adds tracing and opentelemetry exporting to the LSP.
enable it in `.vscode/settings.json` (or wherever you configure the
LSP), like
```
{
"deno.tracing": true
}
```
which will by default export opentelemetry traces to `localhost:4317`
or
```
{
"deno.tracing": {
// all fields optional
"collector": "openTelemetry" (default) | "logging" (output in lsp log window)
"collectorEndpoint": "http://localhost:4318" (for opentelemetry)
"enable": true | false,
"filter": "info" // defaults to "info", but can be any span filter
}
}
```
---
a full working setup would be
1: Run jaeger (an opentelemetry collector with a nice UI):
```
docker run --rm -p 16686:16686 -p 4317:4317 jaegertracing/jaeger
```
2. Enable in .vscode/settings.json
```
{
"deno.tracing": true
}
```
3. Restart LSP (right now it only will start the opentelemetry exporter
on LSP startup)
3. open `http://localhost:16686` in your browser
---------
Co-authored-by: Nathan Whitaker <nathan@deno.com>
Also removes permissions being passed in for node resolution. It was
completely useless because we only checked it for reading package.json
files, but Deno reading package.json files for resolution is perfectly
fine.
My guess is this is also a perf improvement because Deno is doing less
work.
This changes the lockfile to not store JSR specifiers in the "remote"
section. Instead a single JSR integrity is stored per package in the
lockfile, which is a hash of the version's `x.x.x_meta.json` file, which
contains hashes for every file in the package. The hashes in this file
are then compared against when loading.
Additionally, when using `{ "vendor": true }` in a deno.json, the files
can be modified without causing lockfile errors—the checksum is only
checked when copying into the vendor folder and not afterwards
(eventually we should add this behaviour for non-jsr specifiers as
well). As part of this change, the `vendor` folder creation is not
always automatic in the LSP and running an explicit cache command is
necessary. The code required to track checksums in the LSP would have
been too complex for this PR, so that all goes through deno_graph now.
The vendoring is still automatic when running from the CLI.
- bump deps: the newest `lazy-regex` need newer `oncecell` and
`regex`
- reduce `unwrap`
- remove dep `lazy_static`
- make more regex cached
---------
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
These methods are confusing because the arguments are backwards. I feel
like they should have never been added to `Option<T>` and that clippy
should suggest rewriting to
`map(...).unwrap_or(...)`/`map(...).unwrap_or_else(|| ...)`
https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/issues/1025
Turns out we were cloning permissions which after prompting were discarded,
so the state of permissions was never preserved. To handle that we need to store
all permissions behind "Arc<Mutex<>>" (because there are situations where we
need to send them to other thread).
Testing and benching code still uses "Permissions" in most places - it's undesirable
to share the same permission set between various test/bench files - otherwise
granting or revoking permissions in one file would influence behavior of other test
files.