This commit updates our testing npm registry to handle
additional `@denotest2` scope in addition to `@denotest`
scope. I might have to update it further in the future to handle
additional scopes, but it's good enough for now.
Part of #22607 (probably closes it, but I haven't done thorough testing)
Makes it so that `require.resolve` with `paths` specified will fallback
to using the global cache when the paths can't be found when using a
global cache (not when using a node_modules folder)
By default, `deno serve` will assign port 8000 (like `Deno.serve`).
Users may choose a different port using `--port`.
`deno serve /tmp/file.ts`
`server.ts`:
```ts
export default {
fetch(req) {
return new Response("hello world!\n");
},
};
```
This commit changes the workspace support to provide all workspace
members to be available as imports based on their names and versions.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/23343
This allows people to use imports like:
```ts
import "./app.css";
```
...with `deno check` in systems where there's a bundle step (ex. Vite).
This will still error when using it with `deno run` or if the referenced
file does not exist.
See test cases for behaviour.
I'm unsure whether we're planning to make the `Deno.FsFile` constructor
illegal or remove `FsFile` from the `Deno.*` namspace in Deno 2. Either
way, this PR works towards the former. I'll create a superceding PR if
the latter is planned instead.
Towards #23089
Unused locals and parameters don't make sense to surface in remote
modules. Additionally, fast check can cause these kind of diagnostics
when publishing, so they should be ignored.
Closes #22959
Fixes #23053.
Two small bugs here:
- the existing condition for printing out the group header was broken.
it worked in the reproducer (in the issue above) without filtering only
by accident, due to setting `self.has_ungrouped = true` once we see the
warmup bench. Knowing that we sort benchmarks to put ungrouped benches
first, there are only two cases: 1) we are starting the first group 2)
we are ending the previous group and starting a new group
- when you passed `--filter` we were applying that filter to the warmup
bench (which is not visible to users), so we suffered from jit bias if
you were filtering (unless your filter was `<warmup>`)
TLDR;
Running
```bash
deno bench main.js --filter="G"
```
```js
// main.js
Deno.bench({
group: "G1",
name: "G1-A",
fn() {},
});
Deno.bench({
group: "G1",
name: "G1-B",
fn() {},
});
```
Before this PR:
```
benchmark time (avg) iter/s (min … max) p75 p99 p995
--------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------
G1-A 303.52 ps/iter3,294,726,102.1 (254.2 ps … 7.8 ns) 287.5 ps 391.7 ps 437.5 ps
G1-B 3.8 ns/iter 263,360,635.9 (2.24 ns … 8.36 ns) 3.84 ns 4.73 ns 4.94 ns
summary
G1-A
12.51x faster than G1-B
```
After this PR:
```
benchmark time (avg) iter/s (min … max) p75 p99 p995
--------------------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------
group G1
G1-A 3.85 ns/iter 259,822,096.0 (2.42 ns … 9.03 ns) 3.83 ns 4.62 ns 4.83 ns
G1-B 3.84 ns/iter 260,458,274.5 (3.55 ns … 7.05 ns) 3.83 ns 4.45 ns 4.7 ns
summary
G1-B
1x faster than G1-A
```
This change removes deprecated methods from the `Deno.*` namespace when
the `DENO_FUTURE=1` environment variable is used.
Note: this does not address deprecated class properties and methods.
E.g. `Deno.Conn.rid`.
Fixes #22941.
In that case, the only file with coverage was the `test.ts` file. The
coverage reporter filters out test files before compiling its report, so
after filtering we were left with an empty set of files. Later on it's
assumed that there is at least 1 file to be reported on, and we panic.
Instead of panicking, just issue an error after filtering.