## Summary
Adds a `subscriptions` getter to `ServerWebSocket` that returns an array
of all topics the WebSocket is currently subscribed to.
## Implementation
- Added `getTopicsCount()` and `iterateTopics()` helpers to uWS
WebSocket
- Implemented C++ function `uws_ws_get_topics_as_js_array` that:
- Uses `JSC::MarkedArgumentBuffer` to protect values from GC
- Constructs JSArray directly in C++ for efficiency
- Uses template pattern for SSL/TCP variants
- Properly handles iterator locks with explicit scopes
- Exposed as `subscriptions` getter property on ServerWebSocket
- Returns empty array when WebSocket is closed (not null)
## API
```typescript
const server = Bun.serve({
websocket: {
open(ws) {
ws.subscribe("chat");
ws.subscribe("notifications");
console.log(ws.subscriptions); // ["chat", "notifications"]
ws.unsubscribe("chat");
console.log(ws.subscriptions); // ["notifications"]
}
}
});
```
## Test Coverage
Added 5 comprehensive test cases covering:
- Basic subscription/unsubscription flow
- All subscriptions removed
- Behavior after WebSocket close
- Duplicate subscriptions (should only appear once)
- Multiple subscribe/unsubscribe cycles
All tests pass with 24 assertions.
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-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>
### What does this PR do?
Allows optional peers to resolve to package if possible.
Optional peers aren't auto-installed, but they should still be given a
chance to resolve. If they're always left unresolved it's possible for
multiple dependencies on the same package to result in different peer
resolutions when they should be the same. For example, this bug this
could cause monorepos using elysia to have corrupt node_modules because
there might be more than one copy of elysia in `node_modules/.bun` (or
more than the expected number of copies).
fixes#23725
most likely fixes#23895
fixes ENG-21411
### How did you verify your code works?
Added a test for optional peers and non-optional peers that would
previously trigger this bug.
<!-- This is an auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai
-->
## Summary by CodeRabbit
* **New Features**
* Improved resolution of optional peer dependencies during isolated
installations, with better propagation across package hierarchies.
* **Tests**
* Added comprehensive test suite covering optional peer dependency
scenarios in isolated workspaces.
* Added test fixtures for packages with peer and optional peer
dependencies.
* Enhanced lockfile migration test verification using snapshot-based
assertions.
<!-- end of auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai -->
---------
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
### What does this PR do?
When `napi_create_external_buffer` receives empty input, the returned
buffer should be detached.
This fixes the remaining tests in `ref-napi` other than three that use a
few uv symbols
<img width="329" height="159" alt="Screenshot 2025-11-01 at 8 38 01 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/2c75f937-79c5-467a-bde3-44e45e05d9a0"
/>
### How did you verify your code works?
Added tests for correct values from `napi_get_buffer_info`,
`napi_get_arraybuffer_info`, and `napi_is_detached_arraybuffer` when
given an empty buffer from `napi_create_external_buffer`
---------
Co-authored-by: Jarred Sumner <jarred@jarredsumner.com>
### What does this PR do?
If the input was empty `ArrayBuffer::createFromBytes` would create a
buffer that `JSUint8Array::create` would see as detached, so it would
throw an exception. This would likely cause crashes in `node-addon-api`
because finalize data is freed if `napi_create_external_buffer` fails,
and we already setup the finalizer.
Example of creating empty buffer:
a7f62a4caa/src/binding.cc (L687)fixes#6737fixes#10965fixes#12331fixes#12937fixes#13622
most likely fixes#14822
### How did you verify your code works?
Manually and added tests.
## Summary
This PR makes `bun list` an alias for `bun pm ls`, allowing users to
list their dependency tree with a shorter command.
## Changes
- Updated `src/cli.zig` to route `list` command to
`PackageManagerCommand` instead of `ReservedCommand`
- Modified `src/cli/package_manager_command.zig` to detect when `bun
list` is invoked directly and treat it as `ls`
- Updated help text in `bun pm --help` to show both `bun list` and `bun
pm ls` as valid options
## Implementation Details
The implementation follows the same pattern used for `bun whoami`, which
is also a direct alias to a pm subcommand. When `bun list` is detected,
it's internally converted to the `ls` subcommand.
## Testing
Tested locally:
- ✅ `bun list` shows the dependency tree
- ✅ `bun list --all` works correctly with the `--all` flag
- ✅ `bun pm ls` continues to work (backward compatible)
## Test Output
```bash
$ bun list
/tmp/test-bun-list node_modules (3)
└── react@18.3.1
$ bun list --all
/tmp/test-bun-list node_modules
├── js-tokens@4.0.0
├── loose-envify@1.4.0
└── react@18.3.1
$ bun pm ls
/tmp/test-bun-list node_modules (3)
└── react@18.3.1
```
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
## Summary
Fixes CPU profiler generating invalid timestamps that Chrome DevTools
couldn't parse (though VSCode's profiler viewer accepted them).
## The Problem
CPU profiles generated by `--cpu-prof` had timestamps that were either:
1. Negative (in the original broken profile from the gist)
2. Truncated/corrupted (after initial timestamp calculation fix)
Example from the broken profile:
```json
{
"startTime": -822663297,
"endTime": -804820609
}
```
After initial fix, timestamps were positive but still wrong:
```json
{
"startTime": 1573519100, // Should be ~1761784720948727
"endTime": 1573849434
}
```
## Root Cause
**Primary Issue**: `WTF::JSON::Object::setInteger()` has precision
issues with large values (> 2^31). When setting timestamps like
`1761784720948727` (microseconds since Unix epoch - 16 digits), the
method was truncating/corrupting them.
**Secondary Issue**: The timestamp calculation logic needed
clarification - now explicitly uses the earliest sample's wall clock
time as startTime and calculates a consistent wallClockOffset.
## The Fix
### src/bun.js/bindings/BunCPUProfiler.cpp
Changed from `setInteger()` to `setDouble()` for timestamp
serialization:
```cpp
// Before (broken):
json->setInteger("startTime"_s, static_cast<long long>(startTime));
json->setInteger("endTime"_s, static_cast<long long>(endTime));
// After (fixed):
json->setDouble("startTime"_s, startTime);
json->setDouble("endTime"_s, endTime);
```
JSON `Number` type can precisely represent integers up to 2^53 (~9
quadrillion), which is far more than needed for microsecond timestamps
(~10^15 for current dates).
Also clarified the timestamp calculation to use `wallClockStart`
directly as the profile's `startTime` and calculate a `wallClockOffset`
for converting stopwatch times to wall clock times.
### test/cli/run/cpu-prof.test.ts
Added validation that timestamps are:
- Positive
- In microseconds (> 1000000000000000, < 3000000000000000)
- Within valid Unix epoch range
## Testing
```bash
bun bd test test/cli/run/cpu-prof.test.ts
```
All tests pass ✅
Generated profile now has correct timestamps:
```json
{
"startTime": 1761784720948727.2,
"endTime": 1761784721305814
}
```
## Why VSCode Worked But Chrome DevTools Didn't
- **VSCode**: Only cares about relative timing (duration = endTime -
startTime), doesn't validate absolute timestamp ranges
- **Chrome DevTools**: Expects timestamps in microseconds since Unix
epoch (positive, ~16 digits), fails validation when timestamps are
negative, too small, or out of valid range
## References
- Gist with CPU profile format documentation:
https://gist.github.com/Jarred-Sumner/2c12da481845e20ce6a6175ee8b05a3e
- Chrome DevTools Protocol - Profiler:
https://chromedevtools.github.io/devtools-protocol/tot/Profiler/🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)
Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
## Summary
Implements the `--cpu-prof` CLI flag for Bun to profile CPU usage and
save results in Chrome CPU Profiler JSON format, compatible with Chrome
DevTools and VSCode.
## Implementation Details
- Uses JSC's `SamplingProfiler` to collect CPU samples during execution
- Converts samples to Chrome CPU Profiler JSON format on exit
- Supports `--cpu-prof-name` to customize output filename
- Supports `--cpu-prof-dir` to specify output directory
- Default filename: `CPU.YYYYMMDD.HHMMSS.PID.0.001.cpuprofile`
## Key Features
✅ **Chrome DevTools Compatible** - 100% compatible with Node.js CPU
profile format
✅ **Absolute Timestamps** - Uses wall clock time (microseconds since
epoch)
✅ **1ms Sampling** - Matches Node.js sampling frequency for comparable
granularity
✅ **Thread-Safe** - Properly shuts down background sampling thread
before processing
✅ **Memory-Safe** - Uses HeapIterationScope and DeferGC for safe heap
access
✅ **Cross-Platform** - Compiles on Windows, macOS, and Linux with proper
path handling
## Technical Challenges Solved
1. **Heap Corruption** - Fixed by calling `profiler->shutdown()` before
processing traces
2. **Memory Safety** - Added `HeapIterationScope` and `DeferGC` when
accessing JSCells
3. **Timestamp Accuracy** - Explicitly start stopwatch and convert to
absolute wall clock time
4. **Path Handling** - Used `bun.path.joinAbsStringBufZ` with proper cwd
resolution
5. **Windows Support** - UTF-16 path conversion for Windows
compatibility
6. **Atomic Writes** - Used `bun.sys.File.writeFile` with ENOENT retry
## Testing
All tests pass (4/4):
- ✅ Generates profile with default name
- ✅ `--cpu-prof-name` sets custom filename
- ✅ `--cpu-prof-dir` sets custom directory
- ✅ Profile captures function names
Verified format compatibility:
- JSON structure matches Node.js exactly
- All samples reference valid nodes
- Timestamps use absolute microseconds since epoch
- Cross-platform compilation verified with `bun run zig:check-all`
## Example Usage
```bash
# Basic usage
bun --cpu-prof script.js
# Custom filename
bun --cpu-prof --cpu-prof-name my-profile.cpuprofile script.js
# Custom directory
bun --cpu-prof --cpu-prof-dir ./profiles script.js
```
Output can be opened in Chrome DevTools (Performance → Load Profile) or
VSCode's CPU profiling viewer.
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
## Summary
This PR improves snapshot error messages when running tests in CI
environments to make debugging easier by showing exactly what snapshot
was being created and what value was attempted.
## Changes
### 1. Inline Snapshot Errors
**Before:**
```
Updating inline snapshots is disabled in CI environments unless --update-snapshots is used.
```
**After:**
```
Inline snapshot creation is not allowed in CI environments unless --update-snapshots is used.
If this is not a CI environment, set the environment variable CI=false to force allow.
Received: this is new
```
- Changed message to say "creation" instead of "updating" (more
accurate)
- Shows the received value that was attempted using Jest's pretty
printer
### 2. Snapshot File Errors
**Before:**
```
Snapshot creation is not allowed in CI environments unless --update-snapshots is used
If this is not a CI environment, set the environment variable CI=false to force allow.
Received: this is new
```
**After:**
```
Snapshot creation is not allowed in CI environments unless --update-snapshots is used
If this is not a CI environment, set the environment variable CI=false to force allow.
Snapshot name: "new snapshot 1"
Received: this is new
```
- Now shows the snapshot name that was being looked for
- Shows the received value using Jest's pretty printer
## Implementation Details
- Added `last_error_snapshot_name` field to `Snapshots` struct to pass
snapshot name from `getOrPut()` to error handler
- Removed unreachable code path for inline snapshot updates (mismatches
error earlier with diff)
- Updated test expectations in `ci-restrictions.test.ts`
## Test Plan
```bash
# Test inline snapshot creation in CI
cd /tmp/snapshot-test
echo 'import { test, expect } from "bun:test";
test("new inline snapshot", () => {
expect("this is new").toMatchInlineSnapshot();
});' > test.js
GITHUB_ACTIONS=1 bun test test.js
# Test snapshot file creation in CI
echo 'import { test, expect } from "bun:test";
test("new snapshot", () => {
expect("this is new").toMatchSnapshot();
});' > test2.js
GITHUB_ACTIONS=1 bun test test2.js
```
Both should show improved error messages with the received values and
snapshot name.
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: pfg <pfg@pfg.pw>
## Summary
Fixes#24147
- Fixed EventEmitter crash when `removeAllListeners()` is called from
within an event handler while a `removeListener` meta-listener is
registered
- Added undefined check before iterating over listeners array to match
Node.js behavior
- Added comprehensive regression tests
## Bug Description
When `removeAllListeners(type)` was called:
1. From within an event handler
2. While a `removeListener` meta-listener was registered
3. For an event type with no listeners
It would crash with: `TypeError: undefined is not an object (evaluating
'this._events')`
## Root Cause
The `removeAllListeners` function tried to access `listeners.length`
without checking if `listeners` was defined first. When called with an
event type that had no listeners, `events[type]` returned `undefined`,
causing the crash.
## Fix
Added a check `if (listeners !== undefined)` before iterating, matching
the behavior in Node.js core:
https://github.com/nodejs/node/blob/main/lib/events.js#L768
## Test plan
- ✅ Created regression test in `test/regression/issue/24147.test.ts`
- ✅ Verified test fails with `USE_SYSTEM_BUN=1 bun test` (reproduces
bug)
- ✅ Verified test passes with `bun bd test` (confirms fix)
- ✅ Test covers the exact reproduction case from the issue
- ✅ Additional tests for edge cases (actual listeners, nested calls)
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Should fix https://github.com/oven-sh/bun/issues/24104
### What does this PR do?
This PR is changing `ERR_BODY_ALREADY_USED` to be TypeError instead of
Error.
### How did you verify your code works?
A test case added to verify that request call correctly throws a
TypeError after another request call on the same Request, confirming the
fix addresses the issue.
---------
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
## Summary
Fixes#19111
This PR fixes a bug where `fs.createReadStream().pipe(ServerResponse)`
would fail to transfer data when ServerResponse had no handle
(standalone usage). This affected Vite's static file serving and other
middleware adapters using the connect-to-web pattern.
## Root Cause
The bug was in the `ServerResponse.writableNeedDrain` getter at line
1529 of `_http_server.ts`:
```typescript
return !this.destroyed && !this.finished && (this[kHandle]?.bufferedAmount ?? 1) !== 0;
```
When `ServerResponse` had no handle (which is common in middleware
scenarios), the nullish coalescing operator defaulted `bufferedAmount`
to **1** instead of **0**. This caused `writableNeedDrain` to always
return `true`.
## Impact
When `pipe()` checks `dest.writableNeedDrain === true`, it immediately
pauses the source stream to handle backpressure. With the bug,
standalone ServerResponse instances always appeared to need draining,
causing piped streams to pause and never resume.
## Fix
Changed the default value from `1` to `0`:
```typescript
return !this.destroyed && !this.finished && (this[kHandle]?.bufferedAmount ?? 0) !== 0;
```
## Test Plan
- ✅ Added regression test in `test/regression/issue/19111.test.ts`
- ✅ Verified fix with actual Vite middleware reproduction
- ✅ Confirmed behavior matches Node.js
Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
### What does this PR do?
Previously, `JSC__JSPromise__wrap` would call
`JSC::JSPromise::resolvedPromise(globalObject, result)` without checking
if an exception was thrown during promise resolution. This
could happen in certain edge cases, such as when the result value is a
thenable that triggers stack overflow, or when the promise resolution
mechanism itself encounters an error.
When such exceptions occurred, they would escape back to the Zig code,
causing the CatchScope assertion to fail with "ASSERTION FAILED:
Unexpected exception observed on thread"
instead of being properly handled.
This PR adds an exception check immediately after calling
`JSC::JSPromise::resolvedPromise()` and before the `RELEASE_AND_RETURN`
macro. If an exception is detected, the function
now clears it and returns a rejected promise with the exception value,
ensuring consistent error handling behavior. This matches the pattern
already used earlier in the function
for the initial function call exception handling.
### How did you verify your code works?
new and existing tests
---------
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
## Summary
Fixes#23133
This PR fixes a bug where lifecycle hooks (`beforeAll`, `beforeEach`,
`afterAll`, `afterEach`) would throw an error when called with a
function and options object:
```typescript
beforeAll(() => {
console.log("beforeAll")
}, { timeout: 10_000 })
```
Previously, this would throw: `error: beforeAll() expects a function as
the second argument`
## Root Cause
The issue was in `ScopeFunctions.parseArguments()` at
`src/bun.js/test/ScopeFunctions.zig:342`. When parsing two arguments, it
always treated them as `(description, callback)` instead of checking if
they could be `(callback, options)`.
## Solution
Updated the two-argument parsing logic to check if the first argument is
a function and the second is not a function. In that case, treat them as
`(callback, options)` instead of `(description, callback)`.
## Changes
- Modified `src/bun.js/test/ScopeFunctions.zig` to handle `(callback,
options)` case
- Added regression test at `test/regression/issue/23133.test.ts`
## Testing
✅ Verified the fix works with the reproduction case from the issue
✅ Added comprehensive regression test covering all lifecycle hooks with
both object and numeric timeout options
✅ All existing jest-hooks tests still pass
✅ Test fails with `USE_SYSTEM_BUN=1` and passes with the fixed build
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: pfg <pfg@pfg.pw>
## Summary
Fixes#20689
Previously, `@layer` blocks were not being processed through the CSS
minifier, which meant that `color-scheme` properties inside `@layer`
blocks would not get the required `--buncss-light`/`--buncss-dark`
variable injections needed for browsers that don't support the
`light-dark()` function.
## Changes
- Implemented proper minification for `LayerBlockRule` in
`src/css/rules/rules.zig:218-221`
- Added recursive call to `minify()` on nested rules, matching the
behavior of other at-rules like `@media` and `@supports`
- Added comprehensive tests for `color-scheme` inside `@layer` blocks
## Test Plan
Added three new test cases in `test/js/bun/css/css.test.ts`:
1. Simple `@layer` with `color-scheme: dark`
2. Named layers (`@layer shm.colors`) with multiple rules
3. Anonymous `@layer` with `color-scheme: light dark` (generates media
query)
All tests pass:
```bash
bun bd test test/js/bun/css/css.test.ts -t "color-scheme"
```
## Before
```css
/* Input */
@layer shm.colors {
body.theme-dark {
color-scheme: dark;
}
}
/* Output (broken - no variables) */
@layer shm.colors {
body.theme-dark {
color-scheme: dark;
}
}
```
## After
```css
/* Input */
@layer shm.colors {
body.theme-dark {
color-scheme: dark;
}
}
/* Output (fixed - variables injected) */
@layer shm.colors {
body.theme-dark {
--buncss-light: ;
--buncss-dark: initial;
color-scheme: dark;
}
}
```
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-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
Implements `onTestFinished()` for `bun:test`, which runs after all
`afterEach` hooks have completed.
## Implementation
- Added `onTestFinished` export to the test module in `jest.zig`
- Modified `genericHook` in `bun_test.zig` to handle `onTestFinished` as
a special case that:
- Can only be called inside a test (not in describe blocks or preload)
- Appends hooks at the very end of the execution sequence
- Added comprehensive tests covering basic ordering, multiple callbacks,
async callbacks, and interaction with other hooks
## Execution Order
When called inside a test:
1. Test body executes
2. `afterAll` hooks (if added inside the test)
3. `afterEach` hooks
4. `onTestFinished` hooks ✨
## Test Plan
- ✅ All new tests pass with `bun bd test`
- ✅ Tests correctly fail with `USE_SYSTEM_BUN=1` (feature not in
released version)
- ✅ Verifies correct ordering with `afterEach`, `afterAll`, and multiple
`onTestFinished` calls
- ✅ Tests async `onTestFinished` callbacks
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-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: pfg <pfg@pfg.pw>
### What does this PR do?
When `process.nextTick` is overwritten, segv will be occured via
internal `processTick` call.
This patch fixes it.
### How did you verify your code works?
Tests.
---------
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
### What does this PR do?
Adds missing null checking for `Bun.CookieMap#delete`.
### How did you verify your code works?
Tests
---------
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
fixes: oven-sh/bun#23717
### What does this PR do?
- Align ProxyTunnel.onClose with
[HTTPClient.onClose](https://github.com/oven-sh/bun/blob/bun-v1.3.0/src/http.zig#L223-L241):
when a tunneled HTTPS response is in-progress and either
- parsing chunked trailers (trailer-line states), or
- transfer-encoding is identity with content_length == null while in
.body,
treat EOF as end-of-message and complete the request, rather than
ECONNRESET.
- Schedule proxy deref instead of deref inside callbacks to avoid
lifetime hazards.
### How did you verify your code works?
- `test/js/bun/http/proxy.test.ts`: raw TLS origin returns
close-delimited 200 OK; verified no ECONNRESET and body delivered.
- Test suite passes under bun bd test.
## Risk/compat
- Only affects CONNECT/TLS path. Direct HTTP/HTTPS unchanged. Behavior
mirrors existing
[HTTPClient.onClose](https://github.com/oven-sh/bun/blob/bun-v1.3.0/src/http.zig#L223-L241).
## Repro (minimal)
See issue; core condition is no Content-Length and no Transfer-Encoding
(close-delimited).
Co-authored-by: Ciro Spaciari <ciro.spaciari@gmail.com>
## Summary
Fixes `Buffer.isEncoding('')` to return `false` instead of `true`,
matching Node.js behavior.
## Description
Previously, `Buffer.isEncoding('')` incorrectly returned `true` in Bun,
while Node.js correctly returns `false`. This was caused by
`parseEnumerationFromView` in `JSBufferEncodingType.cpp` treating empty
strings (length 0) as valid utf8 encoding.
The fix modifies the switch statement to return `std::nullopt` for empty
strings, along with other invalid short strings.
## Changes
- Modified `src/bun.js/bindings/JSBufferEncodingType.cpp` to return
`std::nullopt` for empty strings
- Added regression test `test/regression/issue23966.test.ts`
## Test Plan
- [x] Test fails with `USE_SYSTEM_BUN=1 bun test
test/regression/issue23966.test.ts` (confirms bug exists)
- [x] Test passes with `bun bd test test/regression/issue23966.test.ts`
(confirms fix works)
- [x] Verified behavior matches Node.js v24.3.0
- [x] All test cases for valid/invalid encodings pass
Fixes#23966🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
### What does this PR do?
Adds missing exception check for ReadableStream.
### How did you verify your code works?
Tests
---------
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
## Summary
Fixes a bug where the `Bun.build()` API with `compile: true` did not
properly apply sourcemaps, even when `sourcemap: "inline"` was
specified. This resulted in error stack traces showing bundled virtual
paths (`/$bunfs/root/`) instead of actual source file names and line
numbers.
## Problem
The CLI `bun build --compile --sourcemap` worked correctly, but the
equivalent API call did not:
```javascript
// This did NOT work (before fix)
await Bun.build({
entrypoints: ['./app.js'],
compile: true,
sourcemap: "inline" // <-- Was ignored/broken
});
```
Error output showed bundled paths:
```
error: Error from helper module
at helperFunction (/$bunfs/root/app.js:4:9) // ❌ Wrong path
at main (/$bunfs/root/app.js:9:17) // ❌ Wrong line numbers
```
## Root Cause
The CLI explicitly overrides any sourcemap type to `.external` when
compile mode is enabled (in `/workspace/bun/src/cli/Arguments.zig`):
```zig
// when using --compile, only `external` works
if (ctx.bundler_options.compile) {
opts.source_map = .external;
}
```
The API implementation in `JSBundler.zig` was missing this override.
## Solution
Added the same sourcemap override logic to `JSBundler.zig` when compile
mode is enabled:
```zig
// When using --compile, only `external` sourcemaps work, as we do not
// look at the source map comment. Override any other sourcemap type.
if (this.source_map != .none) {
this.source_map = .external;
}
```
Now error output correctly shows source file names:
```
error: Error from helper module
at helperFunction (helper.js:2:9) // ✅ Correct file
at main (app.js:4:3) // ✅ Correct line numbers
```
## Tests
Added comprehensive test coverage in
`/workspace/bun/test/bundler/bun-build-compile-sourcemap.test.ts`:
- ✅ `sourcemap: "inline"` works
- ✅ `sourcemap: true` works
- ✅ `sourcemap: "external"` works
- ✅ Multiple source files show correct file names
- ✅ Without sourcemap, bundled paths are shown (expected behavior)
All tests:
- ✅ Fail with `USE_SYSTEM_BUN=1` (confirms bug exists)
- ✅ Pass with `bun bd test` (confirms fix works)
- ✅ Use `tempDir()` to avoid disk space issues
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)
Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
### What does this PR do?
Adds support for `publicHoistPattern` in `bunfig.toml` and
`public-hoist-pattern` from `.npmrc`. This setting allows you to select
transitive packages to hoist to the root node_modules making them
available for all workspace packages.
```toml
[install]
# can be a string
publicHoistPattern = "@types*"
# or an array
publicHoistPattern = [ "@types*", "*eslint*" ]
```
`publicHoistPattern` only affects the isolated linker.
---
Adds `hoistPattern`. `hoistPattern` is the same as `publicHoistPattern`,
but applies to the `node_modules/.bun/node_modules` directory instead of
the root node_modules. Also the default value of `hoistPattern` is `*`
(everything is hoisted to `node_modules/.bun/node_modules` by default).
---
Fixes a determinism issue constructing the
`node_modules/.bun/node_modules` directory.
---
closes#23481closes#6160closes#23548
### How did you verify your code works?
Added tests for
- [x] only include patterns
- [x] only exclude patterns
- [x] mix of include and exclude
- [x] errors for unexpected expression types
- [x] excluding direct dependency (should still include)
- [x] match all with `*`
- [x] string and array expression types
---------
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Implements process.threadCpuUsage() to return the current thread's CPU usage, matching Node.js behavior.
Platform-specific implementations:
- macOS: Uses mach_thread_self() and thread_info()
- Linux: Uses getrusage(RUSAGE_THREAD) or getrusage(RUSAGE_LWP) as fallback
- Windows: Uses libuv's uv_getrusage_thread()
Returns an object with user and system CPU time in microseconds, and supports an optional previous value parameter to calculate the difference.
Fixes issue #23890🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)
Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
### What does this PR do?
`short` is signed in C++ by default and not unsigned. Switched to
`uint16_t` so it's unambiguous.
### How did you verify your code works?
There is a test
---------
Co-authored-by: coderabbitai[bot] <136622811+coderabbitai[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Fixes#19652
## Summary
Fixes a crash that occurred when using the `--production` flag with `bun
build`, particularly on Windows where assertions are enabled in release
builds.
## Root Cause
The crash occurred because an assertion for `jsx.development` was
running **before** `jsx.development` was properly configured. The
problematic sequence was:
1. Set `NODE_ENV=production` in env map
2. Call `configureDefines()` which reads `NODE_ENV` and calls
`setProduction(true)`, setting `jsx.development=false`
3. ❌ **Assert `jsx.development` is false** (assertion fired here, before
line 203 below)
4. Set `jsx.development = !production` on line 203 (too late)
## Changes
This PR reorders the code to move the assertion **after**
`jsx.development` is properly set:
1. Set both `BUN_ENV` and `NODE_ENV` to `"production"` in env map
2. Call `configureDefines()`
3. Set `jsx.development = !production` (now happens first)
4. ✅ **Assert `jsx.development` is false** (now runs after it's set)
Also adds `BUN_ENV=production` to match the behavior of setting
`NODE_ENV`.
## Test Plan
Added regression test in `test/regression/issue/19652.test.ts` that
verifies `bun build --production` doesn't crash.
The test:
- ✅ Passes on this branch
- ❌ Would fail on main (assertion failure)
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-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: Jarred Sumner <jarred@jarredsumner.com>
Co-authored-by: coderabbitai[bot] <136622811+coderabbitai[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
### What does this PR do?
Fixes a bug preventing workspace self dependencies from getting
symlinked to the workspace node_modules
Fixes#23605
### How did you verify your code works?
Added a test for normal `"workspace:*"` deps, and `"workspace:."` under
a different name.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jarred Sumner <jarred@jarredsumner.com>
## Summary
Fixed an off-by-one error in buffer allocation for several path module
functions when handling paths longer than `PATH_SIZE` (typically 4096
bytes on most platforms).
## Changes
- `normalizeJS_T`: Added +1 to buffer allocation for null terminator
- `relativeJS_T`: Added +1 to buffer allocation for null terminator
- `toNamespacedPathJS_T`: Added +9 bytes (8 for possible UNC prefix + 1
for null terminator)
## Test plan
- Added tests for `path.normalize()` with paths up to 100,000 characters
- Added tests for `path.relative()` with very long paths
- All existing path tests continue to pass
The issue occurred because when a path is exactly equal to or longer
than `PATH_SIZE`, the buffer was allocated with size equal to the path
length, but then a null terminator was written at `buf[bufSize]`, which
was out of bounds.
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Jarred Sumner <jarred@jarredsumner.com>
## Summary
Fixes a panic that occurred when a WebSocket close frame's payload was
split across multiple TCP packets.
## The Bug
The panic occurred at `websocket_client.zig:681`:
```
panic: index out of bounds: index 24, len 14
```
This happened when:
- A close frame had a payload of 24 bytes (2 byte code + 22 byte reason)
- The first TCP packet contained 14 bytes (header + partial payload)
- The code tried to access `data[2..24]` causing the panic
## Root Causes
1. **Bounds checking issue**: The code assumed all close frame data
would arrive in one packet and tried to `@memcpy` without verifying
sufficient data was available.
2. **Premature flag setting**: `close_received = true` was set
immediately upon entering the close state. This prevented `handleData`
from being called again when the remaining bytes arrived (early return
at line 354).
## The Fix
Implemented proper fragmentation handling for close frames, following
the same pattern used for ping frames:
- Added `close_frame_buffering` flag to track buffering state
- Buffer incoming data incrementally using the existing
`ping_frame_bytes` buffer
- Track total expected length and bytes received so far
- Only set `close_received = true` after all bytes are received
- Wait for more data if the frame is incomplete
## Testing
- Created two regression tests that fragment close frames across
multiple packets
- All existing WebSocket tests pass (`test/js/web/websocket/`)
- Verified the original panic no longer occurs
## Related
This appears to be the root cause of crashes reported on Windows when
WebSocket connections close, particularly when close frames have reasons
that get fragmented by the network stack.
---
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-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: Jarred Sumner <jarred@jarredsumner.com>
### What does this PR do?
Let MySQL unref when idle and make sure that is behaving like this.
Only set up the timers after all status changes are complete since the
timers rely on the status to determine timeouts, this was causing the
CPU usage spike to 100% (thats why only happened in TLS)
CPU usage it self will be improved in
https://github.com/oven-sh/bun/pull/23700 not in this PR
Fixes: https://github.com/oven-sh/bun/issues/23273
Fixes: https://github.com/oven-sh/bun/issues/23256
### How did you verify your code works?
Test
---------
Co-authored-by: coderabbitai[bot] <136622811+coderabbitai[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
### What does this PR do?
This PR implements support for the `email` field in `.npmrc` files for
registry scope authentication. Some private registries (particularly
Nexus) require the email field to be specified in the registry
configuration alongside username/password or token authentication.
The email field can now be specified in `.npmrc` files like:
```ini
//registry.example.com/:email=user@example.com
//registry.example.com/:username=myuser
//registry.example.com/:_password=base64encodedpassword
```
### How did you verify your code works?
1. **Built Bun successfully** - Confirmed the code compiles without
errors using `bun bd --debug`
2. **Wrote comprehensive unit tests** - Added two test cases to
`test/cli/install/npmrc.test.ts`:
- Test for standalone email field parsing
- Test for email combined with username/password authentication
3. **Verified tests pass** - Ran `bun bd test
test/cli/install/npmrc.test.ts -t "email"` and confirmed both tests
pass:
```
✓ 2 pass
✓ 0 fail
✓ 6 expect() calls
```
4. **Code changes include**:
- Added `email` field to `NpmRegistry` struct in `src/api/schema.zig`
- Updated `encode()` and `decode()` methods to handle the email field
- Modified `ini.zig` to parse and store the email field from `.npmrc`
- Removed email from the unsupported options warning (certfile and
keyfile remain unsupported)
- Updated all `NpmRegistry` struct initializations to include the email
field
- Updated `loadNpmrcFromJS` test API to return the email field
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
### What does this PR do?
Fixes#23489
The YAML parser was incorrectly treating `...` inside double-quoted
strings as document end markers, causing parse errors for strings
containing ellipsis, particularly affecting internationalized text.
### Example of the bug:
```yaml
balance: "👛 لا تمتلك محفظة... !"
```
This would fail with: `error: Unexpected document end`
### Root cause:
The bug was introduced in commit fcbd57ac48 which attempted to optimize
document marker detection by using `self.line_indent == .none` instead
of tracking newlines with a local flag. However, this check was
incomplete - it didn't track whether we had just processed a newline
character.
### The fix:
Restored the `nl` (newline) flag pattern from the single-quoted scanner
and combined it with the `line_indent` check. Document markers `...` and
`---` are now only recognized when **all** of these conditions are met:
1. We're after a newline (`nl == true`)
2. We're at column 0 (`self.line_indent == .none`)
3. Followed by whitespace or EOF
This allows `...` to appear freely in double-quoted strings while still
correctly recognizing actual document end markers at the start of lines.
### How did you verify your code works?
1. Reproduced the original issue from #23489
2. Applied the fix and verified all test cases pass:
- Original Arabic text with emoji: `"👛 لا تمتلك محفظة... !"`
- Various `...` positions: start, middle, end
- Both single and double quotes
- Multiline strings with indented `...` (issue #22392)
3. Created regression test in `test/regression/issue/23489.test.ts`
4. Verified existing YAML tests still pass (514 pass, up from 513)
cc @dylan-conway for review
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: Jarred Sumner <jarred@jarredsumner.com>
Co-authored-by: Dylan Conway <dylan.conway567@gmail.com>
## Summary
Fixes a panic that occurred when passing `NumberObject` or
`BooleanObject` as MySQL query parameters.
**Panic message:** `A JavaScript exception was thrown, but it was
cleared before it could be read.`
## Root Cause
The `FieldType.fromJS` function in `src/sql/mysql/MySQLTypes.zig` was
returning `error.JSError` without throwing a JavaScript exception first
for:
- `NumberObject` (created via `new Number(42)`)
- `BooleanObject` (created via `new Boolean(true)`)
- Non-indexable types
This violated the contract that `error.JSError` means "an exception has
already been thrown and is ready to be taken."
## Call Chain
1. User executes `await sql\`SELECT ${new Number(42)} as value\``
2. `FieldType.fromJS()` detects `.NumberObject` and returns
`error.JSError` without throwing
3. Error propagates to `MySQLQuery.runPreparedQuery()`
4. Code checks `hasException()` → returns false (no exception exists!)
5. Calls `mysqlErrorToJS(globalObject, "...", error.JSError)`
6. `mysqlErrorToJS` tries to `takeException(error.JSError)` but there's
no exception
7. **PANIC**
## Fix
The fix throws a proper exception with a helpful message before
returning `error.JSError`:
- `"Cannot bind NumberObject to query parameter. Use a primitive number
instead."`
- `"Cannot bind BooleanObject to query parameter. Use a primitive
boolean instead."`
- `"Cannot bind this type to query parameter"`
## Test Plan
Added regression tests in `test/js/sql/sql-mysql.test.ts`:
- Test passing `NumberObject` as parameter
- Test passing `BooleanObject` as parameter
Both tests verify that a proper error is thrown instead of crashing.
Verified manually with local MySQL server that:
- ✅ NumberObject now throws proper error (was crashing)
- ✅ BooleanObject now throws proper error (was crashing)
- ✅ Primitive numbers still work correctly
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>