As per our discussion in the dev-infra sync meeting, we don't want
to have all dependencies show up as peer dependencies. Instead, we
only want to have larger dependencies such as `typescript` or buildifier
as peer dependencies. Tslib is also included for the sake of it being
generally a peer dependency of all Angular framework packages.
The rationale is that Yarn is smart enough to collapse packages
if all satisfy a given range. This means that we don't necessarily
need to have all dependencies as peer dependencies. The initial
idea was to keep all dependencies as peer dependencies so that
we have control over duplication of packages as downloading multiple
packages w/ different versions impacts local dev, CI and caches.
At the same time though, we don't want to bother with setting
up peer dependencies all the time. Not every consumer of the
shared dev-infra package would like to manually specify `yaml`
or `multimatch` etc. in the project `package.json`. Hence we
decided to go with a hybrid approach where only more impactful
dependencies are peer dependencies, and other smaller ones can
be standard depdencies that are usually collapsed by Yarn anyway.
Also this commit removes tslib from build targets that don't
rely on it.
PR Close#36980
Previously we used gulp to run our formatter, currently clang-format,
across our repository. This new tool within ng-dev allows us to
migrate away from our gulp based solution as our gulp solution had
issue with memory pressure and would cause OOM errors with too large
of change sets.
PR Close#36726
Currently, when verifying our pullapprove configuration, we don't
respect modifications to the set of files in a condition.
e.g. It's not possible to do the following:
```
contains_any_globs(files.exclude(...), [
```
This prevents us from having codeowner groups which match a directory,
but want to filter out specific sub directories. For example, `fw-core`
matches all files in the core package. We want to exclude the schematics
from that glob. Usually we do this by another exclude condition.
This has a *significant* downside though. It means that fw-core will not
be requested if a PR changes schematic code, _and_ actual fw-core code.
To support these conditions, the pullapprove verification tool is
refactored, so that it no longer uses Regular expressions for parsing,
but rather evaluates the code through a dynamic function. This is
possible since the conditions are written in simple Python that can
be run in NodeJS too (with small modifications/transformations).
PR Close#36661
Creates a standard model for CLI commands provided by ng-dev.
Allows for us to have any of the tools/scripts extend to be
included in the ng-dev command, or be standalone using the same
yargs parser.
PR Close#36326
The dev-infra package currently uses rollup for packaging. This has been
done initially as a way to workaround manifest paths being used in the
AMD JavaScript output.
The actual solution to this problem is setting module names that match
the `package.json` name. This ensures that the package can be consumed
correctly in Bazel, and through NPM. This allows us to get rid of the
rollup bundling, and we don't need to hard-code which dependencies
should be external or included.
Additionally, tools that are part of `dev-infra` can now specify
their external dependencies simply in the `package.json`. To reduce
version duplication, and out-of-sync versions, a new genrule has been
created that syncs the versions with the top-level project
`package.json`.
PR Close#35647