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
- 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
There's no point for this API to expect result. If something fails it should
result in a panic during build time to signal to embedder that setup is
wrong.
This commit changes return type of JsRuntime::execute_script to include
v8::Value returned from evaluation.
When embedding deno_core it is sometimes useful to be able to inspect
script evaluation value without the hoops of adding ops to store the
value on the OpState.
v8::Global<v8::Value> is used so consumers don't have to pass
scope themselves.
This commit renames "JsRuntime::execute" to "JsRuntime::execute_script". Additionally
same renames were applied to methods on "deno_runtime::Worker" and
"deno_runtime::WebWorker".
A new macro was added to "deno_core" called "located_script_name" which
returns the name of Rust file alongside line no and col no of that call site.
This macro is useful in combination with "JsRuntime::execute_script"
and allows to provide accurate place where "one-off" JavaScript scripts
are executed for internal runtime functions.
Co-authored-by: Nayeem Rahman <nayeemrmn99@gmail.com>
Currently file passed to --config file is parsed using TsConfig structure
that does multiple things when loading the file. Instead of relying on that
structure I've introduced ConfigFile structure that can be updated to
sniff out more fields from the config file in the future.
Makes the codebase more searchable and helps distinguish op functions from helper functions
Besides tests/examples/benches this pattern appears to be used everywhere else in the codebase
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
- 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
The mutex was used to hide the fact that the Sources object mutates
itself when it's queried. Be honest about that and mark everything that
directly or indirectly mutates it as `mut`.
This is a follow-up to commit 2828690fc7
from last month ("fix(lsp): fix deadlocks, use one big mutex (#9271)")
The LSP code had numerous places where competing threads could take out
out locks in different orders, making it very prone to deadlocks.
This commit sidesteps the entire issue by switching to a single lock.
The above is a little white lie: the Sources struct still uses a mutex
internally to avoid having to boil the ocean (because being honest about
what it does involves changing all its methods to `&mut self` but that
ripples out extensively...) I'll save that one for another day.