feat(skills): add documentation-lookup, bun-runtime, nextjs-turbopack; feat(agents): add rust-reviewer

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Carson Rodrigues
2026-03-17 00:24:13 +05:30
committed by Affaan Mustafa
parent 5bd183f4a7
commit 93a78f1847
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---
name: bun-runtime
description: Bun as runtime, package manager, bundler, and test runner. When to choose Bun vs Node, migration notes, and Vercel support.
origin: ECC
---
# Bun Runtime
Bun is a fast all-in-one JavaScript runtime and toolkit: runtime, package manager, bundler, and test runner. Use this skill when working in or migrating to Bun.
## Core Concepts
- **Runtime**: Drop-in Node-compatible runtime (built on JavaScriptCore, implemented in Zig).
- **Package manager**: `bun install` is significantly faster than npm/yarn; lockfile is `bun.lockb`.
- **Bundler**: Built-in bundler and transpiler for apps and libraries.
- **Test runner**: Built-in `bun test` with Jest-like API.
## When to Use Bun vs Node
- **Prefer Bun** for: new JS/TS projects, scripts where install/run speed matters, Vercel deployments with Bun runtime, and when you want a single toolchain (run + install + test + build).
- **Prefer Node** for: maximum ecosystem compatibility, legacy tooling that assumes Node, or when a dependency has known Bun issues.
## Quick Reference
### Run and install
```bash
# Install dependencies (creates/updates bun.lockb)
bun install
# Run a script (package.json "scripts" or direct file)
bun run dev
bun run src/index.ts
# Run a file directly
bun src/index.ts
```
### Scripts and env
```bash
# Load .env and run
bun run --env-file=.env dev
# Inline env
FOO=bar bun run script.ts
```
### Testing
```bash
# Run tests (Jest-like API)
bun test
# Watch mode
bun test --watch
```
```typescript
// test/example.test.ts
import { expect, test } from "bun:test";
test("add", () => {
expect(1 + 2).toBe(3);
});
```
### API (runtime)
```typescript
// File I/O (Bun-native, fast)
const file = Bun.file("package.json");
const json = await file.json();
// HTTP server
Bun.serve({
port: 3000,
fetch(req) {
return new Response("Hello");
},
});
```
## Migration from Node
- Replace `node script.js` with `bun run script.js` or `bun script.js`.
- Run `bun install` in place of `npm install`; most packages work. If something fails, try `bun install --backend=hardlink` or report upstream.
- Use `bun run` for npm scripts; `bun x` for npx-style one-off runs (e.g. `bun x prisma generate`).
- Node built-ins (`fs`, `path`, `http`, etc.) are supported; prefer Bun APIs where they exist for better performance.
## Vercel and deployment
- Vercel supports the Bun runtime. Set runtime to Bun in project settings or use the Bun build preset where available.
- Build command: often `bun run build` or `bun build ./src/index.ts --outdir=dist`.
- Install command: `bun install --frozen-lockfile` for reproducible deploys.
## Best Practices
- Use `bun.lockb` and commit it for reproducible installs.
- Prefer `bun run` for scripts so env and lifecycle are consistent.
- For TypeScript, Bun runs `.ts` natively; no separate `ts-node` needed.
- Keep dependencies up to date; Bun and the ecosystem evolve quickly.
## When to Use This Skill
Use when: adopting Bun, migrating from Node, writing or debugging Bun scripts/tests, or configuring Bun on Vercel or other platforms.