Eagerly errors for something like `export * from "jsr:@type/is@";`
(previously it would just fail elsewhere because it would consider this
as having an empty tag)
Previously the CLI was incorrectly reporting `React` as unused in a JSX
file that uses the "old" transform.
The LSP was already handling this correctly.
`esbuild` can work fine without needing to run post-install script, so
to make it easier on users (especially people using Vite) we are not prompting to run with
`--allow-scripts` again.
We only do that for version >= 0.18.0 to be sure.
Currently we only warn once. With this PR, we continue to warn about
not-run scripts on explicit `deno install` (or cache). For `run` (or
other subcommands) we only warn the once, as we do currently.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/25862.
npm only makes bin entries executable if they get linked into `.bin`, as
we did before this PR. So this PR actually deviates from npm, because
it's the only reasonable way to fix this that I can think of.
---
The reason this was broken in moment is the following:
Moment has dependencies on two typescript versions: 1.8 and 3.1
If you have two packages with conflicting bin entries (i.e. two
typescript versions which both have a bin entry `tsc`), in npm it is
non-deterministic and undefined which one will end up in `.bin`.
npm, due to implementation differences, chooses to put typescript 1.8
into the `.bin` directory, and so `node_modules/typescript/bin/tsc` ends
up getting marked executable. We, however, choose typescript 3.2, and so
we end up making `node_modules/typescript3/bin/tsc` executable.
As part of its tests, moment executes `node_modules/typescript/bin/tsc`.
Because we didn't make it executable, this fails.
Since the conflict resolution is undefined in npm, instead of trying to
match it, I think it makes more sense to just make bin entries
executable even if they aren't chosen in the case of a conflict.
This replaces `--allow-net` for import permissions and makes the
security sandbox stricter by also checking permissions for statically
analyzable imports.
By default, this has a value of
`--allow-import=deno.land:443,jsr.io:443,esm.sh:443,raw.githubusercontent.com:443,gist.githubusercontent.com:443`,
but that can be overridden by providing a different set of hosts.
Additionally, when no value is provided, import permissions are inferred
from the CLI arguments so the following works because
`fresh.deno.dev:443` will be added to the list of allowed imports:
```ts
deno run -A -r https://fresh.deno.dev
```
---------
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@gmail.com>
Fixes #25813.
I initially tried doing this in `deno_semver`, where it's a cleaner
change, but that caused breakage in deno in places where we don't expect
a tag (see https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/25857).
This does not fix wildcard requirements failing to choose pre-release
versions. That's a little more involved and I'll do a separate PR.
Refactors the lifecycle scripts code to extract out the common
functionality and then uses that to provide a warning in the global
resolver.
While ideally we would still support them with the global cache, for now
a warning is at least better than the status quo (where people are
unaware why their packages aren't working).
`deno fmt --check` was broken for CSS, YAML and HTML files.
Before this PR, formatting any of these file types would return a
string, even though the contract in `cli/tools/fmt.rs` is to only return a
string if the formatting changed. This causes wrong flagging of these files
as being badly formatted even though diffs showed nothing (because
they were in fact formatted properly).
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/25840
Partially addresses https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/25648.
This allows packages that use `crossws` to be installed with `deno
install`. `crossws` specifies an optional peer dependency on
`uWebSockets`, but `uWebSockets` is not on npm (it is used with `git:`
or `github:` specifiers). Previously we would error on this, now we
don't error on non-existent optional peer dependencies.