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A modern runtime for JavaScript and TypeScript.
https://deno.com/
![]() This PR fixes a regression that caused deno binaries produced by the CI release workflows to be larger than expected. **The problem:** The build script will determine whether the linker supports the `--export-dynamic-symbol-list` flag by looking at the glibc version installed on the system. Ubuntu 20.04 ships with glibc 2.31, which does not support this flag. Upon investigation, I discovered that the CI pipeline does not use the gcc compiler provided by the `build-essential` package, and instead uses *clang-14*, which does support the new flag. **The solution:** Whenever a custom C Compiler is configured, the build script now assumes the compiler supports the `--export-dynamic-symbol-list` flag. This is not always going to be the case (you could use clang-8, for example), but it puts the onus on the user making the override to ensure the compiler has support. This will return deno builds for Linux to their previous size of ~100MB, and also allow builds under older glibc/gcc versions to succeed. If a user is compiling deno with a custom compiler that does not support this new flag, however, their build will fail. I expect this is a rare scenario, however, and suggest we cross that bridge if and when we come to it. |
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.cargo | ||
.devcontainer | ||
.github | ||
bench_util | ||
cli | ||
core | ||
docs | ||
ext | ||
ops | ||
runtime | ||
serde_v8 | ||
test_ffi | ||
test_napi | ||
test_util | ||
third_party@17fd391b8f | ||
tools | ||
.dlint.json | ||
.dprint.json | ||
.editorconfig | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
.rustfmt.toml | ||
Cargo.lock | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md | ||
LICENSE.md | ||
README.md | ||
Releases.md | ||
rust-toolchain.toml | ||
SECURITY.md |
Deno
Deno is a simple, modern and secure runtime for JavaScript and TypeScript that uses V8 and is built in Rust.
Features
- Secure by default. No file, network, or environment access, unless explicitly enabled.
- Supports TypeScript out of the box.
- Ships only a single executable file.
- Built-in utilities.
- Set of reviewed standard modules that are guaranteed to work with Deno.
Install
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
Scoop (Windows):
scoop install deno
Build and install from source using Cargo:
cargo install deno --locked
See deno_install and releases for other options.
Getting Started
Try running a simple program:
deno run https://deno.land/std/examples/welcome.ts
Or a more complex one:
const listener = Deno.listen({ port: 8000 });
console.log("http://localhost:8000/");
for await (const conn of listener) {
serve(conn);
}
async function serve(conn: Deno.Conn) {
for await (const { respondWith } of Deno.serveHttp(conn)) {
respondWith(new Response("Hello world"));
}
}
You can find a deeper introduction, examples, and environment setup guides in the manual.
The complete API reference is available at the runtime documentation.
Contributing
We appreciate your help!
To contribute, please read our contributing instructions.