Allows easily constructing a `DenoResolver` using the exact same logic
that we use in the CLI (useful for dnt and for external bundlers). This
code is then used in the CLI to ensure the logic is always up-to-date.
```rs
use std::rc::Rc;
use deno_resolver:🏭:ResolverFactory;
use deno_resolver:🏭:WorkspaceFactory;
use sys_traits::impls::RealSys;
let sys = RealSys;
let cwd = sys.env_current_dir()?;
let workspace_factory = Rc::new(WorkspaceFactory::new(sys, cwd, Default::default()));
let resolver_factory = ResolverFactory::new(workspace_factory.clone(), Default::default());
let deno_resolver = resolver_factory.deno_resolver().await?;
```
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.
* cts support
* better cjs/cts type checking
* deno compile cjs/cts support
* More efficient detect cjs (going towards stabilization)
* Determination of whether .js, .ts, .jsx, or .tsx is cjs or esm is only
done after loading
* Support `import x = require(...);`
Co-authored-by: Bartek Iwańczuk <biwanczuk@gmail.com>
Fixes #25998. Fixes https://github.com/denoland/deno/issues/25928.
Originally I was just going to make this an error message instead of a
panic, but once I got to a minimal repro I felt that this really should
work.
The panic occurs when you have `nodeModulesDir: manual` (or a
package.json present), and you have an npm package with a tag in your
deno.json (see the spec test that illustrates this).
This code path only actually executes when trying to choose an
appropriate package version from `node_modules/.deno`, so we should be
able to fix it by storing some extra data at install time.
The fix proposed here is to repurpose the `.initialized` file that we
store in `node_modules` to store the tags associated with a package.
Basically, if you have a version requirement with a tag (e.g.
`npm:chalk@latest`), when we set up the node_modules folder for that
package, we store the tag (`latest`) in `.initialized`. Then, when doing
BYONM resolution, if we have a version requirement with a tag, we read
that file and check if the tag is present.
The downside is that we do more work when setting up `node_modules`. We
_could_ do this only when BYONM is enabled, but that would have the
downside of needing to re-run `deno install` when you switch from auto
-> manual, though maybe that's not a big deal.