bun-types 1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554 → 1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606

This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
package/docs/api/fetch.md CHANGED
@@ -337,7 +337,7 @@ This will print the request and response headers to your terminal:
337
337
  ```sh
338
338
  [fetch] > HTTP/1.1 GET http://example.com/
339
339
  [fetch] > Connection: keep-alive
340
- [fetch] > User-Agent: Bun/1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554
340
+ [fetch] > User-Agent: Bun/1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606
341
341
  [fetch] > Accept: */*
342
342
  [fetch] > Host: example.com
343
343
  [fetch] > Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br
package/docs/api/spawn.md CHANGED
@@ -110,7 +110,7 @@ You can read results from the subprocess via the `stdout` and `stderr` propertie
110
110
  ```ts
111
111
  const proc = Bun.spawn(["bun", "--version"]);
112
112
  const text = await new Response(proc.stdout).text();
113
- console.log(text); // => "1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554"
113
+ console.log(text); // => "1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606"
114
114
  ```
115
115
 
116
116
  Configure the output stream by passing one of the following values to `stdout/stderr`:
package/docs/api/sql.md CHANGED
@@ -520,6 +520,7 @@ The client provides typed errors for different failure scenarios:
520
520
  | `ERR_POSTGRES_SERVER_ERROR` | General error from PostgreSQL server |
521
521
  | `ERR_POSTGRES_INVALID_QUERY_BINDING` | Invalid parameter binding |
522
522
  | `ERR_POSTGRES_QUERY_CANCELLED` | Query was cancelled |
523
+ | `ERR_POSTGRES_NOT_TAGGED_CALL` | Query was called without a tagged call |
523
524
 
524
525
  ### Data Type Errors
525
526
 
@@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ Use `bun publish` to publish a package to the npm registry.
7
7
  $ bun publish
8
8
 
9
9
  ## Output
10
- bun publish v1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554 (ca7428e9)
10
+ bun publish v1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606 (ca7428e9)
11
11
 
12
12
  packed 203B package.json
13
13
  packed 224B README.md
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ $ bunx nuxi init my-nuxt-app
9
9
  ✔ Which package manager would you like to use?
10
10
  bun
11
11
  ◐ Installing dependencies...
12
- bun install v1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554 (16b4bf34)
12
+ bun install v1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606 (16b4bf34)
13
13
  + @nuxt/devtools@0.8.2
14
14
  + nuxt@3.7.0
15
15
  785 packages installed [2.67s]
@@ -70,7 +70,7 @@ In the Render UI, provide the following values during web service creation:
70
70
  | ----------------- | ------------- |
71
71
  | **Runtime** | `Node` |
72
72
  | **Build Command** | `bun install` |
73
- | **Start Command** | `bun app.js` |
73
+ | **Start Command** | `bun app.ts` |
74
74
 
75
75
  ---
76
76
 
@@ -0,0 +1,68 @@
1
+ ---
2
+ name: Extract links from a webpage using HTMLRewriter
3
+ ---
4
+
5
+ ## Extract links from a webpage
6
+
7
+ Bun's [HTMLRewriter](https://bun.sh/docs/api/html-rewriter) API can be used to efficiently extract links from HTML content. It works by chaining together CSS selectors to match the elements, text, and attributes you want to process. This is a simple example of how to extract links from a webpage. You can pass `.transform` a `Response`, `Blob`, or `string`.
8
+
9
+ ```ts
10
+ async function extractLinks(url: string) {
11
+ const links = new Set<string>();
12
+ const response = await fetch(url);
13
+
14
+ const rewriter = new HTMLRewriter().on("a[href]", {
15
+ element(el) {
16
+ const href = el.getAttribute("href");
17
+ if (href) {
18
+ links.add(href);
19
+ }
20
+ },
21
+ });
22
+
23
+ // Wait for the response to be processed
24
+ await rewriter.transform(response).blob();
25
+ console.log([...links]); // ["https://bun.sh", "/docs", ...]
26
+ }
27
+
28
+ // Extract all links from the Bun website
29
+ await extractLinks("https://bun.sh");
30
+ ```
31
+
32
+ ---
33
+
34
+ ## Convert relative URLs to absolute
35
+
36
+ When scraping websites, you often want to convert relative URLs (like `/docs`) to absolute URLs. Here's how to handle URL resolution:
37
+
38
+ ```ts
39
+ async function extractLinksFromURL(url: string) {
40
+ const response = await fetch(url);
41
+ const links = new Set<string>();
42
+
43
+ const rewriter = new HTMLRewriter().on("a[href]", {
44
+ element(el) {
45
+ const href = el.getAttribute("href");
46
+ if (href) {
47
+ // Convert relative URLs to absolute
48
+ try {
49
+ const absoluteURL = new URL(href, url).href;
50
+ links.add(absoluteURL);
51
+ } catch {
52
+ links.add(href);
53
+ }
54
+ }
55
+ },
56
+ });
57
+
58
+ // Wait for the response to be processed
59
+ await rewriter.transform(response).blob();
60
+ return [...links];
61
+ }
62
+
63
+ const websiteLinks = await extractLinksFromURL("https://example.com");
64
+ ```
65
+
66
+ ---
67
+
68
+ See [Docs > API > HTMLRewriter](https://bun.sh/docs/api/html-rewriter) for complete documentation on HTML transformation with Bun.
@@ -0,0 +1,93 @@
1
+ ---
2
+ name: Extract social share images and Open Graph tags
3
+ ---
4
+
5
+ ## Extract social share images and Open Graph tags
6
+
7
+ Bun's [HTMLRewriter](https://bun.sh/docs/api/html-rewriter) API can be used to efficiently extract social share images and Open Graph metadata from HTML content. This is particularly useful for building link preview features, social media cards, or web scrapers. We can use HTMLRewriter to match CSS selectors to HTML elements, text, and attributes we want to process.
8
+
9
+ ```ts
10
+ interface SocialMetadata {
11
+ title?: string;
12
+ description?: string;
13
+ image?: string;
14
+ url?: string;
15
+ siteName?: string;
16
+ type?: string;
17
+ }
18
+
19
+ async function extractSocialMetadata(url: string): Promise<SocialMetadata> {
20
+ const metadata: SocialMetadata = {};
21
+ const response = await fetch(url);
22
+
23
+ const rewriter = new HTMLRewriter()
24
+ // Extract Open Graph meta tags
25
+ .on('meta[property^="og:"]', {
26
+ element(el) {
27
+ const property = el.getAttribute("property");
28
+ const content = el.getAttribute("content");
29
+ if (property && content) {
30
+ // Convert "og:image" to "image" etc.
31
+ const key = property.replace("og:", "") as keyof SocialMetadata;
32
+ metadata[key] = content;
33
+ }
34
+ },
35
+ })
36
+ // Extract Twitter Card meta tags as fallback
37
+ .on('meta[name^="twitter:"]', {
38
+ element(el) {
39
+ const name = el.getAttribute("name");
40
+ const content = el.getAttribute("content");
41
+ if (name && content) {
42
+ const key = name.replace("twitter:", "") as keyof SocialMetadata;
43
+ // Only use Twitter Card data if we don't have OG data
44
+ if (!metadata[key]) {
45
+ metadata[key] = content;
46
+ }
47
+ }
48
+ },
49
+ })
50
+ // Fallback to regular meta tags
51
+ .on('meta[name="description"]', {
52
+ element(el) {
53
+ const content = el.getAttribute("content");
54
+ if (content && !metadata.description) {
55
+ metadata.description = content;
56
+ }
57
+ },
58
+ })
59
+ // Fallback to title tag
60
+ .on("title", {
61
+ text(text) {
62
+ if (!metadata.title) {
63
+ metadata.title = text.text;
64
+ }
65
+ },
66
+ });
67
+
68
+ // Process the response
69
+ await rewriter.transform(response).blob();
70
+
71
+ // Convert relative image URLs to absolute
72
+ if (metadata.image && !metadata.image.startsWith("http")) {
73
+ try {
74
+ metadata.image = new URL(metadata.image, url).href;
75
+ } catch {
76
+ // Keep the original URL if parsing fails
77
+ }
78
+ }
79
+
80
+ return metadata;
81
+ }
82
+
83
+ // Example usage
84
+ const metadata = await extractSocialMetadata("https://bun.sh");
85
+ console.log(metadata);
86
+ // {
87
+ // title: "Bun — A fast all-in-one JavaScript runtime",
88
+ // description: "Bundle, transpile, install and run JavaScript & TypeScript projects — all in Bun. Bun is a fast all-in-one JavaScript runtime & toolkit designed for speed, complete with a bundler, test runner, and Node.js-compatible package manager.",
89
+ // image: "https://bun.sh/share.jpg",
90
+ // type: "website",
91
+ // ...
92
+ // }
93
+ ```
@@ -16,7 +16,7 @@ This will add the package to `peerDependencies` in `package.json`.
16
16
  ```json-diff
17
17
  {
18
18
  "peerDependencies": {
19
- + "@types/bun": "^1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554"
19
+ + "@types/bun": "^1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606"
20
20
  }
21
21
  }
22
22
  ```
@@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ Running `bun install` will install peer dependencies by default, unless marked o
28
28
  ```json-diff
29
29
  {
30
30
  "peerDependencies": {
31
- "@types/bun": "^1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554"
31
+ "@types/bun": "^1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606"
32
32
  },
33
33
  "peerDependenciesMeta": {
34
34
  + "@types/bun": {
@@ -97,7 +97,7 @@ $ bun update
97
97
  $ bun update @types/bun --latest
98
98
 
99
99
  # Update a dependency to a specific version
100
- $ bun update @types/bun@1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554
100
+ $ bun update @types/bun@1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606
101
101
 
102
102
  # Update all dependencies to the latest versions
103
103
  $ bun update --latest
@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ Here's what the output of a typical test run looks like. In this case, there are
21
21
 
22
22
  ```sh
23
23
  $ bun test
24
- bun test v1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554 (9c68abdb)
24
+ bun test v1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606 (9c68abdb)
25
25
 
26
26
  test.test.js:
27
27
  ✓ add [0.87ms]
@@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ To only run certain test files, pass a positional argument to `bun test`. The ru
47
47
 
48
48
  ```sh
49
49
  $ bun test test3
50
- bun test v1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554 (9c68abdb)
50
+ bun test v1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606 (9c68abdb)
51
51
 
52
52
  test3.test.js:
53
53
  ✓ add [1.40ms]
@@ -85,7 +85,7 @@ Adding `-t add` will only run tests with "add" in the name. This works with test
85
85
 
86
86
  ```sh
87
87
  $ bun test -t add
88
- bun test v1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554 (9c68abdb)
88
+ bun test v1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606 (9c68abdb)
89
89
 
90
90
  test.test.js:
91
91
  ✓ add [1.79ms]
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ The first time this test is executed, Bun will evaluate the value passed into `e
18
18
 
19
19
  ```sh
20
20
  $ bun test test/snap
21
- bun test v1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554 (9c68abdb)
21
+ bun test v1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606 (9c68abdb)
22
22
 
23
23
  test/snap.test.ts:
24
24
  ✓ snapshot [1.48ms]
@@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ Later, when this test file is executed again, Bun will read the snapshot file an
61
61
 
62
62
  ```sh
63
63
  $ bun test
64
- bun test v1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554 (9c68abdb)
64
+ bun test v1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606 (9c68abdb)
65
65
 
66
66
  test/snap.test.ts:
67
67
  ✓ snapshot [1.05ms]
@@ -78,7 +78,7 @@ To update snapshots, use the `--update-snapshots` flag.
78
78
 
79
79
  ```sh
80
80
  $ bun test --update-snapshots
81
- bun test v1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554 (9c68abdb)
81
+ bun test v1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606 (9c68abdb)
82
82
 
83
83
  test/snap.test.ts:
84
84
  ✓ snapshot [0.86ms]
@@ -29,7 +29,7 @@ To regenerate snapshots, use the `--update-snapshots` flag.
29
29
 
30
30
  ```sh
31
31
  $ bun test --update-snapshots
32
- bun test v1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554 (9c68abdb)
32
+ bun test v1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606 (9c68abdb)
33
33
 
34
34
  test/snap.test.ts:
35
35
  ✓ snapshot [0.86ms]
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ name: Get the current Bun version
5
5
  Get the current version of Bun in a semver format.
6
6
 
7
7
  ```ts#index.ts
8
- Bun.version; // => "1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554"
8
+ Bun.version; // => "1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606"
9
9
  ```
10
10
 
11
11
  ---
@@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ Kernel version 5.6 or higher is strongly recommended, but the minimum is 5.1. Us
14
14
  ```bash#macOS/Linux_(curl)
15
15
  $ curl -fsSL https://bun.sh/install | bash # for macOS, Linux, and WSL
16
16
  # to install a specific version
17
- $ curl -fsSL https://bun.sh/install | bash -s "bun-v1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554"
17
+ $ curl -fsSL https://bun.sh/install | bash -s "bun-v1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606"
18
18
  ```
19
19
 
20
20
  ```bash#npm
@@ -147,6 +147,7 @@ If the command runs successfully but `bun --version` is not recognized, it means
147
147
  [System.EnvironmentVariableTarget]::User
148
148
  )
149
149
  ```
150
+
150
151
  After running the command, restart your terminal and test with `bun --version`
151
152
 
152
153
  {% /details %}
@@ -188,10 +189,10 @@ Since Bun is a single binary, you can install older versions of Bun by re-runnin
188
189
 
189
190
  ### Installing a specific version of Bun on Linux/Mac
190
191
 
191
- To install a specific version of Bun, you can pass the git tag of the version you want to install to the install script, such as `bun-v1.2.0` or `bun-v1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554`.
192
+ To install a specific version of Bun, you can pass the git tag of the version you want to install to the install script, such as `bun-v1.2.0` or `bun-v1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606`.
192
193
 
193
194
  ```sh
194
- $ curl -fsSL https://bun.sh/install | bash -s "bun-v1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554"
195
+ $ curl -fsSL https://bun.sh/install | bash -s "bun-v1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606"
195
196
  ```
196
197
 
197
198
  ### Installing a specific version of Bun on Windows
@@ -200,7 +201,7 @@ On Windows, you can install a specific version of Bun by passing the version num
200
201
 
201
202
  ```sh
202
203
  # PowerShell:
203
- $ iex "& {$(irm https://bun.sh/install.ps1)} -Version 1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554"
204
+ $ iex "& {$(irm https://bun.sh/install.ps1)} -Version 1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606"
204
205
  ```
205
206
 
206
207
  ## Downloading Bun binaries directly
@@ -219,11 +220,12 @@ For convenience, here are download links for the latest version:
219
220
  - [`bun-linux-aarch64.zip`](https://github.com/oven-sh/bun/releases/latest/download/bun-linux-aarch64.zip)
220
221
  - [`bun-linux-aarch64-musl.zip`](https://github.com/oven-sh/bun/releases/latest/download/bun-linux-aarch64-musl.zip)
221
222
  - [`bun-darwin-x64.zip`](https://github.com/oven-sh/bun/releases/latest/download/bun-darwin-x64.zip)
222
- - [`bun-darwin-x64-baseline.zip`](https://github.com/oven-sh/bun/releases/latest/download/bun-darwin-x64-baseline.zip)
223
223
 
224
224
  The `musl` binaries are built for distributions that do not ship with the glibc libraries by default, instead relying on musl. The two most popular distros are Void Linux and Alpine Linux, with the latter is used heavily in Docker containers. If you encounter an error like the following: `bun: /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libm.so.6: version GLIBC_2.29' not found (required by bun)`, try using the musl binary. Bun's install script automatically chooses the correct binary for your system.
225
225
 
226
- The `baseline` binaries are built for older CPUs which may not support AVX2 instructions. If you run into an "Illegal Instruction" error when running Bun, try using the `baseline` binaries instead. Bun's install scripts automatically chooses the correct binary for your system which helps avoid this issue. Baseline builds are slower than regular builds, so use them only if necessary.
226
+ Bun's `x64` binaries target the Haswell CPU architecture, which means they require AVX and AVX2 instructions. For Linux and Windows, the `x64-baseline` binaries are also available which target the Nehalem architecture. If you run into an "Illegal Instruction" error when running Bun, try using the `baseline` binaries instead. Bun's install scripts automatically chooses the correct binary for your system which helps avoid this issue. Baseline builds are slower than regular builds, so use them only if necessary.
227
+
228
+ Bun also publishes `darwin-x64-baseline` binaries, but these are just a copy of the `darwin-x64` ones so they still have the same CPU requirement. We only maintain these since some tools expect them to exist. Bun requires macOS 13.0 or later, which does not support any CPUs that don't meet our requirement.
227
229
 
228
230
  <!--
229
231
  ## Native
@@ -124,11 +124,11 @@ await fetch("https://example.com", {
124
124
  This prints the `fetch` request as a single-line `curl` command to let you copy-paste into your terminal to replicate the request.
125
125
 
126
126
  ```sh
127
- [fetch] $ curl --http1.1 "https://example.com/" -X POST -H "content-type: application/json" -H "Connection: keep-alive" -H "User-Agent: Bun/1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554" -H "Accept: */*" -H "Host: example.com" -H "Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br" --compressed -H "Content-Length: 13" --data-raw "{\"foo\":\"bar\"}"
127
+ [fetch] $ curl --http1.1 "https://example.com/" -X POST -H "content-type: application/json" -H "Connection: keep-alive" -H "User-Agent: Bun/1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606" -H "Accept: */*" -H "Host: example.com" -H "Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br" --compressed -H "Content-Length: 13" --data-raw "{\"foo\":\"bar\"}"
128
128
  [fetch] > HTTP/1.1 POST https://example.com/
129
129
  [fetch] > content-type: application/json
130
130
  [fetch] > Connection: keep-alive
131
- [fetch] > User-Agent: Bun/1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554
131
+ [fetch] > User-Agent: Bun/1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606
132
132
  [fetch] > Accept: */*
133
133
  [fetch] > Host: example.com
134
134
  [fetch] > Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br
@@ -170,7 +170,7 @@ This prints the following to the console:
170
170
  [fetch] > HTTP/1.1 POST https://example.com/
171
171
  [fetch] > content-type: application/json
172
172
  [fetch] > Connection: keep-alive
173
- [fetch] > User-Agent: Bun/1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554
173
+ [fetch] > User-Agent: Bun/1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606
174
174
  [fetch] > Accept: */*
175
175
  [fetch] > Host: example.com
176
176
  [fetch] > Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate, br
package/docs/test/dom.md CHANGED
@@ -55,7 +55,7 @@ Let's run this test with `bun test`:
55
55
 
56
56
  ```bash
57
57
  $ bun test
58
- bun test v1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554
58
+ bun test v1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606
59
59
 
60
60
  dom.test.ts:
61
61
  ✓ dom test [0.82ms]
package/package.json CHANGED
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
1
1
  {
2
- "version": "1.2.3-canary.20250217T140554",
2
+ "version": "1.2.3-canary.20250219T140606",
3
3
  "name": "bun-types",
4
4
  "license": "MIT",
5
5
  "main": "",