## Workers Deno supports [`Web Worker API`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Worker/Worker). Workers can be used to run code on multiple threads. Each instance of `Worker` is run on a separate thread, dedicated only to that worker. Currently Deno supports only `module` type workers; thus it's essential to pass `type: "module"` option when creating new worker: ```ts // Good new Worker("./worker.js", { type: "module" }); // Bad new Worker("./worker.js"); new Worker("./worker.js", { type: "classic" }); ``` ### Using Deno in worker > This is an unstable Deno feature. Learn more about > [unstable features](./stability.md). By default `Deno` namespace is not available in worker scope. To add `Deno` namespace pass `deno: true` option when creating new worker: ```ts // main.js const worker = new Worker("./worker.js", { type: "module", deno: true }); worker.postMessage({ filename: "./log.txt" }); // worker.js self.onmessage = async (e) => { const { filename } = e.data; const text = await Deno.readTextFile(filename); console.log(text); self.close(); }; // log.txt hello world ``` ```shell $ deno run --allow-read --unstable main.js hello world ``` When `Deno` namespace is available in worker scope; the worker inherits parent process permissions (the ones specified using `--allow-*` flags). We intend to make permissions configurable for workers.