`current_dir().unwrap()` joined with a Path is equivalent to the
implementation in `resolve_from_cwd()`. Manually tested on Ubuntu 22.04
and Windows 11.
Signed-off-by: Elijah Conners <business@elijahpepe.com>
This is a follow-on to the earlier work in reducing string copies,
mainly focused on ensuring that ASCII strings are easy to provide to the
JS runtime.
While we are replacing a 16-byte reference in a number of places with a
24-byte structure (measured via `std::mem::size_of`), the reduction in
copies wins out over the additional size of the arguments passed into
functions.
Benchmarking shows approximately the same if not slightly less wallclock
time/instructions retired, but I believe this continues to open up
further refactoring opportunities.
Reduce the number of copies and allocations of script code by carrying
around ownership/reference information from creation time.
As an advantage, this allows us to maintain the identity of `&'static
str`-based scripts and use v8's external 1-byte strings (to avoid
incorrectly passing non-ASCII strings, debug `assert!`s gate all string
reference paths).
Benchmark results:
Perf improvements -- ~0.1 - 0.2ms faster, but should reduce garbage
w/external strings and reduces data copies overall. May also unlock some
more interesting optimizations in the future.
This requires adding some generics to functions, but manual
monomorphization has been applied (outer/inner function) to avoid code
bloat.
These methods are confusing because the arguments are backwards. I feel
like they should have never been added to `Option<T>` and that clippy
should suggest rewriting to
`map(...).unwrap_or(...)`/`map(...).unwrap_or_else(|| ...)`
https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/issues/1025
Chrono's `clock` feature pulls in `iana-time-zone` which links to macOS
core_foundation. This PR itself is not enough to get rid of
CoreFoundation. Removal depends on getting rid of security framework,
see #18071
Creating the node_modules folder when the packages are already
downloaded can take a bit of time and not knowing what is going on can
be confusing. It's better to show a progress bar.
This is implemented in such a way that it should still allow processes
to go through when a file lock wasn't properly cleaned up and the OS
hasn't released it yet (but with a 200ms-ish delay).
Closes #18039
This commit changes "ProcState" to store "file_fetcher" field in an "Arc",
allowing it to be preserved between restarts and thus keeping the state
alive between the restarts. File watchers for "deno test" and "deno bench"
now reset "ProcState" between restarts.
This PR adds the concept of a global `DrawThread`, which can receive
multiple renderers to draw information on the screen (note: the
underlying thread is released back to tokio when it's not rendering). It
also separates the concept of progress bars from the existing "draw
thread". This makes it trivial for us to do stuff like show permission
prompts and progress bars at the same time in the future.
The reason this is global is because the process' tty stderr is also a
global concept.
We currently only do this for fmt. This makes it so they're excluded by
default, but you can still opt into these directories by explicitly
specifying them.