Commit Graph

421 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
George Kalpakas 5fa7b8ba56 fix(ngcc): detect non-emitted, non-imported TypeScript helpers (#36418)
When TypeScript downlevels ES2015+ code to ES5, it uses some helper
functions to emulate some ES2015+ features, such as spread syntax. The
TypeScript compiler can be configured to emit these helpers into the
transpiled code (which is controlled by the `noEmitHelpers` option -
false by default). It can also be configured to import these helpers
from the `tslib` module (which is controlled by the `importHelpers`
option - false by default).

While most of the time the helpers will be either emitted or imported,
it is possible that one configures their app to neither emit nor import
them. In that case, the helpers could, for example, be made available on
the global object. This is what `@nativescript/angular`
v9.0.0-next-2019-11-12-155500-01 does. See, for example, [common.js][1].

Ngcc must be able to detect and statically evaluate these helpers.
Previously, it was only able to detect emitted or imported helpers.

This commit adds support for detecting these helpers if they are neither
emitted nor imported. It does this by checking identifiers for which no
declaration (either concrete or inline) can be found against a list of
known TypeScript helper function names.

[1]: https://unpkg.com/browse/@nativescript/angular@9.0.0-next-2019-11-12-155500-01/common.js

PR Close #36418
2020-04-07 10:19:22 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin ee70a18a75 fix(ngcc): don't crash on cyclic source-map references (#36452)
The source-map flattening was throwing an error when there
is a cyclic dependency between source files and source-maps.
The error was either a custom one describing the cycle, or a
"Maximum call stack size exceeded" one.

Now this is handled more leniently, resulting in a partially loaded
source file (or source-map) and a warning logged.

Fixes #35727
Fixes #35757
Fixes https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/17106
Fixes https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/17115

PR Close #36452
2020-04-06 13:19:53 -07:00
Alan Agius 76a8cd57ae fix(ngcc): add process title (#36448)
Add process.title, so it's clearly in the task manager when ngcc is running

See: https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/36414#issuecomment-609644282

PR Close #36448
2020-04-06 13:19:17 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin f9fb8338f5 fix(ngcc): support ignoring deep-imports via package config (#36423)
Recently we added support for ignoring specified deep-import
warnings by providing sets of regular expressions within the
`ngcc.config.js` file. But this was only working for the project
level configuration.

This commit fixes ngcc so that it will also read these regular
expressions from package level configuration too.

Fixes #35750

PR Close #36423
2020-04-06 11:32:09 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 6b3aa60446 fix(ngcc): support simple `browser` property in entry-points (#36396)
The `browser` package.json property is now supported to the same
level as `main` - i.e. it is sniffed for UMD, ESM5 and CommonJS.

The `browser` property can also contain an object with file overrides
but this is not supported by ngcc.

Fixes #36062

PR Close #36396
2020-04-06 11:31:10 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 2463548fa7 fix(ngcc): sniff `main` property for ESM5 format (#36396)
Previously, `main` was only checked for `umd` or `commonjs`
formats. Now if there are `import` or `export` statements in the
source file it will be deemed to be in `esm5` format.

Fixes #35788

PR Close #36396
2020-04-06 11:31:10 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 8be8466a00 style(ngcc): reformat of ngcc after clang update (#36447)
PR Close #36447
2020-04-06 09:26:57 -07:00
George Kalpakas ca25c957bf fix(ngcc): correctly detect imported TypeScript helpers (#36284)
The `NgccReflectionHost`s have logic for detecting certain known
declarations (such as `Object.assign()` and TypeScript helpers), which
allows the `PartialEvaluator` to evaluate expressions it would not be
able to statically evaluate otherwise.

In #36089, `DelegatingReflectionHost` was introduced, which delegates to
a TypeScript `ReflectionHost` when reflecting on TypeScript files, which
for ngcc's case means `.d.ts` files of dependencies. As a result, ngcc
lost the ability to detect TypeScript helpers imported from `tslib`,
because `DelegatingReflectionHost` was not able to apply the known
declaration detection logic while reflecting on `tslib`'s `.d.ts` files.

This commit fixes this by ensuring `DelegatingReflectionHost` calls the
`NgccReflectionHost`'s `detectKnownDeclaration()` method as necessary,
even when using the TypeScript `ReflectionHost`.

NOTE:
The previous commit exposed a bug in ngcc that was hidden due to the
tests' being inconsistent with how the `ReflectionHost`s are used in the
actual program. The changes in this commit are verified by ensuring the
failing tests are now passing (hence no new tests are added).

PR Close #36284
2020-04-03 11:08:46 -07:00
George Kalpakas 93f07aee6c test(ngcc): use `DelegatingReflectionHost` for testing `NgccReflectionHost`s (#36284)
In #36089, `DelegatingReflectionHost` was introduced. Under the hood, it
delegates another `NgccReflectionHost` in order to reflect over the
program's source files, while using a different TypeScript
`ReflectionHost` to reflect over `.d.ts` files (which is how external
dependencies are represented in the program).

Previously, the `NgccReflectionHost`s were used directly in tests. This
does not exercise them in the way they are exercised in the actual
program, because (when used directly) they will also reflect on `.d.ts`
files too (instead of delegating to the TypeScript `ReflectionHost`).
This could hide bugs that would happen on the actual program.

This commit fixes this by using the `DelegatingReflectionHost` in the
various `NgccReflectionHost` tests.

NOTE:
This change will cause some of the existing tests to start failing.
These failures demonstrate pre-existing bugs in ngcc, that were hidden
due to the tests' being inconsistent with how the `ReflectionHost`s are
used in the actual program. They will be fixed in the next commit.

PR Close #36284
2020-04-03 11:08:46 -07:00
George Kalpakas 0af6e9fcbb refactor(ngcc): move logic for identifying known declarations to method (#36284)
The `NgccReflectionHost`s have logic for detecting certain known
declarations (such as `Object.assign()` and TypeScript helpers), which
allows the `PartialEvaluator` to evaluate expressions it would not be
able to statically evaluate otherwise.

This commit moves the logic for identifying these known declarations to
dedicated methods. This is in preparation of allowing ngcc's
`DelegatingReflectionHost` (introduced in #36089) to also apply the
known declaration detection logic when reflecting on TypeScript sources.

PR Close #36284
2020-04-03 11:08:46 -07:00
George Kalpakas 326240eb91 fix(ngcc): allow ngcc configuration to match pre-release versions of packages (#36370)
Ngcc supports providing a project-level configuration to affect how
certain dependencies are processed and also has a built-in fallback
configuration for some unmaintained packages. Each entry in these
configurations could be scoped to specific versions of a package by
providing a version range. If no version range is provided for a
package, it defaults to `*` (with the intention of matching any
version).

Previously, the installed version of a package was tested against the
version range using the [semver][1] package's `satisfies()` function
with the default options. By default, `satisfies()` does not match
pre-releases (see [here][2] for more details on reasoning). While this
makes sense when determining what version of a dependency to install
(trying to avoid unexpected breaking changes), it is not desired in the
case of ngcc.

This commit fixes it by explicitly specifying that pre-release versions
should be matched normally.

[1]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/semver
[2]: https://github.com/npm/node-semver#prerelease-tags

PR Close #36370
2020-04-01 13:32:32 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin cc4b813e75 fix(ngcc): handle bad path mappings when finding entry-points (#36331)
Previously, a bad baseUrl or path mapping passed to an `EntryPointFinder`
could cause the original `sourceDirectory` to be superceded by a higher
directory. This could result in none of the sourceDirectory entry-points being
processed.

Now missing basePaths computed from path-mappings are discarded with
a warning. Further, if the `baseUrl` is the root directory then a warning is
given as this is most likely an error in the tsconfig.json.

Resolves #36313
Resolves #36283

PR Close #36331
2020-04-01 13:30:46 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 38ad1d97ab fix(ngcc): handle entry-points within container folders (#36305)
The previous optimizations in #35756 to the
`DirectoryWalkerEntryPointFinder` were over zealous
with regard to packages that have entry-points stored
in "container" directories in the package, where the
container directory was not an entry-point itself.

Now we will also walk such "container" folders as long
as they do not contain `.js` files, which we regard as an
indicator that the directory will not contain entry-points.

Fixes #36216

PR Close #36305
2020-04-01 13:20:52 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 372b9101e2 refactor(ngcc): simplify `DirectoryWalkerEntryPointFinder` (#36305)
This commit simplifies the `DirectoryWalkerEntryPointFinder` inter-method
calling to make it easier to follow, and also to support controlling
walking of a directory based on its children.

PR Close #36305
2020-04-01 13:20:52 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 7e62aa0c6e refactor(ngcc): rename INVALID_ENTRY_POINT to INCOMPATIBLE_ENTRY_POINT (#36305)
This name better reflects its meaning.

PR Close #36305
2020-04-01 13:20:52 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin c6dd900f60 fix(ngcc): do not write entry-point manifest outside node_modules (#36299)
Fixes #36296

PR Close #36299
2020-03-30 11:03:26 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 5ac308060d refactor(ngcc): rename `workerCount` to `maxWorkerCount` (#36298)
Now that we spawn workers lazily as needed, this private property is
really the upper limit on how many workers we might spawn.

PR Close #36298
2020-03-30 11:02:52 -07:00
George Kalpakas 5cee709266 fix(ngcc): do not spawn more processes than intended in parallel mode (#36280)
When running in parallel mode, ngcc spawns multiple worker processed to
process the various entry-points. The number of max allowed processes is
determined by the number of CPU cores available to the OS. There is also
currently an [upper limit of 8][1]. The number of active workers is in
turn inferred by the number of [task assignments][2].

In the past, counting the entries of `ClusterMaster#taskAssignments` was
enough, because worker processes were spawned eagerly at the beginning
and corresponding entries were created in `taskAssignments`.
Since #35719 however, worker processes are spawned lazily on an as
needed basis. Because there is some delay between
[spawning a process][3] and [inserting it][4] into `taskAssignments`,
there is a short period of time when `taskAssignment.size` does not
actually represent the number of spawned processes. This can result in
spawning more than `ClusterMaster#workerCount` processes.

An example of this can be seen in #36278, where the debug logs indicate
9 worker processes had been spawned (`All 9 workers are currently busy`)
despite the hard limit of 8.

This commit fixes this by using `cluster.workers` to compute the number
of spawned worker processes. `cluster.workers` is updated synchronously
with `cluster.fork()` and thus reflects the number of spawned workers
accurately at all times.

[1]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/b8e9a30d3b6/packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/src/main.ts#L429
[2]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/b8e9a30d3b6/packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/src/execution/cluster/master.ts#L108
[3]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/b8e9a30d3b6/packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/src/execution/cluster/master.ts#L110
[4]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/b8e9a30d3b6/packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/src/execution/cluster/master.ts#L199

PR Close #36280
2020-03-27 14:12:28 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 995cd15a69 fix(ngcc): correctly identify the package path of secondary entry-points (#36249)
Previously we only searched for package paths below the set of `basePaths`
that were computed from the `basePath` provided to ngcc and the set of
`pathMappings`.

In some scenarios, such as hoisted packages, the entry-point is not within
any of the `basePaths` identified above. For example:

```
project
  packages
    app
      node_modules
        app-lib (depends on lib1)
  node_modules
    lib1 (depends on lib2)
      node_modules
        lib2 (depends on lib3/entry-point)
    lib3
      entry-point
```

When CLI is compiling `app-lib` ngcc will be given
`project/packages/app/node_modules` as the `basePath.

If ngcc is asked to target `lib2`, the `targetPath` will be
`project/node_modules/lib1/node_modules/lib2`.

Since `lib2` depends upon `lib3/entry-point`, ngcc will need to compute
the package path for `project/node_modules/lib3/entry-point`.

Since `project/node_modules/lib3/entry-point` is not contained in the `basePath`
`project/packages/app/node_modules`, ngcc failed to compute the `packagePath`
correctly, instead assuming that it was the same as the entry-point path.

Now we also consider the nearest `node_modules` folder to the entry-point
path as an additional `basePath`. If one is found then we use the first
directory directly below that `node_modules` directory as the package path.

In the case of our example this extra `basePath` would be `project/node_modules`
which allows us to compute the `packagePath` of `project/node_modules/lib3`.

Fixes #35747

PR Close #36249
2020-03-27 11:17:45 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin b8e9a30d3b fix(ngcc): use preserve whitespaces from tsconfig if provided (#36189)
Previously ngcc never preserved whitespaces but this is at odds
with how the ViewEngine compiler works. In ViewEngine, library
templates are recompiled with the current application's tsconfig
settings, which meant that whitespace preservation could be set
in the application tsconfig file.

This commit allows ngcc to use the `preserveWhitespaces` setting
from tsconfig when compiling library templates. One should be aware
that this disallows different projects with different tsconfig settings
to share the same node_modules folder, with regard to whitespace
preservation. But this is already the case in the current ngcc since
this configuration is hard coded right now.

Fixes #35871

PR Close #36189
2020-03-24 14:25:06 -07:00
JoostK 32ce8b1326 feat(compiler): add dependency info and ng-content selectors to metadata (#35695)
This commit augments the `FactoryDef` declaration of Angular decorated
classes to contain information about the parameter decorators used in
the constructor. If no constructor is present, or none of the parameters
have any Angular decorators, then this will be represented using the
`null` type. Otherwise, a tuple type is used where the entry at index `i`
corresponds with parameter `i`. Each tuple entry can be one of two types:

1. If the associated parameter does not have any Angular decorators,
   the tuple entry will be the `null` type.
2. Otherwise, a type literal is used that may declare at least one of
   the following properties:
   - "attribute": if `@Attribute` is present. The injected attribute's
   name is used as string literal type, or the `unknown` type if the
   attribute name is not a string literal.
   - "self": if `@Self` is present, always of type `true`.
   - "skipSelf": if `@SkipSelf` is present, always of type `true`.
   - "host": if `@Host` is present, always of type `true`.
   - "optional": if `@Optional` is present, always of type `true`.

   A property is only present if the corresponding decorator is used.

   Note that the `@Inject` decorator is currently not included, as it's
   non-trivial to properly convert the token's value expression to a
   type that is valid in a declaration file.

Additionally, the `ComponentDefWithMeta` declaration that is created for
Angular components has been extended to include all selectors on
`ng-content` elements within the component's template.

This additional metadata is useful for tooling such as the Angular
Language Service, as it provides the ability to offer suggestions for
directives/components defined in libraries. At the moment, such
tooling extracts the necessary information from the _metadata.json_
manifest file as generated by ngc, however this metadata representation
is being replaced by the information emitted into the declaration files.

Resolves FW-1870

PR Close #35695
2020-03-24 14:21:42 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 380de1e7b4 fix(ngcc): use path-mappings from tsconfig in dependency resolution (#36180)
When computing the dependencies between packages which are not in
node_modules, we may need to rely upon path-mappings to find the path
to the imported entry-point.

This commit allows ngcc to use the path-mappings from a tsconfig
file to find dependencies. By default any tsconfig.json file in the directory
above the `basePath` is loaded but it is possible to use a path to a
specific file by providing the `tsConfigPath` property to mainNgcc,
or to turn off loading any tsconfig file by setting `tsConfigPath` to `null`.
At the command line this is controlled via the `--tsconfig` option.

Fixes #36119

PR Close #36180
2020-03-24 10:16:12 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin c9f554cda7 fix(ngcc): do not crash on overlapping entry-points (#36083)
When two entry-points overlap, ngcc may attempt to process some
files twice. Previously, when this occured ngcc would just exit with an
error preventing any other entry-points from being processed.

This commit changes ngcc so that if `errorOnFailedEntryPoint` is false, it will
simply log an error and continue to process entry-points. This is useful when
ngcc is processing the entire node_modules folder and there are some invalid
entry-points that the project doesn't actually use.

PR Close #36083
2020-03-18 15:56:21 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin ff665b9e6a fix(ngcc): do not crash on entry-point that fails to compile (#36083)
Previously, when an entry-point contained code that caused its compilation
to fail, ngcc would exit in the middle of processing, possibly leaving other
entry-points in a corrupt state.

This change adds a new `errorOnFailedEntryPoint` option to `mainNgcc` that
specifies whether ngcc should exit immediately or log an error and continue
processing other entry-points.

The default is `false` so that ngcc will not error but continue processing
as much as possible. This is useful in post-install hooks, and async CLI
integration, where we do not have as much control over which entry-points
should be processed.

The option is forced to true if the `targetEntryPointPath` is provided,
such as the sync integration with the CLI, since in that case it is targeting
an entry-point that will actually be used in the current project so we do want
ngcc to exit with an error at that point.

PR Close #36083
2020-03-18 15:56:21 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 1790b63a5d refactor(ngcc): expose the TaskDependencies mapping on BaseTaskQueue (#36083)
Later when we implement the ability to continue processing when tasks have
failed to compile, we will also need to avoid processing tasks that depend
upon the failed task.

This refactoring exposes this list of dependent tasks in a way that can be
used to skip processing of tasks that depend upon a failed task.

It also changes the blocking model of the parallel mode of operation so
that non-typings tasks are now blocked on their corresponding typings task.
Previously the non-typings tasks could be triggered to run in parallel to
the typings task, since they do not have a hard dependency on each other,
but this made it difficult to skip task correctly if the typings task failed,
since it was possible that a non-typings task was already in flight when
the typings task failed. The result of this is a small potential degradation
of performance in async parallel processing mode, in the rare cases that
there were not enough unblocked tasks to make use of all the available
workers.

PR Close #36083
2020-03-18 15:56:21 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 39d4016fe9 refactor(ngcc): abstract `onTaskCompleted` out of executors (#36083)
Moving the definition of the `onTaskCompleted` callback into `mainNgcc()`
allows it to be configured based on options passed in there more easily.
This will be the case when we want to configure whether to log or throw
an error for tasks that failed to be processed successfully.

This commit also creates two new folders and moves the code around a bit
to make it easier to navigate the code§:

* `execution/tasks`: specific helpers such as task completion handlers
* `execution/tasks/queues`: the `TaskQueue` implementations and helpers

PR Close #36083
2020-03-18 15:56:21 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 712f2642d5 refactor(ngcc): add message text to task outcomes (#36083)
This sets up the task execution to be able to report failed compiles

PR Close #36083
2020-03-18 15:56:21 -07:00
JoostK 9e70bcb34f fix(ngcc): consistently delegate to TypeScript host for typing files (#36089)
When ngcc is compiling an entry-point, it uses a `ReflectionHost` that
is specific to its format, e.g. ES2015, ES5, UMD or CommonJS. During the
compilation of that entry-point however, the reflector may be used to
reflect into external libraries using their declaration files.

Up until now this was achieved by letting all `ReflectionHost` classes
consider their parent class for reflector queries, thereby ending up in
the `TypeScriptReflectionHost` that is a common base class for all
reflector hosts. This approach has proven to be prone to bugs, as
failing to call into the base class would cause incompatibilities with
reading from declaration files.

The observation can be made that there's only two distinct kinds of
reflection host queries:
1. the reflector query is about code that is part of the entry-point
   that is being compiled, or
2. the reflector query is for an external library that the entry-point
   depends on, in which case the information is reflected
   from the declaration files.

The `ReflectionHost` that was chosen for the entry-point should serve
only reflector queries for the first case, whereas a regular
`TypeScriptReflectionHost` should be used for the second case. This
avoids the problem where a format-specific `ReflectionHost` fails to
handle the second case correctly, as it isn't even considered for such
reflector queries.

This commit introduces a `ReflectionHost` that delegates to the
`TypeScriptReflectionHost` for AST nodes within declaration files,
otherwise delegating to the format-specific `ReflectionHost`.

Fixes #35078
Resolves FW-1859

PR Close #36089
2020-03-17 13:34:04 -07:00
JoostK 1bc3893c65 test(ngcc): use "module" format property for ES5 bundles (#36089)
The format property for ES5 bundles should be "module" or "es5"/"esm5",
but was "main" instead. The "main" property is appropriate for CommonJS
and UMD bundles, not for ES5 bundles.

PR Close #36089
2020-03-17 13:34:04 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 772bb5e742 perf(ngcc): store the position of SegmentMarkers to avoid unnecessary computation (#36027)
Previously, calculations related to the position of and difference between
SegmentMarkers required extensive computation based around the line,
line start positions and columns of each segment.

PR Close #36027
2020-03-13 08:00:29 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 47025e07ce perf(ngcc): link segment markers for faster traversal (#36027)
The merging algorithm needs to find, for a given segment, what the next
segment in the source file is. This change modifies the `generatedSegment`
properties in the mappings so that they have a link directly to the following
segment.

PR Close #36027
2020-03-13 08:00:28 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin e8900824dd perf(ngcc): use line start positions for computing offsets in source-map flattening (#36027)
By computing and caching the start of each line, rather than the length
of each line, we can save a lot of duplicated computation in the `segmentDiff()`
and `offsetSegment()` functions.

PR Close #36027
2020-03-13 08:00:28 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin a40be00e17 fix(ngcc): handle multiple original sources when flattening source-maps (#36027)
Previously the list of original segments that was searched for incoming
mappings did not differentiate between different original source files.

Now there is a separate array of segments to search for each of the
original source files.

PR Close #36027
2020-03-13 08:00:28 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 348ff0c8ea perf(ngcc): use binary search when flattening mappings (#36027)
The `@angular/core` package has a large number of source files
and mappings which exposed performance issues in the new source-map
flattening algorithm.

This change uses a binary search (rather than linear) when finding
matching mappings to merge. Initial measurements indicate that this
reduces processing time for `@angular/core` by about 50%.

PR Close #36027
2020-03-13 08:00:28 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin c852ec9283 test(ngcc): remove unused `FileSystem` variable (#36027)
PR Close #36027
2020-03-13 08:00:28 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 37a48391f2 refactor(ngcc): remove unused `LockFileWithSignalHandlers` (#35938)
PR Close #35938
2020-03-12 09:46:18 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 8ea61a19cd feat(ngcc): support invalidating the entry-point manifest (#35931)
In some scenarios it is useful for the developer to indicate
to ngcc that it should not use the entry-point manifest
file, and instead write a new one.

In the ngcc command line tool, this option is set by specfying

```
--invalidate-entry-point-manifest
```

PR Close #35931
2020-03-11 15:01:59 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin ec9f4d5bc6 perf(ngcc): use the `EntryPointManifest` in `DirectoryWalkerEntryPointFinder` (#35931)
The `DirectoryWalkerEntryPointFinder` has to traverse the
entire node_modules library everytime it executes in order to
identify the entry-points that need to be processed. This is
very time consuming (several seconds for big projects on
Windows).

This commit changes the `DirectoryWalkerEntryPointFinder` to
use the `EntryPointManifest` to store the paths to entry-points
that were found when doing this initial node_modules traversal
in a file to be reused for subsequent calls.

This dramatically speeds up ngcc processing when it has been run once
already.

PR Close #35931
2020-03-11 15:01:59 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 560542c2a8 refactor(ngcc): add entry-point manifest functionality (#35931)
The new `EntryPointManifest` class can read and write a
manifest file that contains all the paths to the entry-points
that have been found in a node_modules folder.
This can be used to speed up finding entry-points in
subsequent runs.

The manifest file stores the ngcc version and hashes of
the package lock-file and project config, since if these
change the manifest will need to be recomputed.

PR Close #35931
2020-03-11 15:01:59 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin a0ce8bc236 refactor(ngcc): show timings in 1/10ths of a second (#35931)
PR Close #35931
2020-03-11 15:01:59 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 74e47c503a refactor(ngcc): expose a hash of the project configuration (#35931)
This will be used in the entry-point manifest since a change to
configuration might change the entry-points that are found.

PR Close #35931
2020-03-11 15:01:59 -07:00
Alan Agius 1f89c6130e fix(ngcc): show helpful error when providing an invalid option (#36010)
Currently, when running the ngcc binary directly and provide an invalid option ngcc will not error out and the user might have a hard time telling why ngcc is behaving not as expected.

With this change we now output an actionable error:
```
 yarn ngcc --unknown-option
Options:
  --version                          Show version number               [boolean]
  -s, --source                       A path (relative to the working directory)
                                     of the `node_modules` folder to process.
                                                     [default: "./node_modules"]
  -p, --properties                   An array of names of properties in
                                     package.json to compile (e.g. `module` or
                                     `es2015`)
                                     Each of these properties should hold the
                                     path to a bundle-format.
                                     If provided, only the specified properties
                                     are considered for processing.
                                     If not provided, all the supported format
                                     properties (e.g. fesm2015, fesm5, es2015,
                                     esm2015, esm5, main, module) in the
                                     package.json are considered.        [array]
  -t, --target                       A relative path (from the `source` path) to
                                     a single entry-point to process (plus its
                                     dependencies).
  --first-only                       If specified then only the first matching
                                     package.json property will be compiled.
                                                                       [boolean]
  --create-ivy-entry-points          If specified then new `*_ivy_ngcc`
                                     entry-points will be added to package.json
                                     rather than modifying the ones in-place.
                                     For this to work you need to have custom
                                     resolution set up (e.g. in webpack) to look
                                     for these new entry-points.
                                     The Angular CLI does this already, so it is
                                     safe to use this option if the project is
                                     being built via the CLI.          [boolean]
  --legacy-message-ids               Render `$localize` messages with legacy
                                     format ids.
                                     The default value is `true`. Only set this
                                     to `false` if you do not want legacy
                                     message ids to
                                     be rendered. For example, if you are not
                                     using legacy message ids in your
                                     translation files
                                     AND are not doing compile-time inlining of
                                     translations, in which case the extra
                                     message ids
                                     would add unwanted size to the final source
                                     bundle.
                                     It is safe to leave this set to true if you
                                     are doing compile-time inlining because the
                                     extra
                                     legacy message ids will all be stripped
                                     during translation.
                                                       [boolean] [default: true]
  --async                            Whether to compile asynchronously. This is
                                     enabled by default as it allows
                                     compilations to be parallelized.
                                     Disabling asynchronous compilation may be
                                     useful for debugging.
                                                       [boolean] [default: true]
  -l, --loglevel                     The lowest severity logging message that
                                     should be output.
                                     [choices: "debug", "info", "warn", "error"]
  --invalidate-entry-point-manifest  If this is set then ngcc will not read an
                                     entry-point manifest file from disk.
                                     Instead it will walking the directory tree
                                     as normal looking for entry-points, and
                                     then write a new manifest file.
                                                      [boolean] [default: false]
  --help                             Show help                         [boolean]
Unknown arguments: unknown-option, unknownOption
```

PR Close #36010
2020-03-11 14:42:16 -04:00
Alex Rickabaugh 95c729f5d1 build: typescript 3.8 support (#35864)
This commit adds support in the Angular monorepo and in the Angular
compiler(s) for TypeScript 3.8. All packages can now compile with
TS 3.8.

For most of the repo, only a handful few typings adjustments were needed:

* TS 3.8 has a new `CustomElementConstructor` DOM type, which enforces a
  zero-argument constructor. The `NgElementConstructor` type previously
  declared a required `injector` argument despite the fact that its
  implementation allowed `injector` to be optional. The interface type was
  updated to reflect the optionality of the argument.
* Certain error messages were changed, and expectations in tests were
  updated as a result.
* tsserver (part of language server) now returns performance information in
  responses, so test expectations were changed to only assert on the actual
  body content of responses.

For compiler-cli and schematics (which use the TypeScript AST) a major
breaking change was the introduction of the export form:

```typescript
export * as foo from 'bar';
```

This is a `ts.NamespaceExport`, and the `exportClause` of a
`ts.ExportDeclaration` can now take this type as well as `ts.NamedExports`.
This broke a lot of places where `exportClause` was assumed to be
`ts.NamedExports`.

For the most part these breakages were in cases where it is not necessary
to handle the new `ts.NamedExports` anyway. ngtsc's design uses the
`ts.TypeChecker` APIs to understand syntax and so automatically supports the
new form of exports.

The View Engine compiler on the other hand extracts TS structures into
metadata.json files, and that format was not designed for namespaced
exports. As a result it will take a nontrivial amount of work if we want to
support such exports in View Engine. For now, these new exports are not
accounted for in metadata.json, and so using them in "folded" Angular
expressions will result in errors (probably claiming that the referenced
exported namespace doesn't exist).

Care was taken to only use TS APIs which are present in 3.7/3.6, as Angular
needs to remain compatible with these for the time being.

This commit does not update angular.io.

PR Close #35864
2020-03-10 17:51:20 -04:00
Pete Bacon Darwin c55f900081 fix(ngcc): a new LockFile implementation that uses a child-process (#35861)
This version of `LockFile` creates an "unlocker" child-process that monitors
the main ngcc process and deletes the lock file if it exits unexpectedly.

This resolves the issue where the main process could not be killed by pressing
Ctrl-C at the terminal.

Fixes #35761

PR Close #35861
2020-03-05 18:17:15 -05:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 4acd658635 refactor(ngcc): move locking code into its own folder (#35861)
PR Close #35861
2020-03-05 18:17:15 -05:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 94fa140888 refactor(ngcc): separate `(Async/Sync)Locker` and `LockFile` (#35861)
The previous implementation mixed up the management
of locking a piece of code (both sync and async) with the
management of writing and removing the lockFile that is
used as the flag for which process has locked the code.

This change splits these two concepts up. Apart from
avoiding the awkward base class it allows the `LockFile`
implementation to be replaced cleanly.

PR Close #35861
2020-03-05 18:17:15 -05:00
Pete Bacon Darwin bdaab4184d refactor(ngcc): expose logging level on the logger (#35861)
PR Close #35861
2020-03-05 18:17:15 -05:00
Alan Agius e0a35e13d5 perf(ngcc): reduce directory traversing (#35756)
This reduces the time that `findEntryPoints` takes from 9701.143ms to 4177.278ms, by reducing the file operations done.

Reference: #35717

PR Close #35756
2020-03-05 15:57:31 -05:00
Alan Agius d7efc45c04 perf(ngcc): only create tasks for non-processed formats (#35719)
Change the behaviour in `analyzeEntryPoints` to only create tasks for non-processed formats.

PR Close #35719
2020-03-02 08:17:02 -08:00
Alan Agius dc40a93317 perf(ngcc): spawn workers lazily (#35719)
With this change we spawn workers lazily based on the amount of work that needs to be done.

Before this change we spawned the maximum of workers possible. However, in some cases there are less tasks than the max number of workers which resulted in created unnecessary workers

Reference: #35717

PR Close #35719
2020-03-02 08:17:02 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 5d8f7da3aa refactor(ngcc): guard against a crash if source-map flattening fails (#35718)
Source-maps in the wild could be badly formatted,
causing the source-map flattening processing to fail
unexpectedly. Rather than causing the whole of ngcc
to crash, we gracefully fallback to just returning the
generated source-map instead.

PR Close #35718
2020-02-27 16:09:37 -05:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 73cf7d5cb4 fix(ngcc): handle mappings outside the content when flattening source-maps (#35718)
Previously when rendering flattened source-maps, it was assumed that no
mapping would come from a line that is outside the lines of the actual
source content. It turns out this is not a valid assumption.

Now the code that renders flattened source-maps will handle such
mappings, with the additional benefit that the rendered source-map
will only contain mapping lines up to the last mapping, rather than a
mapping line for every content line.

Fixes #35709

PR Close #35718
2020-02-27 16:09:36 -05:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 72c4fda613 fix(ngcc): handle missing sources when flattening source-maps (#35718)
If a package has a source-map but it does not provide
the actual content of the sources, then the source-map
flattening was crashing.

Now we ignore such mappings that have no source
since we are not able to compute the merged
mapping if there is no source file.

Fixes #35709

PR Close #35718
2020-02-27 16:09:36 -05:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 20b0c80b0b fix(ngcc): allow deep-import warnings to be ignored (#35683)
This commit adds a new ngcc configuration, `ignorableDeepImportMatchers`
for packages. This is a list of regular expressions matching deep imports
that can be safely ignored from that package. Deep imports that are not
ignored cause a warning to be logged.

// FW-1892

Fixes #35615

PR Close #35683
2020-02-27 10:48:48 -08:00
Alan Agius 59c0689ade refactor(ngcc): remove redundant await (#35686)
Inside an async function, return await is not needed. Since the return value of an async function is always wrapped in Promise.resolve,
PR Close #35686
2020-02-26 12:59:13 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin df816c9c80 feat(ngcc): implement source-map flattening (#35132)
The library used by ngcc to update the source files (MagicString) is able
to generate a source-map but it is not able to account for any previous
source-map that the input text is already associated with.

There have been various attempts to fix this but none have been very
successful, since it is not a trivial problem to solve.

This commit contains a novel approach that is able to load up a tree of
source-files connected by source-maps and flatten them down into a single
source-map that maps directly from the final generated file to the original
sources referenced by the intermediate source-maps.

PR Close #35132
2020-02-26 12:51:35 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 71b5970450 fix(ngcc): capture path-mapped entry-points that start with same string (#35592)
Previously if there were two path-mapped libraries that are in
different directories but the path of one started with same string
as the path of the other, we would incorrectly return the shorter
path - e.g. `dist/my-lib` and `dist/my-lib-second`. This was because
the list of `basePaths` was searched in ascending alphabetic order and
we were using `startsWith()` to match the path.

Now the `basePaths` are searched in reverse alphabetic order so the
longer path will be matched correctly.

// FW-1873

Fixes #35536

PR Close #35592
2020-02-24 09:11:43 -08:00
George Kalpakas bd6a39c364 fix(ngcc): correctly detect emitted TS helpers in ES5 (#35191)
In ES5 code, TypeScript requires certain helpers (such as
`__spreadArrays()`) to be able to support ES2015+ features. These
helpers can be either imported from `tslib` (by setting the
`importHelpers` TS compiler option to `true`) or emitted inline (by
setting the `importHelpers` and `noEmitHelpers` TS compiler options to
`false`, which is the default value for both).

Ngtsc's `StaticInterpreter` (which is also used during ngcc processing)
is able to statically evaluate some of these helpers (currently
`__assign()`, `__spread()` and `__spreadArrays()`), as long as
`ReflectionHost#getDefinitionOfFunction()` correctly detects the
declaration of the helper. For this to happen, the left-hand side of the
corresponding call expression (i.e. `__spread(...)` or
`tslib.__spread(...)`) must be evaluated as a function declaration for
`getDefinitionOfFunction()` to be called with.

In the case of imported helpers, the `tslib.__someHelper` expression was
resolved to a function declaration of the form
`export declare function __someHelper(...args: any[][]): any[];`, which
allows `getDefinitionOfFunction()` to correctly map it to a TS helper.

In contrast, in the case of emitted helpers (and regardless of the
module format: `CommonJS`, `ESNext`, `UMD`, etc.)), the `__someHelper`
identifier was resolved to a variable declaration of the form
`var __someHelper = (this && this.__someHelper) || function () { ... }`,
which upon further evaluation was categorized as a `DynamicValue`
(prohibiting further evaluation by the `getDefinitionOfFunction()`).

As a result of the above, emitted TypeScript helpers were not evaluated
in ES5 code.

---
This commit changes the detection of TS helpers to leverage the existing
`KnownFn` feature (previously only used for built-in functions).
`Esm5ReflectionHost` is changed to always return `KnownDeclaration`s for
TS helpers, both imported (`getExportsOfModule()`) as well as emitted
(`getDeclarationOfIdentifier()`).

Similar changes are made to `CommonJsReflectionHost` and
`UmdReflectionHost`.

The `KnownDeclaration`s are then mapped to `KnownFn`s in
`StaticInterpreter`, allowing it to statically evaluate call expressions
involving any kind of TS helpers.

Jira issue: https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1689

PR Close #35191
2020-02-21 09:06:46 -08:00
George Kalpakas b6e8847967 fix(ngcc): handle imports in dts files when processing CommonJS (#35191)
When statically evaluating CommonJS code it is possible to find that we
are looking for the declaration of an identifier that actually came from
a typings file (rather than a CommonJS file).

Previously, the CommonJS reflection host would always try to use a
CommonJS specific algorithm for finding identifier declarations, but
when the id is actually in a typings file this resulted in the returned
declaration being the containing file of the declaration rather than the
declaration itself.

Now the CommonJS reflection host will check to see if the file
containing the identifier is a typings file and use the appropriate
stategy.

(Note: This is the equivalent of #34356 but for CommonJS.)

PR Close #35191
2020-02-21 09:06:46 -08:00
George Kalpakas 3cc812711b fix(ngcc): add default config for `angular2-highcharts` (#35527)
The package is deprecated (and thus not going to have a new release),
but still has ~7000 weekly downloads.

Fixes #35399

PR Close #35527
2020-02-20 15:12:07 -08:00
George Kalpakas fde89156fa fix(ngcc): correctly detect outer aliased class identifiers in ES5 (#35527)
In ES5 and ES2015, class identifiers may have aliases. Previously, the
`NgccReflectionHost`s recognized the following formats:
- ES5:
    ```js
    var MyClass = (function () {
      function InnerClass() {}
      InnerClass_1 = InnerClass;
      ...
    }());
    ```
- ES2015:
    ```js
    let MyClass = MyClass_1 = class MyClass { ... };
    ```

In addition to the above, this commit adds support for recognizing an
alias outside the IIFE in ES5 classes (which was previously not
supported):
```js
var MyClass = MyClass_1 = (function () { ... }());
```

Jira issue: [FW-1869](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1869)

Partially addresses #35399.

PR Close #35527
2020-02-20 15:12:07 -08:00
George Kalpakas 2baf90209b refactor(ngcc): tighten method parameter type to avoid redundant check (#35527)
`Esm5ReflectionHost#getInnerFunctionDeclarationFromClassDeclaration()`
was already called with `ts.Declaration`, not `ts.Node`, so we can
tighten its parameter type and get rid of a redundant check.
`getIifeBody()` (called inside
`getInnerFunctionDeclarationFromClassDeclaration()`) will check whether
the given `ts.Declaration` is a `ts.VariableDeclaration`.

PR Close #35527
2020-02-20 15:12:07 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin eef07539a6 feat(ngcc): pause async ngcc processing if another process has the lockfile (#35131)
ngcc uses a lockfile to prevent two ngcc instances from executing at the
same time. Previously, if a lockfile was found the current process would
error and exit.

Now, when in async mode, the current process is able to wait for the previous
process to release the lockfile before continuing itself.

PR Close #35131
2020-02-18 17:20:41 -08:00
George Kalpakas 5f57376899 test(ngcc): add missing `UmdReflectionHost#getExportsOfModule()` tests (#35312)
Support for re-exports in UMD were added in e9fb5fdb8. This commit adds
some tests for re-exports (similar to the ones used for
`CommonJsReflectionHost`).

PR Close #35312
2020-02-10 16:13:41 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 54c3a5da3f fix(ngcc): ensure that path-mapped secondary entry-points are processed correctly (#35227)
The `TargetedEntryPointFinder` must work out what the
containing package is for each entry-point that it finds.

The logic for doing this was flawed in the case that the
package was in a path-mapped directory and not in a
node_modules folder. This meant that secondary entry-points
were incorrectly setting their own path as the package
path, rather than the primary entry-point path.

Fixes #35188

PR Close #35227
2020-02-07 11:32:05 -08:00
George Kalpakas 9601b5d18a refactor(ngcc): remove unused function (#35122)
Since #35057, the `markNonAngularPackageAsProcessed()` function is no
longer used and can be removed.

PR Close #35122
2020-02-03 14:04:59 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 3d4067a464 fix(ngcc): do not lock if the target is not compiled by Angular (#35057)
To support parallel CLI builds we instruct developers to pre-process
their node_modules via ngcc at the command line.

Despite doing this ngcc was still trying to set a lock when it was being
triggered by the CLI for packages that are not going to be processed,
since they are not compiled by Angular for instance.

This commit checks whether a target package needs to be compiled
at all before attempting to set the lock.

Fixes #35000

PR Close #35057
2020-02-03 08:46:43 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 2bfddcf29f feat(ngcc): automatically clean outdated ngcc artifacts (#35079)
If ngcc gets updated to a new version then the artifacts
left in packages that were processed by the previous
version are possibly invalid.

Previously we just errored if we found packages that
had already been processed by an outdated version.

Now we automatically clean the packages that have
outdated artifacts so that they can be reprocessed
correctly with the current ngcc version.

Fixes #35082

PR Close #35079
2020-01-31 17:02:44 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 16e15f50d2 refactor(ngcc): export magic strings as constants (#35079)
These strings will be used when cleaning up outdated
packages.

PR Close #35079
2020-01-31 17:02:43 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 3cf55c195b refactor(ngcc): add additional build marker helpers (#35079)
PR Close #35079
2020-01-31 17:02:43 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin cc43bfa725 refactor(ngcc): do not crash if package build version is outdated (#35079)
Now `hasBeenProcessed()` will no longer throw if there
is an entry-point that has been built with an outdated
version of ngcc.

Instead it just returns `false`, which will include it in this
processing run.

This is a precursor to adding functionality that will
automatically revert outdate build artifacts.

PR Close #35079
2020-01-31 17:02:43 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 171a79d04f refactor(ngcc): remove unused code (#35079)
PR Close #35079
2020-01-31 17:02:43 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 7f44fa65a7 fix(ngcc): improve lockfile error message (#35001)
The message now gives concrete advice to developers who
experience the error due to running multiple simultaneous builds
via webpack.

Fixes #35000

PR Close #35001
2020-01-28 09:09:00 -08:00
Miško Hevery 69de7680f5 Revert: "feat(ivy): convert [ngStyle] and [ngClass] to use ivy styling bindings" (#34616)
This change reverts https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/28711
NOTE: This change deletes code and creates a BROKEN SHA. If reverting this SHA needs to be reverted with the next SHA to get back into a valid state.

The change removes the fact that `NgStyle`/`NgClass` is special and colaborates with the `[style]`/`[class]` to merge its styles. By reverting to old behavior we have better backwards compatiblity since it is no longer treated special and simply overwrites the styles (same as VE)

PR Close #34616
2020-01-24 12:22:44 -08:00
Miško Hevery 2961bf06c6 refactor(ivy): move `hostVars`/`hostAttrs` from instruction to `DirectiveDef` (#34683)
This change moves information from instructions to declarative position:
- `ɵɵallocHostVars(vars)` => `DirectiveDef.hostVars`
- `ɵɵelementHostAttrs(attrs)` => `DirectiveDef.hostAttrs`

When merging directives it is necessary to know about `hostVars` and `hostAttrs`. Before this change the information was stored in the `hostBindings` function. This was problematic, because in order to get to the information the `hostBindings` would have to be executed. In order for `hostBindings` to be executed the directives would have to be instantiated. This means that the directive instantiation would happen before we had knowledge about the `hostAttrs` and as a result the directive could observe in the constructor that not all of the `hostAttrs` have been applied. This further complicates the runtime as we have to apply `hostAttrs` in parts over many invocations.

`ɵɵallocHostVars` was unnecessarily complicated because it would have to update the `LView` (and Blueprint) while existing directives are already executing. By moving it out of `hostBindings` function we can access it statically and we can create correct `LView` (and Blueprint) in a single pass.

This change only changes how the instructions are generated, but does not change the runtime much. (We cheat by emulating the old behavior by calling `ɵɵallocHostVars` and `ɵɵelementHostAttrs`) Subsequent change will refactor the runtime to take advantage of the static information.

PR Close #34683
2020-01-24 12:22:10 -08:00
JoostK 7659f2e24b fix(ngcc): do not attempt compilation when analysis fails (#34889)
In #34288, ngtsc was refactored to separate the result of the analysis
and resolve phase for more granular incremental rebuilds. In this model,
any errors in one phase transition the trait into an error state, which
prevents it from being ran through subsequent phases. The ngcc compiler
on the other hand did not adopt this strict error model, which would
cause incomplete metadata—due to errors in earlier phases—to be offered
for compilation that could result in a hard crash.

This commit updates ngcc to take advantage of ngtsc's `TraitCompiler`,
that internally manages all Ivy classes that are part of the
compilation. This effectively replaces ngcc's own `AnalyzedFile` and
`AnalyzedClass` types, together with all of the logic to drive the
`DecoratorHandler`s. All of this is now handled in the `TraitCompiler`,
benefiting from its explicit state transitions of `Trait`s so that the
ngcc crash is a thing of the past.

Fixes #34500
Resolves FW-1788

PR Close #34889
2020-01-23 14:47:03 -08:00
JoostK ba82532812 test(ngcc): remove usage of ES2015 syntax in ES5/UMD/CommonJS tests (#34889)
This syntax is invalid in these source files and does result in
compilation errors as the constructor parameters could not be resolved.
This hasn't been an issue until now as those errors were ignored in the
tests, but future work to introduce the Trait system of ngtsc into
ngcc will cause these errors to prevent compilation, resulting in broken
tests.

PR Close #34889
2020-01-23 14:47:03 -08:00
George Kalpakas 5b42084912 fix(ngcc): do not collect private declarations from external packages (#34811)
Previously, while trying to build an `NgccReflectionHost`'s
`privateDtsDeclarationMap`, `computePrivateDtsDeclarationMap()` would
try to collect exported declarations from all source files of the
program (i.e. without checking whether they were within the target
package, as happens for declarations in `.d.ts` files).

Most of the time, that would not be a problem, because external packages
would be represented as `.d.ts` files in the program. But when an
external package had no typings, the JS files would be used instead. As
a result, the `ReflectionHost` would try to (unnecessarilly) parse the
file in order to extract exported declarations, which in turn would be
harmless in most cases.

There are certain cases, though, where the `ReflectionHost` would throw
an error, because it cannot parse the external package's JS file. This
could happen, for example, in `UmdReflectionHost`, which expects the
file to contain exactly one statement. See #34544 for more details on a
real-world failure.

This commit fixes the issue by ensuring that
`computePrivateDtsDeclarationMap()` will only collect exported
declarations from files within the target package.

Jira issue: [FW-1794](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1794)

Fixes #34544

PR Close #34811
2020-01-23 13:58:37 -08:00
Paul Gschwendtner 6b468f9b2e fix(ngcc): libraries using spread in object literals cannot be processed (#34661)
Consider a library that uses a shared constant for host bindings. e.g.

```ts
export const BASE_BINDINGS= {
  '[class.mat-themed]': '_isThemed',
}

----

@Directive({
  host: {...BASE_BINDINGS, '(click)': '...'}
})
export class Dir1 {}

@Directive({
  host: {...BASE_BINDINGS, '(click)': '...'}
})
export class Dir2 {}
```

Previously when these components were shipped as part of the
library to NPM, consumers were able to consume `Dir1` and `Dir2`.
No errors showed up.

Now with Ivy, when ngcc tries to process the library, an error
will be thrown. The error is stating that the host bindings should
be an object (which they obviously are). This happens because
TypeScript transforms the object spread to individual
`Object.assign` calls (for compatibility).

The partial evaluator used by the `@Directive` annotation handler
is unable to process this expression because there is no
integrated support for `Object.assign`. In View Engine, this was
not a problem because the `metadata.json` files from the library
were used to compute the host bindings.

Fixes #34659

PR Close #34661
2020-01-23 10:29:57 -08:00
George Kalpakas 93ffc67bfb fix(ngcc): update `package.json` deterministically (#34870)
Ngcc adds properties to the `package.json` files of the entry-points it
processes to mark them as processed for a format and point to the
created Ivy entry-points (in case of `--create-ivy-entry-points`). When
running ngcc in parallel mode (which is the default for the standalone
ngcc command), multiple formats can be processed simultaneously for the
same entry-point and the order of completion is not deterministic.

Previously, ngcc would append new properties at the end of the target
object in `package.json` as soon as the format processing was completed.
As a result, the order of properties in the resulting `package.json`
(when processing multiple formats for an entry-point in parallel) was
not deterministic. For tools that use file hashes for caching purposes
(such as Bazel), this lead to a high probability of cache misses.

This commit fixes the problem by ensuring that the position of
properties added to `package.json` files is deterministic and
independent of the order in which each format is processed.

Jira issue: [FW-1801](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1801)

Fixes #34635

PR Close #34870
2020-01-23 10:16:35 -08:00
George Kalpakas 43db4ffcd6 test(ngcc): verify that `PackageJsonUpdater` does not write to files from worker processes (#34870)
PR Close #34870
2020-01-23 10:16:35 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 03465b621b fix(ngcc): only lock ngcc after targeted entry-point check (#34722)
The Angular CLI will continue to call ngcc on all possible packages, even if they
have already been processed by ngcc in a postinstall script.

In a parallel build environment, this was causing ngcc to complain that it was
being run in more than one process at the same time.

This commit moves the check for whether the targeted package has been
processed outside the locked code section, since there is no issue with
multiple ngcc processes from doing this check.

PR Close #34722
2020-01-22 15:35:34 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin a107e9edc6 feat(ngcc): lock ngcc when processing (#34722)
Previously, it was possible for multiple instance of ngcc to be running
at the same time, but this is not supported and can cause confusing and
flakey errors at build time.

Now, only one instance of ngcc can run at a time. If a second instance
tries to execute it fails with an appropriate error message.

See https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/32431#issuecomment-571825781

PR Close #34722
2020-01-22 15:35:34 -08:00
Igor Minar 0b1e34de40 fix(common): cleanup the StylingDiffer and related code (#34307)
Since I was learning the codebase and had a hard time understanding what was going on I've done a
bunch of changes in one commit that under normal circumstances should have been split into several
commits. Because this code is likely going to be overwritten with Misko's changes I'm not going to
spend the time with trying to split this up.

Overall I've done the following:
- I processed review feedback from #34307
- I did a bunch of renaming to make the code easier to understand
- I refactored some internal functions that were either inefficient or hard to read
- I also updated lots of type signatures to correct them and to remove many casts in the code

PR Close #34307
2020-01-17 14:07:27 -05:00
Greg Magolan aee67f08d9 test: handle bootstrap templated_args in jasmine_node_test defaults.bzl (#34736)
PR Close #34736
2020-01-15 14:58:07 -05:00
Greg Magolan dcff76e8b9 refactor: handle breaking changes in rules_nodejs 1.0.0 (#34736)
The major one that affects the angular repo is the removal of the bootstrap attribute in nodejs_binary, nodejs_test and jasmine_node_test in favor of using templated_args --node_options=--require=/path/to/script. The side-effect of this is that the bootstrap script does not get the require.resolve patches with explicitly loading the targets _loader.js file.

PR Close #34736
2020-01-15 14:58:07 -05:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 3d5bcd5883 test(ngcc): update dependency host test description (#34695)
The `describe` description did not match the name of the
method.

PR Close #34695
2020-01-15 10:24:50 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 85b5c365fc fix(ngcc): do not add DTS deep imports to missing packages list (#34695)
When searching the typings program for a package for imports a
distinction is drawn between missing entry-points and deep imports.

Previously in the `DtsDependencyHost` these deep imports may be
marked as missing if there was no typings file at the deep import path.
Instead there may be a javascript file instead. In practice this means
the import is "deep" and not "missing".

Now the `DtsDependencyHost` will also consider `.js` files when checking
for deep-imports, and it will also look inside `@types/...` for a suitable
deep-imported typings file.

Fixes #34720

PR Close #34695
2020-01-15 10:24:50 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin da51d884a1 test(ngcc): remove `declare` from JS classes (#34695)
PR Close #34695
2020-01-15 10:24:49 -08:00
George Kalpakas cfbb1a1e77 fix(ngcc): correctly detect dependencies in CommonJS (#34528)
Previously, `CommonJsDependencyHost.collectDependencies()` would only
find dependencies via imports of the form `var foo = require('...');` or
`var foo = require('...'), bar = require('...');` However, CommonJS
files can have imports in many different forms. By failing to recognize
other forms of imports, the associated dependencies were missed, which
in turn resulted in entry-points being compiled out-of-order and failing
due to that.

While we cannot easily capture all different types of imports, this
commit enhances `CommonJsDependencyHost` to recognize the following
common forms of imports:

- Imports in property assignments. E.g.:
  `exports.foo = require('...');` or
  `module.exports = {foo: require('...')};`

- Imports for side-effects only. E.g.:
  `require('...');`

- Star re-exports (with both emitted and imported heleprs). E.g.:
  `__export(require('...'));` or
  `tslib_1.__exportStar(require('...'), exports);`

PR Close #34528
2020-01-13 09:48:20 -08:00
George Kalpakas eb6e1af46d test(ngcc): fix typos in `CommonJsDependencyHost` tests (to avoid confusion) (#34528)
PR Close #34528
2020-01-13 09:48:20 -08:00
crisbeto 6d534f10e6 fix(ivy): don't run decorator handlers against declaration files (#34557)
Currently the decorator handlers are run against all `SourceFile`s in the compilation, but we shouldn't be doing it against declaration files. This initially came up as a CI issue in #33264 where it was worked around only for the `DirectiveDecoratorHandler`. These changes move the logic into the `TraitCompiler` and `DecorationAnalyzer` so that it applies to all of the handlers.

PR Close #34557
2020-01-10 15:54:51 -08:00
atscott 538d0446b5 Revert "refactor: handle breaking changes in rules_nodejs 1.0.0 (#34589)" (#34730)
This reverts commit 9bb349e1c8.

PR Close #34730
2020-01-10 14:12:15 -08:00
atscott 5e60215470 Revert "test: handle bootstrap templated_args in jasmine_node_test defaults.bzl (#34589)" (#34730)
This reverts commit da4782e67f.

PR Close #34730
2020-01-10 14:12:15 -08:00
Greg Magolan da4782e67f test: handle bootstrap templated_args in jasmine_node_test defaults.bzl (#34589)
PR Close #34589
2020-01-10 08:31:59 -08:00
Greg Magolan 9bb349e1c8 refactor: handle breaking changes in rules_nodejs 1.0.0 (#34589)
The major one that affects the angular repo is the removal of the bootstrap attribute in nodejs_binary, nodejs_test and jasmine_node_test in favor of using templated_args --node_options=--require=/path/to/script. The side-effect of this is that the bootstrap script does not get the require.resolve patches with explicitly loading the targets _loader.js file.

PR Close #34589
2020-01-10 08:31:59 -08:00
George Kalpakas c3271ac22a fix(ngcc): recognize re-exports with imported TS helpers in CommonJS and UMD (#34527)
Previously, the `CommonJsReflectionHost` and `UmdReflectionHost` would
only recognize re-exports of the form `__export(...)`. This is what
re-exports look like, when the TypeScript helpers are emitted inline
(i.e. when compiling with the default [TypeScript compiler options][1]
that include `noEmitHelpers: false` and `importHelpers: false`).

However, when compiling with `importHelpers: true` and [tslib][2] (which
is the recommended way for optimized bundles), the re-exports will look
like: `tslib_1.__exportStar(..., exports)`
These types of re-exports were previously not recognized by the
CommonJS/UMD `ReflectionHost`s and thus ignored.

This commit fixes this by ensuring both re-export formats are
recognized.

[1]: https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/compiler-options.html
[2]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/tslib

PR Close #34527
2020-01-10 08:28:50 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 8815ace418 fix(ngcc): insert definitions after statement (#34677)
If a class was defined as a class expression
in a variable declaration, the definitions
were being inserted before the statment's
final semi-colon.

Now the insertion point will be after the
full statement.

Fixes #34648

PR Close #34677
2020-01-08 15:09:24 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 58cdc22791 fix(ngcc): handle UMD factories that do not use all params (#34660)
In some cases, where a module imports a dependency
but does not actually use it, UMD bundlers may remove
the dependency parameter from the UMD factory function
definition.

For example:

```
import * as x from 'x';
import * as z from 'z';
export const y = x;
```

may result in a UMD bundle including:

```
(function (global, factory) {
    typeof exports === 'object' && typeof module !== 'undefined' ?
        factory(exports, require('x'), require('z')) :
    typeof define === 'function' && define.amd ?
        define(['exports', 'x', 'z'], factory) :
    (global = global || self, factory(global.myBundle = {}, global.x));
}(this, (function (exports, x) { 'use strict';
...
})));
```

Note that while the `z` dependency is provide in the call,
the factory itself only accepts `exports` and `x` as parameters.

Previously ngcc appended new dependencies to the end of the factory
function, but this breaks in the above scenario. Now the new
dependencies are prefixed at the front of parameters/arguments
already in place.

Fixes #34653

PR Close #34660
2020-01-08 15:07:36 -08:00
George Kalpakas 07ea6cf582 fix(ngcc): avoid error due to circular dependency in `EsmDependencyHost` (#34512)
Previously, there was circular dependency between `ngcc/src/utils.ts`,
`ngcc/src/dependencies/dependency_host.ts` and
`ngcc/src/dependencies/esm_dependency_host.ts`. More specifically,
`utils.ts` would [import from `esm_dependency_host.ts`][1], which would
[import from `dependency_host.ts`][2], which would in turn
[import from `utils.ts`][3].

This might be fine in some environments/module formats, but it can cause
unclear errors in the transpiled CommonJS/UMD format (given how Node.js
handles [cycles in module resolution][4]).
(An example error can be found [here][5].)

This commit fixes the problem by moving the code that depends on
`EsmDependencyHost` out of `utils.ts` and into a dedicated file under
`dependencies/`. It also converts the `createDtsDependencyHost()`
function to a class for consistency with the rest of the
`DependencyHost`s.

[1]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/18d89c9c8/packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/src/utils.ts#L10
[2]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/18d89c9c8/packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/src/dependencies/esm_dependency_host.ts#L10
[3]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/18d89c9c8/packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/src/dependencies/dependency_host.ts#L9
[4]: https://nodejs.org/api/modules.html#modules_cycles
[5]: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/577581

PR Close #34512
2020-01-08 15:00:50 -08:00