This is useful for propagating return values without them being converted to a string. It still provides the same guarantees to Closure, which will assume that the function invoked is pure and can be tree-shaken accordingly.
PR Close#35769
Before this change ngIvy implementation of queries would throw upon
encountering null / undefined query result collected from an embedded
view. It turns out that we might have a provider that explicitly provides
a null / undefined value in a place of a token queried for.
This commit removes a check from the ngIvy query implementation that was
asserting on a query result to be defined.
Fixes#35673
PR Close#35796
Before this change `[class]` and `[className]` were both converted into `ɵɵclassMap`. The implication of this is that at runtime we could not differentiate between the two and as a result we treated `@Input('class')` and `@Input('className)` as equivalent.
This change makes `[class]` and `[className]` distinct. The implication of this is that `[class]` becomes `ɵɵclassMap` instruction but `[className]` becomes `ɵɵproperty' instruction. This means that `[className]` will no longer participate in styling and will overwrite the DOM `class` value.
Fix#35577
PR Close#35668
Prior to this commit, i18n attributes defined on `<ng-template>` tags were not processed by the compiler. This commit adds the necessary logic to handle i18n attributes in the same way how these attrs are processed for regular elements.
PR Close#35681
This commit updates the host bindings micro benchmark to run tests with mutliple directives (where each directive contains host bindings). The number of directives is configurable as a constant in the micro benchmark file. This change is needed to have an ability to measure/compare perf in different scenarios.
PR Close#35736
This commit extends the range of tNode types that may have local refs to include `TNodeType.Container` to account for `<ng-template>`s. Original changes in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/33415 didn't include that type and as a result, an error is thrown at runtime in case an i18n block contains an `<ng-template>` with local refs.
PR Close#35758
Prior to this change, the logic that compiles Injectable in JIT mode used incorrect configuration that triggers a problem when `ChangeDetectorRef` is used as a dependency. This commit updates the logic to generate correct inject instruction to add the `ChangeDetectorRef` dependency in case it's requested in @Injectable class.
PR Close#35706
This commit adds micro benchmark for host bindings, so that we can assess the impact of changes related to host bindings (for example PR #35568).
PR Close#35705
If an injectable has a `useClass`, Ivy injects the token in `useClass`, rather than the original injectable, if the injectable is re-provided under a different token. The correct behavior is that it should inject the re-provided token, no matter whether it has `useClass`.
Fixes#34110.
PR Close#34574
When binding to `[style]` we correctly sanitized/unwrapped properties but we did not do it for the object itself.
```
@HostBinding("style")
style: SafeStyle = this.sanitizer.bypassSecurityTrustStyle(
"background: red; color: white; display: block;"
);
```
Above code would fail since the `[style]` would not unwrap the `SafeValue` and would treat it as object resulting in incorrect behavior.
Fix#35476 (FW-1875)
PR Close#35564
Currently we resolve the `NgModuleRef.componentFactoryResolver` by going through the injector, but the problem is that `ComponentFactoryResolver` has a dependency on `NgModuleRef`, which means that if the module that's attached to the ref tries to inject `ComponentFactoryResolver` in its constructor, we'll create a circular dependency which throws at runtime.
These changes resolve the issue by creating the `ComponentFactoryResolver` manually ahead of time without going through the injector. We can do this safely, because the only dependency for the resolver is the current module ref which is providing it.
Aside from fixing the issue, another advantage to this approach is that it should reduce the amount of generated JS, because it removes a getter and a provider definitio.
Fixes#35580.
PR Close#35637
Currently if TestBed detects that TestBed.overrideModule was used for module X, transitive scopes are recalculated recursively for all modules that X imports and previously calculated data (stored in cache) is ignored. This behavior was introduced in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/33787 to fix stale transitive scopes issue (cache was not updated if module overrides are present).
The perf issue comes from a "diamond" problem, where module X is overridden which imports modules A and B, which both import module C. Under previous logic, module C gets its transitive deps recomputed multiple times, during the recompute for both A and B. For deep graphs and big common/shared modules this can be super costly.
This commit updates the logic to recalculate ransitive scopes for the overridden module, while keeping previously calculated scopes of other modules untouched.
PR Close#35454
* it's tricky to get out of the runfiles tree with `bazel test` as `BUILD_WORKSPACE_DIRECTORY` is not set but I employed a trick to read the `DO_NOT_BUILD_HERE` file that is one level up from `execroot` and that contains the workspace directory. This is experimental and if `bazel test //:test.debug` fails than `bazel run` is still guaranteed to work as `BUILD_WORKSPACE_DIRECTORY` will be set in that context
* test //integration:bazel_test and //integration:bazel-schematics_test exclusively
* run "exclusive" and "manual" bazel-in-bazel integration tests in their own CI job as they take 8m+ to execute
```
//integration:bazel-schematics_test PASSED in 317.2s
//integration:bazel_test PASSED in 167.8s
```
* Skip all integration tests that are now handled by angular_integration_test except the tests that are tracked for payload size; these are:
- cli-hello-world*
- hello_world__closure
* add & pin @babel deps as newer versions of babel break //packages/localize/src/tools/test:test
@babel/core dep had to be pinned to 7.6.4 or else //packages/localize/src/tools/test:test failed. Also //packages/localize uses @babel/generator, @babel/template, @babel/traverse & @babel/types so these deps were added to package.json as they were not being hoisted anymore from @babel/core transitive.
NB: integration/hello_world__systemjs_umd test must run with systemjs 0.20.0
NB: systemjs must be at 0.18.10 for legacy saucelabs job to pass
NB: With Bazel 2.0, the glob for the files to test `"integration/bazel/**"` is empty if integation/bazel is in .bazelignore. This glob worked under these conditions with 1.1.0. I did not bother testing with 1.2.x as not having integration/bazel in .bazelignore is correct.
PR Close#33927
When a pipe inherits its constructor, and as a result its factory, from an injectable in AOT mode, it can end up throwing an error, because the inject implementation hasn't been set yet. These changes ensure that the implementation is set before the pipe's factory is invoked.
Note that this isn't a problem in JIT mode, because the factory inheritance works slightly differently, hence why this test isn't going through `TestBed`.
Fixes#35277.
PR Close#35468
In #33705 we made it so that we generate pure functions for object/array literals in order to avoid having them be shared across elements/views. The problem this introduced is that further down the line the `ContantPool` uses the generated literal in order to figure out whether to share an existing factory or to create a new one. `ConstantPool` determines whether to share a factory by creating a key from the AST node and using it to look it up in the factory cache, however the key generation function didn't handle function invocations and replaced them with `null`. This means that the key for `{foo: pureFunction0(...)}` and `{foo: null}` are the same.
These changes rework the logic so that instead of generating a `null` key
for function invocations, we generate a variable called `<unknown>` which
shouldn't be able to collide with anything.
Fixes#35298.
PR Close#35481
In View Engine, host element of dynamically created component received attributes and classes extracted from component's selector. For example, if component selector is `[attr] .class`, the `attr` attribute and `.class` class will be add to host element. This commit adds similar logic to Ivy, to make sure this behavior is aligned with View Engine.
PR Close#34481
Before this change content queries with the `descendants: false` option, as implemented in ivy,
would not descendinto `<ng-container>` elements. This behaviour was different from the way the
View Engine worked. This change alligns ngIvy and VE behaviours when it comes to queries and the
`<ng-container>` elements and fixes a common bugs where a query target was placed inside the
`<ng-container>` element with a * directive on it.
Before:
```html
<needs-target>
<ng-container *ngIf="condition">
<div #target>...</div> <!-- this node would NOT match -->
</ng-container>
</needs-target>
```
After:
```html
<needs-target>
<ng-container *ngIf="condition">
<div #target>...</div> <!-- this node WILL match -->
</ng-container>
</needs-target>
```
Fixes#34768
PR Close#35384
When the same provider is resolved multiple times on the same node, the first invocation had the correct context, but all subsequent ones were incorrect because we were registering the hook multiple times under different indexes in `destroyHooks`.
Fixes#35167.
PR Close#35249
Currently the logic that handles ICUs located outside of i18n blocks may throw exceptions at runtime. The problem is caused by the fact that we store incorrect TNode index for previous TNode (index that includes HEADER_OFFSET) and do not store a flag whether this TNode is a parent or a sibling node. As a result, the logic that assembles the final output uses incorrect TNodes and in some cases throws exceptions (when incompatible structure is extracted from tView.data due to the incorrect index). This commit adjusts the index and captures whether TNode is a parent to make sure underlying logic manipulates correct TNode.
PR Close#35347
Given:
```
<div class="s1" [class]="null" [ngClass]="exp">
```
Notice that `[class]` binding is not a `string`. As a result the existing logic would not concatenate `[class]` with `class="s1"`. The resulting falsy value would than be sent to `ngClass` which would promptly clear all styles on the `<div>`
The new logic correctly handles falsy values for `[class]` bindings.
Fix#35335
PR Close#35350
Root cause is that for perf reasons we cache `LFrame` so that we don't have to allocate it all the time. To be extra fast we clear the `LFrame` on `enterView()` rather that on `leaveView()`. The implication of this strategy is that the deepest `LFrame` will retain objects until the `LFrame` allocation depth matches the deepest object.
The fix is to simply clear the `LFrame` on `leaveView()` rather then on `enterView()`
Fix#35148
PR Close#35156
In the `loadRenderer` we make an assumption that the value will always be an `LView`, but if there's a directive on the same node which injects `ViewContainerRef` the `LView` will be wrapped in an `LContainer`. These changes add a call to unwrap the value before we try to read the value off of it.
Fixes#35342.
PR Close#35343
Prior to this change, element namespace was not set for host elements of dynamically created components that resulted in incorrect rendering in a browser. This commit adds the logic to pick and set correct namespace for host element when component is created dynamically.
PR Close#35136
- Adds `TView` into `LFrame`, read the `TView` from `LView` on `enterView`.
- Before this change the `TView` was ofter looked up from `LView` as `lView[TVIEW]`. This is suboptimal since reading from an Array, requires that the read checks array size before the read. This means that such a read has a much higher cost than reading from the property directly. By passing in the `TView` explicitly it makes the code more explicit and faster.
- Some rearrangements of arguments so that `TView` would come before `LView` for consistency.
PR Close#35069
Inside `*ngFor` the second run of the styling instructions can get into situation where it tries to read a value from a binding which has not yet executed. As a result the read is `NO_CHANGE` value and subsequent property read cause an exception as it is of wrong type.
Fix#35118
PR Close#35133
`TNode.directives` was introduced in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/34938. Turns out that it is unnecessary because the information is already present it `TData` when combining with `TNode.directiveStart` and `TNode.directiveEnd`
Mainly this is true (conceptually):
```
expect(tNode.directives).toEqual(
tData.slice(
tNode.directivesStart,
tNode.directivesEnd - tNode.DirectivesStart -1
)
);
```
The refactoring removes `TNode.directives` and adds `TNode.directiveStyling` as we still need to keep location in the directive in `TNode`
PR Close#35050
These tests are used for perf testing and don't run as part of CI, as a result they bit-rotted. This fixes that. Long term these tests should be run as part of CI.
PR Close#35071
This change changes the priority order of static styling.
Current priority:
```
(least priority)
- Static
- Component
- Directives
- Template
- Dynamic Binding
- Component
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
- Directives
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
- Template
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
(highest priority)
```
The issue with the above priority is this use case:
```
<div style="color: red;" directive-which-sets-color-blue>
```
In the above case the directive will win and the resulting color will be `blue`. However a small change of adding interpolation to the example like so. (Style interpolation is coming in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/34202)
```
<div style="color: red; width: {{exp}}px" directive-which-sets-color-blue>
```
Changes the priority from static binding to interpolated binding which means now the resulting color is `red`. It is very surprising that adding an unrelated interpolation and style can change the `color` which was not changed. To fix that we need to make sure that the static values are associated with priority of the source (directive or template) where they were declared. The new resulting priority is:
```
(least priority)
- Component
- Static
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
- Directives
- Static
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
- Template
- Static
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
(highest priority)
```
PR Close#34938
The current logic pulls multiproviders up to the parent module's
provider list. The result is that the multi provider being defined both in
the imported ModuleWithProviders and the parent and getting an extra
item in the multi provided array of values. This PR fixes that problem
by not pulling providers in ModuleWithProviders up to the parent module.
PR Close#34914
There are different `DebugNode`/`DebugElement` implementations (and
associated helper functions) for ViewEngine and Ivy. Additionally, these
classes/functions, which are defined inside the `core` package, are
imported by the `platform-browser` package.
Previously, this code was not tree-shaken as expected in Ivy. #30130
partially addressed the issue, but only for the case where `core` and
`platform-browser` end up in the same closure after webpack's scope
hoisting. In cases where this is not the case, our webpack/terser based
tooling is not capable of tree-shaking it.
This commit fixes the problem, by ensuring that the code retained in Ivy
mode (due to the cross-package import) does not unnecessarily reference
`DebugNode`/`DebugElement`, allowing the code to be tree-shaken away.
This results in a 7.6KB reduction in the size of the main angular.io
bundle.
Jira issue: [FW-1802](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1802)
PR Close#35003
We had some logic for generating and passing in the `elIndex` parameter into the `hostBindings` function, but it wasn't actually being used for anything. The only place left that had a reference to it was the `StylingBuilder` and it only stored it without referencing it again.
PR Close#34969
Previously we would write to class/style as strings `element.className` and `element.style.cssText`. Turns out that approach is good for initial render but not good for updates. Updates using this approach are problematic because we have to check to see if there was an out of bound write to style and than perform reconciliation. This also requires the browser to bring up CSS parser which is expensive.
Another problem with old approach is that we had to queue the DOM writes and flush them twice. Once on element advance instruction and once in `hostBindings`. The double flushing is expensive but it also means that a directive can observe that styles are not yet written (they are written after directive executes.)
The new approach uses `element.classList.add/remove` and `element.style.setProperty/removeProperty` API for updates only (it continues to use `element.className` and `element.style.cssText` for initial render as it is cheaper.) The other change is that the styling changes are applied immediately (no queueing). This means that it is the instruction which computes priority. In some circumstances it may result in intermediate writes which are than overwritten with new value. (This should be rare)
Overall this change deletes most of the previous code and replaces it with new simplified implement. The simplification results in code savings.
PR Close#34804
This change introduces several functions for manipulating items in an array in an efficient (binary search) way.
- `arraySplice` a faster version of `Array.splice()`.
- `arrayInsert` a faster version of `Array.splice(index, 0, value)`.
- `arrayInsert2` a faster version of `Array.splice(index, 0, value1, value2)`.
- `arrayInsertSorted` a way to insert a value into sorted list.
- `arrayRemoveSorted` a way to remove a value from a sorted list.
- `arrayIndexOfSorted` a way to find a value in a sorted list.
- `ArrayMap` Efficient implementation of `Map` as an `Array`.
- `arrayMapSet`, `arrayMapGet`, `arrayMapIndexOf`, and `arrayMapDelete` for manipulating `ArrayMap`s.
PR Close#34804
NOTE: This change must be reverted with previous deletes so that it code remains in build-able state.
This change deletes old styling code and replaces it with a simplified styling algorithm.
The mental model for the new algorithm is:
- Create a linked list of styling bindings in the order of priority. All styling bindings ere executed in compiled order and than a linked list of bindings is created in priority order.
- Flush the style bindings at the end of `advance()` instruction. This implies that there are two flush events. One at the end of template `advance` instruction in the template. Second one at the end of `hostBindings` `advance` instruction when processing host bindings (if any).
- Each binding instructions effectively updates the string to represent the string at that location. Because most of the bindings are additive, this is a cheap strategy in most cases. In rare cases the strategy requires removing tokens from the styling up to this point. (We expect that to be rare case)S Because, the bindings are presorted in the order of priority, it is safe to resume the processing of the concatenated string from the last change binding.
PR Close#34616
NOTE: This change deletes code and creates a BROKEN SHA. If reverting this SHA needs to be reverted with the next SHA to get back into a valid state.
PR Close#34616
This change reverts https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/28711
NOTE: This change deletes code and creates a BROKEN SHA. If reverting this SHA needs to be reverted with the next SHA to get back into a valid state.
The change removes the fact that `NgStyle`/`NgClass` is special and colaborates with the `[style]`/`[class]` to merge its styles. By reverting to old behavior we have better backwards compatiblity since it is no longer treated special and simply overwrites the styles (same as VE)
PR Close#34616
The `computeStaticStyling` will be used for computing static styling value during `firstCreatePass`.
The function takes into account static styling from the template as well as from the host bindings. The host bindings need to be merged in front of the template so that they have the correct priority.
PR Closes#34418
Parsing styling is now simplified to be used like so:
```
for (let i = parseStyle(text); i <= 0; i = parseStyleNext(text, i)) {
const key = getLastParsedKey();
const value = getLastParsedValue();
...
}
```
This change makes it easier to invoke the parser from other locations in the system without paying the cost of creating and iterating over `Map` of styles.
PR Closes#34418
This change moves information from instructions to declarative position:
- `ɵɵallocHostVars(vars)` => `DirectiveDef.hostVars`
- `ɵɵelementHostAttrs(attrs)` => `DirectiveDef.hostAttrs`
When merging directives it is necessary to know about `hostVars` and `hostAttrs`. Before this change the information was stored in the `hostBindings` function. This was problematic, because in order to get to the information the `hostBindings` would have to be executed. In order for `hostBindings` to be executed the directives would have to be instantiated. This means that the directive instantiation would happen before we had knowledge about the `hostAttrs` and as a result the directive could observe in the constructor that not all of the `hostAttrs` have been applied. This further complicates the runtime as we have to apply `hostAttrs` in parts over many invocations.
`ɵɵallocHostVars` was unnecessarily complicated because it would have to update the `LView` (and Blueprint) while existing directives are already executing. By moving it out of `hostBindings` function we can access it statically and we can create correct `LView` (and Blueprint) in a single pass.
This change only changes how the instructions are generated, but does not change the runtime much. (We cheat by emulating the old behavior by calling `ɵɵallocHostVars` and `ɵɵelementHostAttrs`) Subsequent change will refactor the runtime to take advantage of the static information.
PR Close#34683
This adds `insertTStyleValue` but does not hook it up to anything yet.
The purpose of this function is to create a linked-list of styling
related bindings. The bindings can be traversed during flush.
The linked list also keeps track of duplicates. This is important
for binding to know if it needs to check other styles for reconciliation.
PR Close#34004
This change introduces class/style reconciliation algorithm for DOM elements.
NOTE: The code is not yet hooked up, it will be used by future style algorithm.
Background:
Styling algorithm currently has [two paths](https://hackmd.io/@5zDGNGArSxiHhgvxRGrg-g/rycZk3N5S)
when computing how the style should be rendered.
1. A direct path which concatenates styling and uses `elemnent.className`/`element.style.cssText` and
2. A merge path which uses internal data structures and uses `element.classList.add/remove`/`element.style[property]`.
The situation is confusing and hard to follow/maintain. So a future PR will remove the merge-path and do everything with
direct-path. This however breaks when some other code adds class or style to the element without Angular's knowledge.
If this happens instead of switching from direct-path to merge-path algorithm, this change provides a different mental model
whereby we always do `direct-path` but the code which writes to the DOM detects the situation and reconciles the out of bound write.
The reconciliation process is as follows:
1. Detect that no one has modified `className`/`cssText` and if so just write directly (fast path).
2. If out of bounds write did occur, switch from writing using `className`/`cssText` to `element.classList.add/remove`/`element.style[property]`.
This does require that the write function computes the difference between the previous Angular expected state and current Angular state.
(This requires a parser. The advantage of having a parser is that we can support `style="width: {{exp}}px" kind of bindings.`)
Compute the diff and apply it in non destructive way using `element.classList.add/remove`/`element.style[property]`
Properties of approach:
- If no out of bounds style modification:
- Very fast code path: Just concatenate string in right order and write them to DOM.
- Class list order is preserved
- If out of bounds style modification detected:
- Penalty for parsing
- Switch to non destructive modification: `element.classList.add/remove`/`element.style[property]`
- Switch to alphabetical way of setting classes.
PR Close#34004
Fixes Ivy detecting changes inside child embedded views, even though they're detached.
Note that there's on subtlety here: I made the changes inside `refreshDynamicEmbeddedViews` rather than `refreshView`, because we support detecting changes on a detached view (evidenced by a couple of unit tests), but only if it's triggered directly from the view's `ChangeDetectorRef`, however we shouldn't be detecting changes in the detached child view when something happens in the parent.
Fixes#34816.
PR Close#34846
It was previously defined in core without being exposed publicly, whereas `getLocaleCurrencyName` and `getLocaleCurrencySymbol` were defined in common, and publicly exposed.
This commit now privately exposes `ɵgetLocaleCurrencyCode` from core, and reexports it publicly from common.
PR Close#34810
by DebugElement.triggerEventHandler. ZoneJS tracks the eventListeners on
a node but we need to be able to differentiate between those added by
Angular and those that were added outside the Angular context. This fix
aligns with the behavior that was present in View Engine (not calling
those listeners). If we decide later that we want to call those
listeners, we still need a way to differentiate between those that
we have wrapped in dom_renderer and those that were not (because they
were added outside the Angular context).
PR Close#34514
Fixes Ivy throwing an error when trying to access the `DebugNode.classes` of an SVG element. The problem is that the `className` of an SVG element is an `SVGAnimatedString`, rather than a plain string.
Fixes#34868.
PR Close#34872
This patch removes the need for the styleSanitizer() instruction in
favor of passing the sanitizer into directly into the styleProp
instruction.
This patch also increases the binding index size for all style/class bindings in preparation for #34418
PR Close#34480
In #28162 we introduced an extra `removeNode` call for host elements which can cause the parent element to be removed before all child animations have finished. The issue is only in Ivy, because that the only place where we pass in the `isHostElement` flag. These changes fix the issue by not re-triggering the removal logic if the element has in-progress animations.
Fixes#33597.
PR Close#34702
Before ivy it was possible to configure a mutable service value
in an application initializer (by providing an `APP_INITIALIZER`)
that could be read in the provider of `LOCALE_ID`. This is a common
scenario if you wanted to load the locale id asynchronously from
an HTTP request for instance.
When using the ivy, the runtime needs to be told what the current
locale is, which is done by calling the `setLocaleId()` function with
the value injected by the `LOCALE_ID` token. Previously this was
being done before the application initializers were run, which meant
that the `LOCALE_ID` provider was being executed before the
app initializers had a chance to get a new value for it.
Now this initalization of the locale for the ivy runtime is done after the
application initializers have been run.
Closes#34701
PR Close#34830
remove unnecessary underscore suffix and the corresponding TODO comments,
because the rollup bug was fixed: github.com/rollup/rollup/issues/2047
PR Close#34757
Typescript 3.7 now emits d.ts files for getters differently than prior versions,
and there seems to be a bug in how it strips private types without replacing them
with explicit 'any' type. This then leads to compilation failures in projects compiled
against our packages that don't have skipLibCheck turned on but do have strict or
noImplicitAny check on.
I'm working around this by marking the affected getters as @internal and
adding a test to prevent future regressions.
I believe this is a TypeScript bug, and I filed a bug report:
https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/36216
PR Close#34798
This brings in a few minor fixes including a better way to patch require for bootstrap scripts
Also remove install_source_map_support attribute from nodejs_binary targets This attribute will be removed from nodejs_binary in the future
PR Close#34736
The major one that affects the angular repo is the removal of the bootstrap attribute in nodejs_binary, nodejs_test and jasmine_node_test in favor of using templated_args --node_options=--require=/path/to/script. The side-effect of this is that the bootstrap script does not get the require.resolve patches with explicitly loading the targets _loader.js file.
PR Close#34736
Currently ngtsc looks for the first `ConstructorDeclaration` when figuring out what the parameters are so that it can generate the DI instructions. The problem is that if a constructor has overloads, it'll have several `ConstructorDeclaration` members with a different number of parameters. These changes tweak the logic so it looks for the constructor implementation.
PR Close#34590
DebugElement.query also matches elements that may have been created
outside of Angular (ex: with `document.appendChild`). If those matched
DebugElements are in turn used to query for more elements, an error
occurs because the first step in queryAll is to load the LContext.
PR Close#34687
Default currency code in CurrencyPipe is currently hardcoded to USD
and is not configurable. This commit allows the default currency code
to be configurable by adding a DEFAULT_CURRENCY_CODE injection token.
Example:
```
providers: [{ provide: DEFAULT_CURRENCY_CODE, useValue: "GBP" }]
...
{{ 123.45 | currency }} // outputs £123.45 as opposed to always $123.45 before
```
Closes: #25461
PR Close#32584
Unlike in View Engine, we currently reset the dirty state of
components in the check no changes change detection cycle.
This means that components cannot be marked as dirty from
view lifecycle hooks because the dirty state is reset and
the lifecycle hooks do not run in the check no changes CD cycle.
PR Close#34495
The major one that affects the angular repo is the removal of the bootstrap attribute in nodejs_binary, nodejs_test and jasmine_node_test in favor of using templated_args --node_options=--require=/path/to/script. The side-effect of this is that the bootstrap script does not get the require.resolve patches with explicitly loading the targets _loader.js file.
PR Close#34589
A while ago we made a pass through all instructions to make sure that none of them call directly into other instructions, however it seems like missed the `pipeBind*` since they still call into the pure functions. The result is that we have some unnecessary duplicated accesses of global state like `getLView` which are called twice in a row with nothing changing.
These changes move the common functionality into a shared file and make the pipe instructions call into them with the global state instead.
PR Close#33714
This commit improves `ExpressionChangedAfterChecked` error message for attributes by including attribute name and the content of the entire expression that contains interpolation(s). In order to achieve that, metadata is now stored in `TData` array when `attribute` and `attributeInterpolate` instructions are being called (similar to `property` and `propertyInterpolate` instructions).
PR Close#34505
Fixes classes with trailing or leading space that are passed to `ngClass` (e.g. `{'foo ': bar}`) not being applied in Ivy. The issue comes from the fact that when the styling differ builds up the style map it uses the trimmed key to look up the value in the map that uses non-trimmed keys.
Fixes#34476.
PR Close#34539
Follow-up from [this discussion](https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/33419#discussion_r339296216). In Ivy we don't use the schema to validate tag names, but instead we use feature detection to figure out whether an element is supported. While this should generally be more accurate, it'll also end up throwing for some more innocent cases. E.g. now Ivy throws an error for `main` elements in IE which is accurate since IE doesn't support the element, but is annoying since there is no functionality attached.
These changes switch to logging a warning instead, similarly to what we're doing for unknown properties.
PR Close#34524
The `getProjectAsAttrValue` in `node_selector_matcher` finds the
ProjectAs marker and then additionally checks that the marker appears in
an even index of the node attributes because "attribute names are stored
at even indexes". This is true for "regular" attribute bindings but
classes, styles, bindings, templates, and i18n do not necessarily follow
this rule because there can be an uneven number of them, causing the
next "special" attribute "name" to appear at an odd index. To address
this issue, ensure ngProjectAs is placed right after "regular"
attributes.
PR Close#34617
Prior to this commit, there were no `advance` instructions generated before `i18nExp` instructions and as a result, lifecycle hooks for components used inside i18n blocks were flushed too late. This commit adds the logic to generate `advance` instructions in front of `i18nExp` ones (similar to what we have in other places like interpolations, property bindings, etc), so that the necessary lifecycle hooks are flushed before expression value is captured.
PR Close#34436
The main logic of the `InheritDefinitionFeature` is to go through the prototype chain of a given Component and merge all Angular-specific information onto that Component def. The problem happens in case there is a Component in a hierarchy that also contains the `InheritDefinitionFeature` (i.e. it extends some other Component), so it inherits all Angular-specific information from its super class. As a result, the root Component may end up having duplicate information inherited from different Components in hierarchy.
Let's consider the following structure: `GrandChild` extends `Child` that extends `Base` and the `Base` class has a `HostListener`. In this scenario `GrandChild` and `Child` will have `InheritDefinitionFeature` included into the `features` list. The processing will happend in the following order:
- `Child` inherits `HostListener` from the `Base` class
- `GrandChild` inherits `HostListener` from the `Child` class
- since `Child` has a parent, `GrandChild` also inherits from the `Base` class
The result is that the `GrandChild` def has duplicated host listener, which is not correct.
This commit introduces additional logic that checks whether we came across a def that has `InheritDefinitionFeature` feature (which means that this def already inherited information from its super classes). If that's the case, we skip further fields-related inheritance logic, but keep going though the prototype chain to look for super classes that contain other features (like NgOnChanges), that we need to invoke for a given Component def.
PR Close#34244
Fixes an error that is thrown when a provider is overridden in `TestBed`, if the module definition of one of the imported modules uses a function for the `imports` that is set via `setNgModuleScope`. The problem was that we have a `for...of` loop that assumes that the imports are an array, but they can also be a function. This was handled correctly in other places, but this one was missed.
Note that the above-mentioned error is only thrown at runtime when the code is transpiled to es6. In es5 TS generates a call to a helper that handles the error silently so the attached unit test only fails in es6.
Fixes#34623.
PR Close#34629
Prior to this change, the ExpressionChangedAfterChecked error thrown in Ivy was missing useful information that was available in View Engine, specifically: missing property name for proprty bindings and also the content of the entire property interpolation (only a changed value was displayed) if one of expressions was changed unexpectedly. This commit improves the error message by including the mentioned information into the error text.
PR Close#34381
The ordering matters because we don't currently throw if multiple
configurations are provided (i.e. provider has *both* useExisting and
useFactory). We should actually throw an error in this case, but to
avoid another breaking change in v9, this PR simply aligns the Ivy
behavior with ViewEngine.
PR Close#34433
Currently we only run Saucelabs on PRs using the legacy View Engine
build. Switching that build to Ivy is not trivial and there are various
options:
1. Updating the R3 switches to use POST_R3 by default. At first glance,
this doesn't look easy because the current ngtsc switch logic seems to
be unidirectional (only PRE_R3 to POST_R3).
2. Updating the legacy setup to run with Ivy. This sounds like the easiest
solution at first.. but it turns out to be way more complicated. Packages
would need to be built with ngtsc using legacy tools (i.e. first building
the compiler-cli; and then building packages) and View Engine only tests
would need to be determined and filtered out. Basically it will result in
re-auditing all test targets. This is contradictory to the fact that we have
this information in Bazel already.
3. Creating a new job that runs tests on Saucelabs with Bazel. We specify
fine-grained test targets that should run. This would be a good start
(e.g. acceptance tests) and also would mean that we do not continue maintaining
the legacy setup..
This commit implements the third option as it allows us to move forward
with the general Bazel migration. We don't want to spend too much time
on our legacy setup since it will be removed anyway in the future.
PR Close#34277
When we log DI errors we get the name of the provider via `SomeClass.name`. In IE functions that inherit from other functions don't have their own `name`, but they take the `name` from the lowest parent in the chain, before `Function`. I've added some changes to fall back to parsing out the function name from the function's string form.
PR Close#34305
The way definitions are added in JIT mode is through `Object.defineProperty`, but the problem is that in IE10 properties defined through `defineProperty` won't be inherited which means that inheriting injectable definitions no longer works. These changes add a workaround only for JIT mode where we define a fallback method for retrieving the definition. This isn't ideal, but it should only be required until v10 where we'll no longer support inheriting injectable definitions from undecorated classes.
PR Close#34305
In JIT mode we use `__proto__` when reading constructor parameter metadata, however it's not supported on IE10. These changes switch to using `Object.getPrototypeOf` instead.
PR Close#34305
We've got some tests that assert that the generate DOM looks correct. The problem is that IE changes the attribute order in `innerHTML` which caused the tests to fail. I've reworked the relevant tests not to assert directly against `innerHTML`.
PR Close#34305
We have a couple of cases where we use something like `typeof Node === 'function'` to figure out whether we're in a worker context. This works in most browsers, but IE returns `object` instead of `function`. I've updated all the usages to account for it.
PR Close#34305
In `DebugElement.attributes` we return all of the attributes from the underlying DOM node. Most browsers change the attribute names to lower case, but IE preserves the case and since we use camel-cased attributes, the return value was inconsitent. I've changed it to always lower case the attribute names.
PR Close#34305
While sanitizing on browsers that don't support the `template` element (pretty much only IE), we create an inert document and we insert content into it via `document.body.innerHTML = unsafeHTML`. The problem is that IE appears to parse the HTML passed to `innerHTML` differently, depending on whether the element has been inserted into a document or not. In particular, it seems to split some strings into multiple text nodes, which would've otherwise been a single node. This ended up throwing off some of the i18n code down the line and causing a handful of failures. I've worked around it by creating a new inert `body` element into which the HTML would be inserted.
PR Close#34305
Previously the calls to run the schematics were not being properly
or consistently awaited in the tests. While this currently does not
affect the tests' performance, this fix corrects the syntax and
adds stability for future changes.
PR Close#34364
Previously, the compiler performed an incremental build by analyzing and
resolving all classes in the program (even unchanged ones) and then using
the dependency graph information to determine which .js files were stale and
needed to be re-emitted. This algorithm produced "correct" rebuilds, but the
cost of re-analyzing the entire program turned out to be higher than
anticipated, especially for component-heavy compilations.
To achieve performant rebuilds, it is necessary to reuse previous analysis
results if possible. Doing this safely requires knowing when prior work is
viable and when it is stale and needs to be re-done.
The new algorithm implemented by this commit is such:
1) Each incremental build starts with knowledge of the last known good
dependency graph and analysis results from the last successful build,
plus of course information about the set of files changed.
2) The previous dependency graph's information is used to determine the
set of source files which have "logically" changed. A source file is
considered logically changed if it or any of its dependencies have
physically changed (on disk) since the last successful compilation. Any
logically unchanged dependencies have their dependency information copied
over to the new dependency graph.
3) During the `TraitCompiler`'s loop to consider all source files in the
program, if a source file is logically unchanged then its previous
analyses are "adopted" (and their 'register' steps are run). If the file
is logically changed, then it is re-analyzed as usual.
4) Then, incremental build proceeds as before, with the new dependency graph
being used to determine the set of files which require re-emitting.
This analysis reuse avoids template parsing operations in many circumstances
and significantly reduces the time it takes ngtsc to rebuild a large
application.
Future work will increase performance even more, by tackling a variety of
other opportunities to reuse or avoid work.
PR Close#34288
This commit fixes a couple issues that prevent `class_binding` benchmark from running: moving constants requires by the `benchmark` function before function declaration and referencing correct consts in template instructions.
PR Close#34242
The `ModuleWithProviders` type has an optional type parameter that
should be specified to indicate what NgModule class will be provided.
This enables the Ivy compiler to statically determine the NgModule type
from the declaration files. This type parameter will become required in
the future, however to aid in the migration the compiler will detect
code patterns where using `ModuleWithProviders` as return type is
appropriate, in which case it transforms the emitted .d.ts files to
include the generic type argument.
This should reduce the number of occurrences where `ModuleWithProviders`
is referenced without its generic type argument.
Resolves FW-389
PR Close#34235
TypeScript 3.7 flags `if` conditions that implicitly coerce a function/method definition. While checking for the `template` presence on a def (actually checking whether we work with Component) in `saveNameToExportMap`, the `if` condition had implicit type coercion. This commit updates the condition to use the `isComponentDef` function (that checks `def.template` against `null` internally) to avoid compilation errors with TypeScript 3.7.
PR Close#34335
Prior to this commit, values wrapped into SafeStyle were not handled correctly in [style.prop] bindings in case style sanitizer is present (when template contains some style props that require sanitization). Style sanitizer was not unwrapping values in case a given prop doesn't require sanitization.As a result, wrapped values were used as final styling values (see https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/master/packages/core/src/render3/styling/bindings.ts#L620). This commit updates the logic to unwrap safe values in sanitizer in case no sanitization is required.
PR Close#34286
Occasionally a factory function needs to be generated for an "invalid"
constructor (one with parameters types which aren't injectable). Typically
this happens in JIT mode where understanding of parameters cannot be done in
the same "up-front" way that the AOT compiler can.
This commit changes the JIT compiler to generate a new `invalidFactoryDep`
call for each invalid parameter. This instruction will error at runtime if
called, indicating both the index of the invalid parameter as well as (via
the stack trace) the factory function which was generated for the type being
constructed.
Fixes#33637
PR Close#33739
In Ivy, if you do:
`TestBed.configureTestingModule({providers: [{provide: Service}]});`
the injector will attempt to inject Service as if it was simply listed
in the providers array like `{providers: [Service]}`
This fixes an inconsistency when similarly providing an override with no
`useValue` or `useFactory`.
PR Close#33769
Prior to this commit, calling change detection for destroyed views resulted in errors being thrown in some cases. This commit adds a check to make sure change detection is invoked for non-destroyed views only.
PR Close#34241
Adds the ability to expose global symbols in the API docs via the `@globalApi` tag. Also supports optionally setting a namespace which will be added to the name automatically (e.g. `foo` will be renamed to `ng.foo`). Relevant APIs should also be exported through the `global.ts` file which will show up under `core/global`.
PR Close#34237
If the `ngI18nClosureMode` global check actually makes it
through to the runtime, then checks for its existence should
be guarded to prevent `Reference undefined` errors in strict
mode.
(Normally, it is stripped out by dead code elimination during
build optimization.)
PR Close#34211
Prior to this commit, there was no check in R3TestBed to verify that metadata is resolved using a given Type. That leads to some cryptic error messages (when TestBed tries to compile a Type without having metadata) in case TestBed override functions receive unexpected Types (for example a Directive is used in `TestBed.overrideComponent` call). This commit adds the necessary checks to verify metadata presence before TestBed tries to (re)compile a Type.
PR Close#34204
Prior to this commit, if a template (for example, generated using structural directive such as *ngIf) contains `ngProjectAs` attribute, it was not included into attributes array in generated code and as a result, these templates were not matched at runtime during content projection. This commit adds the logic to append `ngProjectAs` values into corresponding element's attribute arrays, so content projection works as expected.
PR Close#34200
Prior to this commit, i18n runtime code failed with the exception saying that no provider was found for ChangeDetectorRef for a pipe used in ICU. The problem happened because the underlying `createViewRef` function was not taking into account IcuContainer as a valid TNodeType. This commit updates the `createViewRef` function to return corresponding ViewRef for TNodeType.IcuContainer.
PR Close#34198
Includes a few minor performance improvements:
* In the `nextContext` instruction we assign a new LView to the `LFrame.contextLView` and then we immediately look it up to get its context. We don't need to do that since we know the view that was assigned already.
* Removes the default value for the `level` parameter of `nextContextImpl` because it generates more code in es5 and is internal-only.
* Removes the default parameter from `setActiveHostElement` since it generates extra code and it's an internal function.
* Makes a check in `setElementExitFn` more strict since we're guaranteed for the value to match the type.
PR Close#34183
Fixes ngtsc incorrectly logging an unknown element diagnostic for HTML elements that are inside an SVG `foreignObject` with the `xhtml` namespace.
Fixes#34171.
PR Close#34178
Prior to this commit, the unknown element can happen twice for AOT-compiled components: once during compilation and once again at runtime. Due to the fact that `schemas` information is not present on Component and NgModule defs after AOT compilation, the second check (at runtime) may fail, even though the same check was successful at compile time. This commit updates the code to avoid the second check for AOT-compiled components by checking whether `schemas` information is present in a logic that executes the unknown element check.
PR Close#34024
With Angular CLI version 9 RC 3 we can run a single migration for a package using the name of the migration schematic.
We need to pass the schematic name as a value to the `migrate-only` option.
Ex:
```
ng update @angular/core --migrate-only migration-v9-undecorated-classes-with-di
```
See: https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/pull/16174
PR Close#33958
Use angular_ivy_enabled to determine if Ivy is being used for the ivy_test_selector.ts symbols.
Additionally, remove the reflect_metadata genrules as we not longer have a "jit" compile option
so all possible invocations result in the same generated file. Instead we can just commit this
file.
PR Close#33983
Since config=ivy now sets the define=compile flag and the define=angular_ivy_enabled
flag to cause usage of Ivy, we can update all of the documentation and scripts that
reference compile=aot to use config=ivy.
PR Close#33983
Prior to this commit, there was a runtime check in i18n logic to make sure "other" case is always present in an ICU. That was not a requirement in View Engine, so ICUs that previously worked may produce errors. This commit removes that restriction and adds support for ICUs without "other" cases.
PR Close#34042
Move a view only if it would end up at a different place.
Otherwise we would do unnecessary processing like DOM manipulation, query notifications etc.
Thanks to @pkozlowski-opensource for the change.
PR Close#34052
When inserting a `viewRef` it is possible to not provide
an `index`, which is regarded as appending to the end of
the container.
If the `viewRef` already exists in the container, then
this results in a move. But there was a fault in the logic
that computed where to insert the `viewRef` that did not
account for the fact that the `viewRef` was already in
the container, so the insertion `index` was outside the
bounds of the array.
Fixes#33924
PR Close#34052
Prior to this commit, all styles extracted from Component's template (defined using <style> tags) were ignored by JIT compiler, so only `styles` array values defined in @Component decorator were used. This change updates JIT compiler to take styles extracted from the template into account. It also ensures correct order where `styles` array values are applied first and template styles are applied second.
PR Close#34017
Previously if a type was returning itself it would cause an infinite loop in tsickle. We worked around it with a type that alises to `any`. Now that the issue has been resolved in tsickle, we can clean up the workaround.
PR Close#34019
This commit fixes a compatibility bug where pre-order lifecycle
hooks (onInit, doCheck, OnChanges) for directives on the same
host node were executed based on the order the directives were
matched, rather than the order the directives were instantiated
(i.e. injection order).
This discrepancy can cause issues with forms, where it is common
to inject NgControl and try to extract its control property in
ngOnInit. As the NgControl directive is injected, it should be
instantiated before the control value accessor directive (and
thus its hooks should run first). This ensures that the NgControl
ngOnInit can set up the form control before the ngOnInit
for the control value accessor tries to access it.
Closes#32522
PR Close#34026
These apis have been deprecated in v8, so they should stick around till v10,
but since they are defunct we are removing them early so that they don't take up payload size.
PR Close#33949
Micro-benchmarks were broken after we've introduced concept of
DECLARATION_COMPONENT_VIEW on LView (after this change embedded
views must have a pointer to a parent LView).
PR Close#34031
The root view case is already covered by the existing code in the
getRenderParent function so no need to have an explicit checks
(and associated memory reads) again.
PR Close#33988
The assertion that we have in the `directiveInject` instruction is too restrictive and we came across some pattern where it throws unnecessarily. This commit removes that assertion for now and more detailed investigation is needed to decide is we need to restrict the set of TNodeType again.
This commit also adds a test which triggered the TNodeType.View to come up in the `directiveInject` instruction, so it might be useful to avoid regressions during further refactoring.
PR Close#33948
NgModule compilation in JIT mode (that is also used in TestBed) caches module scopes on NgModule defs (using `transitiveCompileScopes` field). Module overrides (defined via TestBed.overrideModule) may invalidate this data by adding/removing items in `declarations` list. This commit forces TestBed to recalculate transitive scopes in case module overrides are present, so TestBed always gets the most up-to-date information.
PR Close#33787
This change enables "var(--my-var)" to pass through the style sanitizer.
After consulation with our security team, allowing these doesn't create
new attack vectors, so the sanitizer doesn't need to strip them.
Fixes parts of #23485 related to the sanitizer, other use cases discussed
there related to binding have been addressed via other changes to the
class and style handling in the runtime.
Closes#23485
PR Close#33841
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