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2024-02-10chore: move cli/tests/ -> tests/ (#22369)Matt Mastracci
This looks like a massive PR, but it's only a move from cli/tests -> tests, and updates of relative paths for files. This is the first step towards aggregate all of the integration test files under tests/, which will lead to a set of integration tests that can run without the CLI binary being built. While we could leave these tests under `cli`, it would require us to keep a more complex directory structure for the various test runners. In addition, we have a lot of complexity to ignore various test files in the `cli` project itself (cargo publish exclusion rules, autotests = false, etc). And finally, the `tests/` folder will eventually house the `test_ffi`, `test_napi` and other testing code, reducing the size of the root repo directory. For easier review, the extremely large and noisy "move" is in the first commit (with no changes -- just a move), while the remainder of the changes to actual files is in the second commit.
2022-11-16fix(npm): support non-all lowercase package names (#16669)David Sherret
Supports package names that aren't all lowercase. This stores the package with a leading underscore (since that's not allowed in npm's registry and no package exists with a leading underscore) then base32 encoded (A-Z0-9) so it can be lowercased and avoid collisions. Global cache dir: ``` $DENO_DIR/npm/registry.npmjs.org/_{base32_encode(package_name).to_lowercase()}/{version} ``` node_modules dir `.deno` folder: ``` node_modules/.deno/_{base32_encode(package_name).to_lowercase()}@{version}/node_modules/<package-name> ``` Within node_modules folder: ``` node_modules/<package-name> ``` So, direct childs of the node_modules folder can have collisions between packages like `JSON` vs `json`, but this is already something npm itself doesn't handle well. Plus, Deno doesn't actually ever resolve to the `node_modules/<package-name>` folder, but just has that for compatibility. Additionally, packages in the `.deno` dir could have collissions if they have multiple dependencies that only differ in casing or a dependency that has different casing, but if someone is doing that then they're already going to have trouble with npm and they are asking for trouble in general.