Web workers
Workers are the only way of running javascript off of the main thread. This can be useful for a wide variety of programs, especially those where there is a lot of computation that needs to be done without blocking a thread.
First we will define a web worker, we can receive messages from the main thread and do some processing as a result of them.
./worker.ts
self.onmessage = async (e) => {
const { filename } = e.data;
const text = await Deno.readTextFile(filename);
console.log(text);
self.close();
};
Currently, Deno only supports module-type workers. To instantiate one we can use similar syntax to what is found on the web.
./main.ts
const worker = new Worker(
new URL("./worker.ts", import.meta.url).href,
{
type: "module",
},
);
We can send a message to the worker by using the `postMessage` method
./main.ts
worker.postMessage({ filename: "./log.txt" });
By default the worker inherits the permissions of the thread it was instantiated from. We can give workers certain permissions by using the deno.permissions option.
./main.ts
const worker2 = new Worker(
new URL("./worker.ts", import.meta.url).href,
{
type: "module",
deno: {
permissions: {
read: [
new URL("./file_1.txt", import.meta.url),
new URL("./file_2.txt", import.meta.url),
],
},
},
},
);
Because we instantiated this worker with specific permissions, this will cause the worker to try to read a file it doesn't have access to and thus will throw a permission error.
./main.ts
worker2.postMessage({ filename: "./log.txt" });