Relanding #12994
This commit adds support for "unhandledrejection" event.
This event will trigger event listeners registered using:
"globalThis.addEventListener("unhandledrejection")
"globalThis.onunhandledrejection"
This is done by registering a default handler using
"Deno.core.setPromiseRejectCallback" that allows to
handle rejected promises in JavaScript instead of Rust.
This commit will make it possible to polyfill
"process.on("unhandledRejection")" in the Node compat
layer.
Co-authored-by: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
This commit adds support for "unhandledrejection" event.
This event will trigger event listeners registered using:
"globalThis.addEventListener("unhandledrejection")
"globalThis.onunhandledrejection"
This is done by registering a default handler using
"Deno.core.setPromiseRejectCallback" that allows to
handle rejected promises in JavaScript instead of Rust.
This commit will make it possible to polyfill
"process.on("unhandledRejection")" in the Node compat
layer.
Co-authored-by: Colin Ihrig <cjihrig@gmail.com>
When a dynamically imported module gets resolved, any code that comes after an
await import() to that module will continue running. However, if that is the
last code in the evaluation of another dynamically imported module, that second
module will not resolve until the next iteration of the event loop, even though
it does not depend on the event loop at all.
When the event loop is being blocked by a long-running operation, such as a
long-running timer, or by an async op that might never end, such as with workers
or BroadcastChannels, that will result in the second dynamically imported module
not being resolved for a while, or ever.
This change fixes this by running the dynamic module loading steps in a loop
until no more dynamic modules can be resolved.
This commit adds support for unstable FFI
callbacks. A callback is registered using
the `Deno.UnsafeCallback` API.
The backing memory for the callback can
be disposed of using `Deno.UnsafeCallback#close`.
It is not safe to pass the callback after calling
close.
Callbacks from other than the isolate thread
are not supported.
Co-authored-by: Divy Srivastava <dj.srivastava23@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Bert Belder <bertbelder@gmail.com>
This commit updates the custom inspect function for URL objects
to pass the inspect options through so that the context is
propagated and the resulting indentation is correct.
Fixes: https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/14171
This commit changes default default behavior of type checking
for several subcommands.
Instead of type checking and reporting type errors only for local
files, the type checking is skipped entirely. Type checking can
still be enabled using the "--check" flag.
Following subcomands are affected:
- deno cache
- deno install
- deno eval
- deno run
This commit adds "Deno.core.setFormatExceptionCallback" which
can be used to provide custom formatting for errors. It is useful
in cases when user throws something that is non-Error (eg.
a string, plain object, etc).
This commit changes default mode of type-checking to "local"
and adds "--check" flag to following subcommands:
- deno bench
- deno bundle
- deno cache
- deno compile
- deno eval
- deno install
- deno test
This commit removes "WorkerOptions.deno" option as a boolean,
as well as "WorkerOptions.deno.namespace" settings. Starting
with this commit all workers have access to "Deno" namespace
by default.
This commit fixes source maps for files that contain emojis.
This is done by updating "deno_ast" to "0.14.1" for the case
of "--no-check" flag (ie using SWC emit) and by overriding
TSC's default base64 encoder (which turned out to be buggy)
for the type checking case.
This flag disables loading of configuration file, ie. it will not be
automatically discovered and loaded. Of course this flag conflicts
with "--config" flag and they cannot be used together.
This commit adds better reporting of uncaught errors
in top level scope of testing files. This change affects
both console runner as well as LSP runner.
Calling `worker.terminate()` used to kill the worker's isolate and
then block until the worker's thread finished. This blocks the calling
thread if the worker's event loop was blocked in a sync op (as with
`Deno.sleepSync`), which wasn't realized at the time, but since the
worker's isolate was killed at that moment, it would not block the
calling thread if the worker was in a JS endless loop.
However, in #12831, in order to work around a V8 bug, worker
termination was changed to first set a signal to let the worker event
loop know that termination has been requested, and only kill the
isolate if the event loop has not finished after 2 seconds. However,
this change kept the blocking, which meant that JS endless loops in
the worker now blocked the parent for 2 seconds.
As it turns out, after #12831 it is fine to signal termination and
even kill the worker's isolate without waiting for the thread to
finish, so this change does that. However, that might leave the async
ops that receive messages and control data from the worker pending
after `worker.terminate()`, which leads to odd results from the op
sanitizer. Therefore, we set up a `CancelHandler` to cancel those ops
when the worker is terminated.
This commit:
- removes "fmt_errors::PrettyJsError" in favor of "format_js_error" fn
- removes "deno_core::JsError::create" and
"deno_core::RuntimeOptions::js_error_create_fn"
- adds new option to "deno_runtime::ops::worker_host::init"
This commit changes "deno bench" subcommand, by updating
the "Deno.bench" API as follows:
- remove "Deno.BenchDefinition.n"
- remove "Deno.BenchDefintion.warmup"
- add "Deno.BenchDefinition.group"
- add "Deno.BenchDefintion.baseline"
This is done because bench cases are no longer run fixed amount
of iterations, but instead they are run until there is difference between
subsequent runs that is statistically insiginificant.
Additionally, console reporter was rewritten completely, to looks
similar to "hyperfine" reporter.
This commit changes "deno test" to filter out stack frames if it is beneficial to the user.
This is the case when there are stack frames coming from "internal" code
below frames coming from user code.
Co-authored-by: Nayeem Rahman <nayeemrmn99@gmail.com>
This commit fixes and edge case, where testing/benching code could pledge new
permission set before restoring the previous pledge.
Appropriate panics were added and tests that assert that process is killed
in case of "recursive pledge".
This commit rewrites test runner to send structured error data from JavaScript
to Rust instead of passing strings. This will allow to customize display of errors
in test report (which will be addressed in follow up commits).
This commit adds "aggregated" field to "deno_core::JsError" that stores
instances of "JsError" recursively to properly handle "AggregateError"
formatting. Appropriate logics was added to "PrettyJsError" and
"console" API to format AggregateErrors.
Co-authored-by: Nayeem Rahman <nayeemrmn99@gmail.com>
The following transformations gradually faced by "JsError" have all been
moved up front to "JsError::from_v8_exception()":
- finding the first non-"deno:" source line;
- moving "JsError::script_resource_name" etc. into the first error stack
in case of syntax errors;
- source mapping "JsError::script_resource_name" etc. when wrapping
the error even though the frame locations are source mapped earlier;
- removing "JsError::{script_resource_name,line_number,start_column,end_column}"
entirely in favour of "js_error.frames.get(0)".
We also no longer pass a js-side callback to "core/02_error.js" from cli.
I avoided doing this on previous occasions because the source map lookups
were in an awkward place.
This commit changes "deno test" to better denote user output coming
from test cases.
This is done by printing "---- output ----" and "---- output end ----"
markers if an output is produced. The output from "console" and
"Deno.core.print" is captured, as well as direct writes to "Deno.stdout"
and "Deno.stderr".
To achieve that new APIs were added to "deno_core" crate, that allow
to replace an existing resource with a different one (while keeping resource
ids intact). Resources for stdout and stderr are replaced by pipes.
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@gmail.com>
Following changes were done in this commit:
- remove "test" prefix before each test
- use gray color for "running N tests from ..." prompt
- use relative path or remote URL instead of full URL in "running N tests from ..." prompt
- in "failures" section, add file path/remote URL before the test name
Co-authored-by: Yoshiya Hinosawa <stibium121@gmail.com>
This commit adds new "deno check" subcommand.
Currently it is an alias for "deno cache" with the difference that remote
modules don't emit TS diagnostics by default.
Prints warning for "deno run" subcommand if "--check" flag is not present
and there's no "--no-check" flag. Adds "DENO_FUTURE_CHECK" env
variable that allows to opt into new behavior now.
`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.