- Each workspace directory is probed for a `tsconfig.json`.
- These and any that are included by their `references` are put into a
list ordered by priority.
- A tsconfig has lower priority than its `references`.
- An earlier listed entry in `references` has higher priority than a
later one.
- A probed tsconfig in an inner directory has higher priority than an
outer one. Their `references` would be interspersed between them.
- Each tsconfig has a filter based on its `files`, `include` and
`exclude` fields. If it doesn't have `files` or `include`, it will match
any path in its containing directory not exempted by `exclude`.
- For type-checking, each root path will be allocated compiler options
based on the first tsconfig it whose filter it matches from this list.
- Only if it doesn't match any tsconfig, it will fall back to using the
nearest `deno.json`. If it's a workspace member and the root `deno.json`
has `compilerOptions`, these will be merged using the same logic from
`extends`.
Inheritance between configs strictly occurs via `extends` in a
`tsconfig.json`, and between workspace member and root `deno.json`s'
`compilerOptions`. There is no implicit inheritance between
`tsconfig.json` and `deno.json`.
The default compiler options currently applied against tsconfigs are
Deno's normal defaults, with the exception of `lib`. The default value
for `lib` is `["deno.window", "deno.unstable", "dom"]` for files in the
scope of a tsconfig with `lib` unspecified. This behaviour is depended
on by, for example, the template project created by `create-vite ->
svelte`. I expect we'll add more such exceptions over time with other
fields.
Closes#29650.
Currently passing `--platform=browser` does two things:
- makes us prefer the `"browser"` key in package json over module and
main
- makes us prefer the `"browser"` export condition
but we may add more things in the future
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/29707.
Not particularly happy with this one, but the only other idea I had was
to just ignore errors about non-existent exports when we build the graph
for a top level install. That might end up being the best solution.
For background, when you do a top level install that includes a jsr
dependency, we fetch the exports for the jsr package and then use those
exports as roots in the module graph (which triggers caching those
files).
To find those exports correctly, we need to know what version will end
up being cached, otherwise we may end up trying to reference exports
that don't exist on the actual package.
Previously, we could just look up the version in the lockfile and that
worked, but it turns out that was depending on the behavior that was
reverted in https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/29642.
This adds support for installing `file:` dependencies in a local
package.json.
In order to use these, you must not set `--node-modules-dir=...` when
using a package.json and it should use the default of
`--node-modules-dir=manual`.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/18701
Updates to use rust 1.85. Doesn't move to the 2024 edition, as that's a
fair bit more involved.
A nice side benefit is that the new rustc version seems to lead to a
slight reduction in binary size (at least on mac):
```
FILE SIZE
--------------
+4.3% +102Ki __DATA_CONST,__const
[NEW] +69.3Ki __TEXT,__literals
[NEW] +68.5Ki Rebase Info
+5.0% +39.9Ki __TEXT,__unwind_info
+57% +8.85Ki [__TEXT]
[NEW] +8.59Ki Lazy Binding Info
[NEW] +5.16Ki __TEXT,__stub_helper
[NEW] +3.58Ki Export Info
[NEW] +3.42Ki __DATA,__la_symbol_ptr
-0.1% -726 [12 Others]
-21.4% -3.10Ki [__DATA_CONST]
-95.8% -3.39Ki __DATA_CONST,__got
-20.9% -3.43Ki [__DATA]
-0.5% -4.52Ki Code Signature
-100.0% -11.6Ki [__LINKEDIT]
-1.0% -43.5Ki Symbol Table
-1.6% -44.0Ki __TEXT,__gcc_except_tab
-0.2% -48.1Ki __TEXT,__const
-3.3% -78.6Ki __TEXT,__eh_frame
-0.7% -320Ki __TEXT,__text
-1.5% -334Ki String Table
-0.5% -586Ki TOTAL
```