In Chrome 83 passing a TrustedScript to eval just returns the
TrustedScript back without evaluating it, causing the
newTrustedFunctionFor{Dev,JIT} functions to fail. This is a browser bug
that has been fixed in Chrome 84, and only affects Angular applications
running with JIT (which includes unit tests).
As a temporary workaround for users still on Chrome 83, detect when this
occurs in the newTrustedFunctionFor* functions and fall back to the
straightforward, non-Trusted Types compatible implementation. The only
combination that is left affected consists of Angular applications
running with JIT, that have explicitly configured Trusted Types in
enforcement mode, with users that are still on Chrome 83.
Also correct docstring for newTrustedFunctionForJIT.
PR Close#40815
This commit implements creating of `ɵɵngDeclarePipe()` calls in partial
compilation, and processing of those calls in the linker and JIT compiler.
See #40677
PR Close#40803
`@angular/platform-server` provides the foundation for rendering an
Angular app on the server. In order to achieve that, it uses a
server-side DOM implementation (currently [domino][1]).
For rendering on the server to work as closely as possible to running
the app on the browser, we need to make DOM globals (such as `Element`,
`HTMLElement`, etc.), which are normally provided by the browser,
available as globals on the server as well.
Currently, `@angular/platform-server` achieves this by extending the
`global` object with the DOM implementation provided by `domino`. This
assignment happens in the [setDomTypes()][2] function, which is
[called in a `PLATFORM_INITIALIZER`][3]. While this works in most cases,
there are some scenarios where the DOM globals are needed sooner (i.e.
before initializing the platform). See, for example, #24551 and #39950
for more details on such issues.
This commit provides a way to solve this problem by exposing a
side-effect-ful entry-point (`@angular/platform-server/init`), that
shims the `global` object with DOM globals. People will be able to
import this entry-point in their server-rendered apps before
bootstrapping the app (for example, in their `main.server.ts` file).
(See also [#39950 (comment)][4].)
In a future update, the [`universal` schematics][5] will include such an
import by default in newly generated projects.
[1]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/domino
[2]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/0fc8466f1be392917e0c/packages/platform-server/src/domino_adapter.ts#L17-L21
[3]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/0fc8466f1be392917e0c/packages/platform-server/src/server.ts#L33
[4]: https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/39950#issuecomment-747598403
[5]: https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/blob/cc51432661eb4ab4b6a3/packages/schematics/angular/universal
PR Close#40559
The `platform-server` package currently depends on the [domino][1]
package. This commit adds `domino` to the list of dependencies for the
`platform-server` `ng_module` target.
[1]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/domino
PR Close#40559
This commit causes imports added by ngtsc's `ImportManager` to have their
TypeScript "original node" set to the generated `ts.ImportDeclaration`
statement.
In g3, the tsickle transformer runs after the Angular transformer and post-
processes Angular's compilation output. One of its post-processing tasks is
to transform generated imports and references to imported symbols from the
commonjs module system to the g3 module system. Part of this transformation
involves recognizing modules with specific metadata and altering references
to symbols from those modules accordingly.
Normally, tsickle can rely on TypeScript's binding for an imported symbol to
find its origin module and thus the correct metadata for the symbol. However
the Angular transform generates new synthetic imports which don't have such
binding information. Angular's imports are always namespace imports of the
form:
```
import * as qualifier 'module/specifier';
```
References to such an import are then of the form `qualifier.SymbolName`.
To process such imports properly, tsickle needs to be able to associate the
reference to `qualifier` in the expression `qualifer.SymbolName` with the
`ts.ImportDeclaration` statement that defines it. It expects to do this by
looking at the `ts.getOriginalNode()` for the `qualifier` reference, which
should be the `ts.ImportDeclaration`. This commit changes ngtsc's import
generation mechanism to set the original node on `qualifier` identifiers
according to this expectation.
This commit is not tested in the direct compiler tests, since:
1) there is no observable behavior externally from setting the original node
2) we don't have tests that intercept transformer operations (which could be
used to directly assert against the AST nodes)
3) tsickle's published version does not (yet) contain the g3-specific
transformations which rely on the original node and would thus allow the
behavior to be observed.
Instead, we rely on the g3 testing suite to validate the correctness of this
fix. Breaking this functionality would cause g3 compilation errors for
targets, since tsickle would be unable to transform imports correctly.
PR Close#40711
Fix router to ensure that a route module is only loaded once especially
in relation to the use of preload strategies with delayed or partial
loading.
Add test to check the interaction of PreloadingStrategy and normal
router navigation under differing scenarios.
Checking:
* Prevention of duplicate loading of modules.
related to #26557
* Prevention of duplicate RouteConfigLoad(Start|End) events
related to #22842
* Ensuring preload strategy remains active for submodules if needed
The selected preload strategy should still decide when to load submodules
* Possibility of memory leak with unfinished preload subscription
related to #26557
* Ensure that the stored loader promise is cleared so that subsequent
load will try the fetch again.
* Add error handle error from loadChildren
* Ensure we handle error from with NgModule create
Fixes#26557#22842#26557
PR Close#40389
This commit adds support for Finnish full date formatting,
as well as `c/cc/ccc/cccc/ccccc/cccccc` date formats in the `DatePipe`.
Fixes#26922
PR Close#40766
Before this change, when Google Chrome cancels a XMLHttpRequest, an Observable of the response
never finishes. This happens, for example, when you put your computer to sleep or just press
Ctrl+S to save the browser page. After this commit, if request is canceled or aborted an
appropriate Observable will be completed with an error.
Fixes#22324
PR Close#40767
The parser does not include parenthesis in the AST, so if a LHS
expression would be parenthesized then its start span would start
after the opening parenthesis. Previously, some parent AST nodes would
be created with the start span of its LHS as its own start, so this
resulted in the parent AST node not encompassing the opening parenthesis
in its source span. This commit fixes the issue by capturing the start
index prior to parsing a child AST tree, which is then used as the
start of the source span of the the parent AST node that is parsed.
Fixes#40721
PR Close#40740
In 5c547675b11a24b16c20df1718583a0e7ed49cbd the `EventEmitter.subscribe`
API was extended with a new signature that allows the emitter's generic
type `T` to flow into the subscribe callback. This new signature removes
the need for the special `_outputHelper` function that used to be
emitted into TCBs when `strictOutputEventTypes`/`strictTemplates` is
enabled.
PR Close#40738
Adds an error if a reference is used more than once on the same element (e.g. `<div #a #a>`).
We used to have this error in ViewEngine, but it wasn't ported over to Ivy.
Fixes#40536.
PR Close#40538
This commit fixes the issue of the ASSERTION ERROR issue when
a projected node(RNode) inside an array is checked against the types
of TNodeType.Element, TNodeType.Container, TNodeType.ElementContainer,
TNodeType.IcuContainer, TNodeType.Projection. As it's inside an array,
it doesn't fall into any of those types, as a result, it throws
the ASSERTION ERROR.
PR Close#37120
PR Close#37167
Produces a diagnostic when we cannot resolve a component's external style sheet or external template.
The previous behavior was to throw an exception, which crashed the
Language Service.
fixes angular/vscode-ng-language-service#1079
PR Close#40660
When using the [timeout attribute](https://xhr.spec.whatwg.org/#the-timeout-attribute) and an XHR
request times out, browsers trigger the `timeout` event (and execute the XHR's `ontimeout`
callback). Additionally, Safari 9 handles timed-out requests in the same way, even if no `timeout`
has been explicitly set on the XHR.
In the above cases, `HttpClient` would fail to capture the XHR's completing (with an error), so
the corresponding `Observable` would never complete.
PR Close#26453
PR Close#39807
When the downleveling helper function has been inlined into the
`$localize` call, it is a bit more tricky to parse out the cooked and
raw strings. There was already code to do this but it assumed that
the `cooked` and `raw` items were both arrays.
Sometimes the `raw` array is just a copy of the `cooked` array
via an expression similar to `raw || (raw=tcookedslice(0))`. This
commit changes the `unwrapMessagePartsFromLocalizeCall()`
function to be able to handle such a situation.
Fixes#40702
PR Close#40754
Previously if the code is invalid the error message might look like:
```
Unexpected messageParts for `$localize` (expected an array of strings).
```
This is not very helpful for debugging where the problem occurs.
Now we build a "code-frame" description to give more useful information:
```
TypeError: Cannot create property 'message' on string '.../src/app/app.component.js:
Unexpected messageParts for `$localize` (expected an array of strings).
4 | export class AppComponent {
5 | constructor() {
> 6 | this.title = $localize(a = ['myapp'], []);
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7 | }
8 | }
```
PR Close#40724
Prior to this patch, if an element was removed multiple times (due
to the nature of parent/child elements), the leave listeners may
have been fired for an element that was already removed. This patch
adds a guard within the animations code to prevent this.
PR Close#40712
Close#40387
Currently zone.js patches `setTimeout` and keeps a `tasksByHandleId` map to keep `timerId` <-> `ZoneTask`
relationship. This is needed so that when `clearTimeout(timerId)` is called, zone.js can find the associated
`ZoneTask`. Now zone.js set the `tasksByHandleId` map in the `scheduleTask` function, but if the `setTimeout`
is running in the `FakeAsyncZoneSpec` or any other `ZoneSpec` with `onScheduleTask` hooks. The `scheduleTask`
in `timer` patch may not be invoked.
For example:
```
fakeAsync(() => {
setTimeout(() => {});
tick();
});
```
In this case, the `timerId` kept in the `tasksByHandleId` map is not cleared.
This is because the `FakeAsyncZoneSpec` in the `onScheduleTask` hook looks like this.
```
onScheduleTask(delegate, ..., task) {
fakeAsyncScheduler.setTimeout(task);
return task;
}
```
Because `FakeAsyncZoneSpec` handles the task itself and it doesn't call `parentDelegate.onScheduleTask`,
therefore the default `scheduleTask` in the `timer` patch is not invoked.
In this commit, the cleanup logic is moved from `scheduleTask` to `setTimeout` patch entry to
avoid the memory leak.
PR Close#40586
This commit adds the missing `min` and `max` validators.
BREAKING CHANGE:
Previously `min` and `max` attributes defined on the `<input type="number">`
were ignored by Forms module. Now presence of these attributes would
trigger min/max validation logic (in case `formControl`, `formControlName`
or `ngModel` directives are also present on a given input) and
corresponding form control status would reflect that.
Fixes#16352
PR Close#39063
No longer emits to `Router.events` after the router has been destroyed. Also
returns a resolved promise to the navigation methods.
Fixes#40502.
PR Close#40638
Two motivations behind this change:
1. We would like to expose the types of the Language Service to external
users (like the VSCode extension) via the npm package, on the top
level of the package
2. We would like the View Engine and Ivy LS to share a common interface
(notably after the inclusion of `getTcb`, the Ivy LS upholds a
strict superset of `ts.LanguageService`; previously both VE and Ivy
LS were aligned on `ts.LanguageService`.)
To this end, this commit refactors the exports on the toplevel of the
`language-service/` package to just be types common to both the VE and
Ivy language services. The VE and Ivy build targets then import and use
these types accordingly, and the expectation is that an external user
will just import the relevant typings from the toplevel package without
diving into either the VE or Ivy sources.
Follow up on #40607
PR Close#40621
This commit updates `AbstractControlStatus` directive code to remove duplicated logic in getters and replaces
that logic with a new function that accepts an argument.
PR Close#40651
The `AsyncPipe.transform<T>(emitter)` method must infer the `T`
type from the `emitter` parameter. Since we changed the `AsyncPipe`
to expect a `Subscribable<T>` rather than `Observable<T>` the
`EventEmitter.subscribe()` method needs to have a tighter signature.
Otherwise TypeScript struggles to infer the type and ends up making
it `unknown`.
Fixes#40637
PR Close#40644
The `TemplateTypeChecker.overrideComponentTemplate` operation was originally
conceived as a "fast path" for the Language Service to react to a template
change without needing to go through a full incremental compilation step. It
served this purpose until the previous commit, which switches the LS to use
the new resource-only incremental change operation provided by `NgCompiler`.
`overrideComponentTemplate` is now no longer utilized, and is known to have
several hard-to-overcome issues that prevent it from being useful in any
other situations. As such, this commit removes it entirely.
PR Close#40585