Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Igor Minar b43f8bc7d3 feat(core): upgrade rxjs to 6.0.0-alpha.4 (#22573)
PR Close #22573
2018-03-19 21:51:51 -07:00
Misko Hevery 47e251a80a build: remove `main()` from specs (#21053)
PR Close #21053
2017-12-22 13:10:51 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh 503be69af6 fix(common): treat an empty body as null when parsing JSON in HttpClient (#19958)
Previously, XhrBackend would call JSON.parse('') if the response body was
empty (a 200 status code with content-length 0). This changes the XhrBackend
to attempt the JSON parse only if the response body is non-empty. Otherwise,
the body is left as null.

Fixes #18680.
Fixes #19413.
Fixes #19502.
Fixes #19555.

PR Close #19958
2017-11-28 22:27:10 -06:00
Alex Rickabaugh 04ab9f1917 fix(common): attempt to JSON.parse errors for JSON responses (#19773)
PR Close #19773
2017-10-18 11:18:58 -07:00
Alex Rickabaugh 452a7ae88b fix(common): fix XSSI prefix stripping by using JSON.parse always (#18466)
Currently HttpClient sends requests for JSON data with the
XMLHttpRequest.responseType set to 'json'. With this flag, the browser
will attempt to parse the response as JSON, but will return 'null' on
any errors. If the JSON response contains an XSSI-prevention prefix,
this will cause the browser's parsing to fail, which is unrecoverable.

The only compelling reason to use the responseType 'json' is for
performance (especially if the browser offloads JSON parsing to a
separate thread). I'm not aware of any browser which does this currently,
nor of any plans to do so. JSON.parse and responseType 'json' both
end up using the same V8 code path in Chrome to implement the parse.

Thus, this change switches all JSON parsing in HttpClient to use
JSON.parse directly.

Fixes #18396, #18453.

PR Close #18466
2017-08-29 17:18:54 -07:00
Victor Berchet 9479a106bb build: enable TSLint on the packages folder 2017-07-31 15:47:57 -07:00
Alex Rickabaugh 37797e2b4e feat(common): new HttpClient API
HttpClient is an evolution of the existing Angular HTTP API, which exists
alongside of it in a separate package, @angular/common/http. This structure
ensures that existing codebases can slowly migrate to the new API.

The new API improves significantly on the ergonomics and features of the legacy
API. A partial list of new features includes:

* Typed, synchronous response body access, including support for JSON body types
* JSON is an assumed default and no longer needs to be explicitly parsed
* Interceptors allow middleware logic to be inserted into the pipeline
* Immutable request/response objects
* Progress events for both request upload and response download
* Post-request verification & flush based testing framework
2017-07-07 12:09:32 -07:00