Claude Bot 3c7cb6fe29 fix(win): close libuv pipe handles before freeing to prevent handle_queue corruption
On Windows, libuv tracks all handles in the event loop's handle_queue
doubly-linked list. When uv_pipe_init() is called, the pipe is inserted
into this queue. If the pipe's memory is later freed without calling
uv_close() first, the queue retains dangling pointers. Subsequent
handle insertions (e.g. during Bun.spawn()) crash when traversing the
corrupted linked list in uv__queue_insert_tail (queue.h:81).

Three sites were freeing pipe handles without uv_close:

1. source.zig openPipe(): If pipe.open(fd) failed after pipe.init()
   succeeded, the pipe was destroyed directly. Now calls uv_close()
   with a callback that frees the memory.

2. process.zig WindowsSpawnOptions.Stdio.deinit(): When spawn failed,
   already-initialized pipes were freed without uv_close(). Now checks
   pipe.loop to determine if the pipe was registered with the event
   loop, and calls uv_close() if so.

3. process.zig spawnProcessWindows IPC handling: Unsupported IPC pipes
   in stdin/stdout/stderr were freed directly. Now uses the same safe
   close-then-destroy pattern.

Additionally, pipe allocations in stdio.zig are now zeroed so that the
loop field is reliably null before uv_pipe_init, enabling the init
detection in deinit.

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-02-14 10:07:24 +00:00
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What is Bun?

Bun is an all-in-one toolkit for JavaScript and TypeScript apps. It ships as a single executable called bun.

At its core is the Bun runtime, a fast JavaScript runtime designed as a drop-in replacement for Node.js. It's written in Zig and powered by JavaScriptCore under the hood, dramatically reducing startup times and memory usage.

bun run index.tsx             # TS and JSX supported out-of-the-box

The bun command-line tool also implements a test runner, script runner, and Node.js-compatible package manager. Instead of 1,000 node_modules for development, you only need bun. Bun's built-in tools are significantly faster than existing options and usable in existing Node.js projects with little to no changes.

bun test                      # run tests
bun run start                 # run the `start` script in `package.json`
bun install <pkg>             # install a package
bunx cowsay 'Hello, world!'   # execute a package

Install

Bun supports Linux (x64 & arm64), macOS (x64 & Apple Silicon) and Windows (x64).

Linux users — Kernel version 5.6 or higher is strongly recommended, but the minimum is 5.1.

x64 users — if you see "illegal instruction" or similar errors, check our CPU requirements

# with install script (recommended)
curl -fsSL https://bun.com/install | bash

# on windows
powershell -c "irm bun.sh/install.ps1 | iex"

# with npm
npm install -g bun

# with Homebrew
brew tap oven-sh/bun
brew install bun

# with Docker
docker pull oven/bun
docker run --rm --init --ulimit memlock=-1:-1 oven/bun

Upgrade

To upgrade to the latest version of Bun, run:

bun upgrade

Bun automatically releases a canary build on every commit to main. To upgrade to the latest canary build, run:

bun upgrade --canary

View canary build

Guides

Contributing

Refer to the Project > Contributing guide to start contributing to Bun.

License

Refer to the Project > License page for information about Bun's licensing.

Description
Bun is a fast, incrementally adoptable all-in-one JavaScript, TypeScript & JSX toolkit. Use individual tools like bun test or bun install in Node.js projects, or adopt the complete stack with a fast JavaScript runtime, bundler, test runner, and package manager built in. Bun aims for 100% Node.js compatibility.
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