Mostly, removing things that were never intended to be exported publicy.
BREAKING CHANGE:
The following are no longer publicly exported APIs. They were intended as internal
utilities and you should use your own util:
```
browserDetection,
dispatchEvent,
el,
normalizeCSS,
stringifyElement,
expect (and custom matchers for Jasmine)
```
BREAKING CHANGE: Parse5Adapter is no longer exported as public API, use serverBootstrap()
Parse5Adapter is an implementation detail not a public API
Closes#9237Closes#9205
This lets users continue using runtime-sideeffect Decorators if they choose,
only down-leveling the marked ones to Annotations.
Also remove the "skipTemplateCodegen" option, which is no longer needed
since Angular compiles with tsc-wrapped rather than ngc. The former doesn't
include any codegen.
Previously these symbols were exposed via platform-browser-dynamic, then we merged then into platform-browser
thinking that tools would know how to shake off the compiler and other dynamic bits not used with the offline
compilation flow. This turned out to be wrong as both webpack and rollup don't have good enough tree-shaking
capabilities to do this today. We think that in the future we'll be able to merge these two entry points into
one, but we need to give tooling some time before we can do it. In the meantime the reintroduction of the -dynamic
package point allows us to separate the compiler dependencies from the rest of the framework.
This change undoes the previous breaking change that removed the platform-browser-dynamic package.
Automatically recognize XSRF protection cookies, and set a corresponding XSRF
header. Allows applications to configure the cookie names, or if needed,
completely override the XSRF request configuration by binding their own
XSRFHandler implementation.
Part of #8511.
This is based on Angular 1's implementation, parsing an HTML document
into an inert DOM Document implementation, and then serializing only
specifically whitelisted elements.
It currently does not support SVG sanitization, all SVG elements are
rejected.
If available, the sanitizer uses the `<template>` HTML element as an
inert container.
Sanitization works client and server-side.
Reviewers: rjamet, tbosch , molnarg , koto
Differential Revision: https://reviews.angular.io/D108
the bundles have source mpas disabled for now because when we downlevel
the esm bundle to es5 tsc doesn't consider the original source map so
we end up with a source map pointing to the esm bundle instead which is
not useful.
Summary:
This adds basic security hooks to Angular 2.
* `SecurityContext` is a private API between core, compiler, and
platform-browser. `SecurityContext` communicates what context a value is used
in across template parser, compiler, and sanitization at runtime.
* `SanitizationService` is the bare bones interface to sanitize values for a
particular context.
* `SchemaElementRegistry.securityContext(tagName, attributeOrPropertyName)`
determines the security context for an attribute or property (it turns out
attributes and properties match for the purposes of sanitization).
Based on these hooks:
* `DomSchemaElementRegistry` decides what sanitization applies in a particular
context.
* `DomSanitizationService` implements `SanitizationService` and adds *Safe
Value*s, i.e. the ability to mark a value as safe and not requiring further
sanitization.
* `url_sanitizer` and `style_sanitizer` sanitize URLs and Styles, respectively
(surprise!).
`DomSanitizationService` is the default implementation bound for browser
applications, in the three contexts (browser rendering, web worker rendering,
server side rendering).
BREAKING CHANGES:
*** SECURITY WARNING ***
Angular 2 Release Candidates do not implement proper contextual escaping yet.
Make sure to correctly escape all values that go into the DOM.
*** SECURITY WARNING ***
Reviewers: IgorMinar
Differential Revision: https://reviews.angular.io/D103