This will respect `"type": "commonjs"` in a package.json to determine if
`.js`/`.jsx`/`.ts`/.tsx` files are CJS or ESM. If the file is found to
be ESM it will be loaded as ESM though.
Initial import of OTEL code supporting tracing. Metrics soon to come.
Implements APIs for https://jsr.io/@deno/otel so that code using
OpenTelemetry.js just works tm.
There is still a lot of work to do with configuration and adding
built-in tracing to core APIs, which will come in followup PRs.
---------
Co-authored-by: Luca Casonato <hello@lcas.dev>
Fixes #26677
Some packages (like supabase) declare bin entries that don't exist until
lifecycle scripts are run. For instance, the lifecycle script downloads
a binary file which serves as a bin entrypoint.
Unfortunately you can't just defer setting up the bin entries until
after lifecycle scripts have run, because the scripts may rely on them.
I looked into this, and PNPM just re-links bin entries after running
lifecycle scripts. I think that's about the best we can do as well.
Note that we'll only re-setup bin entries for packages whose lifecycle
scripts we run. This should limit the performance cost, as typically a
given project will not have many lifecycle scripts (and of those, many
of them probably don't have bin entries to set up).
This commit adds support for wildcard packages in `workspace`
configuration option in `deno.json`. This is now supported:
```
{
"workspace": [
"./packages/*"
]
}
```
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/25783
* cts support
* better cjs/cts type checking
* deno compile cjs/cts support
* More efficient detect cjs (going towards stabilization)
* Determination of whether .js, .ts, .jsx, or .tsx is cjs or esm is only
done after loading
* Support `import x = require(...);`
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Fixes #25342.
Still not sure on the exact user agent to set (should it include
`node`?).
After this PR, here's the state of running some `create-*` packages
(just ones I could think of off the top of my head):
| package | prints/runs/suggests deno install | notes |
| ---------------- | ------------- | ------ |
| `create-next-app` | ❌ | falls back to npm, needs a PR
([code](c32e280209/packages/create-next-app/helpers/get-pkg-manager.ts (L3)))
| `sv create` | ❌ | uses `package-manager-detector`, needs a PR
([code](https://github.com/antfu-collective/package-manager-detector/tree/main))
| `create-qwik` | ✅ | runs `deno install` but suggests `deno start`
which doesn't work (should be `deno task start` or `deno run start`)
| `create-astro` | ✅ | runs `deno install` but suggests `npm run dev`
later in output, probably needs a PR
| `nuxi init` | ❌ | deno not an option in dialog, needs a PR
([code](f04e2e8944/src/commands/init.ts (L96-L102)))
| `create-react-app` | ❌ | uses npm
| `ng new` (`@angular/cli`) | ❌ | uses npm
| `create-vite` | ✅ | suggests working deno commands 🎉
| `create-solid` | ❌ | suggests npm commands, needs PR
It's possible that fixing `package-manager-detector` or other packages
might make some of these just work, but haven't looked too carefully at
each
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/26505
I'm not exactly sure how this case comes about (I tried to write tests
for it but couldn't manage to reproduce it), but what happens is the
parent filename ends up null, and we bail out of resolving the specifier
in package exports.
I've checked, and in node the parent filename is also null (so that's
not a bug on our part), but node continues to resolve even in that case.
So this PR should match node's behavior more closely than we currently
do.
Spend some time stepping through the npm client code and noticed that
the bearer token was different from ours. They do some double encoding
and @dsherret helped me in matching the encoding behavior.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/26033
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/26509.
Ended up being a `deno_graph` bug causing the error to surface. This PR
updates `deno_graph` to pick up the fix and reverts the temporary
workaround that skipped JSON exports.
Fixes playwright on linux, as reported in
https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/16899#issuecomment-2378268454.
The issue was that we were opening the socket in nonblocking mode, which
meant that subprocesses trying to use it would get a `EWOULDBLOCK` error
(unexpectedly). The fix here is to only set nonblocking mode on our end
(which we need to use asynchronously)
Fixes #26498.
This was a sort of intentional decision originally, as I wanted to avoid
caching extra files that may not be needed. It seems like that behavior
is unintuitive, so I propose we cache all of the exports of listed jsr
packages when you run a bare `deno install`.
This commit makes sure that `deno add`, `deno install` and `deno remove`
update the lockfile if only `package.json` file is present.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/26270
1. Respects the formatting of the file (ex. keeps four space indents or
tabs).
2. Handles editing of comments.
3. Handles trailing commas.
4. Code is easier to maintain.
This PR fixes the issue where mapped specifiers in a workspace member
would never be found. Only mapped paths from the workspace root would
resolve.
This was caused by always passing the workspace root url to the import
map resolver instead of the workspace member one.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/26138
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/fresh/issues/2615
---------
Signed-off-by: Marvin Hagemeister <marvinhagemeister50@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@users.noreply.github.com>
This came up on Discord as a question so I thought it's worth adding a
hint for this as it might be a common pitfall.
---------
Signed-off-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@users.noreply.github.com>
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/26119.
Originally I wanted to put them in package.json if there's no deno.json,
but on second thought it makes more sense to just create a deno.json
When using the `--unstable-detect-cjs` flag or adding `"unstable":
["detect-cjs"]` to a deno.json, it will make a JS file CJS if the
closest package.json contains `"type": "commonjs"` and the file is not
an ESM module (no TLA, no `import.meta`, no `import`/`export`).