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Nathan Whitaker 66b66de96a
fix(lsp): Catch cancellation exceptions thrown by TSC, stop waiting for TS result upon cancellation (#23645)
Fixes #23643.

We weren't catching the cancellation exception thrown by TSC on the JS
side, so the rust side was catching this exception and then attempting
to print out the exception via `toString`. That last bit resulted in a
cryptic `[object Object]` showing up in the logs like so:

```
Error during TS request "getCompletionEntryDetails":
  [object Object]
```

I'm not 100% sure how we weren't seeing this in the past. My guess is
that #23409 and the subsequent PR to improve the exception catching and
logging surfaced this, but I'm still not quite clear on it.

My initial fix here returned `null` to rust when a server request was
cancelled, but this resulted in a deserialization error when we
attempted to deserialize that into the expected response type. So now,
as soon as the request's cancellation token signals we'll stop waiting
for a response and return an error (which will get swallowed as the LSP
request is being cancelled).

I was a bit surprised to find that [this
branch](0c671c9792/cli/lsp/tsc.rs (L1093))
actually executes sometimes, I believe due to the fact that aborting a
future may not [immediately stop its
execution](https://docs.rs/futures/latest/futures/stream/struct.AbortHandle.html#method.abort).
2024-05-01 20:31:11 -07:00
.cargo feat: bring back WebGPU (#20812) 2023-12-09 01:19:16 +01:00
.devcontainer fix(devcontainer): moved settings to customizations/vscode (#21512) 2023-12-19 13:29:39 +01:00
.github ci: use -A for wpt script (#23631) 2024-05-01 09:15:29 -06:00
bench_util 1.43.0 (#23629) 2024-05-01 12:16:39 +05:30
cli fix(lsp): Catch cancellation exceptions thrown by TSC, stop waiting for TS result upon cancellation (#23645) 2024-05-01 20:31:11 -07:00
ext 1.43.0 (#23629) 2024-05-01 12:16:39 +05:30
runtime feat(runtime): allow adding custom extensions to snapshot (#23569) 2024-05-01 22:00:32 +00:00
tests chore(cli): add permission test (#23633) 2024-05-01 13:17:05 -06:00
tools chore(tools): chmod +x for scripts (#23610) 2024-04-30 09:18:11 -06:00
.dlint.json chore: update dlint to v0.37.0 for GitHub Actions (#17295) 2023-01-16 17:17:18 +01:00
.dprint.json fix(fmt/md): better handling of lists in block quotes (#23604) 2024-04-29 20:29:00 +02:00
.editorconfig chore(tests): Remove vestiges of cli/tests folder (#22712) 2024-03-05 13:49:21 -07:00
.gitattributes chore: move cli/tests/ -> tests/ (#22369) 2024-02-10 20:22:13 +00:00
.gitignore chore: move tools/wpt to tests/wpt/runner (#22545) 2024-03-05 00:41:16 +00:00
.gitmodules chore: make remaining submodules shallow (#23441) 2024-04-18 19:45:09 +00:00
.rustfmt.toml chore: update copyright year to 2023 (#17247) 2023-01-02 21:00:42 +00:00
Cargo.lock 1.43.0 (#23629) 2024-05-01 12:16:39 +05:30
Cargo.toml 1.43.0 (#23629) 2024-05-01 12:16:39 +05:30
LICENSE.md chore: update LICENSE.md to 2024 (#21833) 2024-01-06 19:14:38 -05:00
README.md chore: update references to deno_std to use JSR (#23239) 2024-04-10 17:26:35 -04:00
Releases.md chore: 1.43 release notes (#23628) 2024-05-01 11:24:37 +05:30
rust-toolchain.toml chore: update to Rust 1.77.2 (#23262) 2024-04-10 22:08:23 +00:00

Deno

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the deno mascot dinosaur standing in the rain

Deno (/ˈdiːnoʊ/, pronounced dee-no) is a JavaScript, TypeScript, and WebAssembly runtime with secure defaults and a great developer experience. It's built on V8, Rust, and Tokio.

Learn more about the Deno runtime in the documentation.

Installation

Install the Deno runtime on your system using one of the commands below. Note that there are a number of ways to install Deno - a comprehensive list of installation options can be found here.

Shell (Mac, Linux):

curl -fsSL https://deno.land/install.sh | sh

PowerShell (Windows):

irm https://deno.land/install.ps1 | iex

Homebrew (Mac):

brew install deno

Chocolatey (Windows):

choco install deno

Build and install from source

Complete instructions for building Deno from source can be found in the manual here.

Your first Deno program

Deno can be used for many different applications, but is most commonly used to build web servers. Create a file called server.ts and include the following TypeScript code:

Deno.serve((_req: Request) => {
  return new Response("Hello, world!");
});

Run your server with the following command:

deno run --allow-net server.ts

This should start a local web server on http://localhost:8000.

Learn more about writing and running Deno programs in the docs.

Additional resources

Contributing

We appreciate your help! To contribute, please read our contributing instructions.