In cc4b813e75 the `getBasePaths()`
function was changed to log a warning if a `basePath()` computed from
the `paths` mappings did not exist. It turns out this is a common and
accepted scenario, so we should not log warnings in this case.
Fixes#36518
PR Close#36525
Currently the golden output of the circular-deps tool is purely
based on the order of source files passed to the tool, and on the
amount of imports inside source files.
This is actually resulting in deterministic output as running
the tool multiple times without any changes to source files,
results in the same output.
Though it seems like the tool is too strict and we can avoid
unnecessary golden changes if:
1. A source file that is part of a cycle is imported earlier (in terms
of how the analyzer visits them). This could result in the cycle path
starting with a different source file.
2. Source files which are not part of a cycle are imported earlier
(in terms of how the analyzer visits them). This could result in moved
items in the golden if re-approved (even though the cycles remain the same)
To fix this, we normalize the cycle path array that serves as
serializable data structure for the text-based goldens. Since
the paths represents a cycle, the path can be shifted in a
deterministic way so that cycles don't change unnecessarily
in the golden, and to simplify comparison of cycles.
Additionally, we sort the cycles in a deterministic way so
that the golden doesn't change unnecessarily (as explained above).
PR Close#36505
`fullTemplateTypeCheck` is no longer required since we now use `strictTemplates` which is a superset of the former option.
Follow-up on: 04f61c0c3e (r38354112)
PR Close#36502
This commit removes individual components from parsing-cases.ts and
colocate them with the actual tests. This makes the tests more readable.
PR Close#36495
1. update jasmine to 3.5
2. update @types/jasmine to 3.5
3. update @types/jasminewd2 to 2.0.8
Also fix several cases, the new jasmine 3 will help to create test cases correctly,
such as in the `jasmine 2.x` version, the following case will pass
```
expect(1 == 2);
```
But in jsamine 3, the case will need to be
```
expect(1 == 2).toBeTrue();
```
PR Close#34625
Previously, the bazel stamping regex only matched on versions
0-9 for major and minor numbers, this update allows for matching
on any number for major, minor or patch.
PR Close#36523
`zone.js` supports jest `test.each()` methods, but it
introduces a bug, which is the `done()` function will not be handled correctly.
```
it('should work with done', done => {
// done will be undefined.
});
```
The reason is the logic of monkey patching `test` method is different from `jasmine` patch
// jasmine patch
```
return testBody.length === 0
? () => testProxyZone.run(testBody, null)
: done => testProxyZone.run(testBody, null, [done]);
```
// jest patch
```
return function(...args) {
return testProxyZone.run(testBody, null, args);
};
```
the purpose of this change is to handle the following cases.
```
test.each([1, 2])('test.each', (arg1, arg2) => {
expect(arg1).toBe(1);
expect(arg2).toBe(2);
});
```
so in jest, it is a little complex, because the `testBody`'s parameter may be bigger than 1, so the
logic in `jasmine`
```
return testBody.length === 0
? () => testProxyZone.run(testBody, null)
: done => testProxyZone.run(testBody, null, [done]);
```
will not work for `test.each` in jest.
So in this PR, I created a dynamic `Function` to return the correct length of paramters (which is required by jest core), to handle
1. normal `test` with or without `done`.
2. each with parameters with or without done.
PR Close#36022
During static evaluation of expressions, the partial evaluator
may come across a binary + operator for which it needs to
evaluate its operands. Any of these operands may be a reference
to an enum member, in which case the enum member's value needs
to be used as literal value, not the enum member reference
itself. This commit fixes the behavior by resolving an
`EnumValue` when used as a literal value.
Fixes#35584
Resolves FW-1951
PR Close#36461
Previously, `isRelativePath()` assumed paths are *nix-style. This caused
Windows-style paths (such as `C:\foo\some-package\some-file.js`) to not
be recognized as "relative" imports.
This commit fixes this by using the OS-agnostic `isRooted()` helper and
also accounting for both styles of path delimiters: `/` and `\`
PR Close#36372
there was a typo in _resourcess.scss file there was an extra comma added some spaces too that were needed for proper styling of the code
PR Close#35935
on small mobile screens the top tab bar contains text which was not visible on small screens changed text size, margin and padding so that the text could be contained in these screens (320px to 480px)
PR Close#35935
Currently destroy hooks are stored in memory as `[1, hook, 5, hook]` where
the numbers represent the index at which to find the context and `hook` is
the function to be invoked. This breaks down for `multi` providers,
because the value at the index will be an array of providers, resulting in
the hook being invoked with an array of all the multi provider values,
rather than the provider that was destroyed. In ViewEngine `ngOnDestroy`
wasn't being called for `multi` providers at all.
These changes fix the issue by changing the structure of the destroy hooks to `[1, hook, 5, [0, hook, 3, hook]]` where the indexes inside the inner array point to the provider inside of the multi provider array. Note that this is slightly different from the original design which called for the structure to be `[1, hook, 5, [hook, hook]`, because in the process of implementing it, I realized that we wouldn't get passing the correct context if only some of the `multi` providers have `ngOnDestroy` and others don't.
I've run the newly-added `view_destroy_hooks` benchmark against these changes and compared it to master. The difference seems to be insignificant (between 1% and 2% slower).
Fixes#35231.
PR Close#35840
When TypeScript downlevels ES2015+ code to ES5, it uses some helper
functions to emulate some ES2015+ features, such as spread syntax. The
TypeScript compiler can be configured to emit these helpers into the
transpiled code (which is controlled by the `noEmitHelpers` option -
false by default). It can also be configured to import these helpers
from the `tslib` module (which is controlled by the `importHelpers`
option - false by default).
While most of the time the helpers will be either emitted or imported,
it is possible that one configures their app to neither emit nor import
them. In that case, the helpers could, for example, be made available on
the global object. This is what `@nativescript/angular`
v9.0.0-next-2019-11-12-155500-01 does. See, for example, [common.js][1].
Ngcc must be able to detect and statically evaluate these helpers.
Previously, it was only able to detect emitted or imported helpers.
This commit adds support for detecting these helpers if they are neither
emitted nor imported. It does this by checking identifiers for which no
declaration (either concrete or inline) can be found against a list of
known TypeScript helper function names.
[1]: https://unpkg.com/browse/@nativescript/angular@9.0.0-next-2019-11-12-155500-01/common.js
PR Close#36418
This commit refactors the process for determining the type of an Angular
attribute to be use a function that takes an attribute name and returns
the Angular attribute kind and name, rather than requiring the user to
query match the attribute name with the regex and query the matching
array.
This refactor prepares for a future change that will improve the
experience of completing attributes in `()`, `[]`, or `[()]` contexts.
PR Close#36301
Recent ZoneJS-related commit (416c786774) update the `promise.ts` file, but it looks like original PR was not rebased after clang update. As a result, the `lint` CircleCI job started to fail in master after merging that PR (https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/36311). This commit updates the format of the `promise.ts` script according to the new clang rules.
PR Close#36487
Close#36142
In Firefox extensions, the `window.fetch` is not configurable, that means
```
const desc = Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor(window, 'fetch');
desc.writable === false;
```
So in this case, we should not try to patch `fetch`, otherwise, it will
throw error ('fetch is ReadOnly`)
PR Close#36311
Each docs example has an `example-config.json` configuration file. Among
other things, this file can be used to specify what commands to run in
order to test the example. (If not specified, the `run-example-e2e.js`
script will run a default `yarn e2e` command.)
Previously, the property specifying the test commands was called `e2e`.
This is because in the past only e2e tests were run for docs examples.
Since recently, some examples may specify commands for other types of
tests (such as unit tests). Therefore, calling the property that holds
the list of test commands `e2e` no longer makes sense and can be
misleading to people looking at the configuration files.
This commit renamed the property to the more generic `tests`. In the
future, the `run-example-e2e.js` script (and corresponding npm script)
should be renamed and refactored to also avoid giving the impression
that only e2e tests are run.
Discussed in:
https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/36143#discussion_r395148379
PR Close#36143
The `core-js` dependency is no longer included in `package.json` for
`cli`-type examples, but only for the `systemjs` ones. This commit
updates the `package.json` templates to reflect that (and also updates
the `npm-packages` guide accordingly).
PR Close#36143
Previously, only e2e tests were run for docs examples on CI. As a
result, unit tests (which are included in the zipped archives we provide
for users to download and play with the examples locally) were often
outdated and broken.
This commit configures specific docs examples that have meaningful unit
tests to run them on CI (via the `run-example-e2e.js` script). Where
necessary, the unit tests are fixed to ensure they pass and reflect the
changes in the corresponding component/service.
This commit also removes some auto-generated unit tests that are not
meaningful (e.g. make trivial assertions, such that a component instance
is truthy) and are often broken anyway (e.g. because the corresponding
component has been changed in ways that make the tests fail).
PR Close#36143
In rare cases a project with configured `rootDirs` that has imports to
non-existent identifiers could fail in the migration.
This happens because based on the application code, the migration could
end up trying to resolve the `ts.Symbol` of such non-existent
identifiers. This isn't a problem usually, but due to a upstream bug
in the TypeScript compiler, a runtime error is thrown.
This is because TypeScript is unable to compute a relative path from the
originating source file to the imported source file which _should_
provide the non-existent identifier. An issue for this has been reported
upstream: https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/37731. The
issue only surfaces since our migrations don't provide an absolute base
path that is used for resolving the root directories.
To fix this, we ensure that we never use relative paths when parsing
tsconfig files. More details can be found in the TS issue.
Fixes#36346.
PR Close#36367
The source-map flattening was throwing an error when there
is a cyclic dependency between source files and source-maps.
The error was either a custom one describing the cycle, or a
"Maximum call stack size exceeded" one.
Now this is handled more leniently, resulting in a partially loaded
source file (or source-map) and a warning logged.
Fixes#35727Fixes#35757
Fixes https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/17106
Fixes https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/17115
PR Close#36452