When streaming a resource in ext/http, with compression enabled, we
didn't flush individual chunks. This became very problematic when we
enabled `req.body` from `fetch` for FastStream recently.
This commit now correctly flushes each resource chunk after compression.
When listening on a UNIX socket path, Deno currently tries to unlink
this path prior to actually listening. The implementation of this
behaviour is VERY racy, involves 2 additional syscalls, and does not
match the behaviour of any other runtime (Node.js, Go, Rust, etc).
This commit removes this behaviour. If a user wants to listen on an
existing socket, they must now unlink the file themselves prior to
listening.
This change in behaviour only impacts --unstable APIs, so it is not
a breaking change.
This commit removes the calls to `expect()` on `std::rc::Rc`, which caused
Deno to panic under certain situations. We now return an error if `Rc`
is referenced by other variables.
Fixes #9360
Fixes #13345
Fixes #13926
Fixes #16241
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This commit adds a fast path to `Request` and `Response` that
make consuming request bodies much faster when using `Body#text`,
`Body#arrayBuffer`, and `Body#blob`, if the body is a FastStream.
Because the response bodies for `fetch` are FastStream, this speeds up
consuming `fetch` response bodies significantly.
- "SpawnOutput" extends "ChildStatus" instead of composing it
- "SpawnOutput::stdout", "SpawnOutput::stderr", "Child::stdin",
"Child::stdout" and "Child::stderr" are no longer optional, instead
made them getters that throw at runtime if that stream wasn't set
to "piped".
- Remove the complicated "<T extends SpawnOptions = SpawnOptions>"
which we currently need to give proper type hints for the availability of
these fields. Their typings for these would get increasingly complex
if it became dependent on more options (e.g. "SpawnOptions::pty"
which if set should make the stdio streams unavailable)
stream shutdown wasn't happening correctly (moved it to call op_http_shutdown) & extra zeroed bytes were being sent for when body length not a multiple of 64*1024
This commit adds "Deno.upgradeHttp" API, which
allows to "hijack" connection and switch protocols, to eg.
implement WebSocket required for Node compat.
Co-authored-by: crowlkats <crowlkats@toaxl.com>
Co-authored-by: Ryan Dahl <ry@tinyclouds.org>
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This commit improves the error messages for the `deno test` async op
sanitizer. It does this in two ways:
- it uses handwritten error messages for each op that could be leaking
- it includes traces showing where each op was started
This "async op tracing" functionality is a new feature in deno_core.
It likely has a significant performance impact, which is why it is only
enabled in tests.
Currently all async ops are polled lazily, which means that op
initialization code is postponed until control is yielded to the event
loop. This has some weird consequences, e.g.
```js
let listener = Deno.listen(...);
let conn_promise = listener.accept();
listener.close();
// `BadResource` is thrown. A reasonable error would be `Interrupted`.
let conn = await conn_promise;
```
JavaScript promises are expected to be eagerly evaluated. This patch
makes ops actually do that.
GET/HEAD requests can't have bodies according to `fetch` spec. This
commit changes the HTTP server to hide request bodies for requests with
GET or HEAD methods.
This adds support for using in memory CA certificates for
`Deno.startTLS`, `Deno.connectTLS` and `Deno.createHttpClient`.
`certFile` is deprecated in `startTls` and `connectTls`, and removed
from `Deno.createHttpClient`.
Our oneshot receiver in `HyperService::call` would unwrap and panic, the `.await` on the oneshot receiver happens when the sender is dropped.
The sender is dropped in `op_http_response` because:
1. We take `ResponseSenderResource`
2. Then get `ConnResource` and early exit on failure (conn already closed)
3. The taken sender then gets dropped in this early exit before any response is sent over the channel
Fallbacking to returning a dummy response to hyper seems to be a fine quickfix