We were only doing the new output on the top level install (`deno
install` with no args or flags), we now do it on `deno install
npm:chalk`, `deno add npm:chalk`, `deno cache ./foo.ts`, "deno install
--entrypoint ./foo.ts"`.
Additionally the scripts and deprecation warnings were printing above
the output, now they're deferred and displayed below
- 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.
Fixes#16899.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/23524.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/23938.
Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/27869.
Unblocks #5501.
This PR adds support for additional stdio pipes to windows, as well as
the detached option in `node:child_process`. I also ported over the
`kill` implementation for windows, which means we now can support
`kill(0)` as well as some other signals.
This means that playwright will now work on windows.
Now that we have a way to support detached processes on all platforms,
we can also easily add a `detached` option to `Deno.Command`, similar to
`child_process.spawn`.
---
The reason for moving away from `std::process::Command` is that the
standard library doesn't expose what we need to control the file
descriptor table of child processes on windows. The implementation here
is based off of parts of `std` and parts of `libuv`, and allows us to
support passing extra pipes in addition to detached processes on
windows.
This commit removes "WorkerGlobalScope" global from the "global
middleware" that we use to provide different set of globals to
user code and npm packages.
This is done, by renaming "WebWorkerType" to "WorkerThreadType"
and introducing a "Node" variant - this variant is used when creating
a worker using "node:worker_threads" module. This worker does
not have a "WorkerGlobalScope" (because it's not a Web Worker)
and the regular Web Worker created using "new Worker" does have
it.
This is to help make this feature less ambiguous with `npm patch`, which
it's not like.
Note: the "patch" property will continue to work for the time being, but
the lockfile will have a bit of churn for this unstable property. We're
going to merge this in a patch because this feature is unstable.
This was actually fixed via the deno_npm and lockfile updates, but it
would be good to have an explicit entry for this in the release notes so
labeling this as a "fix"
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/27758
Fixes#27264. Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/28161.
Currently the new lockfile version is gated behind an unstable flag
(`--unstable-lockfile-v5`) until the next minor release, where it will
become the default.
The main motivation here is that it improves startup performance when
using the global cache or `--node-modules-dir=auto`.
In a create-next-app project, running an empty file:
```
❯ hyperfine --warmup 25 -N --setup "rm -f deno.lock" "deno run --node-modules-dir=auto -A empty.js" "deno-this-pr run --node-modules-dir=auto -A empty.js" "deno-this-pr run --node-modules-dir=auto --unstable-lockfile-v5 empty.js" "deno run --node-modules-dir=manual -A empty.js" "deno-this-pr run --node-modules-dir=manual -A empty.js"
Benchmark 1: deno run --node-modules-dir=auto -A empty.js
Time (mean ± σ): 247.6 ms ± 1.7 ms [User: 228.7 ms, System: 19.0 ms]
Range (min … max): 245.5 ms … 251.5 ms 12 runs
Benchmark 2: deno-this-pr run --node-modules-dir=auto -A empty.js
Time (mean ± σ): 169.8 ms ± 1.0 ms [User: 152.9 ms, System: 17.9 ms]
Range (min … max): 168.9 ms … 172.5 ms 17 runs
Benchmark 3: deno-this-pr run --node-modules-dir=auto --unstable-lockfile-v5 empty.js
Time (mean ± σ): 16.2 ms ± 0.7 ms [User: 12.3 ms, System: 5.7 ms]
Range (min … max): 15.2 ms … 19.2 ms 185 runs
Benchmark 4: deno run --node-modules-dir=manual -A empty.js
Time (mean ± σ): 16.2 ms ± 0.8 ms [User: 11.6 ms, System: 5.5 ms]
Range (min … max): 14.9 ms … 19.7 ms 187 runs
Benchmark 5: deno-this-pr run --node-modules-dir=manual -A empty.js
Time (mean ± σ): 16.0 ms ± 0.9 ms [User: 12.0 ms, System: 5.5 ms]
Range (min … max): 14.8 ms … 22.3 ms 190 runs
Warning: Statistical outliers were detected. Consider re-running this benchmark on a quiet system without any interferences from other programs. It might help to use the '--warmup' or '--prepare' options.
Summary
deno-this-pr run --node-modules-dir=manual -A empty.js ran
1.01 ± 0.08 times faster than deno run --node-modules-dir=manual -A empty.js
1.01 ± 0.07 times faster than deno-this-pr run --node-modules-dir=auto --unstable-lockfile-v5 empty.js
10.64 ± 0.60 times faster than deno-this-pr run --node-modules-dir=auto -A empty.js
15.51 ± 0.88 times faster than deno run --node-modules-dir=auto -A empty.js
```
When using the new lockfile version, this leads to a 15.5x faster
startup time compared to the current deno version.
Install times benefit as well, though to a lesser degree.
`deno install` on a create-next-app project, with everything cached
(just setting up node_modules from scratch):
```
❯ hyperfine --warmup 5 -N --prepare "rm -rf node_modules" --setup "rm -rf deno.lock" "deno i" "deno-this-pr i" "deno-this-pr i --unstable-lockfile-v5"
Benchmark 1: deno i
Time (mean ± σ): 464.4 ms ± 8.8 ms [User: 227.7 ms, System: 217.3 ms]
Range (min … max): 452.6 ms … 478.3 ms 10 runs
Benchmark 2: deno-this-pr i
Time (mean ± σ): 368.8 ms ± 22.0 ms [User: 150.8 ms, System: 198.1 ms]
Range (min … max): 344.8 ms … 397.6 ms 10 runs
Benchmark 3: deno-this-pr i --unstable-lockfile-v5
Time (mean ± σ): 211.9 ms ± 17.1 ms [User: 7.1 ms, System: 177.2 ms]
Range (min … max): 191.3 ms … 233.4 ms 10 runs
Summary
deno-this-pr i --unstable-lockfile-v5 ran
1.74 ± 0.17 times faster than deno-this-pr i
2.19 ± 0.18 times faster than deno i
```
With lockfile v5, a 2.19x faster install time compared to the current
deno.
This adds support for using a local copy of an npm package.
```js
// deno.json
{
"patch": [
"../path/to/local_npm_package"
],
// required until Deno 2.3, but it will still be considered unstable
"unstable": ["npm-patch"]
}
```
1. Requires using a node_modules folder.
2. When using `"nodeModulesDir": "auto"`, it recreates the folder in the
node_modules directory on each run which will slightly increase startup
time.
3. When using the default with a package.json (`"nodeModulesDir":
"manual"`), updating the package requires running `deno install`. This
is to get the package into the node_modules directory of the current
workspace. This is necessary instead of linking because packages can
have multiple "copy packages" due to peer dep resolution.
Caveat: Specifying a local copy of an npm package or making changes to
its dependencies will purge npm packages from the lockfile. This might
cause npm resolution to resolve differently and it may end up not using
the local copy of the npm package. It's very difficult to only
invalidate resolution midway through the graph and then only rebuild
that part of the resolution, so this is just a first pass that can be
improved in the future. In practice, this probably won't be an issue for
most people.
Another limitation is this also requires the npm package name to exist
in the registry at the moment.
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
Shows directory import and missing extension suggestions in error
messages similar but not exactly to node.
Closes#26802
Co-authored-by: Hajime-san <Hajime-san@users.noreply.github.com>
This PR resolves 2 issues of Socket class of node compat (both are
related to playwright)
Currently `browser.launch()` of playwright is not working.
`browser.launch` opens PipeTransport (which is based on Pipe/IPC socket)
with the browser process. But that pipe doesn't start reading the data
because of the workaround #27662 (which pauses the socket at the
beginning if it's from playwright-core). This PR fixes this issue by
checking whether the given handle is `ipc` handle or not.
Another issue is that sock-init-workaround for TLS connection stopped
working at #27707 because of the changes of TLS socket initialization
steps. This change fixes the issue by correctly returning the function
in workaround path.
The added case `specs::npm::playwright_compat` checks both fixes with
actual playwright and playwright-core packages.
`browser.launch` issues
closes#16899closes#27623
`https.request` issue
closes#27658
See the comment
https://github.com/denoland/deno/pull/25470#issuecomment-2435077722 for
the reason why we do this workaround to make `make-fetch-happen` work in
Deno
This PR applies the same workaround to `npm-check-updates` package.
`npm-check-updates` internally uses
[`npm-registry-fetch`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/npm-registry-fetch)
which uses
[`make-fetch-happen`](https://www.npmjs.com/package/make-fetch-happen)
(the problematic package) for making http request to npm registry.
The detection of `make-fetch-happen` doesn't work for
`npm-check-updates` because we use call stack at `net.Socket`
constructor to check if it's called from `make-fetch-happen`, but
`npm-check-updates` bundles its dependency and the check doesn't work.
This PR adds the check of `npm-check-updates` string in call stack in
net.Socket constructor to trigger the workaroud.
closes#27629
This commit adds support for understanding "workpace:^"
and "workspace:~" version constraints in npm/pnpm workspaces.
This is done by upgrading various crates to their latest versions.
Closes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/26726
---------
Co-authored-by: David Sherret <dsherret@gmail.com>
Ensures a dynamic import in a CJS file will consider the referrer as an import for node resolution.
Also adds fixes (adds) support for `"resolution-mode"` in TypeScript.
The issue was this package had an import like: `".//index.js"` and we
resolved that as specified, but node normalizes it to `"./index.js"` so
we have to copy node.