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
Rather than bumping up the allowed version of yarn on each release
we should instead just allow for anything within the major version
1 range.
PR Close#34236
On events page the header was not able to take full width when body exceeds viewport width of the screen So made the below body go overflow-x auto and resources page was taking 80% of the width which is okay on desktop but on mobile it should take 100% width put a media quer for it.
Fixes#34163
PR Close#34188
The local Angular packages used to build `aio/` when running
`yarn setup-local`/`yarn build-local` (and related commands), are built
by bazel. Bazel, determines the version to use for these locally built
packages based on the latest tag for a commit on the current branch.
(This works as expected during the release, because the packages are
built on the correct branch with up-to-date tags.)
During local development, however, this often leads to generating older
versions than what the current `@angular/cli` version is compatible
with, if the user has not fetched the latest tags from `angular/angular`
or the branch has not been rebased recently.
Previously, the above (common) situation would result in a build error
by the CLI. (Note that this would be a false error, because in this case
the version set by bazel would not reflect the actual version of the
local packages.) The solution would be for the user to fetch the latest
tags from `angular/angular`, rebase their branch and run a bazel build
again (ensuring that it would actually build anew and not emit cached
artifacts). This was cumbersome and most people didn't even know about
it.
This commit avoids this error and the associated pain-points by
overwriting the versions of the installed local packages with fake
versions based on the ones in the lockfile, which are guaranteed to be
compatible with the currently used CLI version.
Fixes#34208
PR Close#34213
We should only generate the `providedIn` property in injectable
defs if it has a non-null value. `null` does not communicate
any information to the runtime that isn't communicated already
by the absence of the property.
This should give us some modest code size savings.
PR Close#34116
For injectables, we currently generate a factory function in the
injectable def (prov) that delegates to the factory function in
the factory def (fac). It looks something like this:
```
factory: function(t) { return Svc.fac(t); }
```
The extra wrapper function is unnecessary since the args for
the factory functions are the same. This commit changes the
compiler to generate this instead:
```
factory: Svc.fac
```
Because we are generating less code for each injectable, we
should see some modest code size savings. AIO's main bundle
is about 1 KB smaller.
PR Close#34076
The missing-injectable migration has been updated to handle a breaking change that is
unrelated to missing ´@Injectable` decorators. Though, the breaking change will be handled
as part of this migration since we did not want to create another migration (with all the boilerplate etc.)
The guide has been already updated to reflect the new pattern the migration handles, but we
should also rename the title of the guide to something that also mentions the other pattern.
Not renaming the guide URL since it is referenced in past releases and it's safer to keep the old
URL. The important thing is to change the actual rendered title.
PR Close#34125
Previously, some RxJS-related examples (which are not proper Angular apps) were not
tested on CI as part of the `example-e2e` npm script. This meant that the examples
could get out-of-date or contain compile errors without as noticing.
This commit ensures that the `example-e2e` script picks up these examples and checks
that they compile successfully.
Partly addresses #28017.
PR Close#34063
Previously, the Angular AOT compiler would always add a
`ɵprov` to injectables. But in ngcc this resulted in duplicate `ɵprov`
properties since published libraries already have this property.
Now in ngtsc, trying to add a duplicate `ɵprov` property is an error,
while in ngcc the additional property is silently not added.
// FW-1750
PR Close#34085
Since we created the migration guide for the `missing-injectable` schematic, the schematic
changed in various ways. e.g. the migration no longer migrates classes passed to `useExisting`
Additionally the migration has been expanded to handle another Ivy breaking change where
providers like `{provide: X}` will be intepreted as `{provide: X, useClass: X}`. This pattern should
be documented in the migration guide.
PR Close#33960
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
The change type was only recorded for `aio/` and was not correct anyway.
For example:
- It considered `package.json` changes as `application` (even if only
`package.json` and `yarn.lock` had changed).
- It failed to account for changes in `@angular/*` dependencies, when
using the locally built Angular packages (instead reporting them as
`other`).
- It only looked at the last commit, so it failed to provide accurate
information for multi-commit builds (which are rare, but possible).
For the above reasons (and because there is no straight-forward way of
fixing it), this commit removes the change type from the uploaded data.
If necessary, it is still possible to find the type of changes from the
uploaded info (e.g. extract the associated commits and look at their
changes using git).
PR Close#33987
The size diff threshold of 1% has proven to be too lenient for us
to catch size regressions in AIO. Since the AIO main bundle is
between 400-500 KB, a size regression must be between 4-5 KB before
it will cause the tests to fail. As a result, we may merge many
changes with smaller regressions of a few KB before the size test
eventually lets us know that the number has increased. The hope is
that lowering the threshold will help us catch the smaller
regressions during code review and prevent the size tests failing at
a random later time when someone catches the size "hot potato".
PR Close#33969