When the response has been successfully send, we abort the
`Request.signal` property to indicate that all resources associated with
this transaction may be torn down.
…faces (#23296)"
This reverts commit e190acbfa8.
Reverting because it broke stable API type declarations. We will reland
it for v1.43 with updated interfaces
Removes the certificate options from all the interfaces and replaces
them with a new `TlsCertifiedKeyOptions`. This allows us to centralize
the documentation for TLS key management for both client and server, and
will allow us to add key object support in the future.
Also adds an option `keyFormat` field to the cert/key that must be
omitted or set to `pem`. This will allow us to load other format keys in
the future `der`, `pfx`, etc.
In a future PR, we will add a way to load a certified key object, and we
will add another option to `TlsCertifiedKeyOptions` like so:
```ts
export interface TlsCertifiedKeyOptions =
| TlsCertifiedKeyPem
| TlsCertifiedKeyFromFile
| TlsCertifiedKeyConnectTls
| { key: Deno.CertifiedKey }
```
This change deprecates
`Deno.CreateHttpClientOptions.{certChain,privateKey}` in favour of
`Deno.CreateHttpClientOptions.{cert,key}`.
Closes #22278
Co-authored-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.com>
- changed `Deno.UnsafeWindowSurface` typings from accepting
`Deno.UnsafePointerView` to `Deno.PointerValue`
- added width and height to `GPUCanvasConfiguration`
This change removes the currently deprecated `Deno.cron()` overload with
`options` as a potential last argument.
This might be fine to do now, in a major release, as `Deno.cron()` is an
unstable API. I thought of doing this while working on #22021. If this
is not ready to remove, I can instead set the removal version of this
overload for Deno v2.
Note: this overload was deprecated in Deno v1.38.2 (#21225). So it's
been deprecated for over 2 months.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/21828.
This API is a huge footgun. And given that "Deno.serveHttp" is a
deprecated API that is discouraged to use (use "Deno.serve()"
instead); it makes no sense to keep this API around.
This is a step towards fully migrating to Hyper 1.
This commit adds support for [Stage 3 Temporal API
proposal](https://tc39.es/proposal-temporal/docs/).
The API is available when `--unstable-temporal` flag is passed.
---------
Signed-off-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Kenta Moriuchi <moriken@kimamass.com>
This commit stabilizes "Deno.HttpServer.shutdown" API as well as
Unix socket support in "Deno.serve" API.
---------
Co-authored-by: Yoshiya Hinosawa <stibium121@gmail.com>
This commit adds a method of `Symbol.dispose` to the object returned
from `Deno.createHttpClient`, so we can make use of [explicit resource
management](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-explicit-resource-management)
by declaring it with `using`.
This commit adds support for a new `kv.watch()` method that allows
watching for changes to a key-value pair. This is useful for cases
where you want to be notified when a key-value pair changes, but
don't want to have to poll for changes.
---------
Co-authored-by: losfair <zhy20000919@hotmail.com>
This PR changes the `Deno.cron` API:
* Marks the existing function as deprecated
* Introduces 2 new overloads, where the handler arg is always last:
```ts
Deno.cron(
name: string,
schedule: string,
handler: () => Promise<void> | void,
)
Deno.cron(
name: string,
schedule: string,
options?: { backoffSchedule?: number[]; signal?: AbortSignal },
handler: () => Promise<void> | void,
)
```
This PR also fixes a bug, when other crons continue execution after one
of the crons was closed using `signal`.
This PR adds unstable `Deno.cron` API to trigger execution of cron jobs.
* State: All cron state is in memory. Cron jobs are scheduled according
to the cron schedule expression and the current time. No state is
persisted to disk.
* Time zone: Cron expressions specify time in UTC.
* Overlapping executions: not permitted. If the next scheduled execution
time occurs while the same cron job is still executing, the scheduled
execution is skipped.
* Retries: failed jobs are automatically retried until they succeed or
until retry threshold is reached. Retry policy can be optionally
specified using `options.backoffSchedule`.
This brings in [`display`](https://github.com/rgbkrk/display.js) as part
of the `Deno.jupyter` namespace.
Additionally these APIs were added:
- "Deno.jupyter.md"
- "Deno.jupyter.html"
- "Deno.jupyter.svg"
- "Deno.jupyter.format"
These APIs greatly extend capabilities of rendering output in Jupyter
notebooks.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Adds `buffers` to the `Deno.jupyter.broadcast` API to send binary data
via comms. This affords the ability to send binary data via websockets
to the jupyter widget frontend.
This PR implements a graceful shutdown API for Deno.serve, allowing all
current connections to drain from the server before shutting down, while
preventing new connections from being started or new transactions on
existing connections from being created.
We split the cancellation handle into two parts: a listener handle, and
a connection handle. A graceful shutdown cancels the listener only,
while allowing the connections to drain. The connection handle aborts
all futures. If the listener handle is cancelled, we put the connections
into graceful shutdown mode, which disables keep-alive on http/1.1 and
uses http/2 mechanisms for http/2 connections.
In addition, we now guarantee that all connections are complete or
cancelled, and all resources are cleaned up when the server `finished`
promise resolves -- we use a Rust-side server refcount for this.
Performance impact: does not appear to affect basic serving performance
by more than 1% (~126k -> ~125k)
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Few improvements to FFI types:
1. Export `PointerObject` for convenience. It's fairly commonly used in
library code and thus should be exported.
2. Fix various comments around `PointerValue` and `UnsafePointer` and
expand upon them to better reflect reality.
3. Instead of using a `Record<"value", type>[T]` for determining the
type of an FFI symbol parameter use direct `T extends "value" ? type :
never` comparison.
The last part enables smuggling extra information into the parameter and
return value string declarations at the type level. eg. Instead of just
`"u8"` the parameter can be `"u8" & { [brand]: T }` for some `T extends
number`. That `T` can then be extracted from the parameter to form the
TypeScript function's parameter or return value type. Essentially, this
enables type-safe FFI!
The foremost use-cases for this are enums and pointer safety. These are
implemented in the second commit which should enable, in a backwards
compatible way, for pointer parameters to declare what sort of pointer
they mean, functions to declare what the API definition of the native
function is, and for numbers to declare what Enum they stand for (if
any).