Don't precompile Dart2JS for pull requests, instead serve the dart
sources with pub serve. We were already testing with Dartium so
all we lose is some test coverage of defects exposed only by the
Dart2JS transpiler.
This still runs the dart transformer.
Fixes#3030
The pub publish process was not following through with publishing
packages because the -f flag was not be provided to pub publish,
causing the process to prompt for confirmation before publishing,
which was causing the pub_publish.sh script to skip publishing.
Closes#3077
second attempt after rollback of https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/2946
After each successful build in the dart stable variant, this uploads just enough of the dart
artifacts to mirror what we would push to pub.
By uploading the files instead of a zip, this lets dart users depend on an unreleased snapshot
of angular2, and lets us easily fetch the dart artifacts for sync into google3
without having to re-build (potentially in a subtly different environment).
This doesn't upload anything for pull requests.
In order to speedup the startup time of test.unit.js task, we are moving the circular dependency check into
a pre-test check that executes only on travis. Similarly we are moving the style check to a post-test check
that executes on travis.
This way if a circular dependency issue occurs, we find it before running tests on CI and if the code
is not formatted we fail the build only if all the tests pass.
Related to #2536
Related to #2094
The `build.http.example` task was removed from gulp and replaced by another task, but a reference to the task was not removed from `test_e2e_dart.sh`.
Fixes#2509
This implementation only works in JavaScript, while the Observable transpilation
story gets worked out. Right now, the service just makes a simple request,
and returns an Observable of Response.
Additional functionality will be captured in separate issues.
Fixes#2028
We have Dart code in `angular2` module that ought to be in its own
package. Examples include Dart analysis plugins, and potentially the
transformers (although transformers cannot be moved out just yet).
However, this code is Dart-only and it doesn’t make sense to use JS
directory layout for it. This commit introduces a sub-directory called
`modules_dart`. All modules in this directory are pure Dart packages
using standard pub directory layout. The code in these packages never
gets transpiled. It is directly copied to `dist` unmodified, except an
adjustment in relative paths in `pubspec.yaml` files.
Our style guide includes formatting conventions. Instead of wasting time in reviewing PRs discussing things like indenting, and to avoid later deltas to fix bad formatting in earlier commits, we want to enforce these in the build.
The intent in this change is to fail the build as quickly as possible in travis, so those sending a PR immediately know they should run clang-format and update their commit. When running locally, we want users to know about formatting, but they may not want to act on it immediately, until they are done working. For this reason, it is only a warning outside of the continuous build.
This is done by having a check-format task which should run on most local builds, and an enforce-format task only run by travis.
Now, running protractor configs by default only runs e2e tests. If
the --benchmark flag is added, it runs only the perf tests, and always
restarts the browser in between tests. If the --dryrun test is added,
the perf tests are run only once.
This should make it easier to run perf tests versus example e2e tests,
and help stabilize the travis build because perf tests always
run with a clean browser.
* `npm install` now does a full install; auxiliary installation steps
have been integrated into the `postinstall` script.
* Updated developer docs `DEVELOPER.md` accordingly; also added
instructions to dev docs for performing full tests (via `npm test`) --
same as those run on Travis.
* Reorg in tests so that JS tests can run without a Dart env.
Partly fixes#945 **under the assumption that when running JS tests
locally, `ChromeCanary` is the desired browser to use**. Note that CI
tests (Travis) still uses `DartiumWithWebPlatform` across the board
(Maybe because ChromeCanary isn't being installed?)
Fixes#1012.
Closes#1010
Performed a slight refactoring of CI scripts to make it easier for
developers to run the **same** tests as those run on Travis. Defined
`npm` scripts `test-js` and `test-dart`. `npm test` now runs the whole
lot.
Closes#966