`handleWasmStreaming` is the function that provides the binding with
the `fetch` API needed for `WebAssembly.instantiateStreaming()` and
`WebAssembly.compileStreaming()`. When I implemented it in #11200, I
thought V8 was calling these functions with the argument of the
`WebAssembly` streaming functions, without doing any resolving, and so
`handleWasmStreaming` awaits for the parameter to resolve. However,
as discovered in
https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/13917#issuecomment-1065805565,
V8 does in fact resolve the parameter if it's a promise (and handles
rejections arising from that).
This change removes the `async` IIFE inside `handleWasmStreaming`,
letting initial errors be handled synchronously (which will however
not throw synchronously from the `WebAssembly` namespace functions).
Awaiting is still necessary for reading the bytes of the response,
though, and so there is an `async` IIFE for that.
When an exception is thrown during the processing of streaming WebAssembly,
`op_wasm_streaming_abort` is called. This op calls into V8, which synchronously
rejects the promise and calls into the promise rejection handler, if applicable.
But calling an op borrows the isolate's `JsRuntimeState` for the duration of the
op, which means it is borrowed when V8 calls into `promise_reject_callback`,
which tries to borrow it again, panicking.
This change changes `op_wasm_streaming_abort` from an op to a binding
(`Deno.core.abortWasmStreaming`). Although that binding must borrow the
`JsRuntimeState` in order to access the `WasmStreamingResource` stored in the
`OpTable`, it also takes ownership of that `WasmStreamingResource` instance,
which means it can drop any borrows of the `JsRuntimeState` before calling into
V8.
This commit adds "deno bench" subcommand and "Deno.bench()"
API that allows to register bench cases.
The API is modelled after "Deno.test()" and "deno test" subcommand.
Currently the output is rudimentary and bench cases and not
subject to "ops" and "resource" sanitizers.
Co-authored-by: evan <github@evan.lol>
This commit fixes CJS/ESM interop in compat mode for dynamically
imported modules.
"ProcState::prepare_module_load" was changed to accept a list
of "graph roots" without associated "module kind". That module kind
was always hardcoded to "ESM" which is not true for CJS/ESM interop -
a CommonJs module might be imported using "import()" function. In
such case the root of the graph should have "CommonJs" module kind
instead of "ESM".
This commit adds CJS/ESM interoperability when running in --compat mode.
Before executing files, they are analyzed and all CommonJS modules are
transformed on the fly to a ES modules. This is done by utilizing analyze_cjs()
functionality from deno_ast. After discovering exports and reexports, an ES
module is rendered and saved in memory for later use.
There's a caveat that all files ending with ".js" extension are considered as
CommonJS modules (unless there's a related "package.json" with "type": "module").
This commit adds "--trace-ops" flag to "deno test" subcommand.
This flag enables saving of stack traces for async ops, that before were always
saved. While the feature proved to be very useful it comes with a significant performance
hit, it's caused by excessive source mapping of stack frames.
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.
Adds another callback to WebWorkerOptions that allows to execute
some modules before actual worker code executes. This allows to set up Node
global using std/node.
This commit makes the errors produced from the resource sanitizer much
more human readable. It does this by using real words rather than our
"resource names" when referring to resources, and by giving helpful
hints on how to clean up each of the resources.