On this page
- Using flags at the command line
- Configuring flags in deno.json
- Configuration via environment variables
- --unstable-bare-node-builtins
- --unstable-byonm
- --unstable-sloppy-imports
- --unstable-unsafe-proto
- --unstable-webgpu
- --unstable-broadcast-channel
- --unstable-worker-options
- --unstable-cron
- --unstable-kv
- --unstable-net
- --unstable
Unstable feature flags
New features of the Deno runtime are often released behind feature flags, so users can try out new APIs and features before they are finalized. Current unstable feature flags are listed on this page, and can also be found in the CLI help text by running:
deno --help
Using flags at the command line Jump to heading
You can enable a feature flag when you run a Deno program from the command line
by passing in the flag as an option to the CLI. Here's an example of running a
program with the --unstable-byonm
flag enabled:
deno run --unstable-byonm main.ts
Configuring flags in deno.json
Jump to heading
You can specify which unstable features you'd like to enable for your project
using a
configuration option in deno.json
.
{
"unstable": ["bare-node-builtins", "webgpu"]
}
The possible values in the unstable
array are the flag names with the
--unstable-
prefix removed.
Configuration via environment variables Jump to heading
Some flags can be enabled by setting a value (any value) for an environment
variable of a given name, rather than being passed as a flag or deno.json
configuration option. Flags that are settable via environment variables will be
noted below.
Here's an example of setting the --unstable-bare-node-builtins
flag via
environment variable:
export DENO_UNSTABLE_BARE_NODE_BUILTINS=true
--unstable-bare-node-builtins
Jump to heading
Environment variable: DENO_UNSTABLE_BARE_NODE_BUILTINS
This flag enables you to
import Node.js built-in modules
without a node:
specifier, as in the example below. You can also use this flag
to enable npm packages without an npm:
specifier if you are manually managing
your Node.js dependencies (see byonm
flag).
import { readFileSync } from "fs";
console.log(readFileSync("deno.json", { encoding: "utf8" }));
--unstable-byonm
Jump to heading
Environment variable: DENO_UNSTABLE_BYONM
This feature flag enables support for resolving modules from a local
node_modules
folder that you manage outside of Deno with
npm, pnpm, or
yarn. This may improve compatibility with Node.js
modules that have hard requirements on the installation behavior of npm clients,
or the presence of a node_modules
folder.
In your Deno project folder, include a package.json
file which declares your
dependencies, and manage them through an npm client as you would normally.
Consider a package.json
with the following dependencies:
{
...
"dependencies": {
"cowsay": "^1.5.0"
}
...
}
You would install them as usual with:
npm install
Afterward, you could write code in a Deno program that looks like this:
import cowsay from "cowsay";
console.log(cowsay.say({
text: "Hello from Deno using BYONM!",
}));
--unstable-sloppy-imports
Jump to heading
Environment variable: DENO_UNSTABLE_SLOPPY_IMPORTS
This flag enables behavior which will infer file extensions from imports that do not include them. Normally, the import statement below would produce an error:
import { Example } from "./bar";
console.log(Example);
export const Example = "Example";
Executing the script with sloppy imports enabled will remove the error, but provide guidance that a more performant syntax should be used.
Sloppy imports will allow (but print warnings for) the following:
- Omit file extensions from imports
- Use incorrect file extensions (e.g. importing with a
.js
extension when the actual file is.ts
) - Import a directory path, and automatically use
index.js
orindex.ts
as the import for that directory
deno compile
does not support sloppy
imports.
--unstable-unsafe-proto
Jump to heading
Deno made a conscious decision to not support Object.prototype.__proto__
for
security reasons. However there are still many npm packages that rely on this
property to work correctly.
This flag enables this property. Note that it is not recommended to use this, but if you really need to use a package that relies on it, the escape hatch is now available to you.
--unstable-webgpu
Jump to heading
Enable the
WebGPU
API in
the global scope, as in the browser. Below is a simple example to get basic
information about the GPU using this API:
// Try to get an adapter from the user agent.
const adapter = await navigator.gpu.requestAdapter();
if (adapter) {
// Print out some basic details about the adapter.
const adapterInfo = await adapter.requestAdapterInfo();
// On some systems this will be blank...
console.log(`Found adapter: ${adapterInfo.device}`);
// Print GPU feature list
const features = [...adapter.features.values()];
console.log(`Supported features: ${features.join(", ")}`);
} else {
console.error("No adapter found");
}
Check out this repository for more examples using WebGPU.
--unstable-broadcast-channel
Jump to heading
Enabling this flag makes the
BroadcastChannel
web API available for use in the global scope, as in the browser.
--unstable-worker-options
Jump to heading
Enable unstable Web Worker API options. Specifically, it enables you to specify permissions available to workers:
new Worker(`data:application/javascript;base64,${btoa(`postMessage("ok");`)}`, {
type: "module",
deno: {
permissions: {
read: true,
},
},
}).onmessage = ({ data }) => {
console.log(data);
};
--unstable-cron
Jump to heading
Enabling this flag makes the Deno.cron
API available
on the Deno
namespace.
--unstable-kv
Jump to heading
Enabling this flag makes Deno KV APIs available in the
Deno
namespace.
--unstable-net
Jump to heading
Enable unstable net APIs in the Deno
namespace. These APIs include:
--unstable
Jump to heading
The --unstable
flag is no longer being used for new features, and will be
removed in a future release. All unstable features that were available using
this flag are now available as granular unstable flags, notably:
--unstable-kv
--unstable-cron
Please use these feature flags instead moving forward.
Before more recent Deno versions (1.38+), unstable APIs were made available all
at once using the --unstable
flag. Notably, Deno KV and
other cloud primitive APIs are available behind this flag. To run a program with
access to these unstable features, you would run your script with:
deno run --unstable your_script.ts
It is recommended that you use the granular unstable flags instead of this, the
--unstable
flag is now deprecated and will be removed in Deno 2.