Unused locals and parameters don't make sense to surface in remote
modules. Additionally, fast check can cause these kind of diagnostics
when publishing, so they should be ignored.
Closes #22959
In preparation for upcoming changes to `deno install` in Deno 2.
If `-g` or `--global` flag is not provided a warning will be emitted:
```
⚠️ `deno install` behavior will change in Deno 2. To preserve the current behavior use `-g` or `--global` flag.
```
The same will happen for `deno uninstall` - unless `-g`/`--global` flag
is provided
a warning will be emitted.
Towards https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/23062
---------
Signed-off-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit changes "deno init" subcommand to use "jsr:" specifier for
standard library "assert" module. It is unversioned, but we will change
it to `@^1` once `@std/assert` release version 1.0.
This allows us to start decoupling `deno` and `deno_std` release. The
release scripts have been updated to take that into account.
Fixes #23053.
Two small bugs here:
- the existing condition for printing out the group header was broken.
it worked in the reproducer (in the issue above) without filtering only
by accident, due to setting `self.has_ungrouped = true` once we see the
warmup bench. Knowing that we sort benchmarks to put ungrouped benches
first, there are only two cases: 1) we are starting the first group 2)
we are ending the previous group and starting a new group
- when you passed `--filter` we were applying that filter to the warmup
bench (which is not visible to users), so we suffered from jit bias if
you were filtering (unless your filter was `<warmup>`)
TLDR;
Running
```bash
deno bench main.js --filter="G"
```
```js
// main.js
Deno.bench({
group: "G1",
name: "G1-A",
fn() {},
});
Deno.bench({
group: "G1",
name: "G1-B",
fn() {},
});
```
Before this PR:
```
benchmark time (avg) iter/s (min … max) p75 p99 p995
--------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------
G1-A 303.52 ps/iter3,294,726,102.1 (254.2 ps … 7.8 ns) 287.5 ps 391.7 ps 437.5 ps
G1-B 3.8 ns/iter 263,360,635.9 (2.24 ns … 8.36 ns) 3.84 ns 4.73 ns 4.94 ns
summary
G1-A
12.51x faster than G1-B
```
After this PR:
```
benchmark time (avg) iter/s (min … max) p75 p99 p995
--------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------
group G1
G1-A 3.85 ns/iter 259,822,096.0 (2.42 ns … 9.03 ns) 3.83 ns 4.62 ns 4.83 ns
G1-B 3.84 ns/iter 260,458,274.5 (3.55 ns … 7.05 ns) 3.83 ns 4.45 ns 4.7 ns
summary
G1-B
1x faster than G1-A
```
Before this PR, we didn't have any integration tests set up for the
`jupyter` subcommand.
This PR adds a basic jupyter client and helpers for writing integration
tests for the jupyter kernel. A lot of the code here is boilerplate,
mainly around the message format for jupyter.
This also adds a few basic integration tests, most notably for
requesting execution of a snippet of code and getting the correct
results.
This patch gets JUnit reporter to output more detailed information for
test steps (subtests).
## Issue with previous implementation
In the previous implementation, the test hierarchy was represented using
several XML tags like the following:
- `<testsuites>` corresponds to the entire test (one execution of `deno
test` has exactly one `<testsuites>` tag)
- `<testsuite>` corresponds to one file, such as `main_test.ts`
- `<testcase>` corresponds to one `Deno.test(...)`
- `<property>` corresponds to one `t.step(...)`
This structure describes the test layers but one problem is that
`<property>` tag is used for any use cases so some tools that can ingest
a JUnit XML file might not be able to interpret `<property>` as
subtests.
## How other tools address it
Some of the testing frameworks in the ecosystem address this issue by
fitting subtests into the `<testcase>` layer. For instance, take a look
at the following Go test file:
```go
package main_test
import "testing"
func TestMain(t *testing.T) {
t.Run("child 1", func(t *testing.T) {
// OK
})
t.Run("child 2", func(t *testing.T) {
// Error
t.Fatal("error")
})
}
```
Running [gotestsum], we can get the output like this:
```xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<testsuites tests="3" failures="2" errors="0" time="1.013694">
<testsuite tests="3" failures="2" time="0.510000" name="example/gosumtest" timestamp="2024-03-11T12:26:39+09:00">
<properties>
<property name="go.version" value="go1.22.1 darwin/arm64"></property>
</properties>
<testcase classname="example/gosumtest" name="TestMain/child_2" time="0.000000">
<failure message="Failed" type="">=== RUN TestMain/child_2
 main_test.go:12: error
--- FAIL: TestMain/child_2 (0.00s)
</failure>
</testcase>
<testcase classname="example/gosumtest" name="TestMain" time="0.000000">
<failure message="Failed" type="">=== RUN TestMain
--- FAIL: TestMain (0.00s)
</failure>
</testcase>
<testcase classname="example/gosumtest" name="TestMain/child_1" time="0.000000"></testcase>
</testsuite>
</testsuites>
```
This output shows that nested test cases are squashed into the
`<testcase>` layer by treating them as the same layer as their parent,
`TestMain`. We can still distinguish nested ones by their `name`
attributes that look like `TestMain/<subtest_name>`.
As described in #22795, [vitest] solves the issue in the same way as
[gotestsum].
One downside of this would be that one test failure that happens in a
nested test case will end up being counted multiple times, because not
only the subtest but also its wrapping container(s) are considered to be
failures. In fact, in the [gotestsum] output above, `TestMain/child_2`
failed (which is totally expected) while its parent, `TestMain`, was
also counted as failure. As
https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/20273#discussion_r1307558757
pointed out, there is a test runner that offers flexibility to prevent
this, but I personally don't think the "duplicate failure count" issue
is a big deal.
## How to fix the issue in this patch
This patch fixes the issue with the same approach as [gotestsum] and
[vitest].
More specifically, nested test cases are put into the `<testcase>` level
and their names are now represented as squashed test names concatenated
by `>` (e.g. `parent 2 > child 1 > grandchild 1`). This change also
allows us to put a detailed error message as `<failure>` tag within the
`<testcase>` tag, which should be handled nicely by third-party tools
supporting JUnit XML.
## Extra fix
Also, file paths embedded into XML outputs are changed from absolute
path to relative path, which is helpful when running the test suites in
several different environments like CI.
Resolves #22795
[gotestsum]: https://github.com/gotestyourself/gotestsum
[vitest]: https://vitest.dev/
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Fixes #22941.
In that case, the only file with coverage was the `test.ts` file. The
coverage reporter filters out test files before compiling its report, so
after filtering we were left with an empty set of files. Later on it's
assumed that there is at least 1 file to be reported on, and we panic.
Instead of panicking, just issue an error after filtering.
1. Stops `deno publish` using some custom include/exclude behaviour from
other sub commands
2. Takes ancestor directories into account when resolving gitignore
3. Backards compatible change that adds ability to unexclude an exclude
by using a negated glob at a more specific level for all sub commands
(see https://github.com/denoland/deno_config/pull/44).
We emitted `import "./` rather than `import "./$NAME"`. This is now
fixed.
Also makes a cosmetic change so that `../` imports are now just imported
as `../`, not `./../`.
Improves #19100
Fixes #20356
Replaces #20428
Changes made in deno_core to support this:
- [x] Errors must be handled in setTimeout callbacks
- [x] Microtask ordering is not-quite-right
- [x] Timer cancellation must be checked right before dispatch
- [x] Timer sanitizer
- [x] Move high-res timer to deno_core
- [x] Timers need opcall tracing
This commit adds "deno add" subcommand that has a basic support for
adding "jsr:" packages to "deno.json" file.
This currently doesn't support "npm:" specifiers and specifying version
constraints.
Some `deno_std` tests were failing to print output that was resolved
after the last test finished. In addition, output printed before tests
began would sometimes appear above the "running X tests ..." line, and
sometimes below it depending on timing.
We now guarantee that all output is flushed before and after tests run,
making the output consistent.
Pre-test and post-test output are captured in `------ pre-test output
------` and `------ post-test output ------` blocks to differentiate
them from the regular output blocks.
Here's an example of a test (that is much noisier than normal, but an
example of what the output will look like):
```
Check ./load_unload.ts
------- pre-test output -------
load
----- output end -----
running 1 test from ./load_unload.ts
test ...
------- output -------
test
----- output end -----
test ... ok ([WILDCARD])
------- post-test output -------
unload
----- output end -----
```
As we add tracing to more types of runtime activity, `--trace-ops` is
less useful of a name. `--trace-leaks` better reflects that this feature
traces both ops and timers, and will eventually trace resource opening
as well.
This keeps `--trace-ops` as an alias for `--trace-leaks`, but prints a
warning to the console suggesting migration to `--trace-leaks`.
One test continues to use `--trace-ops` to test the deprecation warning.
---------
Signed-off-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.com>
- Removes the origin call, since all origins are the same for an isolate
(ie: the main module)
- Collects the `TestDescription`s and sends them all at the same time
inside of an Arc, allowing us to (later on) re-use these instead of
cloning.
Needs a follow-up pass to remove all the cloning, but that's a thread
that is pretty long to pull
---------
Signed-off-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.com>
Supply chain security for JSR.
```
$ deno publish --provenance
Successfully published @divy/test_provenance@0.0.3
Provenance transparency log available at https://search.sigstore.dev/?logIndex=73657418
```
0. Package has been published.
1. Fetches the version manifest and verifies it's matching with uploaded
files and exports.
2. Builds the attestation SLSA payload using Github actions env.
3. Creates an ephemeral key pair for signing the github token
(aud=sigstore) and DSSE pre authentication tag.
4. Requests a X.509 signing certificate from Fulcio using the challenge
and ephemeral public key PEM.
5. Prepares a DSSE envelop for Rekor to witness. Posts an intoto entry
to Rekor and gets back the transparency log index.
6. Builds the provenance bundle and posts it to JSR.
Gets us closer to solving #20707.
Rewrites the `TestEventSender`:
- Allow for explicit creation of multiple streams. This will allow for
one-std{out,err}-per-worker
- All test events are received along with a worker ID, allowing for
eventual, proper parallel threading of test events.
In theory this should open up proper interleaving of test output,
however that is left for a future PR.
I had some plans for a better performing synchronization primitive, but
the inter-thread communication is tricky. This does, however, speed up
the processing of large numbers of tests 15-25% (possibly even more on
100,000+).
Before
```
ok | 1000 passed | 0 failed (32ms)
ok | 10000 passed | 0 failed (276ms)
```
After
```
ok | 1000 passed | 0 failed (25ms)
ok | 10000 passed | 0 failed (230ms)
```
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This PR enhances the `deno publish` command to infer dependencies from
`package.json` if present.
1. Renames zap/fast-check to instead be a `no-slow-types` lint rule.
1. This lint rule is automatically run when doing `deno lint` for
packages (deno.json files with a name, version, and exports field)
1. This lint rules still occurs on publish. It can be skipped by running
with `--no-slow-types`
The format of the sanitizers will change a little bit:
- If multiple async ops leak and traces are on, we repeat the async op
header once per stack trace.
- All leaks are aggregated under a "Leaks detected:" banner as the new
timers are eventually going to be added, and these are neither ops nor
resources.
- `1 async op` is now `An async op`
- If ops and resources leak, we show both (rather than op leaks masking
resources)
Follow-on to https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/22226
Splitting the sleep and interval ops allows us to detect an interval
timer. We also remove the use of the `op_async_void_deferred` call.
A future PR will be able to split the op sanitizer messages for timers
and intervals.
This changes the lockfile to not store JSR specifiers in the "remote"
section. Instead a single JSR integrity is stored per package in the
lockfile, which is a hash of the version's `x.x.x_meta.json` file, which
contains hashes for every file in the package. The hashes in this file
are then compared against when loading.
Additionally, when using `{ "vendor": true }` in a deno.json, the files
can be modified without causing lockfile errors—the checksum is only
checked when copying into the vendor folder and not afterwards
(eventually we should add this behaviour for non-jsr specifiers as
well). As part of this change, the `vendor` folder creation is not
always automatic in the LSP and running an explicit cache command is
necessary. The code required to track checksums in the LSP would have
been too complex for this PR, so that all goes through deno_graph now.
The vendoring is still automatic when running from the CLI.
This introduces the `denort` binary - a slim version of deno without
tooling. The binary is used as the default for `deno compile`.
Improves `deno compile` final size by ~2.5x (141 MB -> 61 MB) on Linux
x86_64.
Removes the `FileFetcher`'s internal cache because I don't believe it's
necessary (we already cache this kind of stuff in places like deno_graph
or config files in different places). Removing it fixes this bug because
this functionality was already implemented in deno_graph and lowers
memory usage of the CLI a little bit.
This moves the op sanitizer descriptions into Rust code and prepares for
eventual op import from `ext:core/ops`. We cannot import these ops from
`ext:core/ops` as the testing infrastructure ops are not always present.
Changes:
- Op descriptions live in `cli` code and are currently accessible via an
op for the older sanitizer code
- `phf` dep moved to workspace root so we can use it here
- `ops.op_XXX` changed to to `op_XXX` to prepare for op imports later
on.
Step 1 of the Rustification of sanitizers, which unblocks the faster
timers.
This replaces the resource sanitizer with a Rust one, using the new APIs
in deno_core.
This commit adds support for [TC39 Decorator
Proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-decorators).
These decorators are only available in transpiled sources - ie.
non-JavaScript files (because of lack of support in V8).
This entails that "experimental TypeScript decorators" are not available
by default
and require to be configured, with a configuration like this:
```
{
"compilerOptions": {
"experimentalDecorators": true
}
}
```
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/19160
---------
Signed-off-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: crowlkats <crowlkats@toaxl.com>
Co-authored-by: Divy Srivastava <dj.srivastava23@gmail.com>
This change sets the removal version for the `deno bundle` sub-command
for Deno v2. The warnings appear when `deno bundle` is run and in the
`--help` menu.
This initially uses the new diagnostic printer in `deno lint`,
`deno doc` and `deno publish`. In the limit we should also update
`deno check` to use this printer.
This commit removes the requirement for `--unstable` flag in `deno
jupyter` subcommand. The process will no longer exit if this flag is not
provided, however the subcommand itself is still considered unstable
and might change in the future.
Required for https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/21452
This commit removes conditional type-checking of unstable APIs.
Before this commit `deno check` (or any other type-checking command and
the LSP) would error out if there was an unstable API in the code, but not
`--unstable` flag provided.
This situation hinders DX and makes it harder to configure Deno. Failing
during runtime unless `--unstable` flag is provided is enough in this case.
We were calling `expand_glob` on our excludes, which is very expensive
and unnecessary because we can pattern match while traversing instead.
1. Doesn't expand "exclude" globs. Instead pattern matches while walking
the directory.
2. Splits up the "include" into base paths and applicable file patterns.
This causes less pattern matching to occur because we're only pattern
matching on patterns that might match and not ones in completely
unrelated directories.
Main change is that:
- "hyper" has been renamed to "hyper_v014" to signal that it's legacy
- "hyper1" has been renamed to "hyper" and should be the default
Adds an `--unstable-sloppy-imports` flag which supports the
following for `file:` specifiers:
* Allows writing `./mod` in a specifier to do extension probing.
- ex. `import { Example } from "./example"` instead of `import { Example
} from "./example.ts"`
* Allows writing `./routes` to do directory extension probing for files
like `./routes/index.ts`
* Allows writing `./mod.js` for *mod.ts* files.
This functionality is **NOT RECOMMENDED** for general use with Deno:
1. It's not as optimal for perf:
https://marvinh.dev/blog/speeding-up-javascript-ecosystem-part-2/
1. It makes tooling in the ecosystem more complex in order to have to
understand this.
1. The "Deno way" is to be explicit about what you're doing. It's better
in the long run.
1. It doesn't work if published to the Deno registry because doing stuff
like extension probing with remote specifiers would be incredibly slow.
This is instead only recommended to help with migrating existing
projects to Deno. For example, it's very useful for getting CJS projects
written with import/export declaration working in Deno without modifying
module specifiers and for supporting TS ESM projects written with
`./mod.js` specifiers.
This feature will output warnings to guide the user towards correcting
their specifiers. Additionally, quick fixes are provided in the LSP to
update these specifiers:
A bit hacky, but it works. Essentially, this will check for all the
scripts in the node_modules/.bin directory then force them to run with
Deno via deno_task_shell.
This PR causes Deno to include more files in the graph based on how a
template literal looks that's provided to a dynamic import:
```ts
const file = await import(`./dir/${expr}`);
```
In this case, it will search the `dir` directory and descendant
directories for any .js/jsx/etc modules and include them in the graph.
To opt out of this behaviour, move the template literal to a separate
line:
```ts
const specifier = `./dir/${expr}`
const file = await import(specifier);
```
The self-upgrade feature is undesirable when deno is installed from
(Linux) distribution repository - using a system package manager. This
change will allow package maintainers to build deno with the "upgrade"
subcommand and background check disabled.
When the user runs `deno upgrade <args>` and the upgrade feature is
disabled, it will exit with error message explaining that this deno
binary was built without the upgrade feature.
Note: This patch is already used in the Alpine Linux’s
[deno](https://pkgs.alpinelinux.org/packages?name=deno) package.
This also updates deno_graph, which has the JSR change to use "exports".
It's not yet useful atm, so I've made this PR a fix about the deno doc
--lint error message improvements. I'll do a follow-up PR that adds
exports to the deno.json
This commit moves all Chrome Devtools Protocol messages to `cli/cdp.rs`
and refactors all places using these types to pull them from a common
place.
No functional changes.
As pointed out in https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/21067 , it's
confusing that `deno doc --lint mod.ts` outputs the documentation to
stdout on success. Instead, it would be better if it outputted how many
files were checked similar to what `deno lint` does on success. It still
outputs the documentation if `--lint` or `--html` are provided so this
is non-breaking.
Adds a new `--lint` flag to `deno doc` that surfaces three kinds of
diagnostics:
1. Diagnostic for non-exported type referenced in an exported type.
* Why? People often forget to export types from a module in TypeScript.
To supress this diagnostic, add an `@internal` jsdoc tag to the internal
type.
1. Diagnostic for missing return type or missing property type on a
**public** type.
* Why? Otherwise `deno doc` will not display good documentation. Adding
explicit types also helps with type checking performance.
1. Diagnostic for missing jsdoc on a **public** type.
* Why? Everything should be documented. This diagnostic can be supressed
by adding a jsdoc comment description.
If the lint passes, `deno doc` generates documentation as usual.
For example, checking for deno doc diagnostics on the CI:
```shellsession
$ deno doc --lint mod.ts second_entrypoint.ts > /dev/null
```
This feature is incredibly useful for library authors.
## Why not include this in `deno lint`?
1. The command needs the documenation output in order to figure out the
diagnostics.
1. `deno lint` doesn't understand where the entrypoints are. That's
critical for the diagnostics to be useful.
1. It's much more performant to do this while generating documentation.
1. There is precedence in rustdoc (ex. `#![warn(missing_docs)]`).
## Why not `--check`?
It is confusing with `deno run --check`, since that means to run type
checking (and confusing with `deno check --docs`).
## Output Future Improvement
The output is not ideal atm, but it's fine for a first pass. We will
improve it in the future.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno_lint/pull/972
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno_lint/issues/970
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/19356
This commit adds `--unstable-hmr` flag, that enabled Hot Module Replacement.
This flag works like `--watch` and accepts the same arguments. If
HMR is not possible the process will be restarted instead.
Currently HMR is only supported in `deno run` subcommand.
Upon HMR a `CustomEvent("hmr")` will be dispatched that contains
information which file was changed in its `details` property.
---------
Co-authored-by: Valentin Anger <syrupthinker@gryphno.de>
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@gmail.com>
This commit adds support for multiple entry points to `deno doc`.
Unfortunately to achieve that, I had to change the semantics of the
command to explicitly require `--filter` parameter for filtering
symbols, instead of treating second free argument as the filter argument.
`deno doc --builtin` is still supported, but cannot be mixed with
actual entrypoints.
Upgrades to deno_doc 0.70 which includes the feature for showing
non-exported types referenced in exported types as well as a much more
advanced deno doc that uses a symbol graph.
As title. This will help use the two independently from the other, which
will help in an upcoming deno doc PR where I need to parse the source
files with scope analysis.
This PR adds a new unstable "bring your own node_modules" (BYONM)
functionality currently behind a `--unstable-byonm` flag (`"unstable":
["byonm"]` in a deno.json).
This enables users to run a separate install command (ex. `npm install`,
`pnpm install`) then run `deno run main.ts` and Deno will respect the
layout of the node_modules directory as setup by the separate install
command. It also works with npm/yarn/pnpm workspaces.
For this PR, the behaviour is opted into by specifying
`--unstable-byonm`/`"unstable": ["byonm"]`, but in the future we may
make this the default behaviour as outlined in
https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/18967#issuecomment-1761248941
This is an extremely rough initial implementation. Errors are
terrible in this and the LSP requires frequent restarts. Improvements
will be done in follow up PRs.