* feat: move from yarn to npm
* chore: skip yarn.lock files
* fix: playwright download
* chore: fix compile and hygiene
* chore: bump vsce@2.17.0
Refs 8b49e9dfdf
* test: update results for bat and sh colorizer tests
* fix: add missing lock files for windows
* fix: switch to legacy-peer-deps
* chore: update markdown-it@14.1.0
Refs 737c95a129
esbuild step in extensions-ci-pr was previously using markdown-it
from root which had userland punycode and was able to compile successfully.
* ci: increase pr timeout for windows integration tests
* chore: fix product build
* build: ignore extension dev dependency for rcedit
* build: fix working directory inside container
* build: fix dependency generation
* npm: update dependencies
* ci: use global npmrc
* ci: update cache
* ci: setup global npmrc for private npm auth
* build: fix extension bundling
* chore: sync npm dependencies
* ci: debug env variables for container
* ci: fix win32 cli pipeline
* build: fix npmrc config usage for build/ and remote/ dirs
* fix: windows build
* fix: container builds
* fix: markdown-language-features tests and bundling
```
[03:58:22] Error: Command failed: /Users/demohan/.nvm/versions/node/v20.15.1/bin/node /Users/demohan/github/vscode/extensions/markdown-language-features/esbuild-notebook.js --outputRoot /Users/demohan/github/vscode/.build/extensions/markdown-language-features
✘ [ERROR] Could not resolve "punycode"
extensions/markdown-language-features/node_modules/markdown-it/lib/index.js:14:27:
14 │ var punycode = require('punycode');
╵ ~~~~~~~~~~
The package "punycode" wasn't found on the file system but is built into node. Are you trying to bundle for node? You can use "platform: 'node'" to do that, which will remove this error.
```
Adds userland package based on beed9aee2c
* fix: container builds for distro
* chore: update yarn occurrences
* fixup! chore: bump vsce@2.17.0
Uses the closest version to `main` branch that does not
include d3cc84cdec
while still having the fix 8b49e9dfdf
* chore: sync npm dependencies
* chore: sync npm dependencies
* chore: sync npm dependencies
* chore: throw error when yarn is used for installation
* chore: add review feedback
* chore: switch exec => run where needed
* chore: npm sync dependencies
* fix: markdown-language-features bundling
```
✘ [ERROR] Could not resolve "punycode"
extensions/markdown-language-features/node_modules/markdown-it/lib/index.js:14:27:
14 │ var punycode = require('punycode');
╵ ~~~~~~~~~~
The package "punycode" wasn't found on the file system but is built into node. Are you trying to bundle for node? You can use "platform: 'node'" to do that, which will remove this error.
```
Adds missing userland package based on markdown-it/markdown-it@beed9ae,
can be removed once we update markdown-it >= 14.1.0
* ci: rename no-yarn-lock-changes.yml
* chore: sync npm dependencies
* ci: restore no-yarn-lock-changes.yml
We can disable it in a separate PR to keep the required
checks happy and also need workflow edit perms.
* chore: sync npm dependencies
* ci: rebuild cache
* ci: fix no-package-lock-changes.yml
* chore: bump distro
* chore: rm yarn.lock files
* chore: rm yarn.lock files without dependencies
* chore: add vscode-selfhost-import-aid to postinstall dirs
* chore: bump distro
For web, it seems the most feasible direction for resolvers as we make
existing remote extensions 'web enabled' is to allow them to run in the
extension host. However, in no case will there just be a simple
websocket we can connect to ordinarily.
This PR implements a first cut at 'inline' resolvers where messaging is
done in the extension host. I have not yet tested them on web, where I
think some more wiring is needed to mirror desktop. Also, resolution of
URLs is not in yet. I think for this we'd want to do some service-worker
-based 'loopback' approach to run requests inline in the remote
connection, similar to what I did for tunnels...
Resolvers are not yet run in a dedicated extension host, but I think
that should happen, at least on web where resolvers
will always(?) be 'inline'.
Most of the actual changes are genericizing places where we specified
the "host" and "port" previously into an enum. Additionally, instead of
having a single ISocketFactory, there's now a collection of them, which
the extension host manager registers into when a managed resolution
happens.
* web - first cut `yarn web` via our server
* properly pipe output
* web - remove traces of web playground
* web - remember last opened workspace for convinience
* use vscode-test-web for server less, clean up web commands
* fix comment
* fix `yarn web`
* rename to code-server
* open system browser
* code-server script: use minimist
* test resolver: use ./scripts/code-server
* integartion tests: fix code-server command name
Co-authored-by: Martin Aeschlimann <martinae@microsoft.com>
* 🆙 product
* 🆙 parcel/watcher
* 🆙 parcel/watcher
* tests - separate remote logs from others
* store server logs too
* more tweaks
* fix name
* error when 10s passed