Fixes a pesky bug in the fetch implementation where if the init part is
specified in `fetch` instead of the `Request` constructor, the
fillHeaders function receives two references to the same object, causing
it to append to the same list being iterated over.
This commit adds support for running test in parallel.
Entire test runner functionality has been rewritten
from JavaScript to Rust and a set of ops was added to support reporting in Rust.
A new "--jobs" flag was added to "deno test" that allows to configure
how many threads will be used. When given no value it defaults to 2.
Extensions allow declarative extensions to "JsRuntime" (ops, state, JS or middleware).
This allows for:
- `op_crates` to be plug-and-play & self-contained, reducing complexity leaked to consumers
- op middleware (like metrics_op) to be opt-in and for new middleware (unstable, tracing,...)
- `MainWorker` and `WebWorker` to be composable, allowing users to extend workers with their ops whilst benefiting from the other infrastructure (inspector, etc...)
In short extensions improve deno's modularity, reducing complexity and leaky abstractions for embedders and the internal codebase.
General cleanup of module loading code, tried to reduce indentation in various methods
on "JsRuntime" to improve readability.
Added "JsRuntime::handle_scope" helper function, which returns a "v8::HandleScope".
This was done to reduce a code pattern that happens all over the "deno_core".
Additionally if event loop hangs during loading of dynamic modules a list of
currently pending dynamic imports is printed.
Currently we specify --all-targets when building. It's equivalent of
--lib --bins --tests --benches --examples, but in test release jobs,
we don't need to build everything. So this PR reduces build target to only
--bin deno --bin test_server in build phase, and reduces test targets to
--bins --lib --tests.
This skips the building of benches and examples in test release jobs.
`InvalidDNSNameError` is thrown when a string is not a valid hostname,
e.g. it contains invalid characters, or starts with a numeric digit. It
does not involve a (failed) DNS lookup.
denort is an optimization to "deno compile" to produce slightly smaller
output. It's a decent idea, but causes a lot of negative side-effects:
- Deno's link time is a source of constant agony both locally and in CI,
denort doubles link time.
- The release process is a long and arduous undertaking with many manual
steps. denort necessitates an additional manual zip + upload from M1
apple computers.
- The "deno compile" interface is complicated with the "--lite" option.
This is confusing for uses ("why wouldn't you want lite?").
The benefits of this feature do not outweigh the negatives. We must find
a different approach to optimizing "deno compile" output.
This commits adds adds "permissions" option to the test definitions
which allows tests to run with different permission sets than
the process's permission.
The change will only be in effect within the test function, once the
test has completed the original process permission set is restored.
Test permissions cannot exceed the process's permission.
You can only narrow or drop permissions, failure to acquire a
permission results in an error being thrown and the test case will fail.
Even if bootstrapping the JS runtime is low level, it's an abstraction leak of
core to require users to call `Deno.core.ops()` in JS space.
So instead we're introducing a `JsRuntime::sync_ops_cache()` method,
once we have runtime extensions a new runtime will ensure the ops
cache is setup (for the provided extensions) and then loading/unloading
plugins should be the only operations that require op cache syncs
We are aware that "lint debug ubuntu" and "test debug ubuntu" are sharing
caches - and that it is not ideal. Likely the lint cache will be written
first, and test-debug will have to build extra. However neither are the
bottleneck now.
We proceed on the assumption that we're hitting the 5 GB cache limit on a
single PR, inducing a forever-rolling behavior.
If "test debug ubuntu" becomes the bottleneck in the future we will
revisit.