Adds performance measurements for all ops used by the LSP. Also changes
output of "Language server status" page to include more precise
information.
Current suspicion is that computing "script version" takes a long time
for some users.
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:
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);
```
This commit changes LSP log names by prefixing them, we now have these
prefixes:
- `lsp.*` - requests coming from the client
- `tsc.request.*` - requests coming from clients that are routed to TSC
- `tsc.op.*` - ops called by the TS host
- `tsc.host.*` - requests that call JavaScript runtime that runs
TypeScript compiler host
Additionall `Performance::mark` was split into `Performance::mark` and
`Performance::mark_with_args` to reduce verbosity of code and logs.
When an old request is obsoleted while the user is typing, the client
will say so to the server and tower-lsp will drop the future associated
with that request.
This wires that up to the ts server by having any request's token be
cancelled when the surrounding state is dropped.
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.
This makes `CliNpmResolver` a trait. The terminology used is:
- **managed** - Deno manages the node_modules folder and does an
auto-install (ex. `ManagedCliNpmResolver`)
- **byonm** - "Bring your own node_modules" (ex. `ByonmCliNpmResolver`,
which is in this PR, but unimplemented at the moment)
Part of #18967
When sending configuration requests to the client, reads `javascript`
and `typescript` sections in addition to `deno`.
The LSP's initialization options now accepts `javascript` and
`typescript` namespaces.
Give auto-import completion entries a sort-text suffix depending on if
the specifier parses as a URL. This will favour relative and bare
(likely import-mapped) specifiers.
This commit changes ordering of quickfix actions, by sorting them in
following order:
- TSC fixes
- Deno fixes
- deno_lint fixes
Co-authored-by: Nayeem Rahman <nayeemrmn99@gmail.com>
Removes usage of `serde_json::Value` in several ops used in TSC, in
favor of using strongly typed structs. This will unblock more
changes in https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/20462.
LSP testing APIs now obey the various file inclusion settings:
- Modules shown in the text explorer now respect the `exclude`,
`test.exclude` and `test.include` fields in `deno.json`, as well as
`deno.enablePaths` in VSCode settings.
- Modules with testing code lens now respect the `"exclude"`,
`test.exclude` and `test.include` fields in `deno.json`. Code lens
already respects `deno.enablePaths`.
Previously we pre-computed enabled paths into `Config::enabled_paths`,
and had to keep updating it. Now we determine enabled paths directly
from `Config::settings` on demand as a single source of truth.
Removes `Config::root_uri`. If `InitializeParams::rootUri` is given, and
it doesn't correspond to a folder in
`InitializeParams::workspaceFolders`, prepend it to
`Config::workspace_folders` as a mocked folder.
Includes groundwork for
https://github.com/denoland/vscode_deno/issues/908. In a minor version
cycle or two we can fix that in vscode_deno, and it won't break for Deno
versions post this patch due to the corrected deserialization logic for
`enablePaths`.
Fixes #19802.
Properly respect when clients do not have the `workspace/configuration`
capability, a.k.a. when an editor cannot provide scoped settings on
request from the LSP.
- Fix one spot where we weren't checking for the capability before
sending this request.
- For `enablePaths`, fall back to the settings passed in the
initialization options in more cases.
- Respect the `workspace/configuration` capability in the test harness
client.
See:
https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specifications/lsp/3.17/specification/#workspace_configuration.
Previously:
```rust
pub struct TestDefinition {
pub id: String,
pub name: String,
pub range: SourceRange,
pub steps: Vec<TestDefinition>,
}
pub struct TestDefinitions {
pub discovered: Vec<TestDefinition>,
pub injected: Vec<lsp_custom::TestData>,
pub script_version: String,
}
```
Now:
```rust
pub struct TestDefinition {
pub id: String,
pub name: String,
pub range: Option<Range>,
pub is_dynamic: bool, // True for 'injected' module, not statically detected but added at runtime.
pub parent_id: Option<String>,
pub step_ids: HashSet<String>,
}
pub struct TestModule {
pub specifier: ModuleSpecifier,
pub script_version: String,
pub defs: HashMap<String, TestDefinition>,
}
```
Storing the test tree as a literal tree diminishes the value of IDs,
even though vscode stores them that way. This makes all data easily
accessible from `TestModule`. It unifies the interface between
'discovered' and 'injected' tests. This unblocks some enhancements wrt
syncing tests between the LSP and extension, such as this TODO:
61f08d5a71/client/src/testing.ts (L251-L259)
and https://github.com/denoland/vscode_deno/issues/900. We should also
get more flexibility overall.
`TestCollector` is cleaned up, now stores a `&mut TestModule` directly
and registers tests as it comes across them with
`TestModule::register()`. This method ensures sanity in the redundant
data from having both of `TestDefinition::{parent_id,step_ids}`.
All of the messy conversions between `TestDescription`,
`LspTestDescription`, `TestDefinition`, `TestData` and `TestIdentifier`
are cleaned up. They shouldn't have been using `impl From` and now the
full list of tests is available to their implementations.
<!--
Before submitting a PR, please read https://deno.com/manual/contributing
1. Give the PR a descriptive title.
Examples of good title:
- fix(std/http): Fix race condition in server
- docs(console): Update docstrings
- feat(doc): Handle nested reexports
Examples of bad title:
- fix #7123
- update docs
- fix bugs
2. Ensure there is a related issue and it is referenced in the PR text.
3. Ensure there are tests that cover the changes.
4. Ensure `cargo test` passes.
5. Ensure `./tools/format.js` passes without changing files.
6. Ensure `./tools/lint.js` passes.
7. Open as a draft PR if your work is still in progress. The CI won't
run
all steps, but you can add '[ci]' to a commit message to force it to.
8. If you would like to run the benchmarks on the CI, add the 'ci-bench'
label.
-->
As the title.
---------
Co-authored-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.com>
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/vscode_deno/issues/743.
```ts
const items: string[] = ['foo', 'bar', 'baz'];
items.map
// ->
items.map(callbackfn) // auto-completes with argument placeholders.
```
---
We have our own setting for `suggest.completeFunctionCalls`, which must
be enabled:
```js
{
"deno.suggest.completeFunctionCalls": true,
// Re-implementation of:
// "javascript.suggest.completeFunctionCalls": true,
// "typescript.suggest.completeFunctionCalls": true,
}
```
But before this commit the actual implementation had been left as a TODO.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/vscode_deno/issues/843.
Prevents step results from being reported twice. Refactors
`LspTestReporter` to use a complete `(test_id, descriptor)` map instead
of a brittle `LspTestReporter::stack`.
Some people might get think they need to import from this directory,
which could cause confusion and duplicate dependencies. Additionally,
the `vendor` directory has special behaviour in the language server, so
importing from the folder will definitely cause confusion and issues
there.
This commit moves `snapshot_from_lockfile` function to [deno_npm
crate](https://github.com/denoland/deno_npm). This allows this function
to be called outside Deno CLI (in particular, Deno Deploy).
Renames the unstable `deno_modules` directory and corresponding settings
to `vendor` after feedback. Also causes the vendoring of the
`node_modules` directory which can be disabled via
`--node-modules-dir=false` or `"nodeModulesDir": false`.
This commit adds a "dot" reporter to "deno test" subcommand,
that can be activated using "--dot" flag.
It provides a concise output using:
- "." for passing test
- "," for ignored test
- "!" for failing test
User output is silenced and not printed to the console.
In non-TTY environments each result is printed on a separate line.
We weren't auto-discovering the deno.json in two cases:
1. A project that didn't have a deno.json and just added one.
2. After a syntax error in the deno.json.
This now rediscovers it in both these cases.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/vscode_deno/issues/867
…nclusion" (#19519)"
This reverts commit 28a4f3d0f5.
This change causes failures when used outside Deno repo:
```
============================================================
Deno has panicked. This is a bug in Deno. Please report this
at https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/new.
If you can reliably reproduce this panic, include the
reproduction steps and re-run with the RUST_BACKTRACE=1 env
var set and include the backtrace in your report.
Platform: linux x86_64
Version: 1.34.3+b37b286
Args: ["/opt/hostedtoolcache/deno/0.0.0-b37b286f7fa68d5656f7c180f6127bdc38cf2cf5/x64/deno", "test", "--doc", "--unstable", "--allow-all", "--coverage=./cov"]
thread 'main' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: Failed to read "/home/runner/work/deno/deno/core/00_primordials.js"
Caused by:
No such file or directory (os error 2)', core/runtime/jsruntime.rs:699:8
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
```
Relands #19463. This time the `ExtensionFileSourceCode` enum is
preserved, so this effectively just splits feature
`include_js_for_snapshotting` into `exclude_js_sources` and
`runtime_js_sources`, adds a `force_include_js_sources` option on
`extension!()`, and unifies `ext::Init_ops_and_esm()` and
`ext::init_ops()` into `ext::init()`.
… (#19463)"
This reverts commit ceb03cfb03.
This is being reverted because it causes 3.5Mb increase in the binary
size,
due to runtime JS code being included in the binary, even though it's
already snapshotted.
CC @nayeemrmn
This prevents documents specified in a deno.json's "exclude" from being
pre-loaded by the lsp.
For example, someone may have something like:
```jsonc
// deno.json
{
"exclude": [
"dist" // build directory
]
}
```
Remove `ExtensionFileSourceCode::LoadedFromFsDuringSnapshot` and feature
`include_js_for_snapshotting` since they leak paths that are only
applicable in this repo to embedders. Replace with feature
`exclude_js_sources`. Additionally the feature
`force_include_js_sources` allows negating it, if both features are set.
We need both of these because features are additive and there must be a
way of force including sources for snapshot creation while still having
the `exclude_js_sources` feature. `force_include_js_sources` is only set
for build deps, so sources are still excluded from the final binary.
You can also specify `force_include_js_sources` on any extension to
override the above features for that extension. Towards #19398.
But there was still the snapshot-from-snapshot situation where code
could be executed twice, I addressed that by making `mod_evaluate()` and
scripts like `core/01_core.js` behave idempotently. This allowed
unifying `ext::init_ops()` and `ext::init_ops_and_esm()` into
`ext::init()`.
Rather than disallowing `ext:` resolution, clear the module map after
initializing extensions so extension modules are anonymized. This
operation is explicitly called in `deno_runtime`. Re-inject `node:`
specifiers into the module map after doing this.
Fixes #17717.
This adds support for the lockfile and node_modules directory to the
lsp.
In the case of the node_modules directory, it is only enabled when
explicitly opted into via `"nodeModulesDir": true` in the configuration
file. This is to reduce the language server automatically modifying the
node_modules directory when the user doesn't want it to.
Closes #16510
Closes #16373
Note: If the package information has already been cached, then this
requires running with `--reload` or for the registry information to be
fetched some other way (ex. the cache busting).
Closes #15544
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Partially supersedes #19016.
This migrates `spawn` and `spawn_blocking` to `deno_core`, and removes
the requirement for `spawn` tasks to be `Send` given our single-threaded
executor.
While we don't need to technically do anything w/`spawn_blocking`, this
allows us to have a single `JoinHandle` type that works for both cases,
and allows us to more easily experiment with alternative
`spawn_blocking` implementations that do not require tokio (ie: rayon).
Async ops (+~35%):
Before:
```
time 1310 ms rate 763358
time 1267 ms rate 789265
time 1259 ms rate 794281
time 1266 ms rate 789889
```
After:
```
time 956 ms rate 1046025
time 954 ms rate 1048218
time 924 ms rate 1082251
time 920 ms rate 1086956
```
HTTP serve (+~4.4%):
Before:
```
Running 10s test @ http://localhost:4500
2 threads and 10 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 68.78us 19.77us 1.43ms 86.84%
Req/Sec 68.78k 5.00k 73.84k 91.58%
1381833 requests in 10.10s, 167.36MB read
Requests/sec: 136823.29
Transfer/sec: 16.57MB
```
After:
```
Running 10s test @ http://localhost:4500
2 threads and 10 connections
Thread Stats Avg Stdev Max +/- Stdev
Latency 63.12us 17.43us 1.11ms 85.13%
Req/Sec 71.82k 3.71k 77.02k 79.21%
1443195 requests in 10.10s, 174.79MB read
Requests/sec: 142921.99
Transfer/sec: 17.31MB
```
Suggested-By: alice@ryhl.io
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Adds a `deno.preloadLimit` option (ex. `"deno.preloadLimit": 2000`)
which specifies how many file entries to traverse on the file system
when the lsp loads or its configuration changes.
Closes #18955
This is the initial support for npm and node specifiers in `deno
compile`. The npm packages are included in the binary and read from it via
a virtual file system. This also supports the `--node-modules-dir` flag,
dependencies specified in a package.json, and npm binary commands (ex.
`deno compile --unstable npm:cowsay`)
Closes #16632
This removes `ProcState` and replaces it with a new `CliFactory` which
initializes our "service structs" on demand. This isn't a performance
improvement at the moment for `deno run`, but might unlock performance
improvements in the future.
We can make `NodePermissions` rely on interior mutability (which the
`PermissionsContainer` is already doing) in order to not have to clone
everything all the time. This also reduces the chance of an accidental
`borrow` while `borrrow_mut`.
This is just a straight refactor and I didn't do any cleanup in
ext/node. After this PR we can start to clean it up and make things
private that don't need to be public anymore.
1. Breaks up functionality within `ProcState` into several other structs
to break out the responsibilities (`ProcState` is only a data struct
now).
2. Moves towards being able to inject dependencies more easily and have
functionality only require what it needs.
3. Exposes `Arc<T>` around the "service structs" instead of it being
embedded within them. The idea behind embedding them was to reduce the
verbosity of needing to pass around `Arc<...>`, but I don't think it was
exactly working and as we move more of these structs to be more
injectable I don't think the extra verbosity will be a big deal.
Stores the test/bench functions in rust op state during registration.
The functions are wrapped in JS first so that they return a directly
convertible `TestResult`/`BenchResult`. Test steps are still mostly
handled in JS since they are pretty much invoked by the user. Allows
removing a bunch of infrastructure for communicating between JS and
rust. Allows using rust utilities for things like shuffling tests
(`Vec::shuffle`). We can progressively move op and resource sanitization
to rust as well.
Fixes #17122.
Fixes #17312.
- bump deps: the newest `lazy-regex` need newer `oncecell` and
`regex`
- reduce `unwrap`
- remove dep `lazy_static`
- make more regex cached
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.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.
1. Fixes a cosmetic issue in the repl where it would display lsp warning
messages.
2. Lazily loads dependencies from the package.json on use.
3. Supports using bare specifiers from package.json in the REPL.
Closes #17929
Closes #18494
This will make it a bit harder to accidentally use a client url in the
wrong place. I don't fully understand why we do this mapping, but this
will help prevent bugs like #18373
Closes #18374
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.
This commit changes the build process in a way that preserves already
registered ops in the snapshot. This allows us to skip creating hundreds of
"v8::String" on each startup, but sadly there is still some op registration
going on startup (however we're registering 49 ops instead of >200 ops).
This situation could be further improved, by moving some of the ops
from "runtime/" to a separate extension crates.
---------
Co-authored-by: Divy Srivastava <dj.srivastava23@gmail.com>
Follow-up to #18210:
* we are passing the generated `cfg` object into the state function
rather than passing individual config fields
* reduce cloning dramatically by making the state_fn `FnOnce`
* `take` for `ExtensionBuilder` to avoid more unnecessary copies
* renamed `config` to `options`
This implements two macros to simplify extension registration and centralize a lot of the boilerplate as a base for future improvements:
* `deno_core::ops!` registers a block of `#[op]`s, optionally with type
parameters, useful for places where we share lists of ops
* `deno_core::extension!` is used to register an extension, and creates
two methods that can be used at runtime/snapshot generation time:
`init_ops` and `init_ops_and_esm`.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
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
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 has been bothering me for a while and it became more painful while
working on #18136 because injecting the shared progress bar became very
verbose. Basically we should move the creation of all these npm structs
up to a higher level.
This is a stepping stone for a future refactor where we can improve how
we create all our structs.