NgModules in Ivy have a definition which contains various different bits
of metadata about the module. In particular, this metadata falls into two
categories:
* metadata required to use the module at runtime (for bootstrapping, etc)
in AOT-only applications.
* metadata required to depend on the module from a JIT-compiled app.
The latter metadata consists of the module's declarations, imports, and
exports. To support JIT usage, this metadata must be included in the
generated code, especially if that code is shipped to NPM. However, because
this metadata preserves the entire NgModule graph (references to all
directives and components in the app), it needs to be removed during
optimization for AOT-only builds.
Previously, this was done with a clever design:
1. The extra metadata was added by a function called `setNgModuleScope`.
A call to this function was generated after each NgModule.
2. This function call was marked as "pure" with a comment and used
`noSideEffects` internally, which causes optimizers to remove it.
The effect was that in dev mode or test mode (which use JIT), no optimizer
runs and the full NgModule metadata was available at runtime. But in
production (presumably AOT) builds, the optimizer runs and removes the JIT-
specific metadata.
However, there are cases where apps that want to use JIT in production, and
still make an optimized build. In this case, the JIT-specific metadata would
be erroneously removed. This commit solves that problem by adding an
`ngJitMode` global variable which guards all `setNgModuleScope` calls. An
optimizer can be configured to statically define this global to be `false`
for AOT-only builds, causing the extra metadata to be stripped.
A configuration for Terser used by the CLI is provided in `tooling.ts` which
sets `ngJitMode` to `false` when building AOT apps.
PR Close#33671
Originally, QueryList implemented Iterable and provided a Symbol.iterator
on its prototype. This caused issues with tree-shaking, so QueryList was
refactored and the Symbol.iterator added in its constructor instead. As
part of this change, QueryList no longer implemented Iterable directly.
Unfortunately, this meant that QueryList was no longer assignable to
Iterable or, consequently, NgIterable. NgIterable is used for NgFor's input,
so this meant that QueryList was not usable (in a type sense) for NgFor
iteration. View Engine's template type checking would not catch this, but
Ivy's did.
As a fix, this commit adds the declaration (but not the implementation) of
the Symbol.iterator function back to QueryList. This has no runtime effect,
so it doesn't affect tree-shaking of QueryList, but it ensures that
QueryList is assignable to NgIterable and thus usable with NgFor.
Fixes#29842
PR Close#33536
TNode.inputs are initialised during directives resolution now so we know early
if a node has directives with inputs or no. We don't need to use undefined value
as an indicator that inputs were not resolved yet.
PR Close#33798
Before this change a public name of a directive's input
was stored in 2 places:
- as a key of an object on TNode.index;
- as a value of PropertyAliasValue at the index 1
This PR changes the data structure so the public name is stored
only once as a key on TNode.index. This saves one array entry
for each and every directive input.
PR Close#33798
Adds support for chaining of `styleProp`, `classProp` and `stylePropInterpolateX` instructions whenever possible which should help generate less code. Note that one complication here is for `stylePropInterpolateX` instructions where we have to break into multiple chains if there are other styling instructions inbetween the interpolations which helps maintain the execution order.
PR Close#33837
This refactorings clearly separates the first and subsequent creation execution
of the `template` instruction. This approach has the following benefits:
- it is clear what happens during the first vs. subsequent executions;
- we can avoid several memory reads and checks after the first creation pass
(there is measurable performance improvement on various benchmarks);
- the template instructions becomes smaller and should become a candidate
for optimisations / inlining faster;
PR Close#33856
When asking for a ViewContainerRef on <ng-container> we do reuse <ng-container> comment
node as a LContainer's anachor. Before this fix the act of re-using a <ng-container>'s
comment node would result in this comment node being re-appended to the DOM in the wrong
place. With the fix in this PR we make sure that re-using <ng-container>'s comment node
doesn't result in unwanted DOM manipulation (ng-gontainer's comment node is already part
of the DOM and doesn't have to be re-created / re-appended).
PR Close#33816
In View Engine, providers which neither used `useValue`, `useClass`,
`useFactory` or `useExisting`, were interpreted differently.
e.g.
```
{provide: X} -> {provide: X, useValue: undefined}, // this is how it works in View Engine
{provide: X} -> {provide: X, useClass: X}, // this is how it works in Ivy
```
The missing-injectable migration should migrate such providers to the
explicit `useValue` provider. This ensures that there is no unexpected
behavioral change when updating to v9.
PR Close#33709
If the application is not running directly in the browser, e.g.
universal or app-shell, then the `$localize` import must be
adding to a different file than for normal browser applications.
This commit adds more information about this to avoid any
confusion.
// FW-1557
PR Close#33826
Prior to this commit the assert that we have in `directiveInject` (assert introduced recently) didn't include IcuContainer TNode type and as a result, the error is thrown in case pipes with dependencies are used inside ICUs. This commit extends the assert to allow for IcuContainer TNode types.
PR Close#33832
This commit moves the `setLContainerActiveIndex` and `getLContainerActiveIndex` functions used in a few files to a common `util/view_util.ts` lib to avoid cyclical dependency while importing `instructions/container.ts` where these functions located originally.
PR Close#33831
Currently if a consumer does something like the following, the object literal will be shared across the two elements and any instances of the component template. The same applies to array literals:
```
<div [someDirective]="{}"></div>
<div [someDirective]="{}"></div>
```
These changes make it so that we generate a pure function even if an object is constant so that each instance gets its own object.
Note that the original design for this fix included moving the pure function factories into the `consts` array. In the process of doing so I realized that pure function are also used inside of directive host bindings which means that we don't have access to the `consts`.
These changes also:
* Fix an issue that meant that the `pureFunction0` instruction could only be run during creation mode.
* Make the `getConstant` utility slightly more convenient to use. This isn't strictly required for these changes to work, but I had made it as a part of a larger refactor that I ended up reverting.
PR Close#33705
This is a breaking change in nodejs rules 0.40.0 as part of the API review & cleanup for the 1.0 release. Their APIs are identical as ts_web_test was just karma_web_test without the config_file attribute.
PR Close#33802
Prior to this change, setting style prop value to undefined or empty string would not result in resetting prop value in case the style prop is defined using [style.prop.px] syntax. The problem is that the check for empty value (and thus reseting the value) considered successful only in case of `null` value. This commit updates the check to use `isStylingValueDefined` function that also checks for undefined and empty string.
PR Close#33780
Prior to this change, ComponentFactory.create function invocation in Ivy retained the content of the host element (in case host element reference or CSS seelctor is provided as an argument). This behavior is different in View Engine, where the content of the host element was cleared, except for the case when ShadowDom encapsulation is used (to make sure native slot projection works). This commit aligns Ivy and View Engine and makes sure the host element is cleared before component content insertion.
PR Close#33487
The `ngInjectableDef` property was renamed to `ɵprov`, but core must
still support both because there are published libraries that use the
older term.
We are only interested in such properties that are defined directly on
the type being injected, not on base classes. So there is a check that
the defintion is specifically for the given type.
Previously if you tried to inject a class that had `ngInjectableDef` but
also inherited `ɵprov` then the check would fail on the `ɵprov` property
and never even try the `ngInjectableDef` property resulting in a failed
injection.
This commit fixes this by attempting to find each of the properties
independently.
Fixes https://github.com/angular/ngcc-validation/pull/526
PR Close#33732
Chains multiple listener instructions on a particular element into a single call which results in less generated code. Also handles listeners on templates, host listeners and synthetic host listeners.
PR Close#33720
Most of the use of `document` in the framework is within
the DI so they just inject the `DOCUMENT` token and are done.
Ivy is special because it does not rely upon the DI and must
get hold of the document some other way. There are a limited
number of places relevant to ivy that currently consume a global
document object.
The solution is modelled on the `LOCALE_ID` approach, which has
`getLocaleId()` and `setLocaleId()` top-level functions for ivy (see
`core/src/render3/i18n.ts`). In the rest of Angular (i.e. using DI) the
`LOCALE_ID` token has a provider that also calls setLocaleId() to
ensure that ivy has the same value.
This commit defines `getDocument()` and `setDocument() `top-level
functions for ivy. Wherever ivy needs the global `document`, it calls
`getDocument()` instead. Each of the platforms (e.g. Browser, Server,
WebWorker) have providers for `DOCUMENT`. In each of those providers
they also call `setDocument()` accordingly.
Fixes#33651
PR Close#33712
While overriding providers in Ivy TestBed (via TestBed.overrideProvider call), the old providers were retained in the list, since the override takes precedence. However, presence of providers in the list might have side-effect: if a provider has the `ngOnDestroy` lifecycle hook, this hook will be registered and invoked later (when component is destroyed). This commit updates TestBed logic to clear provider list by removing the ones which have overrides.
PR Close#33706