This commit introduces deprecation warnings for "Deno.*" APIs.
This is gonna be quite noisy, but should tremendously help with user
code updates to ensure
smooth migration to Deno 2.0. The warning is printed at each unique call
site to help quickly
identify where code needs to be adjusted. There's some stack frame
filtering going on to
remove frames that are not useful to the user and would only cause
confusion.
The warning can be silenced using "--quiet" flag or
"DENO_NO_DEPRECATION_WARNINGS" env var.
"Deno.run()" API is now using this warning. Other deprecated APIs will
start warning
in follow up PRs.
Example:
```js
import { runEcho as runEcho2 } from "http://localhost:4545/run/warn_on_deprecated_api/mod.ts";
const p = Deno.run({
cmd: [
Deno.execPath(),
"eval",
"console.log('hello world')",
],
});
await p.status();
p.close();
async function runEcho() {
const p = Deno.run({
cmd: [
Deno.execPath(),
"eval",
"console.log('hello world')",
],
});
await p.status();
p.close();
}
await runEcho();
await runEcho();
for (let i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
await runEcho();
}
await runEcho2();
```
```
$ deno run --allow-read foo.js
Warning
├ Use of deprecated "Deno.run()" API.
│
├ This API will be removed in Deno 2.0. Make sure to upgrade to a stable API before then.
│
├ Suggestion: Use "Deno.Command()" API instead.
│
└ Stack trace:
└─ at file:///Users/ib/dev/deno/foo.js:3:16
hello world
Warning
├ Use of deprecated "Deno.run()" API.
│
├ This API will be removed in Deno 2.0. Make sure to upgrade to a stable API before then.
│
├ Suggestion: Use "Deno.Command()" API instead.
│
└ Stack trace:
├─ at runEcho (file:///Users/ib/dev/deno/foo.js:8:18)
└─ at file:///Users/ib/dev/deno/foo.js:13:7
hello world
Warning
├ Use of deprecated "Deno.run()" API.
│
├ This API will be removed in Deno 2.0. Make sure to upgrade to a stable API before then.
│
├ Suggestion: Use "Deno.Command()" API instead.
│
└ Stack trace:
├─ at runEcho (file:///Users/ib/dev/deno/foo.js:8:18)
└─ at file:///Users/ib/dev/deno/foo.js:14:7
hello world
Warning
├ Use of deprecated "Deno.run()" API.
│
├ This API will be removed in Deno 2.0. Make sure to upgrade to a stable API before then.
│
├ Suggestion: Use "Deno.Command()" API instead.
│
└ Stack trace:
├─ at runEcho (file:///Users/ib/dev/deno/foo.js:8:18)
└─ at file:///Users/ib/dev/deno/foo.js:17:9
hello world
hello world
hello world
hello world
hello world
hello world
hello world
hello world
hello world
hello world
Warning
├ Use of deprecated "Deno.run()" API.
│
├ This API will be removed in Deno 2.0. Make sure to upgrade to a stable API before then.
│
├ Suggestion: Use "Deno.Command()" API instead.
│
├ Suggestion: It appears this API is used by a remote dependency.
│ Try upgrading to the latest version of that dependency.
│
└ Stack trace:
├─ at runEcho (http://localhost:4545/run/warn_on_deprecated_api/mod.ts:2:18)
└─ at file:///Users/ib/dev/deno/foo.js:20:7
hello world
```
Closes #21839
This PR implements the child_process IPC pipe between parent and child.
The implementation uses Windows named pipes created by parent and passes
the inheritable file handle to the child.
I've also replace parts of the initial implementation which passed the
raw parent fd to JS with resource ids instead. This way no file handle
is exposed to the JS land (both parent and child).
`IpcJsonStreamResource` can stream upto 800MB/s of JSON data on Win 11
AMD Ryzen 7 16GB (without `memchr` vectorization)
This PR implements the Node child_process IPC functionality in Deno on
Unix systems.
For `fd > 2` a duplex unix pipe is set up between the parent and child
processes. Currently implements data passing via the channel in the JSON
serialization format.
This commit brings back usage of primordials in "40_testing.js" by
turning it back into an ES module and using new "lazy loading" functionality
of ES modules coming from "deno_core".
The same approach was applied to "40_jupyter.js".
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
This commit removes some of the technical debt related
to snapshotting JS code:
- "cli/ops/mod.rs" and "cli/build.rs" no longer define "cli" extension
which was not required anymore
- Cargo features for "deno_runtime" crate have been unified in
"cli/Cargo.toml"
- "cli/build.rs" uses "deno_runtime::snapshot::create_runtime_snapshot"
API
instead of copy-pasting the code
- "cli/js/99_main.js" was completely removed as it's not necessary
anymore
Towards https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/21137
This commit adds granular `--unstable-*` flags:
- "--unstable-broadcast-channel"
- "--unstable-ffi"
- "--unstable-fs"
- "--unstable-http"
- "--unstable-kv"
- "--unstable-net"
- "--unstable-worker-options"
- "--unstable-cron"
These flags are meant to replace a "catch-all" flag - "--unstable", that
gives a binary control whether unstable features are enabled or not. The
downside of this flag that allowing eg. Deno KV API also enables the FFI
API (though the latter is still gated with a permission).
These flags can also be specified in `deno.json` file under `unstable`
key.
Currently, "--unstable" flag works the same way - I will open a follow
up PR that will print a warning when using "--unstable" and suggest to use
concrete "--unstable-*" flag instead. We plan to phase out "--unstable"
completely in Deno 2.
This commit adds `--unstable-hmr` flag, that enabled Hot Module Replacement.
This flag works like `--watch` and accepts the same arguments. If
HMR is not possible the process will be restarted instead.
Currently HMR is only supported in `deno run` subcommand.
Upon HMR a `CustomEvent("hmr")` will be dispatched that contains
information which file was changed in its `details` property.
---------
Co-authored-by: Valentin Anger <syrupthinker@gryphno.de>
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@gmail.com>
This makes `CliNpmResolver` a trait. The terminology used is:
- **managed** - Deno manages the node_modules folder and does an
auto-install (ex. `ManagedCliNpmResolver`)
- **byonm** - "Bring your own node_modules" (ex. `ByonmCliNpmResolver`,
which is in this PR, but unimplemented at the moment)
Part of #18967
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- update docs
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2. Ensure there is a related issue and it is referenced in the PR text.
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5. Ensure `./tools/format.js` passes without changing files.
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As the title.
---------
Co-authored-by: Matt Mastracci <matthew@mastracci.com>
To fix bugs around detection of when node emulation is required, we will
just eagerly initialize it. The improvements we make to reduce the
impact of the startup time:
- [x] Process stdin/stdout/stderr are lazily created
- [x] node.js global proxy no longer allocates on each access check
- [x] Process checks for `beforeExit` listeners before doing expensive
shutdown work
- [x] Process should avoid adding global event handlers until listeners
are added
Benchmarking this PR (`89de7e1ff`) vs main (`41cad2179`)
```
12:36 $ third_party/prebuilt/mac/hyperfine --warmup 100 -S none './deno-41cad2179 run ./empty.js' './deno-89de7e1ff run ./empty.js'
Benchmark 1: ./deno-41cad2179 run ./empty.js
Time (mean ± σ): 24.3 ms ± 1.6 ms [User: 16.2 ms, System: 6.0 ms]
Range (min … max): 21.1 ms … 29.1 ms 115 runs
Benchmark 2: ./deno-89de7e1ff run ./empty.js
Time (mean ± σ): 24.0 ms ± 1.4 ms [User: 16.3 ms, System: 5.6 ms]
Range (min … max): 21.3 ms … 28.6 ms 126 runs
```
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/20142
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/15826
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/20028
Closes #19399 (running without snapshots at all was suggested as an
alternative solution).
Adds a `__runtime_js_sources` pseudo-private feature to load extension
JS sources at runtime for faster development, instead of building and
loading snapshots or embedding sources in the binary. Will only work in
a development environment obviously.
Try running `cargo test --features __runtime_js_sources
integration::node_unit_tests::os_test`. Then break some behaviour in
`ext/node/polyfills/os.ts` e.g. make `function cpus() {}` return an
empty array, and run it again. Fix and then run again. No more build
time in between.
1. Boxed `File` and `FileSystem` to allow more easily passing this
through the CLI code (as shown within this pr).
2. `StdFileResource` is now `FileResource`. `FileResource` now contains
an `Rc<dyn File>`.
This removes `ProcState` and replaces it with a new `CliFactory` which
initializes our "service structs" on demand. This isn't a performance
improvement at the moment for `deno run`, but might unlock performance
improvements in the future.
This is just a straight refactor and I didn't do any cleanup in
ext/node. After this PR we can start to clean it up and make things
private that don't need to be public anymore.
1. Breaks up functionality within `ProcState` into several other structs
to break out the responsibilities (`ProcState` is only a data struct
now).
2. Moves towards being able to inject dependencies more easily and have
functionality only require what it needs.
3. Exposes `Arc<T>` around the "service structs" instead of it being
embedded within them. The idea behind embedding them was to reduce the
verbosity of needing to pass around `Arc<...>`, but I don't think it was
exactly working and as we move more of these structs to be more
injectable I don't think the extra verbosity will be a big deal.
Stores the test/bench functions in rust op state during registration.
The functions are wrapped in JS first so that they return a directly
convertible `TestResult`/`BenchResult`. Test steps are still mostly
handled in JS since they are pretty much invoked by the user. Allows
removing a bunch of infrastructure for communicating between JS and
rust. Allows using rust utilities for things like shuffling tests
(`Vec::shuffle`). We can progressively move op and resource sanitization
to rust as well.
Fixes #17122.
Fixes #17312.
This is a follow-on to the earlier work in reducing string copies,
mainly focused on ensuring that ASCII strings are easy to provide to the
JS runtime.
While we are replacing a 16-byte reference in a number of places with a
24-byte structure (measured via `std::mem::size_of`), the reduction in
copies wins out over the additional size of the arguments passed into
functions.
Benchmarking shows approximately the same if not slightly less wallclock
time/instructions retired, but I believe this continues to open up
further refactoring opportunities.