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