This commit changes "eager ops" to directly return a response value
instead of calling "opresponse" callback in JavaScript. This saves
one boundary crossing and has a fantastic impact on the "async_ops.js"
benchmark:
```
v1.32.4
$ deno run cli/bench/async_ops.js
time 329 ms rate 3039513
time 322 ms rate 3105590
time 307 ms rate 3257328
time 301 ms rate 3322259
time 303 ms rate 3300330
time 306 ms rate 3267973
time 300 ms rate 3333333
time 301 ms rate 3322259
time 301 ms rate 3322259
time 301 ms rate 3322259
time 302 ms rate 3311258
time 301 ms rate 3322259
time 302 ms rate 3311258
time 302 ms rate 3311258
time 303 ms rate 3300330
```
```
this branch
$ ./target/release/deno run -A cli/bench/async_ops.js
time 257 ms rate 3891050
time 248 ms rate 4032258
time 251 ms rate 3984063
time 246 ms rate 4065040
time 238 ms rate 4201680
time 227 ms rate 4405286
time 228 ms rate 4385964
time 229 ms rate 4366812
time 228 ms rate 4385964
time 226 ms rate 4424778
time 226 ms rate 4424778
time 227 ms rate 4405286
time 228 ms rate 4385964
time 227 ms rate 4405286
time 228 ms rate 4385964
time 227 ms rate 4405286
time 229 ms rate 4366812
time 228 ms rate 4385964
```
Prerequisite for https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/18652
This commit removes "Deno.core" namespace. It is strictly private API
that has no stability guarantees, we were supposed to remove it long time ago.
Co-authored-by: Yoshiya Hinosawa <stibium121@gmail.com>
V8's JIT can do a better job knowing the argument count and also enable
fast call path (in future).
This also lets us call async ops without `opAsync`:
```js
const { ops } = Deno.core;
await ops.op_void_async();
```
this patch: 4405286 ops/sec
main: 3508771 ops/sec