mirror of
https://github.com/denoland/deno.git
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8b90b8e883
- removes global `RESOURCE_TABLE` - resource tables are now created per `Worker` in `State` - renames `CliResource` to `StreamResource` and moves all logic related to it to `cli/ops/io.rs` - removes `cli/resources.rs` - adds `state` argument to `op_read` and `op_write` and consequently adds `stateful_minimal_op` to `State` - IMPORTANT NOTE: workers don't have access to process stdio - this is caused by fact that dropping worker would close stdout for process (because it's constructed from raw handle, which closes underlying file descriptor on drop) |
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.. | ||
examples | ||
libdeno | ||
any_error.rs | ||
build.rs | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
flags.rs | ||
isolate.rs | ||
js_errors.rs | ||
lib.rs | ||
libdeno.rs | ||
module_specifier.rs | ||
modules.rs | ||
ops.rs | ||
README.md | ||
resources.rs | ||
shared_queue.js | ||
shared_queue.rs | ||
shared_queue_test.js |
Deno Core
This Rust crate contains the essential V8 bindings for Deno's command-line
interface (Deno CLI). The main abstraction here is the Isolate which provides a
way to execute JavaScript. The Isolate is modeled as a
Future<Item=(), Error=JSError>
which completes once all of its ops have
completed.
In order to bind Rust functions into JavaScript, use the Deno.core.dispatch()
function to trigger the "dispatch" callback in Rust. The user is responsible for
encoding both the request and response into a Uint8Array.
Documentation for this crate is thin at the moment. Please see http_bench.rs as a simple example of usage.
TypeScript support and a lot of other functionality is not available at this layer. See the cli for that.