### What does this PR do?
fixes#6409
This PR implements `bun install` automatic migration from yarn.lock
files to bun.lock, preserving versions exactly. The migration happens
automatically when:
1. A project has a `yarn.lock` file
2. No `bun.lock` or `bun.lockb` file exists
3. User runs `bun install`
### Current Status: ✅ Complete and Working
The yarn.lock migration feature is **fully functional and
comprehensively tested**. All dependency types are supported:
- ✅ Regular npm dependencies (`package@^1.0.0`)
- ✅ Git dependencies (`git+https://github.com/user/repo.git`,
`github:user/repo`)
- ✅ NPM alias dependencies (`alias@npm:package@version`)
- ✅ File dependencies (`file:./path`)
- ✅ Remote tarball URLs (`https://registry.npmjs.org/package.tgz`)
- ✅ Local tarball files (`file:package.tgz`)
### Test Results
```bash
$ bun bd test test/cli/install/migration/yarn-lock-migration.test.ts
✅ 4 pass, 0 fail
- yarn-lock-mkdirp (basic npm dependency)
- yarn-lock-mkdirp-no-resolved (npm dependency without resolved field)
- yarn-lock-mkdirp-file-dep (file dependency)
- yarn-stuff (all complex dependency types: git, npm aliases, file, remote tarballs)
```
### How did you verify your code works?
1. **Comprehensive test suite**: Added 4 test cases covering all
dependency types
2. **Version preservation**: Verified that package versions are
preserved exactly during migration
3. **Real-world scenarios**: Tested with complex yarn.lock files
containing git deps, npm aliases, file deps, and remote tarballs
4. **Migration logging**: Confirms migration with log message `[X.XXms]
migrated lockfile from yarn.lock`
### Key Implementation Details
- **Core parser**: `src/install/yarn.zig` handles all yarn.lock parsing
and dependency type resolution
- **Integration**: Migration is built into existing lockfile loading
infrastructure
- **Performance**: Migration typically completes in ~1ms for most
projects
- **Compatibility**: Preserves exact dependency versions and resolution
behavior
The implementation correctly handles edge cases like npm aliases, git
dependencies with commits, file dependencies with transitive deps, and
remote tarballs.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jarred-Sumner <709451+Jarred-Sumner@users.noreply.github.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: RiskyMH <git@riskymh.dev>
Co-authored-by: RiskyMH <56214343+RiskyMH@users.noreply.github.com>
## Summary
Fixes a crash in the Windows file watcher that occurred when the number
of file system events exceeded the fixed `watch_events` buffer size
(128).
## Problem
The crash manifested as:
```
index out of bounds: index 128, len 128
```
This happened when:
1. More than 128 file system events were generated in a single watch
cycle
2. The code tried to access `this.watch_events[128]` on an array of
length 128 (valid indices: 0-127)
3. Later, `std.sort.pdq()` would operate on an invalid array slice
## Solution
Implemented a hybrid approach that preserves the original behavior while
handling overflow gracefully:
- **Fixed array for common case**: Uses the existing 128-element array
when possible for optimal performance
- **Dynamic allocation for overflow**: Switches to `ArrayList` only when
needed
- **Single-batch processing**: All events are still processed together
in one batch, preserving event coalescing
- **Graceful fallback**: Handles allocation failures with appropriate
fallbacks
## Benefits
- ✅ **Fixes the crash** while maintaining existing performance
characteristics
- ✅ **Preserves event coalescing** - events for the same file still get
properly merged
- ✅ **Single consolidated callback** instead of multiple partial updates
- ✅ **Memory efficient** - no overhead for normal cases (≤128 events)
- ✅ **Backward compatible** - no API changes
## Test Plan
- [x] Compiles successfully with `bun run zig:check-windows`
- [x] Preserves existing behavior for common case (≤128 events)
- [x] Handles overflow case gracefully with dynamic allocation
🤖 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: Jarred Sumner <jarred@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Jarred Sumner <jarred@jarredsumner.com>
### What does this PR do?
Fixes thread safety issues due to file poll code being not thread safe.
<!-- **Please explain what your changes do**, example: -->
<!--
This adds a new flag --bail to bun test. When set, it will stop running
tests after the first failure. This is useful for CI environments where
you want to fail fast.
-->
### How did you verify your code works?
Added tests for lifecycle scripts. The tests are unlikely to reproduce
the bug, but we'll know if it actually fixes the issue if
`test/package.json` doesn't show in flaky tests anymore.
<!-- **For code changes, please include automated tests**. Feel free to
uncomment the line below -->
<!-- I wrote automated tests -->
<!-- If JavaScript/TypeScript modules or builtins changed:
- [ ] I included a test for the new code, or existing tests cover it
- [ ] I ran my tests locally and they pass (`bun-debug test
test-file-name.test`)
-->
<!-- If Zig files changed:
- [ ] I checked the lifetime of memory allocated to verify it's (1)
freed and (2) only freed when it should be
- [ ] I included a test for the new code, or an existing test covers it
- [ ] JSValue used outside of the stack is either wrapped in a
JSC.Strong or is JSValueProtect'ed
- [ ] I wrote TypeScript/JavaScript tests and they pass locally
(`bun-debug test test-file-name.test`)
-->
<!-- If new methods, getters, or setters were added to a publicly
exposed class:
- [ ] I added TypeScript types for the new methods, getters, or setters
-->
<!-- If dependencies in tests changed:
- [ ] I made sure that specific versions of dependencies are used
instead of ranged or tagged versions
-->
<!-- If a new builtin ESM/CJS module was added:
- [ ] I updated Aliases in `module_loader.zig` to include the new module
- [ ] I added a test that imports the module
- [ ] I added a test that require() the module
-->
---------
Co-authored-by: taylor.fish <contact@taylor.fish>
## Summary
- Fixed buffer overflow in env_loader when parsing large environment
variables with escape sequences
- Replaced fixed 4096-byte buffer with a stack fallback allocator that
automatically switches to heap allocation for larger values
- Added comprehensive tests to prevent regression
## Background
The env_loader previously used a fixed threadlocal buffer that could
overflow when parsing environment variables containing escape sequences.
This caused crashes when the parsed value exceeded 4KB.
## Changes
- Replaced fixed buffer with `StackFallbackAllocator` that uses 4KB
stack buffer for common cases and falls back to heap for larger values
- Updated all env parsing functions to accept a reusable buffer
parameter
- Added proper memory cleanup with defer statements
## Test plan
- [x] Added test cases for large environment variables with escape
sequences
- [x] Added test for values larger than 4KB
- [x] Added edge case tests (empty quotes, escape at EOF)
- [x] All existing env tests continue to pass
fixes#11627
fixes BAPI-1274
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
## Summary
- Fixed shell lexer to properly store error messages using TextRange
instead of direct string slices
- This prevents potential use-after-free issues when error messages are
accessed after the lexer's string pool might have been reallocated
- Added test coverage for shell syntax error reporting
## Changes
- Changed `LexError.msg` from `[]const u8` to `Token.TextRange` to store
indices into the string pool
- Added `TextRange.slice()` helper method for converting ranges back to
string slices
- Updated error message concatenation logic to use the new range-based
approach
- Added test to verify syntax errors are reported correctly
## Test plan
- [x] Added test case for invalid shell syntax error reporting
- [x] Existing shell tests continue to pass
- [x] Manual testing of various shell syntax errors
closes BAPI-2232
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
### What does this PR do?
- for these kinds of aborts which we test in CI, introduce a feature
flag to suppress core dumps and crash reporting only from that abort,
and set the flag when running the test:
- libuv stub functions
- Node-API abort (used in particular when calling illegal functions
during finalizers)
- passing `process.kill` its own PID
- core dumps are suppressed with `setrlimit`, and crash reporting with
the new `suppress_reporting` field. these suppressions are only engaged
right before crashing, so we won't ignore new kinds of crashes that come
up in these tests.
- for the test bindings used to test the crash handler in
`run-crash-handler.test.ts`, disables core dumps but does not disable
crash reporting (because crashes get reported to a server that the test
is running to make sure they are reported)
- fixes a panic when printing source code around an error containing
`\n\r`
- updates the code where we clone vendor tests to checkout the right tag
- adds `vendor/elysia/test/path/plugin.test.ts` to
no-validate-exceptions
- this failure was exposed by starting to test the version of elysia we
have been intending to test. the crash trace suggests it may be fixed by
#21307.
- makes dumping core or uploading a crash report count as a failing test
- this ensures we don't realize a crash has occurred if it happened in a
subprocess and the main test doesn't adequately check the exit code. to
spawn a subprocess you expect to fail, prefer `expect(code).toBe(1)`
over `expect(code).not.toBe(0)`. if you really expect multiple possible
erroneous exit codes, you might try `expect(signal).toBeNull()` to still
disallow crashes.
### How did you verify your code works?
Running affected tests on a Linux machine with core dumps set up and
checking no new ones appear.
https://buildkite.com/bun/bun/builds/21465 has no core dumps.
Also fix a race condition with hardlinking on Windows during hoisted
installs, and a bug in the process waiter thread implementation causing
items to be skipped.
(For internal tracking: fixes STAB-850, STAB-873, STAB-881)