txikia (basque): small, tiny.
txiki.js is a small and powerful JavaScript runtime. It targets state-of-the-art ECMAScript and aims to be WinterCG compliant.
It's built on the shoulders of giants: it uses QuickJS-ng as its JavaScript engine and libuv as the platform layer.
See it in action here:
First head over to building and build the runtime.
$ ./build/tjs eval "console.log('hello world')"
hello world
$
If you want to run a script you can use tjs run
:
$ ./build/tjs run examples/hello_world.js
hello world
$
Explore all the options:
$ ./build/tjs --help
For TS support see @txikijs/types.
Support for the ES2023 specification (almost complete).
txiki.js aims to be WinterCG compliant, you can track the progress here.
- alert, confirm, prompt (1)
- Console
- Crypto (2)
- Encoding API
- EventTarget
- fetch
- JSON modules
- Performance
- setTimeout, setInterval
- Storage API
- Streams API
- URL
- URLPattern
- URLSearchParams
- WebAssembly (3)
- WebSocket
- Web Workers API
(1): All of them are async.
(2): No subtle support.
(3): No tables, globals or memory support.
- Standalone executables
- TCP and UDP sockets
- Unix sockets / named pipes
- Signal handling
- File operations
- Child processes
- WASI
- ...
See the full API documentation.
Other extras:
- Import directly from HTTP(S) URLs
- Import JSON files
- Builtin test runner
The following modules compose the standard library:
- GNU/Linux
- macOS
- Windows (beta)
- Other Unixes (please test!)
CMake is necessary.
NOTE: The txiki.js build depends on a number of git submodules (libffi, libuv and wasm3).
If you didn't already clone this repository recursively, make sure you initialize these
submodules with git submodule update --init
before proceeding to the build.
Install dependencies (libcurl
, build-essential
, cmake
, makeinfo
, autoreconf
, libtool
):
# On Debian / Ubuntu
sudo apt install libcurl4-openssl-dev build-essential cmake autoconf texinfo libtool
Install dependencies (cmake
, autoconf
):
brew install cmake autoconf automake libtool texinfo
# Get the code
git clone --recursive https://github.com/saghul/txiki.js --shallow-submodules && cd txiki.js
# Compile it!
make
# Run the REPL
./build/tjs
Building has only been tested in 64bit Windows.
First make sure you have MSYS2 installed. The mingw64
and clang64
environments are currently tested.
Then install the required dependencies:
pacman -S git make pactoys
pacboy -S curl-winssl:p toolchain:p cmake:p ninja:p
These commands must be run in a MinGW64 or clang64 shell.
make
This will build the executable just like on Unix. Note that at this point there are a number of dynamically linked libraries, so if you want to use the executable on a different system you'll need to copy those too. Check the list with ldd build/tjs.exe
.
Make sure these commands are run from Windows Terminal (mintty, what MSYS2 provides is not supported).
make test
If you are making a custom build and are modifying any of the JS files that are part of the runtime, you'll need to regenerate the C code for them, so your changes become part of the build.
# First install the JS dependencies
npm install
# Now bundle the code and compile it into C source files
make js
Creating standalone executables is possible with tjs compile
. The resulting executable
will bundle the given code and the txiki.js runtime. No compiler is needed.
NOTE: The resulting executable will have the same runtime dependencies as the tjs
executable.
Assuming a bundle.js
file with some JS code, the following command will create
a standalone executable with it:
tjs compile bundle.js
The new executable will be called bundle
on Unix platforms and bundle.exe
on Windows.
The output name can be customized by passing a second option:
tjs compile bundle.js myexe
The tjs compile
command doesn't do any code bundling. If you need to bundle your
app into a single JS file for use with tjs compile
, esbuild can be a good option.
Here is how to bundle an app into a single bundle.js
file:
npx esbuild my-app/index.js \
--bundle \
--outfile=bundle.js \
--external:tjs:* \
--minify \
--target=es2023 \
--platform=neutral \
--format=esm \
--main-fields=main,module
txiki.js uses calendar versioning with the form YY.MM.MICRO.
Built with ❤️ by saghul and these awesome contributors.