## Summary
- Removes unused function and class expression names when
`--minify-syntax` is enabled during bundling
- Adds `--keep-names` flag to preserve original names when minifying
- Matches esbuild's minification behavior
## Problem
When minifying with `--minify-syntax`, Bun was keeping function and
class expression names even when they were never referenced, resulting
in larger bundle sizes compared to esbuild.
**Before:**
```js
export var AB = function A() { };
// Bun output: var AB = function A() {};
// esbuild output: var AB = function() {};
```
## Solution
This PR adds logic to remove unused function and class expression names
during minification, matching esbuild's behavior. Names are only removed
when:
- `--minify-syntax` is enabled
- Bundling is enabled (not transform-only mode)
- The scope doesn't contain direct eval (which could reference the name
dynamically)
- The symbol's usage count is 0
Additionally, a `--keep-names` flag has been added to preserve original
names when desired (useful for debugging or runtime reflection).
## Testing
- Updated existing test in `bundler_minify.test.ts`
- All transpiler tests pass
- Manually verified output matches esbuild for various cases
## Examples
```bash
# Without --keep-names (names removed)
bun build --minify-syntax input.js
# var AB = function() {}
# With --keep-names (names preserved)
bun build --minify-syntax --keep-names input.js
# var AB = function A() {}
```
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Dylan Conway <dylan.conway567@gmail.com>
## Summary
This PR implements the `--workspaces` flag for the `bun run` command,
allowing scripts to be run in all workspace packages as defined in the
`"workspaces"` field in package.json.
Fixes the infinite loop issue reported in
https://github.com/threepointone/bun-workspace-bug-repro
## Changes
- Added `--workspaces` flag to run scripts in all workspace packages
- Added `--if-present` flag to gracefully skip packages without the
script
- Root package is excluded when using `--workspaces` to prevent infinite
recursion
- Added comprehensive tests for the new functionality
## Usage
```bash
# Run "test" script in all workspace packages
bun run --workspaces test
# Skip packages that don't have the script
bun run --workspaces --if-present build
# Combine with filters
bun run --filter="@scope/*" test
```
## Behavior
The `--workspaces` flag must come **before** the script name (matching
npm's behavior):
- ✅ `bun run --workspaces test`
- ❌ `bun run test --workspaces` (treated as passthrough to script)
## Test Plan
- [x] Added test cases in `test/cli/run/workspaces.test.ts`
- [x] Verified fix for infinite loop issue in
https://github.com/threepointone/bun-workspace-bug-repro
- [x] Tested with `--if-present` flag
- [x] All tests pass locally
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Dylan Conway <dylan.conway567@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jarred Sumner <jarred@jarredsumner.com>
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
## Summary
Implements the `jsxSideEffects` option to control whether JSX elements
are marked as pure for dead code elimination, matching esbuild's
behavior from their TestJSXSideEffects test case.
## Features Added
- **tsconfig.json support**: `{"compilerOptions": {"jsxSideEffects":
true}}`
- **CLI flag support**: `--jsx-side-effects`
- **Dual runtime support**: Works with both classic
(`React.createElement`) and automatic (`jsx`/`jsxs`) JSX runtimes
- **Production/Development modes**: Works in both production and
development environments
- **Backward compatible**: Default value is `false` (maintains existing
behavior)
## Behavior
- **Default (`jsxSideEffects: false`)**: JSX elements marked with `/*
@__PURE__ */` comments (can be eliminated by bundlers)
- **When `jsxSideEffects: true`**: JSX elements NOT marked as pure
(always preserved)
## Example Usage
### tsconfig.json
```json
{
"compilerOptions": {
"jsxSideEffects": true
}
}
```
### CLI
```bash
bun build --jsx-side-effects
```
### Output Comparison
```javascript
// Input: console.log(<div>test</div>);
// Default (jsxSideEffects: false):
console.log(/* @__PURE__ */ React.createElement("div", null, "test"));
// With jsxSideEffects: true:
console.log(React.createElement("div", null, "test"));
```
## Implementation Details
- Added `side_effects: bool = false` field to `JSX.Pragma` struct
- Updated tsconfig.json parser to handle `jsxSideEffects` option
- Added CLI argument parsing for `--jsx-side-effects` flag
- Modified JSX element visiting logic to respect the `side_effects`
setting
- Updated API schema with proper encode/decode support
- Enhanced test framework to support the new JSX option
## Comprehensive Test Coverage (12 Tests)
### Core Functionality (4 tests)
- ✅ Classic JSX runtime with default behavior (includes `/* @__PURE__
*/`)
- ✅ Classic JSX runtime with `side_effects: true` (no `/* @__PURE__ */`)
- ✅ Automatic JSX runtime with default behavior (includes `/* @__PURE__
*/`)
- ✅ Automatic JSX runtime with `side_effects: true` (no `/* @__PURE__
*/`)
### Production Mode (4 tests)
- ✅ Classic JSX runtime in production with default behavior
- ✅ Classic JSX runtime in production with `side_effects: true`
- ✅ Automatic JSX runtime in production with default behavior
- ✅ Automatic JSX runtime in production with `side_effects: true`
### tsconfig.json Integration (4 tests)
- ✅ Default tsconfig.json behavior (automatic runtime, includes `/*
@__PURE__ */`)
- ✅ tsconfig.json with `jsxSideEffects: true` (automatic runtime, no `/*
@__PURE__ */`)
- ✅ tsconfig.json with `jsx: "react"` and `jsxSideEffects: true`
(classic runtime)
- ✅ tsconfig.json with `jsx: "react-jsx"` and `jsxSideEffects: true`
(automatic runtime)
### Snapshot Testing
All tests include inline snapshots demonstrating the exact output
differences, providing clear documentation of the expected behavior.
### Existing Compatibility
- ✅ All existing JSX tests continue to pass
- ✅ Cross-platform Zig compilation succeeds
## Closes
Fixes#22295🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
## Summary
This PR adds a new `--compile-argv` option to `bun build --compile` that
allows developers to embed runtime arguments into standalone
executables. The specified arguments are stored in the executable
metadata during compilation and provide **dual functionality**:
1. **🔧 Actually processed by Bun runtime** (like passing them on command
line)
2. **📊 Available in `process.execArgv`** (for application inspection)
This means flags like `--user-agent`, `--smol`, `--max-memory` will
actually take effect AND be visible to your application!
## Motivation & Use Cases
### 1. **Global User Agent for Web Scraping**
Perfect for @thdxr's opencode use case - the user agent actually gets
applied:
```bash
# Compile with custom user agent that ACTUALLY works
bun build --compile --compile-argv="--user-agent='OpenCode/1.0'" ./scraper.ts --outfile=opencode
# The user agent is applied by Bun runtime AND visible in execArgv
./opencode # All HTTP requests use the custom user agent!
```
### 2. **Memory-Optimized Builds**
Create builds with actual runtime memory optimizations:
```bash
# Compile with memory optimization that ACTUALLY takes effect
bun build --compile --compile-argv="--smol --max-memory=512mb" ./app.ts --outfile=app-optimized
# Bun runtime actually runs in smol mode with memory limit
```
### 3. **Performance & Debug Builds**
Different builds with different runtime characteristics:
```bash
# Production: optimized for memory
bun build --compile --compile-argv="--smol --gc-frequency=high" ./app.ts --outfile=app-prod
# Debug: with inspector enabled
bun build --compile --compile-argv="--inspect=0.0.0.0:9229" ./app.ts --outfile=app-debug
```
### 4. **Security & Network Configuration**
Embed security settings that actually apply:
```bash
# TLS and network settings that work
bun build --compile --compile-argv="--tls-min-version=1.3 --dns-timeout=5000" ./secure-app.ts
```
## How It Works
### Dual Processing Architecture
The implementation provides both behaviors:
```bash
# Compiled with: --compile-argv="--smol --user-agent=Bot/1.0"
./my-app --config=prod.json
```
**What happens:**
1. **🔧 Runtime Processing**: Bun processes `--smol` and
`--user-agent=Bot/1.0` as if passed on command line
2. **📊 Application Access**: Your app can inspect these via
`process.execArgv`
```javascript
// In your compiled application:
// 1. The flags actually took effect:
// - Bun is running in smol mode (--smol processed)
// - All HTTP requests use Bot/1.0 user agent (--user-agent processed)
// 2. You can also inspect what flags were used:
console.log(process.execArgv); // ["--smol", "--user-agent=Bot/1.0"]
console.log(process.argv); // ["./my-app", "--config=prod.json"]
// 3. Your application logic can adapt:
if (process.execArgv.includes("--smol")) {
console.log("Running in memory-optimized mode");
}
```
### Implementation Details
1. **Build Time**: Arguments stored in executable metadata
2. **Runtime Startup**:
- Arguments prepended to actual argv processing (so Bun processes them)
- Arguments also populate `process.execArgv` (so app can inspect them)
3. **Result**: Flags work as if passed on command line + visible to
application
## Example Usage
```bash
# User agent that actually works
bun build --compile --compile-argv="--user-agent='MyBot/1.0'" ./scraper.ts --outfile=scraper
# Memory optimization that actually applies
bun build --compile --compile-argv="--smol --max-memory=256mb" ./microservice.ts --outfile=micro
# Debug build with working inspector
bun build --compile --compile-argv="--inspect=127.0.0.1:9229" ./app.ts --outfile=app-debug
# Multiple working flags
bun build --compile --compile-argv="--smol --user-agent=Bot/1.0 --tls-min-version=1.3" ./secure-scraper.ts
```
## Runtime Verification
```javascript
// Check what runtime flags are active
const hasSmol = process.execArgv.includes("--smol");
const userAgent = process.execArgv.find(arg => arg.startsWith("--user-agent="))?.split("=")[1];
const maxMemory = process.execArgv.find(arg => arg.startsWith("--max-memory="))?.split("=")[1];
console.log("Memory optimized:", hasSmol);
console.log("User agent:", userAgent);
console.log("Memory limit:", maxMemory);
// These flags also actually took effect in the runtime!
```
## Changes Made
### Core Implementation
- **Arguments.zig**: Added `--compile-argv <STR>` flag with validation
- **StandaloneModuleGraph.zig**: Serialization/deserialization for
`compile_argv`
- **build_command.zig**: Pass `compile_argv` to module graph
- **cli.zig**: **Prepend arguments to actual argv processing** (so Bun
processes them)
- **node_process.zig**: **Populate `process.execArgv`** from stored
arguments
- **bun.zig**: Made `appendOptionsEnv()` public for reuse
### Testing
- **expectBundled.ts**: Added `compileArgv` test support
- **compile-argv.test.ts**: Tests verifying dual behavior
## Behavior
### Complete Dual Functionality
```javascript
// With --compile-argv="--smol --user-agent=TestBot/1.0":
// ✅ Runtime flags actually processed by Bun:
// - Memory usage optimized (--smol effect)
// - HTTP requests use TestBot/1.0 user agent (--user-agent effect)
// ✅ Flags visible to application:
process.execArgv // ["--smol", "--user-agent=TestBot/1.0"]
process.argv // ["./app", ...script-args] (unchanged)
```
## Backward Compatibility
- ✅ Purely additive feature - no breaking changes
- ✅ Optional flag - existing behavior unchanged when not used
- ✅ No impact on non-compile builds
## Perfect for @thdxr's Use Case!
```bash
# Compile opencode with working user agent
bun build --compile --compile-argv="--user-agent='OpenCode/1.0'" ./opencode.ts --outfile=opencode
# Results in:
# 1. All HTTP requests actually use OpenCode/1.0 user agent ✨
# 2. process.execArgv contains ["--user-agent=OpenCode/1.0"] for inspection ✨
```
The user agent will actually work in all HTTP requests made by the
compiled executable, not just be visible as metadata!
🚀 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)
Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Claude <claude@anthropic.ai>
## Summary
- Adds `--user-agent` CLI flag to allow customizing the default
User-Agent header for HTTP requests
- Maintains backward compatibility with existing default behavior
- Includes comprehensive tests
## Test plan
- [x] Added unit tests for both custom and default user-agent behavior
- [x] Tested manually with external HTTP service (httpbin.org)
- [x] Verified existing tests still pass
@thdxr I built this for you! 🎉🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>