec doesn't require this of `self.close()`, and since Deno uses
different channels to send messages and to notify that the worker was
closed, messages might still arrive after the worker is known to be
closed, which are currently being dropped. This change fixes that.
The fix involves two parts: one on the JS side and one on the Rust side.
The JS side was using the `#terminated` flag to keep track of whether
the worker is known to be closed, without distinguishing whether further
messages should be dropped or not. This PR changes that flag to an
enum `#state`, which can be one of `"RUNNING"`, `"CLOSED"` or
`"TERMINATED"`.
The Rust side was removing the `WorkerThread` struct from the workers
table when a close control was received, regardless of whether there
were any messages left to read, which made any subsequent calls to
`op_host_recv_message` to return `Ok(None)`, as if there were no more
mesasges. This change instead waits for both a close control and for
the message channel's sender to be closed before the worker thread is
removed from the table.
This commit implements classic workers, but only when the `--enable-testing-features-do-not-use` flag is provided. This change is not user facing. Classic workers are used extensively in WPT tests. The classic workers do not support loading from disk, and do not support TypeScript.
Co-authored-by: Luca Casonato <hello@lcas.dev>
This commit removes implementation of "native plugins" and replaces
it with FFI API.
Effectively "Deno.openPlugin" API was replaced with "Deno.dlopen" API.
The WebAssembly streaming APIs used to be enabled, but used to take
buffer sources as their first argument (see #6154 and #7259). This
change re-enables them, requiring a Promise<Response> instead, as well as
enabling asynchronous compilation of WebAssembly modules.
This commits moves implementation of net related APIs available on "Deno"
namespace to "deno_net" extension.
Following APIs were moved:
- Deno.listen()
- Deno.connect()
- Deno.listenTls()
- Deno.serveHttp()
- Deno.shutdown()
- Deno.resolveDns()
- Deno.listenDatagram()
- Deno.startTls()
- Deno.Conn
- Deno.Listener
- Deno.DatagramConn