Previously, bindings to [class] and [style] were treated like any other
property binding. That is, they would result in type-checking code that
attempted to write directly to .class or .style on the element node.
This is incorrect, however - the mapping from Angular's [class] and [style]
onto the DOM properties is non-trivial.
For now, this commit avoids the issue by only checking the expressions
themselves and not the assignment to the element properties.
Testing strategy: TCB tests included.
PR Close#29698
Previously the template type-checking engine processed templates in a linear
manner, and could not handle '#' references within a template. One reason
for this is that '#' references are non-linear - a reference can be used
before its declaration. Consider the template:
```html
{{ref.value}}
<input #ref>
```
Accommodating this required refactoring the type-checking code generator to
be able to produce Type Check Block (TCB) code non-linearly. Now, each
template is processed and a list of TCB operations (`TcbOp`s) are created.
Non-linearity is modeled via dependencies between operations, with the
appropriate protection in place for circular dependencies.
Testing strategy: TCB tests included.
PR Close#29698
This commit adds support for the generation of type-checking expressions for
forms which were previously unsupported:
* array literals
* map literals
* keyed property accesses
* non-null assertions
Testing strategy: TCB tests included.
Fixes#29327
FW-1218 #resolve
PR Close#29698
This commit adds a test suite for the Type Check Block generation which
doesn't require running the entire compiler (specifically, it doesn't even
require the creation of a ts.Program).
PR Close#29698
This commit adds registration of AOT compiled NgModules that have 'id'
properties set in their metadata. Such modules have a call to
registerNgModuleType() emitted as part of compilation.
The JIT behavior of this code is already in place.
This is required for module loading systems (such as g3) which rely on
getModuleFactory().
PR Close#29980
With this change downstream users will no longer need to build ts-api-guardian from source as now the bazel rule is available in the npm package.
This can be used by installing ts-api-guardian as a devDependency and changing the load syntax from:
```
load("@angular//tools/ts-api-guardian:index.bzl", "ts_api_guardian_test")
```
to:
```
load("@npm_ts_api_guardian//:index.bzl", "ts_api_guardian_test")
```
**Note**: downstream users should also clean their `WORKSPACE` and remove the dependencies of angular workspace.
PR Close#29977
Previous to this change, we assumed embedded views could only be created after
their parent template node had completed processing. As a result, we only set
up query logic for containers after directives on the node were created.
However, this assumption didn't take into account the case where a directive
on a template node could create views in its constructor.
This commit fixes query logic to work with views created in constructors.
In that case, we need to create a query container before the new view is
rendered so query results in the view aren't lost. But since the query container
is created before directives have completed processing, we also have to ensure
that query results gathered later on the template node are inserted before that
query container. Otherwise, query results in embedded views will clobber query
results on template nodes.
This splice mode may be slightly slower than the normal matching for queries on
containers, but we should only fall back to this strategy in the edge case where
views are created in constructors. (We should encourage developers to create
views in ngOnInit instead).
PR Close#29983
In #29953, the wait period for SW on localhost was increased to avoid CI
flakes for the PWA score tests.
This commit expands the fix to non-localhost origins to avoid flakes in
the `aio_monitoring` job, when CircleCI VMs/network are slow.
(For reference, example failures: [289127], [289238])
[289127]: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/289127
[289238]: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/289238
PR Close#29988
In light of #29926, that will change the path of `tsconfig.app.json`,
this commit switches from a hard-coded `tsconfig.app.json` path to
looking it up in `angular.json` (to be more future-proof).
PR Close#29989
Previously, the `build-with-ivy` script could be used to build the `aio`
project with Ivy (once it had been prepared with `ivy-ngcc`, etc.) and
then restored the configuration (e.g. `tsconfig.json`) to non-ivy mode.
As a result, it was not useful for running other commands (e.g. unit/e2e
tests) in Ivy mode.
This commit renames the script to `switch-to-ivy` and employs a
different model (similar to `ng-packages-installer`), where the project
is setup to run in Ivy mode and then all subsequent commands are
executed in that mode (until restored).
Since this is currently only used on CI, there is no automatic way to
switch back to non-ivy mode (but it could be implemented in the future
if needed).
Finally, the script now modifies `src/tsconfig.app/json` instead of
`tsconfig.json` to ensure that the `angularCompilerOptions` are not
ignored/overwritten. This is also closer to what the cli generates
with the `--enable-ivy` option.
PR Close#29989
To better test ngcc (in addition to Ivy) on angular.io, change the
`test_aio_local_ivy` CircleCI job to use the pre-ivy Angular packages
(and have ngcc transform them to Ivy ones).
PR Close#29989
Prior to this change, components created via TestBed.createComponent in the same test were placed into the same root context, which caused problems in conjunction with fixture.autoDetectChanges usage in the same test. Specifically, change detection was triggered immediately for created component (starting from the 2nd one) even if it was not required/desired. This commit makes Ivy and VE behavior consistent: now every component created via TestBed.createComponent is isolated from each other. Current solution uses host element id naming convention, which is not ideal, but helps avoid public API surface changes at this point (we might revisit this approach later).
Note: this commit also adds extra tests to verify bootstrap and change detection behavior in case of multiple components in `bootstrap` array in @NgModule, to make sure this behavior is aligned between Ivy and VE.
PR Close#29981
Currently the `template-strategy` for the static query migration uses the
Angular compiler in order to determine the query timing. This is problematic
as the AngularCompilerProgram also collects metadata for referenced
component stylesheets which aren't necessarily present. e.g. in a CLI
project the component can reference a Sass file. It's not guaranteed
that the standalone Angular compiler plugin supports Sass without
custom logic that is brought in by the Angular CLI webpack plugin.
In order to avoid any failures for invalid stylesheets, we just disable
normalizing of all referenced stylesheets.
PR Close#29876
Currently there are two available migration strategies for the `static-query`
schematic. Both have benefits and negatives which depend on what the
developer prefers. Since we can't decide which migration strategy is the
best for a given project, the developer should be able to select a specific
strategy through a simple choice prompt.
In order to be able to use prompts in a migration schematic, we need to
take advantage of the "inquirer" package which is also used by the CLI
schematic prompts (schematic prompts are usually only statically defined
in the schema). Additionally the schematic needs to be made "async"
because with prompts the schematic can no longer execute synchronously
without implementing some logic that blocks the execution.
PR Close#29876
Currently for Angular Bazel projects, NGC needs to be run in the
"postinstall" NPM script in order to generate required summary files.
We need to update the postinstall `tsconfig` to not check/re-build the
`@angular/core` schematic code which has transitive dependencies
which are only available inside of a CLI project. As this is not guaranteed
to be the case with Angular Bazel projects, we need to make sure that
we don't check/re-build these files.
PR Close#29876
With dts bundles, `core.d.ts` will include an `EventListener` class as it's used in 303eae918d/packages/core/src/debug/debug_node.ts (L32)
This will conflict with the DOM EventListener, as anything in `core.d.ts` which is using the DOM EventListener will fallback in using the one defined in the same module and hence build will fail because their implementation is different.
With this change, we rename the local `EventListener` to `DebugEventListener`, the later one is non exported.
Fixes#29806
PR Close#29809
Previously, ngtsc would fail to resolve `forwardRef` calls if they
contained additional parenthesis or casts. This commit changes the
behavior to first unwrap the AST nodes to see past such insignificant
nodes, resolving the issue.
Fixes#29639
PR Close#29886
Previously, only static evaluation of `Array.slice` was implemented in
ngtsc's static evaluator. This commit adds support for `Array.concat`.
Closes#29835
PR Close#29887
When compiling Angular classes, the compiler may decide to append statements with specific metadata that's only required for JIT. This includes things like decorator metadata as well as NgModule scope data.
When the compiler generates such calls, the call sites are marked with Uglify's PURE annotation, so the optimizer will remove them in production builds. However, Closure does not have the PURE (or similar) annotation. We have a utility function `noSideEffects` in the runtime for this purpose. This commit wraps `setClassMetadata` and `setNgModuleScope` function bodies in `noSideEffect` closures to allow Closure remove them.
PR Close#29947
The `TNode.cleanup` data structure can contain sequences of 4-element
sequence of entries (event handlers, directive outputs) mixed with
2-element sequence of entries (QueryList cleanup). Before this fix
we would always skip 4 elements in the `TNode.cleanup` while looking
up event handler cleanups. 4-element skips are not correct in case
of query cleanup presence and this commit corrects the algorithm to
jump 4 or 2 elements depending on a type of cleanup encountered.
PR Close#29957
The server used for testing on localhost has less optimizations (e.g.
serves uncompressed files), so we need to wait longer the ServiceWorker
to be loaded and registered to allow Lighthouse to reliably detect it,
especially on slower environments (e.g. CI).
Related: https://github.com/GoogleChrome/lighthouse/issues/5527#issuecomment-483710849Fixes#29910
PR Close#29953
If a component has its definition set by defineComponent (as opposed to
JIT getter), then it will generate a factory that uses directiveInject()
to retrieve its dependencies. This can be problematic in test code because
tests could use the injection utility before bootstrapping the component,
and directiveInject() relies on the view having been created.
This commit tweaks directiveInject() to fall back to inject() if the view
has not been created. This will allow injection to work in tests even if
it is called before the component is bootstrapped.
PR Close#29948
Previous to this commit, providing a component or directive in a test
module without @Injectable() would throw because the injectable factory
would not be found. Providing components in tests in addition to declaring
or importing them is not necessary, but it should not throw an error.
This commit ensures factory data is saved when component defs and directive
defs are created, which allows them to be processed by the module injector.
Note that bootstrapping is still required for this setup to work because
directiveInject() does not support cases where the view has not been
created. This case will be handled in a future commit.
PR Close#29945
We had a bug where event.preventDefault() was not always called if listeners
were coalesced. This is because we were overwriting the previous listener's
result every time we called the next listener, so listeners early in the chain
that returned false would be ignored and preventDefault would not be called.
This commit fixes that issue, so now preventDefault() is called if any listener
in a coalesced chain returns false. This brings us in line with View Engine
behavior.
PR Close#29934
The config path is an optional argument to `ts.parseJsonConfigFileContent`. When passed, it is added to the returned object as `options.configFilePath`, and `tsc` itself passes it in.
The new TS 3.4 [incremental](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/release-notes/typescript-3-4.html) build functionality relies on this property being present: 025d826339/src/compiler/emitter.ts (L56-L57)
When using The compiler-cli `readConfiguration` the config path option isn't passed, preventing consumers (like @ngtools/webpack) from obtaining a complete config object.
This PR fixes this omission and should allow JIT users of @ngtools/webpack to set the `incremental` option in their tsconfig and have it be used by the TS program.
I tested this in JIT and saw a small decrease in build times in a small project. In AOT the incremental option didn't seem to be used at all, due to how `ngc` uses the TS APIs.
Related to https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/13941.
PR Close#29872
Overriding multi provider values (providers with `multi: true` flag) via TestBed require additional handling: all existing multi-provider values for the same token should be removed from the override list, so that they are not included into the final value of a given provider. This commit adds this logic to make sure we handle multi providers correctly.
PR Close#29919