Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Eagle 4d912b6b12 Revert "build: enable shard_count for some jasmine tests that have many specs (#29196)" (#29347)
This reverts commit a5c747f46d.

PR Close #29347
2019-03-15 19:47:00 -04:00
Alex Eagle a5c747f46d build: enable shard_count for some jasmine tests that have many specs (#29196)
This partitions the spects across multiple processes so they run in parallel.

PR Close #29196
2019-03-14 13:14:03 -04:00
Greg Magolan ea09430039 build: rules_nodejs 0.26.0 & use @npm instead of @ngdeps now that downstream angular build uses angular bundles (#28871)
PR Close #28871
2019-02-28 12:06:36 -08:00
Igor Minar 4237c34c78 test(ivy): mark failing test targets with fixme-ivy-jit and fixme-ivy-local tags (#26471)
We are close enough to blacklist a few test targets, rather than whitelist targets to run...

Because bazel rules can be composed of other rules that don't inherit tags automatically,
I had to explicitly mark all of our ts_library and ng_module targes with "ivy-local" and
"ivy-jit" tags so that we can create a query that excludes all fixme- tagged targets even
if those targets are composed of other targets that don't inherit this tag.

This is the updated overview of ivy related bazel tags:

- ivy-only: target that builds or runs only under ivy
- fixme-ivy-jit: target that doesn't yet build or run under ivy with --compile=jit
- fixme-ivy-local: target that doesn't yet build or run under ivy with --compile=local
- no-ivy-jit: target that is not intended to build or run under ivy with --compile=jit
- no-ivy-local: target that is not intended to build or run under ivy with --compile=local

PR Close #26471
2018-10-23 08:57:42 -07:00
Greg Magolan 1f3331f5e6 build(bazel): use fine-grained npm deps (#26111) (#26488)
PR Close #26488
2018-10-19 20:59:29 -07:00
Greg Magolan b99d7ed5bf build(bazel): update to rules_typescript 0.17.0 & rules_nodejs 0.13.4 (#25920)
PR Close #25920
2018-09-18 13:05:38 -07:00
Alex Rickabaugh eb999300d9 test(ivy): run compiler compliance tests without rebuilding core,common (#25248)
Previously the compiler compliance tests ran and built test code with
real dependencies on @angular/core and @angular/common. This meant that
any changes to the compiler would result in long rebuild processes
for tests to rerun.

This change removes those dependencies and causes test code to be built
against the fake_core stub of @angular/core that the ngtsc tests use.
This change also removes the dependency on @angular/common entirely, as
locality means it's possible to reference *ngIf without needing to link
to an implementation.

PR Close #25248
2018-08-03 13:08:51 -07:00
Alex Rickabaugh 9fd70c9715 refactor(ivy): run the compiler compliance tests against ngtsc (#24862)
This commit moves the compiler compliance tests into compiler-cli,
and uses ngtsc to run them instead of the custom compilation
pipeline used before. Testing against ngtsc allows for validation
of the real compiler output.

This commit also fixes a few small issues that prevented the tests
from passing.

PR Close #24862
2018-07-20 11:48:36 -07:00