Skip to content

Bump esbuild and astro in /web#241

Open
dependabot[bot] wants to merge 1 commit into
mainfrom
dependabot/npm_and_yarn/web/multi-197401b2eb
Open

Bump esbuild and astro in /web#241
dependabot[bot] wants to merge 1 commit into
mainfrom
dependabot/npm_and_yarn/web/multi-197401b2eb

Conversation

@dependabot

@dependabot dependabot Bot commented on behalf of github Jun 22, 2026

Copy link
Copy Markdown
Contributor

Bumps esbuild to 0.28.1 and updates ancestor dependency astro. These dependencies need to be updated together.

Updates esbuild from 0.27.7 to 0.28.1

Release notes

Sourced from esbuild's releases.

v0.28.1

  • Disallow \ in local development server HTTP requests (GHSA-g7r4-m6w7-qqqr)

    This release fixes a security issue where HTTP requests to esbuild's local development server could traverse outside of the serve directory on Windows using a \ backslash character. It happened due to the use of Go's path.Clean() function, which only handles Unix-style / characters. HTTP requests with paths containing \ are no longer allowed.

    Thanks to @​dellalibera for reporting this issue.

  • Add integrity checks to the Deno API (GHSA-gv7w-rqvm-qjhr)

    The previous release of esbuild added integrity checks to esbuild's npm install script. This release also adds integrity checks to esbuild's Deno install script. Now esbuild's Deno API will also fail with an error if the downloaded esbuild binary contains something other than the expected content.

    Note that esbuild's Deno API installs from registry.npmjs.org by default, but allows the NPM_CONFIG_REGISTRY environment variable to override this with a custom package registry. This change means that the esbuild executable served by NPM_CONFIG_REGISTRY must now match the expected content.

    Thanks to @​sondt99 for reporting this issue.

  • Avoid inlining using and await using declarations (#4482)

    Previously esbuild's minifier sometimes incorrectly inlined using and await using declarations into subsequent uses of that declaration, which then fails to dispose of the resource correctly. This bug happened because inlining was done for let and const declarations by avoiding doing it for var declarations, which no longer worked when more declaration types were added. Here's an example:

    // Original code
    {
      using x = new Resource()
      x.activate()
    }
    // Old output (with --minify)
    new Resource().activate();
    // New output (with --minify)
    {using e=new Resource;e.activate()}

  • Fix module evaluation when an error is thrown (#4461, #4467)

    If an error is thrown during module evaluation, esbuild previously didn't preserve the state of the module for subsequent module references. This was observable if import() or require() is used to import a module multiple times. The thrown error is supposed to be thrown by every call to import() or require(), not just the first. With this release, esbuild will now throw the same error every time you call import() or require() on a module that throws during its evaluation.

  • Fix some edge cases around the new operator (#4477)

    Previously esbuild incorrectly printed certain edge cases involving complex expressions inside the target of a new expression (specifically an optional chain and/or a tagged template literal). The generated code for the new target was not correctly wrapped with parentheses, and either contained a syntax error or had different semantics. These edge cases have been fixed so that they now correctly wrap the new target in parentheses. Here is an example of some affected code:

    // Original code
    new (foo()`bar`)()
    new (foo()?.bar)()
    // Old output
    new foo()bar();
    new (foo())?.bar();

... (truncated)

Changelog

Sourced from esbuild's changelog.

0.28.1

  • Disallow \ in local development server HTTP requests (GHSA-g7r4-m6w7-qqqr)

    This release fixes a security issue where HTTP requests to esbuild's local development server could traverse outside of the serve directory on Windows using a \ backslash character. It happened due to the use of Go's path.Clean() function, which only handles Unix-style / characters. HTTP requests with paths containing \ are no longer allowed.

    Thanks to @​dellalibera for reporting this issue.

  • Add integrity checks to the Deno API (GHSA-gv7w-rqvm-qjhr)

    The previous release of esbuild added integrity checks to esbuild's npm install script. This release also adds integrity checks to esbuild's Deno install script. Now esbuild's Deno API will also fail with an error if the downloaded esbuild binary contains something other than the expected content.

    Note that esbuild's Deno API installs from registry.npmjs.org by default, but allows the NPM_CONFIG_REGISTRY environment variable to override this with a custom package registry. This change means that the esbuild executable served by NPM_CONFIG_REGISTRY must now match the expected content.

    Thanks to @​sondt99 for reporting this issue.

  • Avoid inlining using and await using declarations (#4482)

    Previously esbuild's minifier sometimes incorrectly inlined using and await using declarations into subsequent uses of that declaration, which then fails to dispose of the resource correctly. This bug happened because inlining was done for let and const declarations by avoiding doing it for var declarations, which no longer worked when more declaration types were added. Here's an example:

    // Original code
    {
      using x = new Resource()
      x.activate()
    }
    // Old output (with --minify)
    new Resource().activate();
    // New output (with --minify)
    {using e=new Resource;e.activate()}

  • Fix module evaluation when an error is thrown (#4461, #4467)

    If an error is thrown during module evaluation, esbuild previously didn't preserve the state of the module for subsequent module references. This was observable if import() or require() is used to import a module multiple times. The thrown error is supposed to be thrown by every call to import() or require(), not just the first. With this release, esbuild will now throw the same error every time you call import() or require() on a module that throws during its evaluation.

  • Fix some edge cases around the new operator (#4477)

    Previously esbuild incorrectly printed certain edge cases involving complex expressions inside the target of a new expression (specifically an optional chain and/or a tagged template literal). The generated code for the new target was not correctly wrapped with parentheses, and either contained a syntax error or had different semantics. These edge cases have been fixed so that they now correctly wrap the new target in parentheses. Here is an example of some affected code:

    // Original code
    new (foo()`bar`)()
    new (foo()?.bar)()
    // Old output
    new foo()bar();
    new (foo())?.bar();

... (truncated)

Commits

Updates astro from 6.4.6 to 7.0.0

Release notes

Sourced from astro's releases.

astro@7.0.0

Major Changes

  • #15819 cafec4e Thanks @​delucis! - Upgrade to Vite v8

  • #16965 57ead0d Thanks @​Princesseuh! - Makes 'jsx' the default value for compressHTML

    Astro now strips whitespace from your HTML using JSX rules by default, the same way frameworks like React do. Whitespace and line breaks around elements are removed, but meaningful whitespace within a single line — like a space between two inline elements — is preserved. To keep a space that would otherwise be removed, write it explicitly in your source, for example with {" "}.

    This can change rendered output where whitespace between inline elements was previously meaningful. To keep Astro's earlier behavior, set compressHTML: true for HTML-aware compression, or compressHTML: false to preserve all whitespace.

  • #16610 c63e7e4 Thanks @​matthewp! - Adds background dev server management for AI coding agents.

    When an AI coding agent is detected, astro dev now automatically starts the dev server as a detached background process. This prevents the dev server from blocking the agent's terminal and allows it to continue working while the server runs.

    A lock file (.astro/dev.json) is written when the dev server starts, recording the server's URL, port, and PID. This prevents duplicate servers from being started for the same project.

    New flag and subcommands

    • astro dev --background — Start the dev server as a background process (this is what runs automatically when an agent is detected).
    • astro dev stop — Stop a running background dev server.
    • astro dev status — Check if a dev server is running and display its URL, PID, and uptime.
    • astro dev logs — View logs from a background dev server. Use --follow (-f) to stream new output as it's written.

    These allow you to start and manage dev servers programmatically and were designed with AI coding agents in mind.

    What should I do?

    No action is required. If you are not using an AI coding agent, astro dev behaves exactly as before. If you are using an agent, background mode is enabled automatically — the agent will receive the server URL and PID, and can use astro dev stop to shut it down.

    To opt out of automatic background mode when an agent is detected, set the environment variable ASTRO_DEV_BACKGROUND=0 before running astro dev.

  • #17010 0606073 Thanks @​ocavue! - Removes the @astrojs/db package as it is no longer maintained.

    The @astrojs/db package were deprecated in v6.4.5 and is now removed. This means the astro db, astro login, astro logout, astro link, and astro init CLI commands have also been removed.

    If you were using Astro DB in your project, remove @astrojs/db from your project's dependencies and replace it with one of the following alternatives:

    • Node.js built-in SQLite: Node.js now includes a built-in node:sqlite module (available since Node.js v22.5.0). This is a good option if you are using the Node.js adapter and were using @astrojs/db for local SQLite storage.
    • Drizzle ORM: If you were using @astrojs/db for its Drizzle-based schema and query API, you can use Drizzle directly with any supported database.
    • Other database libraries: Use any database library that suits your deployment platform (e.g. Turso, PlanetScale, Neon).
  • #16462 c30a778 Thanks @​Princesseuh! - Replaces the Go compiler with a Rust-based version.

    The Rust-based Astro compiler (@astrojs/compiler-rs) is now the default compiler. This new compiler is faster and more reliable, leading to faster build times and iteration cycles during development.

    This new compiler is more strict regarding invalid syntax. For example, unclosed HTML tags will now throw an error instead of being ignored. It also does not attempt to correct semantically invalid HTML anymore, instead leaving it to the browser to handle, similar to other tools or document.write() in JavaScript.

    The previous Go-based compiler has been removed, along with the experimental.rustCompiler flag used to opt into the Rust compiler. If you were setting experimental.rustCompiler in your astro.config.mjs, you can now remove it. No other action is required.

... (truncated)

Changelog

Sourced from astro's changelog.

7.0.0

Major Changes

  • #15819 cafec4e Thanks @​delucis! - Upgrade to Vite v8

  • #16965 57ead0d Thanks @​Princesseuh! - Makes 'jsx' the default value for compressHTML

    Astro now strips whitespace from your HTML using JSX rules by default, the same way frameworks like React do. Whitespace and line breaks around elements are removed, but meaningful whitespace within a single line — like a space between two inline elements — is preserved. To keep a space that would otherwise be removed, write it explicitly in your source, for example with {" "}.

    This can change rendered output where whitespace between inline elements was previously meaningful. To keep Astro's earlier behavior, set compressHTML: true for HTML-aware compression, or compressHTML: false to preserve all whitespace.

  • #16610 c63e7e4 Thanks @​matthewp! - Adds background dev server management for AI coding agents.

    When an AI coding agent is detected, astro dev now automatically starts the dev server as a detached background process. This prevents the dev server from blocking the agent's terminal and allows it to continue working while the server runs.

    A lock file (.astro/dev.json) is written when the dev server starts, recording the server's URL, port, and PID. This prevents duplicate servers from being started for the same project.

    New flag and subcommands

    • astro dev --background — Start the dev server as a background process (this is what runs automatically when an agent is detected).
    • astro dev stop — Stop a running background dev server.
    • astro dev status — Check if a dev server is running and display its URL, PID, and uptime.
    • astro dev logs — View logs from a background dev server. Use --follow (-f) to stream new output as it's written.

    These allow you to start and manage dev servers programmatically and were designed with AI coding agents in mind.

    What should I do?

    No action is required. If you are not using an AI coding agent, astro dev behaves exactly as before. If you are using an agent, background mode is enabled automatically — the agent will receive the server URL and PID, and can use astro dev stop to shut it down.

    To opt out of automatic background mode when an agent is detected, set the environment variable ASTRO_DEV_BACKGROUND=0 before running astro dev.

  • #17010 0606073 Thanks @​ocavue! - Removes the @astrojs/db package as it is no longer maintained.

    The @astrojs/db package were deprecated in v6.4.5 and is now removed. This means the astro db, astro login, astro logout, astro link, and astro init CLI commands have also been removed.

    If you were using Astro DB in your project, remove @astrojs/db from your project's dependencies and replace it with one of the following alternatives:

    • Node.js built-in SQLite: Node.js now includes a built-in node:sqlite module (available since Node.js v22.5.0). This is a good option if you are using the Node.js adapter and were using @astrojs/db for local SQLite storage.
    • Drizzle ORM: If you were using @astrojs/db for its Drizzle-based schema and query API, you can use Drizzle directly with any supported database.
    • Other database libraries: Use any database library that suits your deployment platform (e.g. Turso, PlanetScale, Neon).
  • #16462 c30a778 Thanks @​Princesseuh! - Replaces the Go compiler with a Rust-based version.

    The Rust-based Astro compiler (@astrojs/compiler-rs) is now the default compiler. This new compiler is faster and more reliable, leading to faster build times and iteration cycles during development.

    This new compiler is more strict regarding invalid syntax. For example, unclosed HTML tags will now throw an error instead of being ignored. It also does not attempt to correct semantically invalid HTML anymore, instead leaving it to the browser to handle, similar to other tools or document.write() in JavaScript.

    The previous Go-based compiler has been removed, along with the experimental.rustCompiler flag used to opt into the Rust compiler. If you were setting experimental.rustCompiler in your astro.config.mjs, you can now remove it. No other action is required.

  • #16966 6650ec2 Thanks @​Princesseuh! - Makes Sätteri the default Markdown processor

... (truncated)

Commits

Dependabot will resolve any conflicts with this PR as long as you don't alter it yourself. You can also trigger a rebase manually by commenting @dependabot rebase.


Dependabot commands and options

You can trigger Dependabot actions by commenting on this PR:

  • @dependabot rebase will rebase this PR
  • @dependabot recreate will recreate this PR, overwriting any edits that have been made to it
  • @dependabot show <dependency name> ignore conditions will show all of the ignore conditions of the specified dependency
  • @dependabot ignore this major version will close this PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for this major version (unless you reopen the PR or upgrade to it yourself)
  • @dependabot ignore this minor version will close this PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for this minor version (unless you reopen the PR or upgrade to it yourself)
  • @dependabot ignore this dependency will close this PR and stop Dependabot creating any more for this dependency (unless you reopen the PR or upgrade to it yourself)
    You can disable automated security fix PRs for this repo from the Security Alerts page.

Bumps [esbuild](https://github.com/evanw/esbuild) to 0.28.1 and updates ancestor dependency [astro](https://github.com/withastro/astro/tree/HEAD/packages/astro). These dependencies need to be updated together.


Updates `esbuild` from 0.27.7 to 0.28.1
- [Release notes](https://github.com/evanw/esbuild/releases)
- [Changelog](https://github.com/evanw/esbuild/blob/main/CHANGELOG.md)
- [Commits](evanw/esbuild@v0.27.7...v0.28.1)

Updates `astro` from 6.4.6 to 7.0.0
- [Release notes](https://github.com/withastro/astro/releases)
- [Changelog](https://github.com/withastro/astro/blob/main/packages/astro/CHANGELOG.md)
- [Commits](https://github.com/withastro/astro/commits/astro@7.0.0/packages/astro)

---
updated-dependencies:
- dependency-name: esbuild
  dependency-version: 0.28.1
  dependency-type: indirect
- dependency-name: astro
  dependency-version: 7.0.0
  dependency-type: direct:production
...

Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
@dependabot dependabot Bot added dependencies Pull requests that update a dependency file javascript Pull requests that update javascript code labels Jun 22, 2026
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment

Labels

dependencies Pull requests that update a dependency file javascript Pull requests that update javascript code

Projects

None yet

Development

Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues.

0 participants