This is what pnpm does and we were missing it. It makes modules work
which have a dependency on something, but don't say they have that
dependency, but that dep is still in the tree somewhere.
This commit fixes emitting "unhandledrejection" event when there are
"node:" or "npm:" imports.
Before this commit the Node "unhandledRejection" event was emitted
using a regular listener for Web "unhandledrejection" event. This
listener was installed before any user listener had a chance to be
installed which effectively prevent emitting "unhandledrejection"
events to user code.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/16928
When someone explicitly opts into using the node_modules dir via
`--node-modules-dir` or setting `"nodeModulesDir": true` in the
deno.json file, we should eagerly ensure a top level package.json
install is done on startup. This was initially always done when we added
package.json support and a package.json was auto-discovered, but scaled
it back to be lazily done when a bare specifier matched an entry in the
package.json because of how disruptive it was for people using Deno
scripts in Node projects. That said, it does not make sense for someone
to opt-into having deno control and use their node_modules directory and
not want a package.json install to occur. If such a rare scenario
exists, the `DENO_NO_PACKAGE_JSON=1` environment variable can be set.
Ideally, we would only ever use a node_modules directory with this
explicit opt-in so everything is very clear, but we still have this
automatic scenario when there's a package.json in order to make more
node projects work out of the box.
Before:
```
$ cargo run -- test "foo/*******/bar.ts"
error: Pattern syntax error near position 6: wildcards are either regular `*` or recursive `**`
```
After:
```
$ cargo run -- test "foo/*******/bar.ts"
error: Failed to expand glob: "foo/*******/bar.ts"
Caused by:
Pattern syntax error near position 6: wildcards are either regular `*` or recursive `**`
```
---------
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@users.noreply.github.com>
Noticed that we're checking more module paths than necessary. In
particular the module path array contains a couple of entries with a
duplicated `node_modules/node_modules` suffix.
```js
[
// ... more entries before here, where some also contain duplicate suffixes
"/Users/marvinhagemeister/dev/preact-render-to-string/node_modules/.deno/node_modules",
"/Users/marvinhagemeister/dev/preact-render-to-string/node_modules/node_modules", // <-- duplicate suffix
"/Users/marvinhagemeister/dev/preact-render-to-string/node_modules",
"/Users/marvinhagemeister/dev/node_modules",
"/Users/marvinhagemeister/node_modules",
"/Users/node_modules",
"/node_modules",
"/node_modules" // <-- duplicate entry
]
```
This was caused by a misunderstanding in how Rust's
[`Path::ends_with()`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/path/struct.Path.html#method.ends_with)
works. It's designed to match on whole path segments and the suffix
`/node_modules` is not that, except for the root entry. This meant that
our check for if the path already ended with `node_module` always
returned `false`. Removing the leading slash fixes that.
While we're at it, we can remove the last condition where we explicitly
added the root `/node_modules` entry since the while loop prior to that
takes care of it already.
Follow up to https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/19084.
This commit adds support for globs in the configuration file as well
as CLI arguments for files.
With this change users can now use glob syntax for "include" and
"exclude" fields, like so:
```json
{
"lint": {
"include": [
"directory/test*.ts",
"other_dir/"
],
"exclude": [
"other_dir/foo*.ts",
"nested/nested2/*"
]
},
"test": {
"include": [
"data/test*.ts",
"nested/",
"tests/test[1-9].ts"
],
"exclude": [
"nested/foo?.ts",
"nested/nested2/*"
]
}
}
```
Or in CLI args like so:
```
// notice quotes here; these values will be passed to Deno verbatim
// and deno will perform glob expansion
$ deno fmt --ignore="data/*.ts"
$ deno lint "data/**/*.ts"
```
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/17971
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/6365
This adds support for the lockfile and node_modules directory to the
lsp.
In the case of the node_modules directory, it is only enabled when
explicitly opted into via `"nodeModulesDir": true` in the configuration
file. This is to reduce the language server automatically modifying the
node_modules directory when the user doesn't want it to.
Closes #16510
Closes #16373
This commit changes implementation of "setImmediate"
from "node:timers" module to 0ms timer that is never
clamped to 4ms no matter how many nested calls there are.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/19034
This runs our `js_unit_tests` and `node_unit_tests` in parallel, one
rust test per JS unit test file. Some of our JS tests don't like running
in parallel due to port requirements, so this also makes those use a
specific port-per-file. This does not attempt to make the node-compat
tests work.
We don't need to use the `deno` command here to test kill permissions
and it's awkward to get right without passing `-A`. `cat` works, but for
platforms other than windows. This test should have plenty of coverage
on other platforms.
This commit changes the implementation of `ext/web` timers, by using
"op_void_async_deferred" for timeouts of 0ms.
0ms timeout is meant to be run at the end of the event loop tick and
currently Tokio timers that we use to back timeouts have at least 1ms
resolution. That means that 0ms timeout actually take >1ms. This
commit changes that and runs 0ms timeout at the end of the event
loop tick.
One consequence is that "unrefing" a 0ms timer will actually keep
the event loop alive (which I believe actually makes sense, the test
we had only worked because the timeout took more than 1ms).
Ref https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/19034
This commit ensures that JavaScript functions generated for registered
ops have proper names set up - the function name matches the name
of the op.
A test was added in `core/runtime.rs` that verifies this.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/19206
We never properly added support for this. This fixes vendoring when it
has npm or node specifiers. Vendoring occurs by adding a
`"nodeModulesDir": true` property to deno.json then it uses a local
node_modules directory. This can be opted out by setting
`"nodeModulesDir": false` or running with `--node-modules-dir=false`.
Closes #18090
Closes #17210
Closes #17619
Closes #16778
This reverts commit 798c1ad0f1.
Reverting because this change caused a spike in memory usage, but we
can't fully realise gains from lower GC pressure from more optimal
malloc/ free provided by "jemalloc".
We might revisit the topic in future.
This commit changes the return type of an unstable `Deno.serve()` API
to instead return a `Deno.Server` object that has a `finished` field.
This change is done in preparation to be able to ref/unref the HTTP
server.
**THIS PR HAS GIT CONFLICTS THAT MUST BE RESOLVED**
This is the release commit being forwarded back to main for 1.33.4
Please ensure:
- [x] Everything looks ok in the PR
- [ ] The release has been published
To make edits to this PR:
```shell
git fetch upstream forward_v1.33.4 && git checkout -b forward_v1.33.4 upstream/forward_v1.33.4
```
Don't need this PR? Close it.
cc @levex
Co-authored-by: levex <levex@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Levente Kurusa <lkurusa@kernelstuff.org>
This is a bit bare bones but gets `npm-run-all` working. For full stdio
compatibility with node more work is needed which is probably better
done in follow up PRs.
Fixes #19159
Doesn't make the API bullet-proof and there are some TODOs left,
but greatly improves the situation. Tests were ported from Node.js.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/18276.
Note: If the package information has already been cached, then this
requires running with `--reload` or for the registry information to be
fetched some other way (ex. the cache busting).
Closes #15544
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
If a timer is requested with <=100ms resolution, request the high-res
timer. Since the default Windows timer period is 15ms, this means a
100ms timer could fire at 115ms (15% late). We assume that timers longer
than 100ms are a reasonable cutoff here.
The high-res timers on Windows are still limited. Unfortuntely this
means that our shortest duration 4ms timers can still be 25% late, but
without a more complex timer system or spinning on the clock itself,
we're somewhat bounded by the OS' scheduler itself.