This allows resources to be "streams" by implementing read/write/shutdown. These streams are implicit since their nature (read/write/duplex) isn't known until called, but we could easily add another method to explicitly tag resources as streams.
`op_read/op_write/op_shutdown` are now builtin ops provided by `deno_core`
Note: this current implementation is simple & straightforward but it results in an additional alloc per read/write call
Closes #12556
Closes #11826
**BREAKING CHANGE** this behaviour was disable when introduced in Deno 1.14/TypeScript 4.4. It will highlight code that unsafely handles variables that are caught, and will cause type errors in unsafe code.
A `handshake()` method was added that returns when the TLS handshake is
complete. The `TlsListener` and `TlsConn` interfaces were added to
accomodate this new method.
Closes: #11759.
`fetch()` and client-side websocket used to support HTTP/2, but this
regressed in #11491. This patch reenables it by explicitly adding `h2`
and `http/1.1` to the list of ALPN protocols on the HTTP and websocket
clients.
A bug was fixed that could cause a hang when a method was
called on a TlsConn object that had thrown an exception earlier.
Additionally, a bug was fixed that caused TlsConn.write() to not
completely flush large buffers (>64kB) to the socket.
The public `TlsConn.handshake()` API is scheduled for inclusion in the
next minor release. See https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/12467.
Currently all async ops are polled lazily, which means that op
initialization code is postponed until control is yielded to the event
loop. This has some weird consequences, e.g.
```js
let listener = Deno.listen(...);
let conn_promise = listener.accept();
listener.close();
// `BadResource` is thrown. A reasonable error would be `Interrupted`.
let conn = await conn_promise;
```
JavaScript promises are expected to be eagerly evaluated. This patch
makes ops actually do that.
On OS X, the watcher sometimes witnesses the creation of it's own root
directory. Creating that directory using a sync op instead of an async
op sidesteps the issue.
GET/HEAD requests can't have bodies according to `fetch` spec. This
commit changes the HTTP server to hide request bodies for requests with
GET or HEAD methods.
This commit annotates errors returned from FS Deno APIs to include
paths that were passed to the API calls.
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This adds support for using in memory CA certificates for
`Deno.startTLS`, `Deno.connectTLS` and `Deno.createHttpClient`.
`certFile` is deprecated in `startTls` and `connectTls`, and removed
from `Deno.createHttpClient`.
Our oneshot receiver in `HyperService::call` would unwrap and panic, the `.await` on the oneshot receiver happens when the sender is dropped.
The sender is dropped in `op_http_response` because:
1. We take `ResponseSenderResource`
2. Then get `ConnResource` and early exit on failure (conn already closed)
3. The taken sender then gets dropped in this early exit before any response is sent over the channel
Fallbacking to returning a dummy response to hyper seems to be a fine quickfix