Note, the reason this commit removes `firebase-tools` is:
1) firebase-tools has an optional dependency on
https://www.npmjs.com/package/@google-cloud/functions-emulator
2) yarn's `--ignore-optional` doesn't work for transitive deps, so
there's no way to yarn install without getting that functions-emulator
package
3) functions-emulator has a transitive dep on `grpc`
4) the version of `grpc` we get has `BUILD` files and no `WORKSPACE`
file so it always breaks `bazel build ...`
It could be solved by any of:
1) remove firebase-tools - this is what I did
2) fix yarn so you can omit optional deps of a transitive dep
3) make functions-emulator depend transitively on a more recent `grpc`
version
4) patch `grpc` after install by doing an `rm` command in our
postinstall or something
In its place we must install protobufjs. This is needed by the
ngc-wrapped test, which needs jasmine as well as bazel's worker mode
dependencies, and therefore cannot simply rely on
node_modules =
"@build_bazel_rules_typescript_tsc_wrapped_deps//:node_modules"
PR Close#22168
This saves us an executor on Travis.
Note that we still do a bazel build on travis when we run the integration tests under e2e_2.
We expect that CircleCI is the only place we'll ever consume bazel-built artifacts.
PR Close#22170
This should cause Bazel builds to be incremental, only re-building parts of Angular affected by changes since the last build.
It also fixes a potential version skew, where CI was running the Bazel linter binaries in the ngcontainer docker image, but developers built them using the versions in WORKSPACE
PR Close#21784
The AsyncPipe type signature was changed to allow
deferred creation of promises and observalbes that
is supported by the implementation by allowing
`Promise<T>|null|undefined` and by allowing
`Observable<T>|null|undefined`.
PR Close#22169
This commit bundles 3 important changes, with the goal of enabling tree-shaking
of services which are never injected. Ordinarily, this tree-shaking is prevented
by the existence of a hard dependency on the service by the module in which it
is declared.
Firstly, @Injectable() is modified to accept a 'scope' parameter, which points
to an @NgModule(). This reverses the dependency edge, permitting the module to
not depend on the service which it "provides".
Secondly, the runtime is modified to understand the new relationship created
above. When a module receives a request to inject a token, and cannot find that
token in its list of providers, it will then look at the token for a special
ngInjectableDef field which indicates which module the token is scoped to. If
that module happens to be in the injector, it will behave as if the token
itself was in the injector to begin with.
Thirdly, the compiler is modified to read the @Injectable() metadata and to
generate the special ngInjectableDef field as part of TS compilation, using the
PartialModules system.
Additionally, this commit adds several unit and integration tests of various
flavors to test this change.
PR Close#22005
All of the providers in a module get compiled into a module definition in the
factory file. Some of these providers are for the actual module types, as those
are available for injection in Angular. For tree-shakeable tokens, the runtime
needs to be able to distinguish which modules are present in an injector.
This change adds a NodeFlag which tags those module providers for later
identification.
PR Close#22005
Same fix as e70d7a2a7c
This is because the CompilerOptions needs to have directoryExists undefined in order to get the google3 behavior,
so we have to set the property outside the constructor.
Fixes#21872
PR Close#21876
Modifies validation syntax to generate back references to ensure
that identifiers are used consistently.
Introduced … to allow validating constant definition and usage.
PR Close#21877
Includes:
* display ToC for API docs
* update dgeni-packages to 0.24.1
* add floating sidebar in API docs
* add breadcrumbs and structured data for Google crawler
* improved rendering of method overloads
* properties rendered in a table
* params rendered with docs
* removal of outdated "infobox" from all API docs
PR Close#21874
Both Firefox and Safari are vulnerable to XSS if we use an inert document
created via `document.implementation.createHTMLDocument()`.
Now we check for those vulnerabilities and then use a DOMParser or XHR
strategy if needed.
Further the platform-server has its own library for parsing HTML, so we
sniff for that (by checking whether DOMParser exists) and fall back to
the standard strategy.
Thanks to @cure53 for the heads up on this issue.
PR Close#17019