### What does this PR do?
Adds a `bun run build:debug:noasan` run script and deletes the `bun run
build:debug:asan` rule.
### How did you verify your code works?
Ran the change locally.
## Summary
Implements authenticode signature stripping for Windows PE files when
using `bun build --compile`, ensuring that generated executables can be
properly signed with external tools after Bun embeds its data section.
## What Changed
### Core Implementation
- **Authenticode stripping**: Removes digital signatures from PE files
before adding the .bun section
- **Safe memory access**: Replaced all `@alignCast` operations with safe
unaligned access helpers to prevent crashes
- **Hardened PE parsing**: Added comprehensive bounds checking and
validation throughout
- **PE checksum recalculation**: Properly updates checksums after
modifications
### Key Features
- Always strips authenticode signatures when using `--compile` for
Windows (uses `.strip_always` mode)
- Validates PE file structure according to PE/COFF specification
- Handles overlapping memory regions safely during certificate removal
- Clears `IMAGE_DLLCHARACTERISTICS_FORCE_INTEGRITY` flag when stripping
signatures
- Ensures no unexpected overlay data remains after stripping
### Bug Fixes
- Fixed memory corruption bug using `copyBackwards` for overlapping
regions
- Fixed checksum calculation skipping 6 bytes instead of 4
- Added integer overflow protection in payload size calculations
- Fixed double alignment bug in `size_of_image` calculation
## Technical Details
The implementation follows the Windows PE/COFF specification and
includes:
- `StripMode` enum to control when signatures are stripped
(none/strip_if_signed/strip_always)
- Safe unaligned memory access helpers (`viewAtConst`, `viewAtMut`)
- Proper alignment helpers with overflow protection (`alignUpU32`,
`alignUpUsize`)
- Comprehensive error types for all failure cases
## Testing
- Passes all existing PE tests in
`test/regression/issue/pe-codesigning-integrity.test.ts`
- Compiles successfully with `bun run zig:check-windows`
- Properly integrated with StandaloneModuleGraph for Windows compilation
## Impact
This ensures Windows users can:
1. Use `bun build --compile` to create standalone executables
2. Sign the resulting executables with their own certificates
3. Distribute properly signed Windows binaries
Fixes issues where previously signed executables would have invalid
signatures after Bun added its embedded data.
---------
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>
## Summary
- Fixes unnecessary regeneration of `bun_dependency_versions.h` on every
CMake run
- Only writes the header file when content actually changes
## Test plan
Tested locally by running CMake configuration multiple times:
1. First run generates the file (shows "Updated dependency versions
header")
2. Subsequent runs skip writing (shows "Dependency versions header
unchanged")
3. File modification timestamp remains unchanged when content is the
same
4. File is properly regenerated when deleted or when content changes
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
### What does this PR do?
When we added "happy eyeballs" support to fetch(), it meant that
`onOpen` would not be called potentially for awhile. If the AbortSignal
is aborted between `connect()` and the socket becoming
readable/writable, then we would delay closing the connection until the
connection opens. Fixing that fixes#18536.
Separately, the `isHTTPS()` function used in abort and in request body
streams was not thread safe. This caused a crash when many redirects
happen simultaneously while either AbortSignal or request body messages
are in-flight.
This PR fixes https://github.com/oven-sh/bun/issues/14137
### How did you verify your code works?
There are tests
---------
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Ciro Spaciari <ciro.spaciari@gmail.com>
## Summary
This PR adds a `--randomize` flag to `bun test` that shuffles test
execution order. This helps developers catch test interdependencies and
identify flaky tests that may depend on execution order.
## Changes
- ✨ Added `--randomize` CLI flag to test command
- 🔀 Implemented test shuffling using `bun.fastRandom()` as PRNG seed
- 🧪 Added comprehensive tests to verify randomization behavior
- 📝 Tests are shuffled at the scheduling phase, properly handling
describe blocks and hooks
## Usage
```bash
# Run tests in random order
bun test --randomize
# Works with other test flags
bun test --randomize --bail
bun test mytest.test.ts --randomize
```
## Implementation Details
The randomization happens in `Order.zig`'s `generateOrderDescribe`
function, which shuffles the `current.entries.items` array when the
randomize flag is set. This ensures:
- All tests still run (just in different order)
- Hooks (beforeAll, afterAll, beforeEach, afterEach) maintain proper
relationships
- Describe blocks and their children are shuffled independently
- Each run uses a different random seed for varied execution orders
## Test Coverage
Added tests in `test/cli/test/test-randomize.test.ts` that verify:
- Tests run in random order with the flag
- All tests execute (none are skipped)
- Without the flag, tests run in consistent order
- Randomization works with describe blocks
## Example Output
```bash
# Without --randomize (consistent order)
$ bun test mytest.js
Running test 1
Running test 2
Running test 3
Running test 4
Running test 5
# With --randomize (different order each run)
$ bun test mytest.js --randomize
Running test 3
Running test 5
Running test 1
Running test 4
Running test 2
$ bun test mytest.js --randomize
Running test 2
Running test 4
Running test 5
Running test 1
Running test 3
```
🤖 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: pfg <pfg@pfg.pw>
## Summary
- Fixes double slashes appearing in error stack traces when `root_path`
ends with a trailing slash
- Followup to #22469 which added dimmed cwd prefixes to error messages
## Changes
- Use `strings.withoutTrailingSlash()` to strip any trailing separator
from `root_path` before adding the path separator
- This prevents paths like `/workspace//file.js` from appearing in error
messages
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
### What does this PR do?
Resume work on https://github.com/oven-sh/bun/pull/21898
### How did you verify your code works?
Manually tested on MacOS, Windows 11 and Ubuntu 25.04. CI changes are
needed for the tests
---------
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>
### What does this PR do?
Uprevs `libuv` to version `1.51.0`.
### How did you verify your code works?
CI passes.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jarred Sumner <jarred@jarredsumner.com>
## Summary
- Fixed `dns.resolve()` callback to pass 2 parameters instead of 3,
matching Node.js
- Fixed `dns.promises.resolve()` to return array of strings for A/AAAA
records instead of objects
- Added comprehensive regression tests
## What was wrong?
The `dns.resolve()` callback was incorrectly passing 3 parameters
`(error, hostname, results)` instead of Node.js's 2 parameters `(error,
results)`. Additionally, `dns.promises.resolve()` was returning objects
with `{address, family}` instead of plain string arrays for A/AAAA
records.
## How this fixes it
1. Removed the extra `hostname` parameter from the callback in
`dns.resolve()` for A/AAAA records
2. Changed promise version to use `promisifyResolveX(false)` instead of
`promisifyLookup()` to return string arrays
3. Applied same fixes to the `Resolver` class methods
## Test plan
- Added regression test `test/regression/issue/22712.test.ts` with 6
test cases
- All tests pass with the fix
- Verified existing DNS tests still pass
Fixes#22712🤖 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
- Clarifies help text for `--reporter` and `--reporter-outfile` flags
- Improves error messages when invalid reporter formats are specified
- Makes distinction between test reporters and coverage reporters
clearer
## Changes
1. Updated help text in `Arguments.zig` to better explain:
- What formats are currently available (only 'junit' for --reporter)
- Default behavior (console output for tests)
- Requirements (--reporter-outfile needed with --reporter=junit)
2. Improved error messages to list available options when invalid
formats are used
3. Updated CLI completions to match the new help text
## Test plan
- [x] Built and tested with `bun bd`
- [x] Verified help text displays correctly: `./build/debug/bun-debug
test --help`
- [x] Tested error message for invalid reporter:
`./build/debug/bun-debug test --reporter=json`
- [x] Tested error message for missing outfile: `./build/debug/bun-debug
test --reporter=junit`
- [x] Tested error message for invalid coverage reporter:
`./build/debug/bun-debug test --coverage-reporter=invalid`
- [x] Verified junit reporter still works: `./build/debug/bun-debug test
--reporter=junit --reporter-outfile=/tmp/junit.xml`
- [x] Verified lcov coverage reporter still works:
`./build/debug/bun-debug test --coverage --coverage-reporter=lcov`
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
## Summary
Fixes#22656, #11730, and #7116
Fixes a panic that occurred when macros returned collections containing
three or more arrays or objects.
## Problem
The issue was caused by hash table resizing during recursive processing.
When `this.run()` was called recursively to process nested
arrays/objects, it could add more entries to the `visited` map,
triggering a resize. This would invalidate the `_entry.value_ptr`
pointer obtained from `getOrPut`, leading to memory corruption and
crashes.
## Solution
The fix ensures we handle hash table resizing safely:
1. Use `getOrPut` to reserve an entry and store a placeholder
2. Process all children (which may trigger hash table resizing)
3. Create the final expression with all data
4. Use `put` to update the entry (safe even after resizing)
This approach is applied consistently to both arrays and objects.
## Verification
All three issues have been tested and verified as fixed:
### ✅#22656 - "Panic when returning collections with three or more
arrays or objects"
- **Before**: `panic(main thread): switch on corrupt value`
- **After**: Works correctly
### ✅#11730 - "Constructing deep objects in macros causes segfaults"
- **Before**: `Segmentation fault at address 0x8` with deep nested
structures
- **After**: Handles deep nesting without crashes
### ✅#7116 - "[macro] crash with large complex array"
- **Before**: Crashes with objects containing 50+ properties (hash table
stress)
- **After**: Processes large complex arrays successfully
## Test Plan
Added comprehensive regression tests that cover:
- Collections with 3+ arrays
- Collections with 3+ objects
- Deeply nested structures (5+ levels)
- Objects with many properties (50+) to stress hash table operations
- Mixed collections of arrays and objects
All tests pass with the fix applied.
🤖 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: Jarred Sumner <jarred@jarredsumner.com>
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
This is feature flagged and will not activate until Bun 1.3
- Makes `test.only()` throw an error in CI
- Unless `--update-snapshots` is passed:
- Makes `expect.toMatchSnapshot()` throw an error instead of adding a
new snapshot in CI
- Makes `expect.toMatchInlineSnapshot()` throw an error instead of
filling in the snapshot value in CI
---------
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?
This change was missing after changing semver core numbers to use u64.
Also fixes potentially serializing uninitialized bytes from resolution
unions.
### How did you verify your code works?
Added a test for migrating a bun.lockb with most features used.
## Summary
Adds a new `concurrentTestGlob` configuration option to bunfig.toml that
allows test files matching a glob pattern to automatically run with
concurrent test execution enabled. This provides granular control over
which tests run concurrently without modifying test files or using the
global `--concurrent` flag.
## Problem
Currently, enabling concurrent test execution in Bun requires either:
1. Using the `--concurrent` flag (affects ALL tests)
2. Manually adding `test.concurrent()` to individual test functions
(requires modifying test files)
This creates challenges for:
- Large codebases wanting to gradually migrate to concurrent testing
- Projects with mixed test types (unit tests that need isolation vs
integration tests that can run in parallel)
- CI/CD pipelines that want to optimize test execution without code
changes
## Solution
This PR introduces a `concurrentTestGlob` option in bunfig.toml that
automatically enables concurrent execution for test files matching a
specified glob pattern:
```toml
[test]
concurrentTestGlob = "**/concurrent-*.test.ts"
```
### Key Features
- ✅ Non-breaking: Completely opt-in via configuration
- ✅ Flexible: Use glob patterns to target specific test files or
directories
- ✅ Override-friendly: `--concurrent` flag still forces all tests to run
concurrently
- ✅ Zero code changes: No need to modify existing test files
## Implementation Details
### Code Changes
1. Added `concurrent_test_glob` field to `TestOptions` struct
(`src/cli.zig`)
2. Added parsing for `concurrentTestGlob` from bunfig.toml
(`src/bunfig.zig`)
3. Added `concurrent_test_glob` field to `TestRunner`
(`src/bun.js/test/jest.zig`)
4. Implemented `shouldFileRunConcurrently()` method that checks file
paths against the glob pattern
5. Updated test execution logic to apply concurrent mode based on glob
matching (`src/bun.js/test/ScopeFunctions.zig`)
### How It Works
- When a test file is loaded, its path is checked against the configured
glob pattern
- If it matches, all tests in that file run concurrently (as if
`--concurrent` was passed)
- Files not matching the pattern run sequentially as normal
- The `--concurrent` CLI flag overrides this behavior when specified
## Usage Examples
### Basic Usage
```toml
# bunfig.toml
[test]
concurrentTestGlob = "**/integration/*.test.ts"
```
### Multiple Patterns
```toml
[test]
concurrentTestGlob = [
"**/integration/*.test.ts",
"**/e2e/*.test.ts",
"**/concurrent-*.test.ts"
]
```
### Migration Strategy
Teams can gradually migrate to concurrent testing:
1. Start with integration tests: `"**/integration/*.test.ts"`
2. Add stable unit tests: `"**/fast-*.test.ts"`
3. Eventually migrate most tests except those requiring isolation
## Testing
Added comprehensive test coverage in
`test/cli/test/concurrent-test-glob.test.ts`:
- ✅ Tests matching glob patterns run concurrently (verified via
execution order logging)
- ✅ Tests not matching patterns run sequentially (verified via shared
state and execution order)
- ✅ `--concurrent` flag properly overrides the glob setting
- Tests use file system logging to deterministically verify concurrent
vs sequential execution
## Documentation
Complete documentation added:
- `docs/runtime/bunfig.md` - Configuration reference
- `docs/test/configuration.md` - Test configuration details
- `docs/test/examples/concurrent-test-glob.md` - Comprehensive example
with migration guide
## Performance Considerations
- Glob matching happens once per test file during loading
- Uses Bun's existing `glob.match()` implementation
- Minimal overhead: simple string pattern matching
- Future optimization: Could cache match results per file path
## Breaking Changes
None. This is a fully backward-compatible, opt-in feature.
## Checklist
- [x] Implementation complete and building
- [x] Tests passing
- [x] Documentation updated
- [x] No breaking changes
- [x] Follows existing code patterns
## Related Issues
This addresses common requests for more granular control over concurrent
test execution, particularly for large codebases migrating from other
test runners.
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)
---------
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Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
## Summary
Adds a new `test.serial()` API that forces tests to run serially even
when the `--concurrent` flag is passed. This is the opposite of
`test.concurrent()` which forces parallel execution.
## Motivation
Some tests genuinely need to run serially even in CI environments with
`--concurrent`:
- Database migration tests that must run in order
- Tests that modify shared global state
- Tests that use fixed ports or file system resources
- Tests that depend on timing or resource constraints
## Implementation
Changed `self_concurrent` from `bool` to `?bool`:
- `null` = default behavior (inherit from parent or use default)
- `true` = force concurrent execution
- `false` = force serial execution
## API Surface
```javascript
// Force serial execution
test.serial("database migration", async () => {
// This runs serially even with --concurrent flag
});
// All modifiers work
test.serial.skip("skip this serial test", () => {});
test.serial.todo("implement this serial test");
test.serial.only("only run this serial test", () => {});
test.serial.each([[1], [2]])("serial test %i", (n) => {});
test.serial.if(condition)("conditional serial", () => {});
// Works with describe too
describe.serial("serial test suite", () => {
test("test 1", () => {}); // runs serially
test("test 2", () => {}); // runs serially
});
// Explicit test-level settings override describe-level
describe.concurrent("concurrent suite", () => {
test.serial("this runs serially", () => {}); // serial wins
test("this runs concurrently", () => {});
});
```
## Test Coverage
Comprehensive tests added including:
- Basic `test.serial()` functionality
- All modifiers (skip, todo, only, each, if)
- `describe.serial()` blocks
- Mixing serial and concurrent tests in same describe block
- Nested describe blocks with conflicting settings
- Explicit overrides (test.serial in describe.concurrent and vice versa)
All 36 tests pass ✅
## Example
```javascript
// Without this PR - these tests might run in parallel with --concurrent
test("migrate database schema v1", async () => { await migrateV1(); });
test("migrate database schema v2", async () => { await migrateV2(); });
test("migrate database schema v3", async () => { await migrateV3(); });
// With this PR - guaranteed serial execution
test.serial("migrate database schema v1", async () => { await migrateV1(); });
test.serial("migrate database schema v2", async () => { await migrateV2(); });
test.serial("migrate database schema v3", async () => { await migrateV3(); });
```
🤖 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>
### What does this PR do?
Fixes https://github.com/oven-sh/bun/issues/21225
### 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?
Fixes the postgres benchmark so that it actually benchmarks query
performance on node and deno.
Before this PR, the `sql` function was just creating a tagged template
function, which involved connecting to the database. So basically bun
was doing queries, but node and deno were just connecting to the
postgres database over and over.
You can see from the first example in the docs that you're supposed to
call the default export in order to get back a function to use with
template literals: https://www.npmjs.com/package/postgres
### How did you verify your code works?
Ran it
shared lazy:
- cloneWeak didn't incrementWeak. fixed
- exposes a public Optional so you can do `bun.ptr.Shared(*T).Optional`
- the doc comment for 'take' said it set self to null. but it did not.
fixed.
- upgrading a weak to a strong incremented the weak instead of
decrementing it. fixed.
- adds a new method unsafeGetStrongFromPointer. this is currently unused
but used in pfg/describe-2:
a690faa60a/src/bun.js/api/Timer/EventLoopTimer.zig (L220-L223)
cppbind:
- moves the bindings to the root of the file at the top and puts raw at
the bottom
- fixes false_is_throw to return void instead of bool
- updates the help message
---------
Co-authored-by: taylor.fish <contact@taylor.fish>
## Summary
This PR fixes infinite recursion and stack overflow crashes when error
objects have circular references in their properties, particularly when
`error.stack = error`.
### The Problem
When an error object's stack property references itself or creates a
circular reference chain, Bun would enter infinite recursion and crash.
Common patterns that triggered this:
```javascript
const error = new Error();
error.stack = error; // Crash!
console.log(error);
// Or circular cause chains:
error1.cause = error2;
error2.cause = error1; // Crash!
```
### The Solution
Added proper circular reference detection at three levels:
1. **C++ bindings layer** (`bindings.cpp`): Skip processing if `stack`
property equals the error object itself
2. **VirtualMachine layer** (`VirtualMachine.zig`): Track visited errors
when printing error instances and their causes
3. **ConsoleObject layer** (`ConsoleObject.zig`): Properly coordinate
visited map between formatters
Circular references are now safely detected and printed as `[Circular]`
instead of causing crashes.
## Test plan
Added comprehensive tests in
`test/regression/issue/circular-error-stack.test.ts`:
- ✅ `error.stack = error` circular reference
- ✅ Nested circular references via error properties
- ✅ Circular cause chains (`error1.cause = error2; error2.cause =
error1`)
All tests pass:
```
bun test circular-error-stack.test.ts
✓ error with circular stack reference should not cause infinite recursion
✓ error with nested circular references should not cause infinite recursion
✓ error with circular reference in cause chain
```
Manual testing:
```javascript
// Before: Stack overflow crash
// After: Prints error normally
const error = new Error("Test");
error.stack = error;
console.log(error); // error: Test
```
🤖 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>
### What does this PR do?
Sometimes packages will use very large numbers exceeding max u32 for
major/minor/patch (usually patch). This pr changes each core number in
bun to u64.
Because we serialize package information to disk for the binary lockfile
and package manifests, this pr bumps the version of each. We don't need
to change anything other than the version for serialized package
manifests because they will invalidate and save the new version. For old
binary lockfiles, this pr adds logic for migrating to the new version.
Even if there are no changes, migrating will always save the new
lockfile. Unfortunately means there will be a one time invisible diff
for binary lockfile users, but this is better than installs failing to
work.
fixes#22881fixes#21793fixes#16041fixes#22891
resolves BUN-7MX, BUN-R4Q, BUN-WRB
### How did you verify your code works?
Manually, and added a test for migrating from an older binary lockfile.
---------
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
### What does this PR do?
This PR does two things.
First, it fixes a bug when using
[`jest-dom`](https://github.com/testing-library/jest-dom) where
expectation failures would break as `RECEIVED_COLOR` and
`EXPECTED_COLOR` are not properties of `ExpectMatcherContext`.
<img width="1216" height="139" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/26ef87c2-f763-4a46-83a3-d96c4c534f3d"
/>
Second, it adds some existing timer mock functions that were missing
from the `vi` object.
### How did you verify your code works?
I've added a test.
### What does this PR do?
### How did you verify your code works?
---------
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
## Summary
Implements `--cpu` and `--os` flags for `bun install` to filter optional
dependencies based on target architecture and operating system. This
allows developers to control which platform-specific optional
dependencies are installed.
## What Changed
### Core Implementation
- Added `--cpu` and `--os` flags to `bun install` command that accept
multiple values
- Multiple values combine with bitwise OR (e.g., `--cpu x64 --cpu arm64`
matches packages for either architecture)
- Updated `isDisabled` methods throughout the codebase to accept custom
CPU/OS targets
- Removed deprecated `isMatch` methods in favor of `isMatchWithTarget`
for consistency
### Files Modified
- `src/install/npm.zig` - Removed `isMatch` methods, standardized on
`isMatchWithTarget`
- `src/install/PackageManager/CommandLineArguments.zig` - Parse and
validate multiple flag values
- `src/install/PackageManager/PackageManagerOptions.zig` - Pass CPU/OS
options through
- `src/install/lockfile/Package.zig` & `Package/Meta.zig` - Updated
`isDisabled` signatures
- `src/install/lockfile/Tree.zig` & `lockfile.zig` - Updated call sites
## Usage Examples
```bash
# Install only x64 dependencies
bun install --cpu x64
# Install dependencies for both x64 and arm64
bun install --cpu x64 --cpu arm64
# Install Linux-specific dependencies
bun install --os linux
# Install for multiple platforms
bun install --cpu x64 --cpu arm64 --os linux --os darwin
```
## Test Plan
✅ All 10 tests pass in `test/cli/install/bun-install-cpu-os.test.ts`:
- CPU architecture filtering
- OS filtering
- Combined CPU and OS filtering
- Multiple CPU architectures support
- Multiple operating systems support
- Multiple CPU and OS combinations
- Error handling for invalid values
- Negated CPU/OS support (`!arm64`, `!linux`)
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)
Co-authored-by: Jarred Sumner <jarred@jarredsumner.com>
### What does this PR do?
#22534 made `--test-name-pattern` more logical and not start with empty
` ` (space), so fixing the built regex to make it work still for old and
new bun
The other main issue that that pr did was make start events for filtered
out names which means it appears to rerun them all even when in reality
it doesn't as they are skipped
Also in theory with concurrent test, if there's an error after another
started it would be assigned to the wrong test because we don't get test
id's in the error event, so its just assumed its from the last started
one which with parallel means it isn't correct.
### How did you verify your code works?
## Summary
- Moved `jsxSideEffects` (now `sideEffects`) from tsconfig.json compiler
options to the jsx object in the build API
- Updated all jsx bundler tests to use the new jsx.sideEffects
configuration
- Added jsx configuration parsing to JSBundler.zig
## Changes
- Removed jsxSideEffects parsing from `src/resolver/tsconfig_json.zig`
- Added jsx configuration parsing to `src/bun.js/api/JSBundler.zig`
Config.fromJS
- Fixed TransformOptions to properly pass jsx config to the transpiler
in `src/bundler/bundle_v2.zig`
- Updated TypeScript definitions to include jsx field in BuildConfigBase
- Modified test framework to support jsx configuration in API mode
- Updated all jsx tests to use `sideEffects` in the jsx config instead
of `side_effects` in tsconfig
## Test plan
All 27 jsx bundler tests are passing with the new configuration
structure.
🤖 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 implements the Node.js-compatible `process.report.getReport()`
API on Windows, which was previously returning a "Not implemented"
message.
fixes https://github.com/rollup/rollup/issues/6119fixes#11992
## Changes
### ✅ Implementation
- Full Windows support for `process.report.getReport()`
- Uses libuv APIs (`uv_cpu_info`, `uv_interface_addresses`) for
cross-platform consistency
- Refactored to share common code between Windows and POSIX platforms
(~150 lines reduced)
- Returns comprehensive diagnostic information matching Node.js
structure
### 📊 Key Features Implemented
**System Information:**
- ✅ CPU information: All processors with model, speed, and usage times
- ✅ Network interfaces: Complete with MAC addresses, IPs, and netmasks
- ✅ Memory statistics: RSS, page faults, system memory info using
Windows APIs
- ✅ Process information: PID, CWD, command line arguments, Windows
version detection
**JavaScript Runtime:**
- ✅ JavaScript heap information with all V8-compatible heap spaces
- ✅ JavaScript stack traces with proper formatting
- ✅ Environment variables
- ✅ Loaded DLLs in sharedObjects array
### 🧪 Testing
- Added comprehensive test suite with 10 tests covering all report
sections
- Tests validate structure, data types, and field presence
- All tests passing on Windows
```bash
bun test test/js/node/process/process.test.js -t "process.report"
# 10 pass, 0 fail
```
## Compatibility
Matches Node.js report structure exactly on Windows:
- Correctly omits `userLimits` and `uvthreadResourceUsage` (not present
in Node.js on Windows)
- Includes Windows-specific `libUrl` field in release object
- Returns same top-level keys as Node.js
## Example Output
```javascript
const report = process.report.getReport();
console.log(report.header.cpus.length); // 24
console.log(report.header.osVersion); // "Windows 11 Pro"
console.log(report.sharedObjects.filter(so => so.includes('.dll')).length); // 36+
```
## Test Plan
```bash
# Run the new tests
bun bd test test/js/node/process/process.test.js -t "process.report"
# Verify output structure matches Node.js
node -e "console.log(Object.keys(process.report.getReport()).sort())"
bun bd -e "console.log(Object.keys(process.report.getReport()).sort())"
```
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)
Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
---------
Co-authored-by: Zack Radisic <zack@theradisic.com>
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
# bun test
Fixes#8768, Fixes#14624, Fixes#20100, Fixes#19875, Fixes#14135,
Fixes#20980, Fixes#21830, Fixes#5738, Fixes#19758, Fixes#12782,
Fixes#5585, Fixes#9548, Might fix 5996
# New features:
## Concurrent tests
Concurrent tests allow running multiple async tests at the same time.
```ts
// concurrent.test.ts
test.concurrent("this takes a while 1", async () => {
await Bun.sleep(1000);
});
test.concurrent("this takes a while 2", async () => {
await Bun.sleep(1000);
});
test.concurrent("this takes a while 3", async () => {
await Bun.sleep(1000);
});
```
Without `.concurrent`, this test file takes 3 seconds to run because
each one has to wait for the one before it to finish before it can
start.
With `.concurrent`, this file takes 1 second because all three sleeps
can run at once.
```
$> bun-after test concurrent
concurrent.test.js:
✓ this takes a while 1 [1005.36ms]
✓ this takes a while 2 [1012.51ms]
✓ this takes a while 3 [1013.15ms]
3 pass
0 fail
Ran 3 tests across 1 file. [1081.00ms]
```
To run all tests as concurrent, pass the `--concurrent` flag when
running tests.
Limitations:
- concurrent tests cannot attribute `expect()` call counts to the test,
meaning `expect.assertions()` does not function
- concurrent tests cannot use `toMatchSnapshot`. `toMatchInlineSnapshot`
is still supported.
- `beforeAll`/`afterAll` will never be executed concurrently.
`beforeEach`/`afterEach` will.
## Chaining
Chaining multiple describe/test qualifiers is now allowed. Previously,
it would fail.
```ts
// chaining-test-qualifiers.test.ts
test.failing.each([1, 2, 3])("each %i", async i => {
throw new Error(i);
});
```
```
$> bun-after test chaining-test-qualifiers
a.test.js:
✓ each 1
✓ each 2
✓ each 3
```
# Breaking changes:
## Describe ordering
Previously, describe callbacks were called immediately. Now, they are
deferred until the outer callback has finished running. The previous
order matched Jest. The new order is similar to Vitest, but does not
match exactly.
```ts
// describe-ordering.test.ts
describe("outer", () => {
console.log("outer before");
describe("inner", () => {
console.log("inner");
});
console.log("outer after");
});
```
Before, this would print
```
$> bun-before test describe-ordering
outer before
inner
outer after
```
Now, this will print
```
$> bun-after test describe-ordering
outer before
outer after
inner
```
## Test ordering
Describes are no longer always called before tests. They are now in
order.
```ts
// test-ordering.test.ts
test("one", () => {});
describe("scope", () => {
test("two", () => {});
});
test("three", () => {});
```
Before, this would print
```
$> bun-before test test-ordering
✓ scope > two
✓ one
✓ three
```
Now, this will print
```
$> bun-after test test-ordering
✓ one
✓ scope > two
✓ three
```
## Preload hooks
Previously, beforeAll in a preload ran before the first file and
afterAll ran after the last file. Now, beforeAll will run at the start
of each file and afterAll will run at the end of each file. This
behaviour matches Jest and Vitest.
```ts
// preload.ts
beforeAll(() => console.log("preload: beforeAll"));
afterAll(() => console.log("preload: afterAll"));
```
```ts
// preload-ordering-1.test.ts
test("demonstration file 1", () => {});
```
```ts
// preload-ordering-2.test.ts
test("demonstration file 2", () => {});
```
```
$> bun-before test --preload=./preload preload-ordering
preload-ordering-1.test.ts:
preload: beforeAll
✓ demonstration file 1
preload-ordering-2.test.ts:
✓ demonstration file 2
preload: afterAll
```
```
$> bun-after test --preload=./preload preload-ordering
preload-ordering-1.test.ts:
preload: beforeAll
✓ demonstration file 1
preload: afterAll
preload-ordering-2.test.ts:
preload: beforeAll
✓ demonstration file 2
preload: afterAll
```
## Describe failures
Current behaviour is that when an error is thrown inside a describe
callback, none of the tests declared there will run. Now, describes
declared inside will also not run. The new behaviour matches the
behaviour of Jest and Vitest.
```ts
// describe-failures.test.ts
describe("erroring describe", () => {
test("this test does not run because its describe failed", () => {
expect(true).toBe(true);
});
describe("inner describe", () => {
console.log("does the inner describe callback get called?");
test("does the inner test run?", () => {
expect(true).toBe(true);
});
});
throw new Error("uh oh!");
});
```
Before, the inner describe callback would be called and the inner test
would run, although the outer test would not:
```
$> bun-before test describe-failures
describe-failures.test.ts:
does the inner describe callback get called?
# Unhandled error between tests
-------------------------------
11 | throw new Error("uh oh!");
^
error: uh oh!
-------------------------------
✓ erroring describe > inner describe > does the inner test run?
1 pass
0 fail
1 error
1 expect() calls
Ran 1 test across 1 file.
Exited with code [1]
```
Now, the inner describe callback is not called at all.
```
$> bun-after test describe-failures
describe-failures.test.ts:
# Unhandled error between tests
-------------------------------
11 | throw new Error("uh oh!");
^
error: uh oh!
-------------------------------
0 pass
0 fail
1 error
Ran 0 tests across 1 file.
Exited with code [1]
```
## Hook failures
Previously, a beforeAll failure would skip subsequent beforeAll()s, the
test, and the afterAll. Now, a beforeAll failure skips any subsequent
beforeAll()s and the test, but not the afterAll.
```js
beforeAll(() => {
throw new Error("before all: uh oh!");
});
test("my test", () => {
console.log("my test");
});
afterAll(() => console.log("after all"));
```
```
$> bun-before test hook-failures
Error: before all: uh oh!
$> bun-after test hook-failures
Error: before all: uh oh!
after all
```
Previously, an async beforeEach failure would still allow the test to
run. Now, an async beforeEach failure will prevent the test from running
```js
beforeEach(() => {
await 0;
throw "uh oh!";
});
it("the test", async () => {
console.log("does the test run?");
});
```
```
$> bun-before test async-beforeeach-failure
does the test run?
error: uh oh!
uh oh!
✗ the test
$> bun-after test async-beforeeach-failure
error: uh oh!
uh oh!
✗ the test
```
## Hook timeouts
Hooks will now time out, and can have their timeout configured in an
options parameter
```js
beforeAll(async () => {
await Bun.sleep(1000);
}, 500);
test("my test", () => {
console.log("ran my test");
});
```
```
$> bun-before test hook-timeouts
ran my test
Ran 1 test across 1 file. [1011.00ms]
$> bun-after test hook-timeouts
✗ my test [501.15ms]
^ a beforeEach/afterEach hook timed out for this test.
```
## Hook execution order
beforeAll will now execute before the tests in the scope, rather than
immediately when it is called.
```ts
describe("d1", () => {
beforeAll(() => {
console.log("<d1>");
});
test("test", () => {
console.log(" test");
});
afterAll(() => {
console.log("</d1>");
});
});
describe("d2", () => {
beforeAll(() => {
console.log("<d2>");
});
test("test", () => {
console.log(" test");
});
afterAll(() => {
console.log("</d2>");
});
});
```
```
$> bun-before test ./beforeall-ordering.test.ts
<d1>
<d2>
test
</d1>
test
</d2>
$> bun-after test ./beforeall-ordering.test.ts
<d1>
test
</d1>
<d2>
test
</d2>
```
## test inside test
test() inside test() now errors rather than silently failing. Support
for this may be added in the future.
```ts
test("outer", () => {
console.log("outer");
test("inner", () => {
console.log("inner");
});
});
```
```
$> bun-before test
outer
✓ outer [0.06ms]
1 pass
0 fail
Ran 1 test across 1 file. [8.00ms]
$> bun-after test
outer
1 | test("outer", () => {
2 | console.log("outer");
3 | test("inner", () => {
^
error: Cannot call test() inside a test. Call it inside describe() instead.
✗ outer [0.71ms]
0 pass
1 fail
```
## afterAll inside test
afterAll inside a test is no longer allowed
```ts
test("test 1", () => {
afterAll(() => console.log("afterAll"));
console.log("test 1");
});
test("test 2", () => {
console.log("test 2");
});
```
```
$> bun-before
test 1
✓ test 1 [0.05ms]
test 2
✓ test 2
afterAll
$> bun-after
error: Cannot call afterAll() inside a test. Call it inside describe() instead.
✗ test 1 [1.00ms]
test 2
✓ test 2 [0.20ms]
```
# Only inside only
Previously, an outer 'describe.only' would run all tests inside it even
if there was an inner 'test.only'. Now, only the innermost only tests
are executed.
```ts
describe.only("outer", () => {
test("one", () => console.log("should not run"));
test.only("two", () => console.log("should run"));
});
```
```
$> bun-before test
should not run
should run
$> bun-after test
should run
```
With no inner only, the outer only will still run all tests:
```ts
describe.only("outer", () => {
test("test 1", () => console.log("test 1 runs"));
test("test 2", () => console.log("test 2 runs"));
});
```
# Potential follow-up work
- [ ] for concurrent tests, display headers before console.log messages
saying which test it is for
- this will need async context or similar
- refActiveExecutionEntry should also be able to know the current test
even in test.concurrent
- [ ] `test("rerun me", () => { console.log("run one time!"); });`
`--rerun-each=3` <- this runs the first and third time but not the
second time. fix.
- [ ] should to cache the JSValue created from
DoneCallback.callAsFunction
- [ ] implement retry and rerun params for tests.
- [ ] Remove finalizer on ScopeFunctions.zig by storing the data in 3
jsvalues passed in bind rather than using a custom class. We should also
migrate off of the ClassGenerator for ScopeFunctions
- [ ] support concurrent limit, how many concurrent tests are allowed to
run at a time. ie `--concurrent-limit=25`
- [ ] flag to run tests in random order
- [ ] `test.failing` should have its own style in the same way
`test.todo` passing marks as 'todo' insetead of 'passing'. right now
it's `✓` which is confusing.
- [ ] remove all instances of bun.jsc.Jest.Jest.current
- [ ] test options should be in BunTestRoot
- [ ] we will need one global still, stored in the globalobject/vm/?.
but it should not be a Jest instance.
- [ ] consider allowing test() inside test(), as well as afterEach and
afterAll. could even allow describe() too. to do this we would switch
from indices to pointers and they would be in a linked list. they would
be allocated in memorypools for perf/locality. some special
consideration is needed for making sure repeated tests lose their
temporary items. this could also improve memory usage soomewhat.
- [ ] consider using a jsc Bound Function rather than CallbackWithArgs.
bound functions allow adding arguments and they are only one value for
GC instead of many. and this removes our unnecessary three copies.
- [ ] eliminate Strong.Safe. we should be using a C++ class instead.
- [ ] consider modifying the junit reporter to print the whole describe
tree at the end instead of trying to output as test results come in. and
move it into its own file.
- [ ] expect_call_count/expect_assertions is confusing. rename to
`expect_calls`, `assert_expect_calls`. or something.
- [ ] Should make line_no be an enum with a none option and a function
to get if line nombers are enabled
- [ ] looks like we don't need to use file_id anymore (remove
`bun.jsc.Jest.Jest.runner.?.getOrPutFile(file_path).file_id;`, store the
file path directly)
- [ ] 'dot' test reporter like vitest?
- [ ] `test.failing.if(false)` errors because it can't replace mode
'failing' with mode 'skip'. this should probably be allowed instead.
- [ ] trigger timeout termination exception for `while(true) {}`
- [ ] clean up unused callbacks. as soon as we advance to the next
execution group, we can fully clean out the previous one. sometimes
within an execution sequence we can do the same.
- clean by swapping held values with undefined
- [ ] structure cache for performance for donecallback/scopefunctions
- [ ] consider migrating CallbackWithArgs to be a bound function. the
length of the bound function can exclude the specified args.
- [ ] setting both result and maybe_skip is not ideal, maybe there
should be a function to do both at once?
- [ ] try using a linked list rather than arraylist for describe/test
children, see how it affects performance
- [ ] consider a memory pool for describescope/executionentry. test if
it improves performance.
- [ ] consider making RefDataValue methods return the reason for failure
rather than ?value. that way we can improve error messages. the reason
could be a string or it could be a defined error set
- [ ] instead of 'description orelse (unnamed)', let's have description
default to 'unnamed' and not free it if it === the global that defines
that
- [ ] Add a phase before ordering results that inherits properties to
the parents. (eg inherit only from the child and inherit has_callback
from the child. and has_callback can be on describe/test individually
rather than on base). then we won't have that happening in an init()
function (terrible!)
- [ ] this test was incidentally passing because resolves.pass() wasn't
waiting for promise
```
test("fetching with Request object - issue #1527", async () => {
const server = createServer((req, res) => {
res.end();
}).listen(0);
try {
await once(server, "listening");
const body = JSON.stringify({ foo: "bar" });
const request = new Request(`http://localhost:${server.address().port}`,
{
method: "POST",
body,
});
expect(fetch(request)).resolves.pass();
} finally {
server.closeAllConnections();
}
});
```
- [ ] the error "expect.assertions() is not supported in the describe
phase, in concurrent tests, between tests, or after test execution has
completed" is not very good. we should be able to identify which of
those it is and print the right error for the context
- [ ] consider: instead of storing weak pointers to BunTest, we can
instead give the instance an id and check that it is correct when
getting the current bun test instance from the ref
- [ ] auto_killer: add three layers of auto_killer:
- preload (includes file & test)
- file (includes test)
- test
- that way at the end of the test, we kill the test processes. at the
end of the file, we kill the file processes. at the end of all, we kill
anything remaining.
AsyncLocalStorage
- store active_id & refdatavalue. active_id is a replacement for the
above weak pointers thing. refdatavalue is for determining which test it
is. this probably fits in 2×u64
- use for auto_killer so timeouts can kill even in concurrent tests
---------
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
### What does this PR do?
### How did you verify your code works?
---------
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>