Even if bootstrapping the JS runtime is low level, it's an abstraction leak of
core to require users to call `Deno.core.ops()` in JS space.
So instead we're introducing a `JsRuntime::sync_ops_cache()` method,
once we have runtime extensions a new runtime will ensure the ops
cache is setup (for the provided extensions) and then loading/unloading
plugins should be the only operations that require op cache syncs
- register builtin v8 errors in core.js so consumers don't have to
- remove complexity of error args handling (consumers must provide a
constructor with custom args, core simply provides msg arg)
- Improves op performance.
- Handle op-metadata (errors, promise IDs) explicitly in the op-layer vs
per op-encoding (aka: out-of-payload).
- Remove shared queue & custom "asyncHandlers", all async values are
returned in batches via js_recv_cb.
- The op-layer should be thought of as simple function calls with little
indirection or translation besides the conceptually straightforward
serde_v8 bijections.
- Preserve concepts of json/bin/min as semantic groups of their
inputs/outputs instead of their op-encoding strategy, preserving these
groups will also facilitate partial transitions over to v8 Fast API for the
"min" and "bin" groups
This PR makes json_op_sync/async generic to all Deserialize/Serialize types
instead of the loosely-typed serde_json::Value. Since serde_json::Value
implements Deserialize/Serialize, very little existing code needs to be updated,
however as json_op_sync/async are now generic, type inference is broken in some
cases (see cli/build.rs:146). I've found this reduces a good bit of boilerplate,
as seen in the updated deno_core examples.
This change may also reduce serialization and deserialization overhead as serde
has a better idea of what types it is working with. I am currently working on
benchmarks to confirm this and I will update this PR with my findings.