This means integration tests no longer need to depend on a $CI_CHROMEDRIVER_VERSION_ARG environment variable to specify which chromedriver version to download to match the locally installed chrome. This was bad DX and not having it specified was not reliable as webdriver-manager would not always download the chromedriver version to work with the locally installed chrome.
webdriver-manager update --gecko=false --standalone=false $CI_CHROMEDRIVER_VERSION_ARG is now replaced with node webdriver-manager-update.js in the root package.json, which checks which version of chrome puppeteer has come bundled with & downloads informs webdriver-manager to download the corresponding chrome driver version.
Integration tests now use "webdriver-manager": "file:../../node_modules/webdriver-manager" so they don't have to waste time calling webdriver-manager update in postinstall
"// resolutions": "Ensure a single version of webdriver-manager which comes from root node_modules that has already run webdriver-manager update",
"resolutions": {
"**/webdriver-manager": "file:../../node_modules/webdriver-manager"
}
This should speed up each integration postinstall by a few seconds.
Further, integration test package.json files link puppeteer via file:../../node_modules/puppeteer which is the ideal situation as the puppeteer post-install won't download chrome if it is already downloaded. In CI, since node_modules is cached it should not need to download Chrome either unless the node_modules cache is busted.
NB: each version of puppeteer comes bundles with a specific version of chrome. Root package.json & yarn.lock currently pull down puppeteer 2.1.0 which comes with chrome 80. See https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer#q-which-chromium-version-does-puppeteer-use for more info.
Only two references to CI_CHROMEDRIVER_VERSION_ARG left in integration tests at integration/bazel-schematics/test.sh which I'm not entirely sure how to get rid of it
Use a lightweight puppeteer=>chrome version mapping instead of launching chrome and calling browser.version()
Launching puppeteer headless chrome and calling browser.version() was a heavy-handed approach to determine the Chrome version. A small and easy to update mappings file is a better solution and it means that the `yarn install` step does not require chrome shared libs available on the system for its postinstall step
PR Close#35049
This allows us to update the version of the package in a single place for all tests.
Notable exemption of this is aio which currently doesn't depend on anything installed in the root.
PR Close#34002
Since we cannot run `yarn install` with the `--frozen-lockfile` option
(because we want to be able to install the locally built Angular
packages), integration project lockfiles are susceptible to getting
out-of-sync with the corresponding `package.json`. When this happens,
yarn will install the latest available version that satisfies the
version range specified in `package.json`.
This commit adds another line of defense, by specifying exact versions
for the dependencies in `package.json` files (i.e. `1.33.7` instead of
`^1.33.0`). While transitive dependencies will be unpinned, this still
ensures that the same version of direct dependencies will be installed
in case of an out-of-sync lockfile, thus reducing the probability of
random failures.
PR Close#33968
In the `integration_test` CircleCI job, we run `yarn install` on all
projects in the `integration/` directory. If a project has no lockfile
or if the lockfile is out-of-sync with the corresponding `package.json`
file, then the installed dependency versions are no longer pinned, which
can result in different versions being installed between different runs
of the same job (if, for example, a new version is released for a
package) and breaks hermeticity.
This could be prevented by using the `--frozen-lockfile` option with
`yarn install`, but this is not possible with the current setup, because
yarn needs to be able to install the locally built Angular packages,
whose checksums will be different from the ones in the lockfile.
Therefore, we have to manually ensure that the lockfiles remain in-sync
with the corresponding `package.json` files for the rest of the
dependencies.
For example, previously, [cli-hello-world-lazy/yarn.lock][1] had an
entry for `@angular-devkit/build-angular@0.900.0-next.9` (pinned to
`0.900.0-next.9`), but [cli-hello-world-lazy/package.json][2] specified
the `@angular-devkit/build-angular` version as `^0.900.0-rc.0` (note the
leading caret). As a result, since the version in the lock file does not
much the one in `package.json`, the lockfile is ignored and the latest
available version that matches `^0.900.0-rc.0` is installed.
This, for example, started causing unrelated CI failures ([example][3]),
when `@angular-devkit/build-angular@9.0.0-rc.3` was released with a size
improvement.
This commit ensures that all integration projects have a lockfile and
that lockfiles are up-to-date (with the current `package.json` files).
[1]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/fc2f6b845/integration/cli-hello-world-lazy/yarn.lock#L13
[2]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/fc2f6b845/integration/cli-hello-world-lazy/package.json#L26
[3]: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/535959#tests/containers/2
PR Close#33968
In #33823, `scripts/package-builds.sh` (which is used by both
`build-packages-dist.sh` and `build-ivy-npm-packages.sh`) was updated to
use `realpath`. It turns out that `realpath` does not exist on macOS, so
the build scripts do not work there.
In order to fix this (and also reduce the likelihood of introducing
similar issues in the future), this commit changes these bash scripts to
Node.js scripts (using [ShellJS](https://github.com/shelljs/shelljs) for
a cross-platform implementation of Unix shell commands where necessary).
PR Close#33854
In #33046, internal uses of `zone.js` were switched to reference it
directly from source (built with Bazel) instead of npm. As a result, the
necessary scripts were updated to build `zone.js` as necessary. However,
some `integration/**/debug-test.sh` scripts were missed (apparently
because they are not used on CI, but only locally as helpers for
debugging the integration projects).
This commit updates the `scripts/build-packages-dist.sh` script to also
build `zone.js`, so that other scripts (such as the various
`debug-test.sh` scripts) can use it.
PR Close#33733
Previously, the executable for the Angular Compatibility Compiler
(`ngcc`) was called `ivy-ngcc`. This would be confusing for users not
familiar with our internal terminology, especially given that we call it
`ngcc` in all our docs and presentations.
This commit renames the executable to `ngcc` and replaces `ivy-ngcc`
with a script that errors with an informative message (prompting the
user to use `ngcc` instead).
Jira issue: [FW-1624](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1624)
PR Close#33140
Updates the NodeJS version to the latest stable version at the time of
writing (v10.16.0). We need to update our image to use a minimum NodeJS
version of v10.15.0 because new CLI apps automatically install a non-locked
version of selenium-webdriver that now requires NodeJS >= 10.15.0 since the
latest release of 17th June 2019 (4.0.0-alpha.3).
See CI failures: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/359077
PR Close#31088
We recently had an unexpected size regression in the hello world
tests because the CLI devkit released an RC that regressed us and
the dependencies were not pinned. This change ensures that we only
update dependencies like devkit deliberately, so we do not have
mysterious breakages caused by other packages.
PR Close#30152
Currently our plan is to skip the publish, docgen, and update steps for this package.
During RC, we'll determine if the breaking change is too difficult for users, in which case we might restore the package for another major.
PR Close#29550