The API of `@microsoft/api-extractor` changed in a minor version which is causes an error when using dts flattening downstream.
API wil be updated on master https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/32185
PR Close#32187
Fixes an error that is thrown by `ngTemplateOutlet` under Ivy when switching from a template to null and back to a template. The error is thrown because the reference to the previous ViewRef is never cleared and the directive tries to detach a view that has already been detached.
Fixes#32060.
PR Close#32160
During the dependency analysis phase of ngcc, imports are resolved to
files on disk according to certain module resolution rules. Since module
specifiers are typically missing extensions, or can refer to index.js
barrel files within a directory, the module resolver attempts several
postfixes when searching for a module import on disk. Module specifiers
that already include an extension, however, would fail to be resolved as
ngcc's module resolver failed to check the location on disk without
adding any postfixes.
Closes#32097
PR Close#32181
During the recursive processing of dependencies, ngcc resolves the
requested file to an actual location on disk, by testing various
extensions. For recursive calls however, the path is known to have been
resolved in the module resolver. Therefore, it is safe to move the path
resolution to the initial caller into the recursive process.
Note that this is not expected to improve the performance of ngcc, as
the call to `resolveFileWithPostfixes` is known to succeed immediately,
as the provided path is known to exist without needing to add any
postfixes. Furthermore, the FileSystem caches whether files exist, so
the additional check that we used to do was cheap.
PR Close#32181
This commit fixes many diagnostic tests have have incorrect/uncaught assertions.
Also added more assertions to make sure TS diagnostics are clear.
A few test util methods are removed to reduce clutter and improve readability.
PR Close#32161
Remove unnecessary private method `getDeclarationFromNode` and moved
some logic to utils instead so that it can be tested in isolation of the
Language Service infrastructure.
The use of typechecker to check the directive is also not necessary,
since resolve.getNonNormalizedDirectiveMetadata() will check if the
directive is actually an Angular entity.
PR Close#32156
TypeScript downlevels `for-of` loops for ES5 targets. As a result, generated output contains extra code, including a try-catch block, which has code size and performance implications. This is especially important for runtime code where we want to keep it as small as possible. This commit changes `for-of` loops in runtime code to regular `for` loops.
PR Close#32157
Bundle size changed in both zone.js(legacy) and zone-evergreen.js
- zone.js(legacy) package increased a little because the following feature and fixes.
1. #31699, handle MSPointer events PR
2. https://github.com/angular/zone.js/pull/1219 to add __zone_symbol__ customization support
- zone-evergreen.js package decreased because
1. the MSPointer PR only for legacy
2. the Object.defineProperty patch is moved to legacy #31660
PR Close#31975
ngcc needs to solve a unique problem when compiling typings for an
entrypoint: it must resolve a declaration within a .js file to its
representation in a .d.ts file. Since such .d.ts files can be used in deep
imports without ever being referenced from the "root" .d.ts, it's not enough
to simply match exported types to the root .d.ts. ngcc must build an index
of all .d.ts files.
Previously, this operation had a bug: it scanned all .d.ts files in the
.d.ts program, not only those within the package. Thus, if a class in the
program happened to share a name with a class exported from a dependency's
.d.ts, ngcc might accidentally modify the wrong .d.ts file, causing a
variety of issues downstream.
To fix this issue, ngcc's .d.ts scanner now limits the .d.ts files it
indexes to only those declared in the current package.
PR Close#32129
One of the compiler's tasks is to enumerate the exports of a given ES
module. This can happen for example to resolve `foo.bar` where `foo` is a
namespace import:
```typescript
import * as foo from './foo';
@NgModule({
directives: [foo.DIRECTIVES],
})
```
In this case, the compiler must enumerate the exports of `foo.ts` in order
to evaluate the expression `foo.DIRECTIVES`.
When this operation occurs under ngcc, it must deal with the different
module formats and types of exports that occur. In commonjs code, a problem
arises when certain exports are downleveled.
```typescript
export const DIRECTIVES = [
FooDir,
BarDir,
];
```
can be downleveled to:
```javascript
exports.DIRECTIVES = [
FooDir,
BarDir,
```
Previously, ngtsc and ngcc expected that any export would have an associated
`ts.Declaration` node. `export class`, `export function`, etc. all retain
`ts.Declaration`s even when downleveled. But the `export const` construct
above does not. Therefore, ngcc would not detect `DIRECTIVES` as an export
of `foo.ts`, and the evaluation of `foo.DIRECTIVES` would therefore fail.
To solve this problem, the core concept of an exported `Declaration`
according to the `ReflectionHost` API is split into a `ConcreteDeclaration`
which has a `ts.Declaration`, and an `InlineDeclaration` which instead has
a `ts.Expression`. Differentiating between these allows ngcc to return an
`InlineDeclaration` for `DIRECTIVES` and correctly keep track of this
export.
PR Close#32129
Instead of destroying and recreating MetadataResolver every time the
program changes, create one instance and reuse it throughout the
lifetime of the language service.
Since Angular StaticSymbols are invalidated when program gets
out-of-date, this should be safe.
This should make the language service more more performant.
PR Close#32145
In VE the `Sanitizer` is always available in `BrowserModule` because the VE retrieves it using injection.
In Ivy the injection is optional and we have instructions instead of component definition arrays. The implication of this is that in Ivy the instructions can pull in the sanitizer only when they are working with a property which is known to be unsafe. Because the Injection is optional this works even if no Sanitizer is present. So in Ivy we first use the sanitizer which is pulled in by the instruction, unless one is available through the `Injector` then we use that one instead.
This PR does few things:
1) It makes `Sanitizer` optional in Ivy.
2) It makes `DomSanitizer` tree shakable.
3) It aligns the semantics of Ivy `Sanitizer` with that of the Ivy sanitization rules.
4) It refactors `DomSanitizer` to use same functions as Ivy sanitization for consistency.
PR Close#31934
This commit creates two concrete classes Inline and External
TemplateSource to differentiate between templates in TS file and
HTML file.
Knowing the template type makes the code much more explicit which
filetype we are dealing with.
With these two classes, there is no need for `getTemplateAt()` method in
TypeScriptHost. Removing this method is safe since it is not used in the
extension. This reduces the API surface of TypescriptHost.
PR Close#32127
Part 3/3 of language-service refactoring:
Change all language service APIs to return TS value since Angular LS
will be a proper tsserver plugin. This reduces the need to transform
results among Angular <--> TS <--> LSP.
PR Close#32116
In Angular today, the following pattern works:
```typescript
export class BaseDir {
constructor(@Inject(ViewContainerRef) protected vcr: ViewContainerRef) {}
}
@Directive({
selector: '[child]',
})
export class ChildDir extends BaseDir {
// constructor inherited from BaseDir
}
```
A decorated child class can inherit a constructor from an undecorated base
class, so long as the base class has metadata of its own (for JIT mode).
This pattern works regardless of metadata in AOT.
In Angular Ivy, this pattern does not work: without the @Directive
annotation identifying the base class as a directive, information about its
constructor parameters will not be captured by the Ivy compiler. This is a
result of Ivy's locality principle, which is the basis behind a number of
compilation optimizations.
As a solution, @Directive() without a selector will be interpreted as a
"directive base class" annotation. Such a directive cannot be declared in an
NgModule, but can be inherited from. To implement this, a few changes are
made to the ngc compiler:
* the error for a selector-less directive is now generated when an NgModule
declaring it is processed, not when the directive itself is processed.
* selector-less directives are not tracked along with other directives in
the compiler, preventing other errors (like their absence in an NgModule)
from being generated from them.
PR Close#31379
Cleanup the logic in TypeScriptHost as to when langauge service state
should be synchronized with the editor state.
The model employed follows that of tsserver, in which case it is the
caller's responsiblity to synchronize host data before any LS methods
are called.
PR Close#32017
For some reason (on OS/X) this transitive dependency is not being passed
through to the final TS builds that rely on this rule, so the build fails
with a missing file error:
```
The specified path does not exist:
'/.../sandbox/darwin-sandbox/451/execroot/angular/packages/tsconfig-build.json'.
```
PR Close#31943
Introduces a new migration schematic that follows the given
migration plan: https://hackmd.io/@alx/S1XKqMZeS.
First case: The schematic detects decorated directives which
inherit a constructor. The migration ensures that all base
classes until the class with the explicit constructor are
properly decorated with "@Directive()" or "@Component". In
case one of these classes is not decorated, the schematic
adds the abstract "@Directive()" decorator automatically.
Second case: The schematic detects undecorated declarations
and copies the inherited "@Directive()", "@Component" or
"@Pipe" decorator to the undecorated derived class. This
involves non-trivial import rewriting, identifier aliasing
and AOT metadata serializing
(as decorators are not always part of source files)
PR Close#31650
The $locationShim has onChange listeners to allow for synchronization logic between
AngularJS and Angular. When the AngularJS routing events are emitted first, this can
cause Angular code to be out of sync. Notifying the listeners earlier solves the
problem.
PR Close#32037
PR #29473 changed the docs to use a string as the input value of `formControlName`, as it used to only accept a string.
This has been changed, and `formControlName` now accepts a string or a number, so the example in the docs can use a binding as they used to.
PR Close#30606
This commit relaxes the type of the `formControlName` input to accept both a `string` and a `number`.
Currently, when using a `FormArray`, most templates look like:
```
<div formArrayName="tags">
<div *ngFor="let tag of tagsArray.controls; index as i">
<input [formControlName]="i">
</div>
</div>
```
Here `formControlName` receives a number whereas its input type is a string.
This is fine for VE and `fullTemplateTypeCheck`, but not for Ivy which does a more thorough type checking on inputs with `fullTemplateTypeCheck` enabled and throws `Type 'number' is not assignable to type 'string'`. It is fixable by using `formControlName="{{i}}"` but you have to know the difference between `a="{{b}}"` and `[a]="b"` and change it all over the application codebase. This commit allows the existing code to still type-check.
PR Close#30606
Follow-up to #30993 where we build all Angular packages with
the TypeScript `--strict` flag. The flag improves overall code
health and also helps us catch issues easier.
PR Close#31967
Part 2/3 of language service refactoring:
Now that the language service is a proper tsserver plugin, all LS
interfaces should return TS values. This PR refactors the
ng.getDiagnostics() API to return ts.Diagnostic[] instead of
ng.Diagnostic[].
PR Close#32115
The language service relies on a "context" file that is used as the
canonical "containing file" when performing module resolution.
This file is unnecessary since the language service host's current
directory always default to the location of tsconfig.json for the
project, which would give the correct result.
This refactoring allows us to simplify the "typescript host" and also
removes the need for custom logic to find tsconfig.json.
PR Close#32015
There has been a regression where enabling rollup treeshaking causes errors during runtime because it will drop const access which will always evaluate to true or false. However, such `const` in `@angular/core` cannot be dropped because their value is changed when NGCC is run on `@angular/core`
VE
```
const SWITCH_IVY_ENABLED__POST_R3__ = true;
const SWITCH_IVY_ENABLED__PRE_R3__ = false;
const ivyEnabled = SWITCH_IVY_ENABLED__PRE_R3__;
```
Ivy (After NGCC)
```
const SWITCH_IVY_ENABLED__POST_R3__ = true;
const SWITCH_IVY_ENABLED__PRE_R3__ = false;
const ivyEnabled = SWITCH_IVY_ENABLED__POST_R3__;
```
FESM2015
```
load(path) {
/** @type {?} */
const legacyOfflineMode = this._compiler instanceof Compiler;
return legacyOfflineMode ? this.loadFactory(path) : this.loadAndCompile(path);
}
```
ESM2015
```
load(path) {
/** @type {?} */
const legacyOfflineMode = !ivyEnabled && this._compiler instanceof Compiler;
return legacyOfflineMode ? this.loadFactory(path) : this.loadAndCompile(path);
}
```
From the above we can see that `ivyEnabled ` is being treeshaken away when generating the FESM bundle which is causing runtime errors such as `Cannot find module './lazy/lazy.module.ngfactory'` since in Ivy we will always load the factories.
PR Close#32069
Similar to interpolation, we do not want to completely remove whitespace
nodes that are siblings of an expansion.
For example, the following template
```html
<div>
<strong>items left<strong> {count, plural, =1 {item} other {items}}
</div>
```
was being collapsed to
```html
<div><strong>items left<strong>{count, plural, =1 {item} other {items}}</div>
```
which results in the text looking like
```
items left4
```
instead it should be collapsed to
```html
<div><strong>items left<strong> {count, plural, =1 {item} other {items}}</div>
```
which results in the text looking like
```
items left 4
```
---
**Analysis of the code and manual testing has shown that this does not cause
the generated ids to change, so there is no breaking change here.**
PR Close#31962
Previously if only a component template changed then we would know to
rebuild its component source file. But the compilation was incorrect if the
component was part of an NgModule, since we were not capturing the
compilation scope information that had a been acquired from the NgModule
and was not being regenerated since we were not needing to recompile
the NgModule.
Now we register compilation scope information for each component, via the
`ComponentScopeRegistry` interface, so that it is available for incremental
compilation.
The `ComponentDecoratorHandler` now reads the compilation scope from a
`ComponentScopeReader` interface which is implemented as a compound
reader composed of the original `LocalModuleScopeRegistry` and the
`IncrementalState`.
Fixes#31654
PR Close#31932
Moves the `renderer_to_renderer2` migration google3 tslint rule
into the new `google3` directory. This is done for consistency
as we recently moved all google3 migration rules into a new
`google3` folder (see: f69e4e6f77).
PR Close#31817
Creates a separate bazel target for the google3 migration
tests. The benefit is that it's faster to run tests for
public migrations in development. Google3 lint rules are
usually another story/implementation and the tests are quite
slow due to how TSLint applies replacements.
Additionally if something changes in the google3 tslint rules,
the tests which aren't affected re-run unnecessarily.
PR Close#31817
In Angular today, the following pattern works:
```typescript
export class BaseDir {
constructor(@Inject(ViewContainerRef) protected vcr: ViewContainerRef) {}
}
@Directive({
selector: '[child]',
})
export class ChildDir extends BaseDir {
// constructor inherited from BaseDir
}
```
A decorated child class can inherit a constructor from an undecorated base
class, so long as the base class has metadata of its own (for JIT mode).
This pattern works regardless of metadata in AOT.
In Angular Ivy, this pattern does not work: without the @Directive
annotation identifying the base class as a directive, information about its
constructor parameters will not be captured by the Ivy compiler. This is a
result of Ivy's locality principle, which is the basis behind a number of
compilation optimizations.
As a solution, @Directive() without a selector will be interpreted as a
"directive base class" annotation. Such a directive cannot be declared in an
NgModule, but can be inherited from. To implement this, a few changes are
made to the ngc compiler:
* the error for a selector-less directive is now generated when an NgModule
declaring it is processed, not when the directive itself is processed.
* selector-less directives are not tracked along with other directives in
the compiler, preventing other errors (like their absence in an NgModule)
from being generated from them.
PR Close#31379
PR #29473 changed the docs to use a string as the input value of `formControlName`, as it used to only accept a string.
This has been changed, and `formControlName` now accepts a string or a number, so the example in the docs can use a binding as they used to.
PR Close#30606
This commit relaxes the type of the `formControlName` input to accept both a `string` and a `number`.
Currently, when using a `FormArray`, most templates look like:
```
<div formArrayName="tags">
<div *ngFor="let tag of tagsArray.controls; index as i">
<input [formControlName]="i">
</div>
</div>
```
Here `formControlName` receives a number whereas its input type is a string.
This is fine for VE and `fullTemplateTypeCheck`, but not for Ivy which does a more thorough type checking on inputs with `fullTemplateTypeCheck` enabled and throws `Type 'number' is not assignable to type 'string'`. It is fixable by using `formControlName="{{i}}"` but you have to know the difference between `a="{{b}}"` and `[a]="b"` and change it all over the application codebase. This commit allows the existing code to still type-check.
PR Close#30606
Now that the Angular LS is a proper tsserver plugin, it does not make
sense for it to maintain its own language service API.
This is part one of the effort to remove our custom LanguageService
interface.
This interface is cumbersome because we have to do two transformations:
ng def -> ts def -> lsp definition
The TS LS interface is more comprehensive, so this allows the Angular LS
to return more information.
PR Close#31972
Publishing of NGCC packages should not be allowed. It is easy for a user to publish an NGCC'd version of a library they have workspace libraries which are being used in a workspace application.
If a users builds a library and afterwards the application, the library will be transformed with NGCC and since NGCC taints the distributed files that should be published.
With this change we use the npm/yarn `prepublishOnly` hook to display and error and abort the process with a non zero error code when a user tries to publish an NGCC version of the package.
More info: https://docs.npmjs.com/misc/scripts
PR Close#32031
Previously, when run with `createNewEntryPointFormats: true`, `ngcc`
would only update `package.json` with the new entry-point for the first
format property that mapped to a format-path. Subsequent properties
mapping to the same format-path would be detected as processed and not
have their new entry-point format recorded in `package.json`.
This commit fixes this by ensuring `package.json` is updated for all
matching format properties, when writing an `EntryPointBundle`.
PR Close#32052
Remove the `formatProperty` property from the `EntryPointBundle`
interface, because the property is not directly related to that type.
It was only used in one place, when calling `fileWriter.writeBundle()`,
but we can pass `formatProperty` directrly to `writeBundle()`.
PR Close#32052
This refactoring more clearly separates the different phases of the work
performed by `ngcc`, setting the ground for being able to run each phase
independently in the future and improve performance via parallelization.
Inspired by/Based on @alxhub's prototype: alxhub/angular@cb631bdb1
PR Close#32052
This change basically moves some checks to happen up front and ensures
we don't try to process any more properties than we absolutely need.
(The properties would not be processed before either, but we would
consider them, before finding out that they have already been processed
or that they do not exist in the entry-point's `package.json`.)
This change should make no difference in the work done by `ngcc`, but it
transforms the code in a way that makes the actual work known earlier,
thus making it easier to parallelize the processing of each property in
the future.
PR Close#32052
In commit 7b55ba58b (part of PR #29092), the implementation of
`makeEntryPointBundle()` was changed such that it now always return
`EntryPointBundle` (and not `null`).
However, the return type was not updated and as result we continued to
unnecessarily handle `null` as a potential return value in some places.
This commit fixes the return type to reflect the implementation and
removes the redundant code that was dealing with `null`.
PR Close#32052
ngcc analyzes the dependency structure of the entrypoints it needs to
process, as the compilation of entrypoints is ordering sensitive: any
dependent upon entrypoint must be compiled before its dependees. As part
of the analysis of the dependency graph, it is detected when a
dependency of entrypoint is not installed, in which case that entrypoint
will be marked as ignored.
For libraries that work with Angular Universal to run in NodeJS, imports
into builtin NodeJS modules can be present. ngcc's dependency analyzer
can only resolve imports within the TypeScript compilation, which
builtin modules are not part of. Therefore, such imports would
erroneously cause the entrypoint to become ignored.
This commit fixes the problem by taking the NodeJS builtins into account
when dealing with missing imports.
Fixes#31522
PR Close#31872
ngcc analyzes the dependency structure of the entrypoints it needs to
process, as the compilation of entrypoints is ordering sensitive: any
dependent upon entrypoint must be compiled before its dependees. As part
of the analysis of the dependency graph, it is detected when a
dependency of entrypoint is not installed, in which case that entrypoint
will be marked as ignored.
When a target entrypoint to compile is provided, it could occur that
given target is considered ignored because one of its dependencies might
be missing. This situation was not dealt with currently, instead
resulting in a crash of ngcc.
This commit prevents the crash by taking the above scenario into account.
PR Close#31872
Previously, `ngcc` would avoid processing a `formatPath` that a property
in `package.json` mapped to, if either the _property_ was marked as
processed or the `formatPath` (i.e. the file(s)) was processed in the
same `ngcc` run (since the `compiledFormats` set was not persisted
across runs).
This could lead in a situation where a `formatPath` would be compiled
twice (if for example properties `a` and `b` both mapped to the same
`formatPath` and one would run `ngcc` for property `a` and then `b`).
This commit fixes it by ensuring that as soon as a `formatPath` has been
processed all corresponding properties are marked as processed (which
persists across `ngcc` runs).
PR Close#32003
Previously, when `ngcc` was called with `compileAllFormats === false`
(i.e. how `@angular/cli` calls it), it would not attempt to process
more properties, once the first was successfully processed. However, it
_would_ continue looping over them and perform some unnecessary
operations, such as:
- Determining the format each property maps to (which can be an
expensive operation for some properties mapping to either UMD or
CommonJS).
- Checking whether each property has been processed (which involves
checking whether any property has been processed with a different
version of `ngcc` each time).
- Potentially marking properties as processed (which involves a
file-write operation).
This commit avoids the unnecessary operations by entirely skipping
subsequent properties, once the first one has been successfully
processed. While this theoretically improves performance, it is not
expected to have any noticeable impact in practice, since the list of
`propertiesToConsider` is typically small and the most expensive
operation (marking a property as processed) has low likelihood of
happening (plus these operations are a tiny fraction of `ngcc`'s work).
PR Close#32003
Previously, when `ngcc` needed to mark multiple properties as processed
(e.g. a processed format property and `typings` or all supported
properties for a non-Angular entry-point), it would update each one
separately and write the file to disk multiple times.
This commit changes this, so that multiple properties can be updated at
once with one file-write operation. While this theoretically improves
performance (reducing the I/O operations), it is not expected to have
any noticeable impact in practice, since these operations are a tiny
fraction of `ngcc`'s work.
This change will be useful for a subsequent change to mark all
properties that map to the same `formatPath` as processed, once it is
processed the first time.
PR Close#32003
Using `ParentInjectorPromise.all()` (which is a static method inherited
from `SyncPromise`) causes Closure Compiler (or some related tool) to
complain:
```
TypeError: ...$packages$upgrade$src$common$src$downgrade_component_ParentInjectorPromise.all is not a function
```
Switching to `SyncPromise.all()` (the static method on the parent class)
to avoid this error.
PR Close#31986
This PR changes the language service to work in two different modes:
1. TS + Angular
Plugin augments TS language service to provide additonal Angular
information. This only works with inline template and is meant to be
used as a local plugin (configured via tsconfig.json).
2. Angular only
Plugin only provides information on Angular templates, no TS info at
all. This effectively disables native TS features and is meant for
internal use only.
Default mode is `angularOnly = false` so that we don't break any users
already using Angular LS as local plugin.
As part of the refactoring, `undefined` is removed from type aliases
because it is considered bad practice.
go/tsstyle#nullableundefined-type-aliases
```
Type aliases must not include |null or |undefined in a union type.
Nullable aliases typically indicate that null values are being passed
around through too many layers of an application, and this clouds the
source of the original issue that resulted in null. They also make it
unclear when specific values on a class or interface might be absent.
```
PR Close#31935
Fixes Ivy's directive matching not capturing attribute selectors when there is one class binding, one style binding and a regular binding that precede the attribute that would match the directive. The issue appears to come from the fact that we weren't skipping over style bindings correctly which was throwing the loop off not to go into `bindingsMode` and to skip some of the bindings when matching.
PR Close#31942
This commit changes the emit order of ngcc when a class has multiple static
fields being assigned. Previously, ngcc would emit each static field
followed immediately by any extra statements specified for that field. This
causes issues with downstream tooling such as build optimizer, which expects
all of the static fields for a class to be grouped together. ngtsc already
groups static fields and additional statements. This commit changes ngcc's
ordering to match.
PR Close#31933
Fixes Ivy's `DebugElement.triggerEventHandler` to picking up events that have been registered through a `Renderer2`, unlike ViewEngine.
This PR resolves FW-1480.
PR Close#31845
Prior to this commit, the `schemas` configuration was applied to top-level view only. That leads to problems when using unknown props with elements inside nested views (for example generated as a result of *ngIf). This commit passes `schemas` information down to nested views to make sure that all the checks are consistent.
PR Close#31913
AngularJS compilation is a synchronous operation (unless having to fetch
a template, which is not supported for downgraded components).
Previously, ngUpgrade tried to retain the synchronous nature of the
compilation for downgraded components (when possible), by using a
synchronous thenable implementation (`ParentInjectorPromise`). This was
accidentally broken in #27217 by replacing a call to
`ParentInjectorPromise#then()` (which can be synchronous) with a call to
`Promise.all()` (which is asynchronous).
This commit fixes this by introducing a `SyncPromise.all()` static
method; similar to `Promise.all()` but retaining the synchronous
capabilities of `SyncPromise` (which `ParentInjectorPromise` inherits
from).
Fixes#30330
PR Close#31840
If a project being built with ngtsc has no templates to check, then ngtsc
previously generated an empty typecheck file. This seems to trigger some
pathological behavior in TS where the entire user program is re-checked,
which is extremely expensive. This likely has to do with the fact that the
empty file is not considered an ES module, meaning the module structure of
the program has changed.
This commit causes an export to be produced in the typecheck file regardless
of its other contents, which guarantees that it will be an ES module. The
pathological behavior is avoided and template type-checking is fast once
again.
PR Close#31922
Describe the indexer module for Angular compiler developers. Include
scope of analysis provided by the module and the indexers it targets as
first-party.
PR Close#31260
In #31426 a fix was implemented to render namespaced decorator imports
correctly, however it turns out that the fix only worked when decorator
information was extracted from static properties, not when using
`__decorate` calls.
This commit fixes the issue by creating the decorator metadata with the
full decorator expression, instead of only its name.
Closes#31394
PR Close#31614
An identifier may become repeated when bundling multiple source files
into a single bundle, so bundlers have a strategy of suffixing non-unique
identifiers with a suffix like $2. Since ngcc operates on such bundles,
it needs to process potentially suffixed identifiers in their canonical
form without the suffix. The "ngx-pagination" package was previously not
compiled fully, as most decorators were not recognized.
This commit ensures that identifiers are first canonicalized by removing
the suffix, such that they are properly recognized and processed by ngcc.
Fixes#31540
PR Close#31614
Any decorator information present in TypeScript is emitted into the
generated JavaScript sources by means of `__decorate` call. This call
contains both the decorators as they existed in the original source
code, together with calls to `tslib` helpers that convey additional
information on e.g. type information and parameter decorators. These
different kinds of decorator calls were not previously distinguished on
their own, but instead all treated as `Decorator` by themselves. The
"decorators" that were actually `tslib` helper calls were conveniently
filtered out because they were not imported from `@angular/core`, a
characteristic that ngcc uses to drop certain decorators.
Note that this posed an inconsistency in ngcc when it processes
`@angular/core`'s UMD bundle, as the `tslib` helper functions have been
inlined in said bundle. Because of the inlining, the `tslib` helpers
appear to be from `@angular/core`, so ngcc would fail to drop those
apparent "decorators". This inconsistency does not currently cause any
issues, as ngtsc is specifically looking for decorators based on their
name and any remaining decorators are simply ignored.
This commit rewrites the decorator analysis of a class to occur all in a
single phase, instead of all throughout the `ReflectionHost`. This
allows to categorize the various decorate calls in a single sweep,
instead of constantly needing to filter out undesired decorate calls on
the go. As an added benefit, the computed decorator information is now
cached per class, such that subsequent reflection queries that need
decorator information can reuse the cached info.
PR Close#31614
Currently the `DebugElement.listeners` array are retained after the node is destroyed. This means that they'll continue to fire through `triggerEventHandler` and can cause memory leaks. This has already been fixed in Ivy, but these changes fix it in ViewEngine for consistency.
PR Close#31820
nodejs rules 0.34.0 now includes protractor_web_test_suite rule (via new @bazel/protractor rule) so we switch to that location for that rule in this PR so that /packages/bazel/src/protractor can be removed in a future PR
this PR also brings in node toolchain support which was released in nodejs rules 0.33.0. this is a prerequisite for RBE for mac & windows users
bazel schematics also updated with the same. @bazel/bazel 0.28.1 npm package includes transitive dep on hide-bazel-files so we're able to remove an explicit dep on that as well.
PR Close#31824
In `BrowserModule` the value of `LOCALE_ID` is defined in the `APPLICATION_MODULE_PROVIDERS` after `APP_INITIALIZER` has run.
This PR ensures that `LOCALE_ID` is also set for ivy at the same moment which allows the application to fetch the locale from a backend (for example).
Fixes#31465
FW-1436 #resolve
PR Close#31566
Fixes Ivy throwing an error when something is passed in as a `forwardRef` into `@Injectable`'s `useClass` option. The error was being thrown, because we were trying to get the provider factory off of the wrapper function, rather than the value itself.
This PR resolves FW-1335.
PR Close#30532
In #30181, several testcases were added that were failing in Windows.
The reason was that a recent rebase missed a required change to interact
with the compiler's virtualized filesystems. This commit introduces the
required usage of the VFS layer to fix the testcase.
PR Close#31860
`TemplateVisitor#visitBoundAttribute` currently has to invoke visiting
expressions manually (this is fixed in #31813). Previously, it did not
bind `targetToIdentifier` to the visitor before deferring to the
expression visitor, which breaks the `targetToIdentifier` code. This
fixes that and adds a test to ensure the closure processed correctly.
This change is urgent; without it, many indexing targets in g3 are
broken.
PR Close#31861
Template AST nodes for (bound) attributes, variables and references will
now retain a reference to the source span of their value, which allows
for more accurate type check diagnostics.
PR Close#30181
The type check blocks (TCB) that ngtsc generates for achieving type
checking of Angular templates needs to be annotated with positional
information in order to translate TypeScript's diagnostics for the TCB
code back to the location in the user's template. This commit augments
the TCB by attaching trailing comments with AST nodes, such that a node
can be traced back to its source location.
PR Close#30181
Adds support for indexing template referenecs, variables, and property
and method calls inside bound attributes and bound events. This is
mostly an extension of the existing indexing infrastructure.
PR Close#31535
Currently we always generate the `read` parameter for the view and content query instructions, however since most of the time the `read` parameter won't be set, we'll end up generating `null` which adds 5 bytes for each query when minified. These changes make it so that the `read` parameter only gets generated if it has a value.
PR Close#31667
This commit fixes a bug where we assumed all dynamically created
components would have tag-name selectors, so we passed through the
"tag name" to the renderer as the first index of the selector. For
components with attribute selectors, the tag name would be "", so
the renderer would try to create an element with tag name "" and
throw. Now we default to a "div" element the same way that View
Engine did.
Closes#31785
PR Close#31812
This switches all Angular targets to be built with the same Angular compiler architecture (c.n. Ivy) that the Angular indexer uses. This eliminates issues with cross-references to transitive dependencies not being generated because of the way such dependencies are loaded by the legacy compiler arch.
PR Close#31786
Extend indexing API interface to provide information about used
directives' selectors on template elements. This enables an indexer to
xref element attributes to the directives that match them.
The current way this matching is done is by mapping selectors to indexed
directives. However, this fails in cases where the directive is not
indexed by the indexer API, like for transitive dependencies. This
solution is much more general.
PR Close#31782
When analyzing components, directives, etc we capture its base class.
Previously this assumed that the code is in TS format, which is not
always the case (e.g. ngcc).
Now this code is replaced with a call to
`ReflectionHost.getBaseClassExpression()`, which abstracts the work
of finding the base class.
PR Close#31544
Previously the last file-system being tested was left as the current
file-system. Now it is reset to an `InvalidFileSystem` to ensure future
tests are not affected.
PR Close#31544
Moves all google3 migration tslint rules into a single directory.
This makes it easier to wire up multiple migration rules in
google3 without having to update the rule directories each time
a new migration is available.
PR Close#30956
Introduces a new migration schematic for adding the "@Injectable()"
decorator to provider classes which are currently not migrated. Previously
in ViewEngine, classes which are declared as providers sometimes don't
require the "@Injectable()" decorator
(e.g. https://stackblitz.com/edit/angular-hpo7gw)
With Ivy, provider classes need to be explicitly decorated with
the "@Injectable()" decorator if they are declared as providers
of a given module. This commit introduces a migration schematic
which automatically adds the explicit decorator to places where
the decorator is currently missing.
The migration logic is designed in a CLI devkit and TSlint agnostic
way so that we can also have this migration run as part of a public
CLI migration w/ `ng update`. This will be handled as part of a follow-up to reiterate on console output etc.
Resolves FW-1371
PR Close#30956
The way the `ComponentFactory.create` is set up at the moment is that if a `rootSelectorOrNode` is passed in, the root context will be injected instead of creating dedicated one for the component. As far as I can tell, there doesn't seem to be a reason to do this and nothing seems to break because of it. These changes switch to always create the root context.
PR Close#31661
In ViewEngine nodes that were inserted through `Renderer2` would also be picked up by `DebugNode.query` and `DebugNode.queryAll`. This worked because everything in ViewEngine went through `Renderer2` and `DebugRenderer2` in dev mode which was able to keep track of the child nodes as they're being inserted. This no longer works in Ivy, because we don't use `DebugRenderer2` and debug nodes work a little differently. These changes work around the issue by walking the DOM as the logical tree is being walked and looking for matches. Note that this is __not__ optimal, because we're walking similar trees multiple times. ViewEngine could do it more efficiently, because all the insertions go through Renderer2, however that's not the case in Ivy. This approach is being used because:
1. Matching the ViewEngine behavior would mean potentially introducing a depedency from `Renderer2` to Ivy which could bring Ivy code into ViewEngine.
2. We would have to make `Renderer3` "know" about debug nodes.
3. It allows us to capture nodes that were inserted directly via the DOM.
PR Close#31716
This commit updates the `_clone` function of the `_ApplySourceSpanTransformer` class, where the for-in loop was used, resulting in copying from prototype to own properties, thus consuming more memory. Prior to NodeJS 12 (V8 versions before 7.4) there was an optimization that was improving the situation and since that logic was removed in favor of other optimizations, the situation with memory consumption caused by the for-in loop got worse. This commit adds a check to make sure we copy only own properties over to cloned object.
Closes#31627.
PR Close#31638
When injecting a `ChangeDetectorRef` into a pipe, the expected result is that the ref will be tied to the component in which the pipe is being used. This works for most cases, however when a pipe is used inside a property binding of a component (see test case as an example), the current `TNode` is pointing to component's host so we end up injecting the inner component's view. These changes fix the issue by only looking up the component view of the `TNode` if the `TNode` is a parent.
This PR resolves FW-1419.
PR Close#31438
In the previous patch () all the existing styling code was turned
off in favor of using the new refactored ivy styling code. This
patch is a follow up patch to that and removes all old, unused
styling code from the render3 directory.
PR Close#31193
This commit fixes a bug where ICU expressions inserted into ngTemplateOutlets
that are inside ngFor blocks would throw an error. We were assuming in view
insertion code that text nodes would always exist by the time a view\`s
creation block had executed. This is not true for text nodes created dynamically
by ICUs because this happens in the update block (in `i18nApply`).
This change ensures such dynamically created nodes are skipped when encountered
too early (as they will be attached later by i18n code anyway).
PR Close#31789
We currently have a handwritten version of the Ivy directive def for NgClass so
we can switch between Ivy and View Engine behavior. This generated code needs to
be kept up-to-date with what the Ivy compiler generates.
PR 30742 recently changed `classMap` such that it now requires allocation of
host binding slots. This means that the `allocHostVars()` function must be
called in the NgClass directive def to match compiler output, but the
handwritten directive def was not updated. This caused a bug where NgClass
was inappropriately overwriting data for other directives because space was
not allocated for its values.
PR Close#31788
This commit bumps the heap size of node/ngc under bazel to 4 GB instead of
the previous 2 GB. This brings it in sync with what the TS compiler uses
in g3, and fixes a bug where ngc would crash with OOM in worker mode.
PR Close#31784
Currently, template expressions and statements have their location
recorded relative to the HTML element they are in, with no handle to
absolute location in a source file except for a line/column location.
However, the line/column location is also not entirely accurate, as it
points an entire semantic expression, and not necessarily the start of
an expression recorded by the expression parser.
To support record of the source code expressions originate from, add a
new `sourceSpan` field to `ASTWithSource` that records the absolute byte
offset of an expression within a source code.
Implement part 2 of [refactoring template parsing for
stability](https://hackmd.io/@X3ECPVy-RCuVfba-pnvIpw/BkDUxaW84/%2FMA1oxh6jRXqSmZBcLfYdyw?type=book).
PR Close#31391
This commit is the final patch of the ivy styling algorithm refactor.
This patch swaps functionality from the old styling mechanism to the
new refactored code by changing the instruction code the compiler
generates and by pointing the runtime instruction code to the new
styling algorithm.
PR Close#30742
Versions of CLI prior to angular/angular-cli@0e339ee did not expose the host.getModifiedResourceFiles() method.
This meant that null was being passed through to the IncrementalState.reconcile() method
to indicate that there were either no changes or the host didn't support that method.
This commit fixes a bug where we were checking for undefined rather than null when
deciding whether any resource files had changed, causing a null reference error to be thrown.
This bug was not caught by the unit testing because the tests set up the changed files
via a slightly different process, not having access to the CompilerHost, and these test
were making the erroneous assumption that undefined indicated that there were no
changed files.
PR Close#31322
Currently developers can use the `By` class to construct common
`DebugElement` query predicates. e.g. `By.directive(MyDirective)`.
The `directive()` and `all()` predicates are currently returning
a predicate that works for `DebugElement` nodes. This return type
is too strict since the predicate is not specific to `DebugElement`
instances and can also apply to `DebugNode` instances.
Meaning that developers are currently able to use the `directive()`
predicate when using `queryAllNodes()`. This is a common practice
but will break when the project is compiled with TypeScript's
`--strictFunctionTypes` flag as the `DebugElement` predicate type
is not assignable to predicates for `DebugNode`. In order to make
these predicates usable with `--strictFuntionTypes` enabled, we
adjust the predicate type to reflect what is actually needed for
evaluation of the predicate.
PR Close#30993
Fixes all TypeScript failures caused by enabling the `--strict`
flag for test source files. We also want to enable the strict
options for tests as the strictness enforcement improves the
overall codehealth, unveiled common issues and additionally it
allows us to enable `strict` in the `tsconfig.json` that is picked
up by IDE's.
PR Close#30993
In View Engine, developers can pass bootstrap and entry components
as nested arrays. e.g.
```ts
export const MyOtherEntryComponents = [A, B, C]
@NgModule({
entryComponents: [MyComp, MyOtherEntryComponents]
})
```
Currently using nested arrays for these properties causes
unexpected errors to be reported in Ivy since the semantic
NgModule checks aren't properly recursing into the nested
entry/bootstrap components. This issue has been unveiled by
enabling the strict function parameter checks.
PR Close#30993
Currently the `ɵɵdefineComponent` method has incorrect type
definitions the `directives` and `pipes` metadata property.
The incorrect types allow developers to pass in already instantiated
`DirectiveDef` or `ComponentDef` objects. This can cause unexpected
failures because the definition internally only expects `Type` objects
and now incorrectly tries to read the `ngDirectiveDef` or `ngComponentDef`
of existing definitions.
This issue has been unveiled by enabling the strict function parameter
types flag, where the directive definitions are determined from each array
element in the `directives` or `pipes` property (which can throw).
PR Close#30993
As part of FW-1265, the `@angular/compiler` package is made compatible
with the TypeScript `--strict` flag. This already unveiled a few bugs,
so the strictness flag seems to help with increasing the overall code health.
Read more about the strict flag [here](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/compiler-options.html)
PR Close#30993
As part of FW-1265, the `@angular/core` package is made compatible
with the TypeScript `--strict` flag. This already unveiled a few bugs,
so the strictness flag seems to help with increasing the overall code health.
Read more about the strict flag [here](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/compiler-options.html)
PR Close#30993
Previously, the usage of `null` and `undefined` keywords in code that is
statically interpreted by ngtsc resulted in a `DynamicValue`, as they were
not recognized as special entities. This commit adds support to interpret
these keywords.
PR Close#31150
The support for decorators that were imported via a namespace,
e.g. `import * as core from `@angular/core` was implemented
piecemeal. This meant that it was easy to miss situations where
a decorator identifier needed to be handled as a namepsaced
import rather than a direct import.
One such issue was that UMD processing of decorators was not
correct: the namespace was being omitted from references to
decorators.
Now the types have been modified to make it clear that a
`Decorator.identifier` could hold a namespaced identifier,
and the corresponding code that uses these types has been
fixed.
Fixes#31394
PR Close#31426
Fixes Ivy matching directives against attribute bindings (e.g. `[attr.some-directive]="foo"`). Works by excluding attribute bindings from the attributes array during compilation. This has the added benefit of generating less code.
**Note:** My initial approach to implementing this was to have a different marker for attribute bindings so that they can be ignored when matching directives, however as I was implementing it I realized that the attributes in that array were only used for directive matching (as far as I could tell). I decided to drop the attribute bindings completely, because it results in less generated code.
PR Close#31541
Data members in TypeScriptServiceHost of Map type should be eagerly
initialized to address issue/24571. This eliminates the need to
constantly check for truthiness and makes code much more readable.
More PRs to follow to address issue/24571.
PR Close#31577
Prior to this commit, default value for LOCALE_ID was not setup for Closure Compiler. In Closure Compiler, we can use `goog.LOCALE` as a default value, which will be replaced at build time with current locale.
PR Close#31519
Currently we reuse the same instruction both for regular property bindings and property bindings on the `host`. The only difference between the two is that when it's on the host we shouldn't support inputs. We have an optional parameter called `nativeOnly` which is used to differentiate the two, however since `nativeOnly` is preceeded by another optional parameter (`sanitizer`), we have to generate two extra parameters for each host property bindings every time (e.g. `property('someProp', 'someValue', null, true)`).
These changes add a new instruction called `hostProperty` which avoids the need for the two parameters by removing `nativeOnly` which is always set and it allows us to omit `sanitizer` when it isn't being used.
These changes also remove the `nativeOnly` parameter from the `updateSyntheticHostBinding` instruction, because it's only generated for host elements which means that we can assume that its value will always be `true`.
PR Close#31550
Add support for indexing elements in the indexing module.
Opening and self-closing HTML tags have their selector indexed, as well
as the attributes on the element and the directives applied to an
element.
PR Close#31240
If zonejs is sent undefined callbacks it proceeds to attempt to call them, then fails, catches it own fail, rewrites the stack to hide the mistake, and reports a TypeError with a callstack unrelated to inputs.
Throw early if the callback is undefined (as can happen if JS or any-ified TS calls zone invokeTask).
Check for undefined onCommplete callback to zonejs jasmine wrapper.
PR Close#31497
Switch back to passing a custom bazel host instead of rewriting one that
is passed to `compile` now that the Angular indexer is stable.
Revert "feat(bazel): allow passing and rewriting an old bazel host"
This reverts commit 0a4c1c8f803a65f5c156af90e67f7d7d68ebc7f8.
PR Close#31496
There are two places in the ngcc processing where it needs to load the
content of a file given by a general path:
* when determining the format of an entry-point.
To do this ngcc uses the value of the relevant property in package.json.
But in the case of `main` it must parse the contents of the entry-point
file to decide whether the format is UMD or CommonJS.
* when parsing the source files for dependencies to determine the order in
which compilation must occur. The relative imports in each file are parsed
and followed recursively, looking for external imports.
Previously, we naively assumed that the path would match the file name exactly.
But actually we must consider the standard module resolution conventions.
E.g. the extension (.js) may be missing, or the path may refer to a directory
containing an index.js file.
This commit fixes both places.
This commit now requires the `DependencyHost` instances to check
the existence of more files than before (at worst all the different possible
post-fixes). This should not create a significant performance reduction for
ngcc. Since the results of the checks will be cached, and similar work is
done inside the TS compiler, so what we lose in doing it here, is saved later
in the processing. The main performance loss would be where there are lots
of files that need to be parsed for dependencies that do not end up being
processed by TS. But compared to the main ngcc processing this dependency
parsing is a small proportion of the work done and so should not impact
much on the overall performance of ngcc.
// FW-1444
PR Close#31509
Prior to this fix, the logic to set the right placeholder format for ICUs was a bit incorrect: if there was a nested ICU in one of the root ICU cases, that led to a problem where placeholders in subsequent branches used the wrong ({$placeholder}) format instead of {PLACEHOLDER} one. This commit updates the logic to make sure we properly transform all placeholders even if nested ICUs are present.
PR Close#31516
Prior to this commit, it was impossible to override providers defined via ModuleWithProviders using TestBed.overrideProvider API. The problem was caused by the fact that we were not taking into account these providers while calculating accumulated set of provider overrides. This commit updates the logic to extract providers from ModuleWithProviders and calculate the final set of overrides taking them into account.
PR Close#31415
Since, 7186f9c01 `compiler-cli` is no longer depending on `shelljs` for
production code. (We still use it in tests and infrastructure/tooling.)
Incidentally, this should also help with #29460.
PR Close#31468
Removes direct calls from one instruction into another, moves the shared logic into a separate function and removes the state getters from the shared function.
This PR resolves FW-1340.
PR Close#31456
Previously, resource paths beginning with '/' (aka "rooted" paths, which
are not actually absolute filesystem paths, but are relative to the
TypeScript project root directory) were not handled correctly. The leading
'/' was stripped and the path was resolved as if it was relative, but with
no containing file for context. This led to resources in different rootDirs
not being found.
Instead, such rooted paths are now resolved without TypeScript's help, by
checking each root directory. A test is added to this effect.
PR Close#31511
When determining if a `main` path points to a UMD or CommonJS
format, the contents of the file need to be loaded and parsed.
Previously, it was assumed that the path referred to the exact filename,
but did not account for normal module resolution semantics, where the
path may be missing an extension or refer to a directory containing an
`index.js` file.
// FW-1444
PR Close#31509
Since `goog.getMsg` does not process ICUs (post-processing is required via goog.i18n.MessageFormat, https://google.github.io/closure-library/api/goog.i18n.MessageFormat.html) and placeholder format used for ICUs and regular messages inside `goog.getMsg` are different, the current implementation (that assumed the same placeholder format) needs to be updated. This commit updates placeholder format used inside ICUs from `{$placeholder}` to `{PLACEHOLDER}` to better align with Closure. ICU placeholders (that were left as is prior to this commit) are now replaced with actual values in post-processing step (inside `i18nPostprocess`).
PR Close#31459
Prior to this commit, the `` unicode symbol that represents `&ngsp` in translations was not handled correctly, i.e. was not replaced with a whitespace, thus appearing on a screen. This commit adds post-processing and replaces the mentioned symbol with a whitespace.
PR Close#31479
This commit adds a test that verifies no translations are generated for bound attributes and also checks (as a part of the `verify` function) that VE and Ivy handle this case the same way.
PR Close#31481
`i18nStart` was calling `allocExpando` even if there was 0 new variable created.
This created a new expando instruction with the value 0 which was later interpreted as the start of a new expando block instead of just skipping 0 instructions.
FW-1417 #resolve
PR Close#31451
Fixes Ivy's return value for `DebugNode.context` not being consistent for the case where there is both a structural directive and a component on a node. In `ViewEngine` the instance of the component would be returned, whereas in Ivy the context of the directive is returned.
Also adds a couple of extra test cases for how `DebugNode.context` deals with directives.
This PR resolves FW-1343.
PR Close#31442
Adds a new `elementContainer` instruction that can be used to avoid two instruction (`elementContainerStart` and `elementContainerEnd`) for `ng-container` that has text-only content. This is particularly useful when we have `ng-container` inside i18n sections.
This PR resolves FW-1105.
PR Close#31444
Paths can be mapped directly to files, which was not being taken
into account when computing `basePaths` for the `EntryPointFinder`s.
Now if a `pathMapping` pattern does not exist or is a file, then we try
the containing folder instead.
Fixes#31424
PR Close#30525
Previously, ngcc had to walk the entire `node_modules` tree looking for
entry-points, even if it only needed to process a single target entry-point
and its dependencies.
This added up to a few seconds to each execution of ngcc, which is noticeable
when being run via the CLI integration.
Now, if an entry-point target is provided, only that target and its entry-points
are considered rather than the whole folder tree.
PR Close#30525
When profiling ngcc it is notable that a large amount of time
is spent dealing with an exception that is thrown (and handled
internally by fs) when checking the existence of a file.
We check file existence a lot in both finding entry-points
and when TS is compiling code. This commit adds a simple
cached `FileSystem`, which wraps a real `FileSystem` delegate.
This will reduce the number of calls through to `fs.exists()` and
`fs.readFile()` on the delegate.
Initial benchmarks indicate that the cache is miss to hit ratio
for `exists()` is about 2:1, which means that we save about 1/3
of the calls to `fs.existsSync()`.
Note that this implements a "non-expiring" cache, so it is not suitable
for a long lived `FileSystem`, where files may be modified externally.
The cache will be updated if a file is changed or moved via
calls to `FileSystem` methods but it will not be aware of changes
to the files system from outside the `FileSystem` service.
For ngcc we must create a new `FileSystem` service
for each run of `mainNgcc` and ensure that all file operations
(including TS compilation) use the `FileSystem` service.
This ensures that it is very unlikely that a file will change
externally during `mainNgcc` processing.
PR Close#30525
This message gets called if a format has already been
compiled and we only want the first. So the message itself
is wrong but it is also not very useful anyway.
PR Close#30525
The ngcc tool adds namespaced imports to files when compiling. The ngtsc
tooling was not processing types correctly when they were imported via
such namespaces. For example:
```
export declare class SomeModule {
static withOptions(...): ModuleWithProviders<ɵngcc1.BaseModule>;
```
In this case the `BaseModule` was being incorrectly attributed to coming
from the current module rather than the imported module, represented by
`ɵngcc1`.
Fixes#31342
PR Close#31367
If a package delcares a class internally on an NgModule, ngcc
needs to be able to add a public export to this class's type.
Previously, if the typing file for the declared is not imported
from the typings entry-point file, then ngcc cannot find it.
Now we try to guess the .d.ts files from the equivalent .js
files.
PR Close#31411
This partially reverts some changes from 71b9371180 (diff-dd469785fca8680a5b33b1e81c5cfd91R1420)
These broke the g3sync of zone.js because we use the output of the TypeScript compiler directly, rather than rely on the rollup commonjs plugin to define the global symbol
PR Close#31453
Non-wild-card path-mappings were not being matched correctly.
Further path-mapped secondary entry-points that
were imported from the associated primary entry-point were not
being martched correctly.
Fixes#31274
PR Close#31450
This is needed in g3 where the translation system is sensitive to the full path of the output.
For Bazel users, we don't want this because it would force them to
disable a Bazel option that prevents using the deprecated ctx.new_file
API
PR Close#31410
Adds a schematic and tslint rule that automatically migrate the consumer from `Renderer` to `Renderer2`. Supports:
* Renaming imports.
* Renaming property and method argument types.
* Casting to `Renderer`.
* Mapping all of the methods from the `Renderer` to `Renderer2`.
Note that some of the `Renderer` methods don't map cleanly between renderers. In these cases the migration adds a helper function at the bottom of the file which ensures that we generate valid code with the same return value as before. E.g. here's what the migration for `createText` looks like.
Before:
```
class SomeComponent {
createAndAddText() {
const node = this._renderer.createText(this._element.nativeElement, 'hello');
node.textContent += ' world';
}
}
```
After:
```
class SomeComponent {
createAndAddText() {
const node = __rendererCreateTextHelper(this._renderer, this._element.nativeElement, 'hello');
node.textContent += ' world';
}
}
function __rendererCreateTextHelper(renderer: any, parent: any, value: any) {
const node = renderer.createText(value);
if (parent) {
renderer.appendChild(parent, node);
}
return node;
}
```
This PR resolves FW-1344.
PR Close#30936
Updates the decision made in #31341; this is for the Angular indexer
inside Google. The indexer currently passes (and ngc-wrapped#compile
accepts) a bazel host to use, but because many methods are overwritten
specially for Angular compilation a better approach is to pass an old
bazel compiler host and siphon methods needed off of it before creating
a new host. This enables that.
PR Close#31381
Adds the new `classMapInterpolate1` through `classMapInterpolate8` instructions which handle interpolations inside the `class` attribute and moves the interpolation logic internally. This allows us to remove the `interpolationX` instructions in a follow-up PR.
These changes also add an error if an interpolation is encountered inside a `style` tag (e.g. `style="width: {{value}}"`). Up until now this would actually generate valid instructions, because `styleMap` goes through the same code path as `classMap` which does support interpolation. At runtime, however, `styleMap` would set invalid styles that look like `<div style="0:w;1:i;2:d;3:t;4:h;5::;7:1;">`. In `ViewEngine` interpolations inside `style` weren't supported either, however there we'd output invalid styles like `<div style="unsafe">`, even if the content was trusted.
PR Close#31211
There's no build time dependency from @angular/core to @angular/compiler,
so core can't directly refer to compiler types. To overcome this limitation,
there's a facade layer defined in the compiler and duplicated in core,
such that during runtime all types will correctly align.
There's a testcase in the compiler that verifies that all such facade types
are compatible across core and compiler, such that the core types can't get
misaligned with the actual definitions in the compiler. This suite of
tests were missing the `R3BaseMetadataFacade` facade type, so it was possible
for this type to get out of sync.
PR Close#31210
When a class uses Angular decorators such as `@Input`, `@Output` and
friends without an Angular class decorator, they are compiled into a
static `ngBaseDef` field on the class, with the TypeScript declaration
of the class being altered to declare the `ngBaseDef` field to be of type
`ɵɵBaseDef`. This type however requires a generic type parameter that
corresponds with the type of the class, however the compiler did not
provide this type parameter. As a result, compiling a program where such
invalid `ngBaseDef` declarations are present will result in compilation
errors.
This commit fixes the problem by providing the generic type parameter.
Fixes#31160
PR Close#31210
after update to rules_nodejs 0.32.1, @types are no longer automatically discovered by ngc-wrapped (which uses parts of ts_library) so this test needed updating so that the types files it generates is added as an explicit dep
PR Close#31325
...tsetse now falsely asserting on some lines in a few tests such as packages/core/schematics/test/injectable_pipe_migration_spec.ts.
```
await runMigration();
expect(tree.readContent('/index.ts'))
```
it asserts that "await is required on promise" on the 2nd line when there is no promise there
PR Close#31325
Brings in ts_library fixes required to get angular/angular building after 0.32.0:
typescript: exclude typescript lib declarations in node_module_library transitive_declarations
typescript: remove override of @bazel/tsetse (+1 squashed commit)
@npm//node_modules/foobar:foobar.js labels changed to @npm//:node_modules/foobar/foobar.js with fix for bazelbuild/rules_nodejs#802
also updates to rules_rass commit compatible with rules_nodejs 0.32.0
PR Close#31325
ctx.actions.declare_file now used in @angular/bazel ng_module rule as ctx.new_file is now deprecated. Fixes error:
```
File "ng_module.bzl", line 272, in _expected_outs
ctx.new_file(ctx.genfiles_dir, (ctx.label.name ..."))
Use ctx.actions.declare_file instead of ctx.new_file.
Use --incompatible_new_actions_api=false to temporarily disable this check.
```
This can be worked around with incompatible_new_actions_api flag but may as well fix it proper so downstream doesn't require this flag due to this code.
Also, depset() is no longer iterable by default without a flag. This required fixing in a few spots in @angular/bazel.
fix: foo
PR Close#31325
Some formats of CommonJS put the decorator helper calls
outside the class IIFE as statements on the top level of the
source file.
This commit adds support to the `CommonJSReflectionHost`
for this format.
PR Close#31335
Prior to this commit, host element of a view created via TestBed.createComponent was not attached to the component's host, making it problematic to use TestBed.createComponent API in component factories, which might be used for testing purposes only. This behavior is observed in google3 app tests and was supported by VE, so this commit aligns Ivy and VE.
PR Close#31318
Enable users to pass a custom Bazel CompilerHost to use for an Angular
compilation. This supports users who must override the TypeScript
compiler host.
PR Close#31341
Adds chaining to the `property`, `attribute` and `updateSyntheticHostBinding` instructions when they're used in a host binding.
This PR resolves FW-1404.
PR Close#31296
Without this change when using UrlTree redirects in `urlUpdateStrategy="eager"`, the URL would get updated to the target location, then redirected. This resulted in having an additional entry in the `history` and thus the `back` button would be broken (going back would land on the URL causing a new redirect).
Additionally, there was a bug where the redirect, even without `urlUpdateStrategy="eager"`, could create a history with too many entries. This was due to kicking off a new navigation within the navigation cancelling logic. With this PR the new navigation is pushed to the next tick with a `setTimeout`, allowing the page being redirected from to be cancelled before starting a new navigation.
Related to #27148
PR Close#31168
When `walkTNodeTree` was refactored, the case of ICU expressions was forgotten (because it was handled in the `else` previously).
This PR fixes that to handle it like `ElementContainer`.
FW-1411 #resolve
PR Close#31313
The TS compiler is likely to test paths with extensions and try to
load them as files. Therefore `fileExists()` and methods that rely
on it need to be able to distinguish between real files and directories
that have paths that look like files.
This came up as a bug in ngcc when trying to process `ngx-virtual-scroller`,
which relies upon a library called `@tweenjs/tween.js`.
PR Close#31289
Previously, (presummably due to a typo) the `okToCacheOpaque` argument
of `DataGroup#cacheResponse()` was essentially never taken into account
(since opaque responses have a non-200 status code and thus `res.ok` is
always false).
This commit fixes the typo, which allows opaque responses to be cached
when `okToCacheOpaque` is true (i.e. in data groups using the
`freshness` strategy).
Fixes#30968
PR Close#30977
This commit doesn't change the behavior wrt caching, but it makes it
more explicit that only non-timed-out responses are cached. In case of a
timeout, `res` would be set to a programmatically created 504
`Response`, so `cacheResponse()` (which checks for `res.ok`) would not
have cached it anyway, but this makes change makes it more explicit (and
more similar to the equivalent part in [handleFetchWithFreshness()][1]).
[1]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/2b4d5c754/packages/service-worker/worker/src/data.ts#L379-L388
PR Close#30977
Previously, opaque responses where handled a little differently than
other responses from the mock server. More specifically, they were not
tracked (so no assertions could be made for them) and their
[`Body` mixin][1] methods (such as `arrayBuffer()`, `json()`, `text()`)
would throw an error due to `body` being `null`.
This commit ensures opaque responses are also captured on the mock
server and also changes `Body` mixin methods to better simulate the
[spec'd behavior][2].
(These improvements will be necessary to test caching of opaque
responses in a subsequent commit.)
[1]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Body
[2]: https://fetch.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-body-consume-body
PR Close#30977
Currently in Ivy whenever we encounter a new namespace, we set it in the global state so that all subsequent nodes are created under the same namespace. Next time a template is run the namespace will be reset back to HTML.
This breaks down if the last node that was rendered was under the SVG or MathML namespace and we create a component through `ViewContainerRef.create`, because the next template function hasn't run yet and it hasn't had the chance to update the namespace. The result is that the root node of the new component will retain the wrong namespace and may not end up rendering at all (e.g. if we're trying to show a `div` inside the SVG namespace). This issue has the potential to affect a lot of apps, because all components inserted through the router also go through `ViewContainerRef.create`.
PR Close#31232
These files have not been formatted properly, due to issues in the
`gulp format*` tasks. See previous commits (or #31295) for more details.
PR Close#31295
If an entry-point has missing dependencies then it cannot be
processed and is marked as invalid. Similarly, if an entry-point
has dependencies that have been marked as invalid then that
entry-point too is invalid. In all these cases, ngcc should quietly
ignore these entry-points and continue processing what it can.
Previously, if an entry-point had more than one entry-point that
was transitively invalid then ngcc was crashing rather than
ignoring the entry-point.
PR Close#31276
The Angular runtime frequently calls into user code (for example, when
writing to a property binding). Since user code can throw errors, calls to
it are frequently wrapped in a try-finally block. In Ivy, the following
pattern is common:
```typescript
enterView();
try {
callUserCode();
} finally {
leaveView();
}
```
This has a significant problem, however: `leaveView` has a side effect: it
calls any pending lifecycle hooks that might've been scheduled during the
current round of change detection. Generally it's a bad idea to run
lifecycle hooks after the application has crashed. The application is in an
inconsistent state - directives may not be instantiated fully, queries may
not be resolved, bindings may not have been applied, etc. Invariants that
the app code relies upon may not hold. Further crashes or broken behavior
are likely.
Frequently, lifecycle hooks are used to make assertions about these
invariants. When these assertions fail, they will throw and "swallow" the
original error, making debugging of the problem much more difficult.
This commit modifies `leaveView` to understand whether the application is
currently crashing, via a parameter `safeToRunHooks`. This parameter is set
by modifying the above pattern:
```typescript
enterView();
let safeToRunHooks = false;
try {
callUserCode();
safeToRunHooks = true;
} finally {
leaveView(..., safeToRunHooks);
}
```
If `callUserCode` crashes, then `safeToRunHooks` will never be set to `true`
and `leaveView` won't call any further user code. The original error will
then propagate back up the stack and be reported correctly. A test is added
to verify this behavior.
PR Close#31244
Our module resolution prefers `.js` files over `.d.ts` files because
occasionally libraries publish their typings in the same directory
structure as the compiled JS files, i.e. adjacent to each other.
The standard TS module resolution would pick up the typings
file and add that to the `ts.Program` and so they would be
ignored by our analyzers. But we need those JS files, if they
are part of the current package.
But this meant that we also bring in JS files from external
imports from outside the package, which is not desired.
This was happening for the `@fire/storage` enty-point
that was importing the `firebase/storage` path.
In this commit we solve this problem, for the case of imports
coming from a completely different package, by saying that any
file that is outside the package root directory must be an external
import and so we do not analyze those files.
This does not solve the potential problem of imports between
secondary entry-points within a package but so far that does
not appear to be a problem.
PR Close#30591
Rather than passing a number of individual arguments, we can
just pass an `EntryPointBundle`, which already contains them.
This is also a precursor to using more of the properties in the bundle.
PR Close#30591
This will allow users of the `EntryPointBundle` to use some of the `EntryPoint`
properties without us having to pass them around one by one.
PR Close#30591
Previously we expected the constructor parameter `decorators`
property to be an array wrapped in a function. Now we also support
an array not wrapped in a function.
PR Close#30591
Some packages do not actually provide a `typings` field in their
package.json. But TypeScript naturally infers the typings file from
the location of the JavaScript source file.
This commit modifies ngcc to do a similar inference when finding
entry-points to process.
Fixes#28603 (FW-1299)
PR Close#30591
There are scenarios where it is not possible for ngcc to guess the format
or configuration of an entry-point just from the files on disk.
Such scenarios include:
1) Unwanted entry-points: A spurious package.json makes ngcc think
there is an entry-point when there should not be one.
2) Deep-import entry-points: some packages allow deep-imports but do not
provide package.json files to indicate to ngcc that the imported path is
actually an entry-point to be processed.
3) Invalid/missing package.json properties: For example, an entry-point
that does not provide a valid property to a required format.
The configuration is provided by one or more `ngcc.config.js` files:
* If placed at the root of the project, this file can provide configuration
for named packages (and their entry-points) that have been npm installed
into the project.
* If published as part of a package, the file can provide configuration
for entry-points of the package.
The configured of a package at the project level will override any
configuration provided by the package itself.
PR Close#30591
Previously each test relied on large shared mock file-systems, which
makes it difficult to reason about what is actually being tested.
This commit breaks up these big mock file-systems into smaller more
focused chunks.
PR Close#30591