1. Rewrites the tests to be more back and forth rather than getting the
output all at once (which I believe was causing the hangs on linux and
maybe mac)
2. Runs the pty tests on the linux ci.
3. Fixes a bunch of tests that were just wrong.
4. Adds timeouts on the pty tests.
Fast-follow on #18401 -- the reason that some tests were panicking in
the `CacheDB` `impl Drop` was that the cache itself was being dropped
during panic and the runtime may or may not still exist at that point.
We can reduce the actual tokio runtime testing to where it's needed.
In addition, we return the journal mode to `TRUNCATE` to avoid the risk
of data corruption.
Towards #18455
This commit implements `checkPrimeSync` and `checkPrime` in node:crypto
using the Miller-Rabin primality test (fun fact: it actually is a test
for composite numbers)
It first compares the candidate against many known small primes and if
not, proceeds to run the Miller-Rabin primality test.
http://nickle.org/examples/miller-rabin.5c used as reference
implementation.
This commit changes how data required to bootstrap main and worker
runtime is serialized.
Instead of relying on serde_v8 and using JSON object,
we're doing manual serialization to a "v8::Array". This limits number
of V8 strings that need to be serialized by 16.
It also made it clear that some data could be obtained during
snapshotting instead of during bootstrap.
This gets SQLite off the flamegraph and reduces initialization time by
somewhere between 0.2ms and 0.5ms. In addition, I took the opportunity
to move all the cache management code to a single place and reduce
duplication. While the PR has a net gain of lines, much of that is just
being a bit more deliberate with how we're recovering from errors.
The existing caches had various policies for dealing with cache
corruption, so I've unified them and tried to isolate the decisions we
make for recovery in a single place (see `open_connection` in
`CacheDB`). The policy I chose was:
1. Retry twice to open on-disk caches
2. If that fails, try to delete the file and recreate it on-disk
3. If we fail to delete the file or re-create a new cache, use a
fallback strategy that can be chosen per-cache: InMemory (temporary
cache for the process run), BlackHole (ignore writes, return empty
reads), or Error (fail on every operation).
The caches all use the same general code now, and share the cache
failure recovery policy.
In addition, it cleans up a TODO in the `NodeAnalysisCache`.
This internal node hook is used by libraries such as `ts-node` when used
as a require hook `node -r ts-node/register`. That combination is often
used with test frameworks like `mocha` or `jasmine`.
We had a reference to `Module._preloadModules` in our code, but the
implementation was missing. While fixing this I also noticed that the
`fakeParent` module that we create internally always threw because of
the `pathDirname` check on the module id in the constructor of `Mdoule`.
So this code path was probably broken for a while.
```txt
✖ ERROR: Error: Empty filepath.
at pathDirname (ext:deno_node/01_require.js:245:11)
at new Module (ext:deno_node/01_require.js:446:15)
at Function.Module._resolveFilename (ext:deno_node/01_require.js:754:28)
at Function.resolve (ext:deno_node/01_require.js:1015:19)
```
Since we can preserve ops in the snapshot these days, we no longer
need to have "Deno[Deno.internal].nodeUnstable" namespace.
Instead, various built-in Node.js modules can use appropriate APIs
directly.
This reverts commit 4c2269d64a.
> This update introduced more flakiness to the tests on CI, we are going
> to investigate and reland this update after Deno 1.32.0 is released.
This commit adds the `crypto.createSecretKey` API.
Key management: This follows the same approach as our WebCrypto
CryptoKey impl where we use WeakMap for storing key material and a
handle is passed around, such that (only internal) JS can access the key
material and we don't have to explicitly close a Rust resource.
As a result, `createHmac` now accepts a secret KeyObject.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/17844
This will improve diagnostics and catch any non-ASCII extension code
early.
This will use `debug_assert!` rather than `assert!` to avoid runtime
costs, and ensures (in debug_assert mode only) that all extension source
files are ASCII as we load them.
This will make it a bit harder to accidentally use a client url in the
wrong place. I don't fully understand why we do this mapping, but this
will help prevent bugs like #18373
Closes #18374
No need for two almost identical implementations of the same thing
---------
Co-authored-by: Yoshiya Hinosawa <stibium121@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Aapo Alasuutari <aapo.alasuutari@gmail.com>