Leading trivia, such as whitespace or comments, is
confusing for developers looking at source-mapped
templates, since they expect the source-map segment
to start after the trivia.
This commit adds skipping trivial characters to the lexer;
and then implements that in the template parser.
PR Close#30095
Previously, the ServiceWorker registration options should be defined as
an object literal (in order for them to be compatible with Ahead-of-Time
compilation), thus making it impossible to base the ServiceWorker
behavior on runtime conditions.
This commit allows specifying the registration options using a regular
provider, which means that it can take advantage of the `useFactory`
option to determine the config at runtime, while still remaining
compatible with AoT compilation.
PR Close#21842
With #30058, the ngUpgrade internal `angular.module()` method was
renamed to `angular.module_()` (to avoid a webpack bug).
Merging #29794 afterwards resulted in some broken tests, because it
still used the old `angular.module()` method name. (The PR had been
tested on CI against a revision that did not contain the rename.)
This commit fixes the broken tests by renaming the remaining occurrences
of `angular.module()`.
PR Close#30126
Previously, under certain circumstances, `NgZone#onMicrotaskEmpty` could
emit while a `$digest` was in progress, thus triggering another
`$digest`, which in turn would throw a `$digest already in progress`
error. Furthermore, throwing an error from inside the `onMicrotaskEmpty`
subscription would result in unsubscribing and stop triggering further
`$digest`s, when `onMicrotaskEmpty` emitted.
Usually, emitting while a `$digest` was already in progress was a result
of unintentionally running some part of AngularJS outside the Angular
zone, but there are valid (if rare) usecases where this can happen
(see #24680 for details).
This commit addresses the issue as follows:
- If a `$digest` is in progress when `onMicrotaskEmpty` emits, do not
trigger another `$digest` (to avoid the error). `$evalAsync()` is used
instead, to ensure that the bindings are evaluated at least once more.
- Since there is still a high probability that the situation is a result
of programming error (i.e. some AngularJS part running outside the
Angular Zone), a warning will be logged, but only if the app is in
[dev mode][1].
[1]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/78146c189/packages/core/src/util/ng_dev_mode.ts#L12Fixes#24680
PR Close#29794
Previously, ngtsc included query fields in the list of fields which can
affect the type of a directive via its type constructor. This feature
however has yet to be built, and View Engine in default mode does not
do this inference.
This caused an unexpected bug where private query fields (which should be
an error but are allowed by View Engine) cause the type constructor
signature to be invalid. This commit fixes that issue by disabling the
logic to include query fields.
PR Close#30094
ngtsc generates type constructors which infer the type of a directive based
on its inputs. Previously, a bug existed where this inference would fail in
the case of 'any' input values. For example, the inference of NgForOf fails
when an 'any' is provided, as it causes TypeScript to attempt to solve:
T[] = any
In this case, T gets inferred as {}, the empty object type, which is not
desirable.
The fix is to assign generic types in type constructors a default type of
'any', which TypeScript uses instead of {} when inference fails.
PR Close#30094
The proposed ES dynamic import() is now supported by the Angular CLI and the
larger toolchain. This renders the `loadChildren: string` API largely
redundant, as import() is far more natural, is less error-prone, and is
standards compliant. This commit deprecates the `string` form of
`loadChildren` in favor of dynamic import().
DEPRECATION:
When defining lazy-loaded route, Angular previously offered two options for
configuring the module to be loaded, both via the `loadChildren` parameter
of the route. Most Angular developers are familiar withthe `string` form of
this API. For example, the following route definition configures Angular to
load a `LazyModule` NgModule from `lazy-route/lazy.module.ts`:
```
[{
path: 'lazy',
loadChildren: 'lazy-route/lazy.module#LazyModule',
}]
```
This "magic string" configuration was previously necessary as there was
no dynamic module loading standard on the web. This has changed with the
pending standardization of dynamic `import()` expressions, which are now
supported in the Angular CLI and in web tooling in general. `import()`
offers a more natural and robust solution to dynamic module loading. The
above example can be rewritten to use dynamic `import()`:
```
[{
path: 'lazy',
loadChildren: () => import('./lazy-route/lazy.module').then(mod => mod.LazyModule),
}]
```
This form of lazy loading offers significant advantages in terms of:
* type checking via TypeScript
* simplicity of generated code
* future potential to run natively in supporting browsers
(see: [caniuse: dynamic import()](https://caniuse.com/#feat=es6-module-dynamic-import))
As a result, Angular is deprecating the `loadChildren: string` syntax in
favor of ES dynamic `import()`. An automatic migration will run during
`ng upgrade` to convert your existing Angular code to the new syntax.
PR Close#30073
When targeting ES2015 (as is the default in cli@8), `const` is not
downleveled to `var` and thus declaring `const module` throws an error
due to webpack wrapping the code in a function call with a `module`
argument (even when compiling for the `web` environment).
Related: webpack/webpack#7369
Fixes#30050
PR Close#30058
This commit provides a replacement for `$location`. The new service is written in Angular, and can be consumed into existing applications by using the downgraded version
of the provider.
Prior to this addition, applications upgrading from AngularJS to Angular could get into a situation where AngularJS wanted to control the URL, and would often parse or se
rialize the URL in a different way than Angular. Additionally, AngularJS was alerted to URL changes only through the `$digest` cycle. This provided a buggy feedback loop
from Angular to AngularJS.
With this new `LocationUpgradeProvider`, the `$location` methods and events are provided in Angular, and use Angular APIs to make updates to the URL. Additionally, change
s to the URL made by other parts of the Angular framework (such as the Router) will be listened for and will cause events to fire in AngularJS, but will no longer attempt
to update the URL (since it was already updated by the Angular framework).
This centralizes URL reads and writes to Angular and should help provide an easier path to upgrading AngularJS applications to Angular.
PR Close#30055
This abstract class (and AngularJSUrlCodec) are used for serializing and deserializing pieces of a URL string. AngularJS had a different way of doing this than Angular, and using this class in conjunction with the LocationUpgradeService an application can have control over how AngularJS URLs are serialized and deserialized.
PR Close#30055
When using the `history` API, setting a new `state` and retrieving it does not pass a `===` test to the object used to set the state. In other words, `history.state` is always a copy. This change makes the `MockPlatformLocation` behave in the same way.
PR Close#30055
This feature adds an `onUrlChange` to Angular's `Location` class. This is useful to track all updates coming from anywhere in the framework. Without this method, it's difficult (or impossible) to track updates run through `location.go()` or `location.replaceState()` as the browser doesn't publish events when `history.pushState()` or `.replaceState()` are run.
PR Close#30055
AngularJS's `$location` service doesn't have a direct counterpart in Angular. This is largely because the `Location` service in Angular was pulled out of the `Router`, but was not purpose-built to stand on its own.
This commit adds a new `@angular/common/upgrade` package with the beginnings of a new `LocationUpgradeService`. This service will more closely match the API of AngularJS and provide a way to replace the `$location` service from AngularJS.
PR Close#30055
Without this change, the framework doesn't surface URL parts such as hostname, protocol, and port. This makes it difficult to rebuild a complete URL. This change provides new APIs to read these values.
PR Close#30055
Previously there wasn't a way to retrieve `history.state` from the `Location` service. The only time the framework exposed this value was in navigation events. This meant if you weren't using the Angular router, there wasn't a way to get access to this `history.state` value other than going directly to the DOM.
This PR adds an API to retrieve the value of `history.state`. This will be useful and needed to provide a backwards-compatible `Location` service that can emulate AngularJS's `$location` service since we will need to be able to read the state data in order to produce AngularJS location transition events.
This feature will additionally be useful to any application that wants to access state data through Angular rather than going directly to the DOM APIs.
PR Close#30055
Prior to this change we had a MockLocationStrategy to replace the Path and Hash Location Strategies. However, there wasn't a good way to test the PlatformLocation which is needed for doing things such as setting history.state, using back()/forward(), etc.
PR Close#30055
ngtsc previously could attempt to reuse the main ts.Program twice. This
occurred when template type-checking was enabled and then an incremental
build was performed. This breaks a TypeScript invariant - ts.Programs can
only be reused once.
The creation of the template type-checking program reuses the main program,
rendering it moot. Then, on the next incremental build the main program
would be subject to reuse again, which would crash inside TypeScript.
This commit fixes the issue by reusing the template type-checking program
from the previous run on the next incremental build. Since under normal
circumstances the files in the type-checking program aren't changed, this
should be just as fast.
Testing strategy: a test is added in the incremental_spec which validates
that program reuse with type-checking turned on does not crash the compiler.
Fixes#30079
PR Close#30090
The `renderStringify` function is used in a lot of performance-sensitive places, however it contains a megamorphic read which is used primarily for error messages. These changes introduce a new function that can be used to stringify output for errors and removes the megamorphic read from `renderStringify`.
This PR resolves FW-1286.
PR Close#30082
Only the JS files that are actually part of the entry-point
should be copied to the new entry-point folder in the
`NewEntryPointFileWriter`.
Previously some typings and external JS files were
being copied which was messing up the node_modules
structure.
Fixes https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/14193
PR Close#30085
When `ng add` is invoked independently of `ng new`, a node installation
of `@angular/bazel` is performed by the CLI before invoking the
schematic. This step appends `@angular/bazel` to the `dependencies`
section of `package.json`. The schematics then appends the same package
to `devDependencies`.
This leads to the warning:
```
warning package.json: "dependencies" has dependency "@angular/bazel" with
range "^8.0.0-beta.13" that collides with a dependency in "devDependencies"
of the same name with version "~8.0.0-beta.12"
```
PR Close#30072
Fixes view and content queries not being inherited in Ivy, if the base class hasn't been annotated with an Angular decorator (e.g. `Component` or `Directive`).
Also reworks the way the `ngBaseDef` is created so that it is added at the same point as the queries, rather than inside of the `Input` and `Output` decorators.
This PR partially resolves FW-1275. Support for host bindings will be added in a follow-up, because this PR is somewhat large as it is.
PR Close#30015
Prior to this commit, the check that verifies correct "id" field type was too strict and didn't allow `module.id` as @NgModule's "id" field value. This change adds a special handling for `module.id` and uses it as id of @NgModule if specified.
PR Close#30040
Now that ngtsc performs type checking using a dedicated `__ng_typecheck__.ts`
file, `NgtscProgram` always wraps its `ts.CompilerHost` in a shim host. This
shim fails to delegate `resolveModuleNames` so no custom module resolution
logic is considered. This introduces a problem for the CLI, as the compiler
host it passes kicks of ngcc for any imported module such that Ivy's
compatibility compiler runs automatically behind the scenes.
This commit adds delegation of the `resolveModuleNames` to fix the issue.
Fixes#30064
PR Close#30068
Previously, an instance of HttpParams would retain its list of mutations
after they have been materialized as a result of a read operation. Not
only does this unnecessarily hold onto memory, more importantly does it
introduce a bug where branching of off a materialized instance would
reconsider the set of mutations that had already been applied, resulting
in repeated application of mutations.
This commit fixes the bug by clearing the list of pending mutations
after they have been materialized, such that they will not be considered
once again for branched off instances.
Fixes#20430
PR Close#29045
Currently when someone runs `ng update` with the static-query migration,
the migration can fail with an error saying that the `AOT` compiler could not
be created. This can happen if the CLI project contains a test `tsconfig.json`
that is picked up by the schematic.
Due to the fact that spec tsconfig files cannot be ran with NGC (e.g. test
components are not part of a module; not all source files are guaranteed to
be included), test `tsconfig` projects will now use a new `test` migration
strategy where all queries within tests are left untouched and a TODO is added.
PR Close#30034
This commit unifies the way auxillary RootScopeModule and DynamicTestModule are compiled in R3TestBed by calling `compileNgModuleDefs` explicitly for RootScopeModule. This change also resolves the problem where TestBed's code was used from the @angular/core NPM package: due to the "jit" flag, the @NgModule decorator on the RootScopeModule was transformed to RootScopeModule.decorators = [...], but actual ngModuleDef was never defined.
PR Close#30037
The compiler uses metadata to represent what it statically knows about
various expressions in a program. Occasionally, expressions in the program
for which metadata is extracted may contain sub-expressions which are not
representable in metadata. One such construct is an arrow function.
The compiler does not always need to understand such expressions completely.
For example, for a provider defined with `useValue`, the compiler does not
need to understand the value at all, only the outer provider definition. In
this case, the compiler employs a technique known as "expression lowering",
where it rewrites the provider expression into one that can be represented
in metadata. Chiefly, this involves extracting out the dynamic part (the
`useValue` expression) into an exported constant.
Lowering is applied through a heuristic, which considers the containing
statement as well as the field name of the expression.
Previously, this heuristic was not completely accurate in the case of
route definitions and the `loadChildren` field, which is lowered. If the
route definition using `loadChildren` existed inside a decorator invocation,
lowering was performed correctly. However, if it existed inside a standalone
variable declaration with an export keyword, the heuristic would conclude
that lowering was unnecessary. For ordinary providers this is true; however
the compiler attempts to fully understand the ROUTES token and thus even if
an array of routes is declared in an exported variable, any `loadChildren`
expressions within still need to be lowered.
This commit enables lowering of already exported variables under a limited
set of conditions (where the initializer expression is of a specific form).
This should enable the use of `loadChildren` in route definitions.
PR Close#30038
Previously, a template's context name would only be included in an embedded
template function if the element that the template was declared on has a
tag name. This is generally true for elements, except for `ng-content`
that does not have a tag name. By omitting the context name the compiler
could introduce duplicate template function names, which would fail at runtime.
This commit fixes the behavior by always including the context name in the
template function's name, regardless of tag name.
Resolves FW-1272
PR Close#30025
Previously, ngcc would insert new imports at the beginning of the file, for
convenience. This is problematic for imports that have side-effects, as the
side-effects imposed by such imports may affect the behavior of subsequent
imports.
This commit teaches ngcc to insert imports after any existing imports. Special
care has been taken to ensure inserted constants will still follow after the
inserted imports.
Resolves FW-1271
PR Close#30029
Fixes Ivy throwing an error because it tries to generate styling instructions for empty `style` and `class` bindings.
This PR resolves FW-1274.
PR Close#30024
Currently the `template-var-assignment` migration incorrectly warns if
the template writes to a property in the component that has the same
`ast.PropertyWrite´ name as a template input variable but different
receiver. e.g.
```html
<!-- "someProp.element" will be incorrectly reported as template variable assignment -->
<button *ngFor="let element of list" (click)="someProp.element = null">Reset</button>
```
Similarly if an output writes to a component property with the same name as a
template input variable, but the expression is within a different template scope,
the schematic currently incorrectly warns. e.g.
```html
<button *ngFor="let element of list">{{element}}</button>
<!-- The "element = null" expression does not refer to the "element" template input variable -->
<button (click)="element = null"></button>
```
PR Close#30026
Previously, we had a bug where directive matching could fail if the directive
attribute was bound and followed a certain number of classes. This is because
in the matching logic, we were treating classes like normal attributes. We
should instead be skipping classes in the attribute matching logic. Otherwise
classes will match for directives with attribute selectors, and as we are
iterating through them in twos (when they are stored as name-only, not in
name-value pairs), it may throw off directive matching for any bound attributes
that come after. This commit changes the directive matching logic to skip
classes altogether.
PR Close#30002
`ng build` by default builds the prodapp because there is not
a dev build in Bazel. This PR restores the `--prod` to do the
same to prevent achitect from showing missing config error.
PR Close#30005
Previously, all of a program's files would be copied into the __ivy_ngcc__
folder where ngcc then writes its modifications into. The set of source files
in a program however is much larger than the source files contained within
the entry-point of interest, so many more files were copied than necessary.
Even worse, it may occur that an unrelated file in the program would collide
with an already existing source file, resulting in incorrectly overwriting
a file with unrelated content. This behavior has actually been observed
with @angular/animations and @angular/platform-browser/animations, where
the former package would overwrite declaration files of the latter package.
This commit fixes the issue by only copying relevant source files when cloning
a bundle's content into __ivy_ngcc__.
Fixes#29960
PR Close#30020
Previously, during the evaluation of a function call where no argument
was provided for a parameter that has a default value, the default value
would be taken from the context of the caller, instead of the callee.
This commit fixes the behavior by resolving the default value of a
parameter in the context of the callee.
PR Close#29888
Previously, ngtsc's static evaluator did not take spread operators into
account when evaluating function calls, nor did it handle rest arguments
correctly. This commit adds support for static evaluation of these
language features.
PR Close#29888
We only set ng-reflect properties on directive input bindings.
This PR ensures that we also add ng-reflect properties on unbound inputs for backwards compatibility.
FW-1266 #resolve
PR Close#29973
Template type-checking is enabled by default in the View Engine compiler.
The feature in Ivy is not quite ready for this yet, so this flag will
temporarily control whether templates are type-checked in ngtsc.
The goal is to remove this flag after rolling out template type-checking in
google3 in Ivy mode, and making sure the feature is as compatible with the
View Engine implementation as possible.
Initially, the default value of the flag will leave checking disabled.
PR Close#29698
Previously, Template.templateAttrs was introduced to capture attribute
bindings which originated from microsyntax (e.g. bindings in *ngFor="...").
This means that a Template node can have two different structures, depending
on whether it originated from microsyntax or from a literal <ng-template>.
In the literal case, the node behaves much like an Element node, it has
attributes, inputs, and outputs which determine which directives apply.
In the microsyntax case, though, only the templateAttrs should be used
to determine which directives apply.
Previously, both the t2_binder and the TemplateDefinitionBuilder were using
the wrong set of attributes to match directives - combining the attributes,
inputs, outputs, and templateAttrs of the Template node regardless of its
origin. In the TDB's case this wasn't a problem, since the TDB collects a
global Set of directives used in the template, so it didn't matter whether
the directive was also recognized on the <ng-template>. t2_binder's API
distinguishes between directives on specific nodes, though, so it's more
sensitive to mismatching.
In particular, this showed up as an assertion failure in template type-
checking in certain cases, when a directive was accidentally matched on
a microsyntax template element and also had a binding which referenced a
variable declared in the microsyntax. This resulted in the type-checker
attempting to generate a reference to a variable that didn't exist in that
scope.
The fix is to distinguish between the two cases and select the appropriate
set of attributes to match on accordingly.
Testing strategy: tested in the t2_binder tests.
PR Close#29698
This commit adds support for template type-checking a pipe binding which
previously was not handled by the type-checking engine. In compatibility
mode, the arguments to transform() are not checked and the type returned
by a pipe is 'any'. In full type-checking mode, the transform() method's
type signature is used to check the pipe usage and infer the return type
of the pipe.
Testing strategy: TCB tests included.
PR Close#29698
The template type-checking engine previously would assemble a type-checking
program by inserting Type Check Blocks (TCBs) into existing user files. This
approach proved expensive, as TypeScript has to re-parse and re-type-check
those files when processing the type-checking program.
Instead, a far more performant approach is to augment the program with a
single type-checking file, into which all TCBs are generated. Additionally,
type constructors are also inlined into this file.
This is not always possible - both TCBs and type constructors can sometimes
require inlining into user code, particularly if bound generic type
parameters are present, so the approach taken is actually a hybrid. These
operations are inlined if necessary, but are otherwise generated in a single
file.
It is critically important that the original program also include an empty
version of the type-checking file, otherwise the shape of the two programs
will be different and TypeScript will throw away all the old program
information. This leads to a painfully slow type checking pass, on the same
order as the original program creation. A shim to generate this file in the
original program is therefore added.
Testing strategy: this commit is largely a refactor with no externally
observable behavioral differences, and thus no tests are needed.
PR Close#29698
This commit adds support in the template type-checking engine for handling
the logical not operation and the safe navigation operation.
Safe navigation in particular is tricky, as the View Engine implementation
has a rather inconvenient flaw. View Engine checks a safe navigation
operation `a?.b` as:
```typescript
(a != null ? a!.b : null as any)
```
The type of this expression is always 'any', as the false branch of the
ternary has type 'any'. Thus, using null-safe navigation throws away the
type of the result, and breaks type-checking for the rest of the expression.
A flag is introduced in the type-checking configuration to allow Ivy to
mimic this behavior when needed.
Testing strategy: TCB tests included.
PR Close#29698
View Engine's implementation of naive template type-checking is less
advanced than the current Ivy implementation. As a result, Ivy catches lots
of typing bugs which VE does not. As a result, it's necessary to tone down
the Ivy template type-checker in the default case.
This commit introduces a mechanism for doing that, by passing a config to
the template type-checking engine. Through this configuration, particular
checks can be loosened or disabled entirely.
Testing strategy: TCB tests included.
PR Close#29698
Previously the template type-checking code only considered the metadata of
directive classes actually referenced in the template. If those directives
had base classes, any inputs/outputs/etc of the base classes were not
tracked when generating the TCB. This resulted in bindings to those inputs
being incorrectly attributed to the host component or element.
This commit uses the new metadata package to follow directive inheritance
chains and use the full metadata for a directive for TCB generation.
Testing strategy: Template type-checking tests included.
PR Close#29698
Previously, metadata registration (the recording of collected metadata
during analysis of directives, pipes, and NgModules) was only used to
produce the `LocalModuleScope`, and thus was handled by the
`LocalModuleScopeRegistry`.
However, the template type-checker also needs information about registered
directives, outside of the NgModule scope determinations. Rather than
reuse the scope registry for an unintended purpose, this commit introduces
new abstractions for metadata registration and lookups in a separate
'metadata' package, which the scope registry implements.
This paves the way for a future commit to make use of this metadata for the
template type-checking system.
Testing strategy: this commit is a refactoring which introduces no new
functionality, so existing tests are sufficient.
PR Close#29698
Previously, bindings to [class] and [style] were treated like any other
property binding. That is, they would result in type-checking code that
attempted to write directly to .class or .style on the element node.
This is incorrect, however - the mapping from Angular's [class] and [style]
onto the DOM properties is non-trivial.
For now, this commit avoids the issue by only checking the expressions
themselves and not the assignment to the element properties.
Testing strategy: TCB tests included.
PR Close#29698
Previously the template type-checking engine processed templates in a linear
manner, and could not handle '#' references within a template. One reason
for this is that '#' references are non-linear - a reference can be used
before its declaration. Consider the template:
```html
{{ref.value}}
<input #ref>
```
Accommodating this required refactoring the type-checking code generator to
be able to produce Type Check Block (TCB) code non-linearly. Now, each
template is processed and a list of TCB operations (`TcbOp`s) are created.
Non-linearity is modeled via dependencies between operations, with the
appropriate protection in place for circular dependencies.
Testing strategy: TCB tests included.
PR Close#29698
This commit adds support for the generation of type-checking expressions for
forms which were previously unsupported:
* array literals
* map literals
* keyed property accesses
* non-null assertions
Testing strategy: TCB tests included.
Fixes#29327
FW-1218 #resolve
PR Close#29698
This commit adds a test suite for the Type Check Block generation which
doesn't require running the entire compiler (specifically, it doesn't even
require the creation of a ts.Program).
PR Close#29698
This commit adds registration of AOT compiled NgModules that have 'id'
properties set in their metadata. Such modules have a call to
registerNgModuleType() emitted as part of compilation.
The JIT behavior of this code is already in place.
This is required for module loading systems (such as g3) which rely on
getModuleFactory().
PR Close#29980
Previous to this change, we assumed embedded views could only be created after
their parent template node had completed processing. As a result, we only set
up query logic for containers after directives on the node were created.
However, this assumption didn't take into account the case where a directive
on a template node could create views in its constructor.
This commit fixes query logic to work with views created in constructors.
In that case, we need to create a query container before the new view is
rendered so query results in the view aren't lost. But since the query container
is created before directives have completed processing, we also have to ensure
that query results gathered later on the template node are inserted before that
query container. Otherwise, query results in embedded views will clobber query
results on template nodes.
This splice mode may be slightly slower than the normal matching for queries on
containers, but we should only fall back to this strategy in the edge case where
views are created in constructors. (We should encourage developers to create
views in ngOnInit instead).
PR Close#29983
Prior to this change, components created via TestBed.createComponent in the same test were placed into the same root context, which caused problems in conjunction with fixture.autoDetectChanges usage in the same test. Specifically, change detection was triggered immediately for created component (starting from the 2nd one) even if it was not required/desired. This commit makes Ivy and VE behavior consistent: now every component created via TestBed.createComponent is isolated from each other. Current solution uses host element id naming convention, which is not ideal, but helps avoid public API surface changes at this point (we might revisit this approach later).
Note: this commit also adds extra tests to verify bootstrap and change detection behavior in case of multiple components in `bootstrap` array in @NgModule, to make sure this behavior is aligned between Ivy and VE.
PR Close#29981
Currently the `template-strategy` for the static query migration uses the
Angular compiler in order to determine the query timing. This is problematic
as the AngularCompilerProgram also collects metadata for referenced
component stylesheets which aren't necessarily present. e.g. in a CLI
project the component can reference a Sass file. It's not guaranteed
that the standalone Angular compiler plugin supports Sass without
custom logic that is brought in by the Angular CLI webpack plugin.
In order to avoid any failures for invalid stylesheets, we just disable
normalizing of all referenced stylesheets.
PR Close#29876
Currently there are two available migration strategies for the `static-query`
schematic. Both have benefits and negatives which depend on what the
developer prefers. Since we can't decide which migration strategy is the
best for a given project, the developer should be able to select a specific
strategy through a simple choice prompt.
In order to be able to use prompts in a migration schematic, we need to
take advantage of the "inquirer" package which is also used by the CLI
schematic prompts (schematic prompts are usually only statically defined
in the schema). Additionally the schematic needs to be made "async"
because with prompts the schematic can no longer execute synchronously
without implementing some logic that blocks the execution.
PR Close#29876
Currently for Angular Bazel projects, NGC needs to be run in the
"postinstall" NPM script in order to generate required summary files.
We need to update the postinstall `tsconfig` to not check/re-build the
`@angular/core` schematic code which has transitive dependencies
which are only available inside of a CLI project. As this is not guaranteed
to be the case with Angular Bazel projects, we need to make sure that
we don't check/re-build these files.
PR Close#29876
With dts bundles, `core.d.ts` will include an `EventListener` class as it's used in 303eae918d/packages/core/src/debug/debug_node.ts (L32)
This will conflict with the DOM EventListener, as anything in `core.d.ts` which is using the DOM EventListener will fallback in using the one defined in the same module and hence build will fail because their implementation is different.
With this change, we rename the local `EventListener` to `DebugEventListener`, the later one is non exported.
Fixes#29806
PR Close#29809
Previously, ngtsc would fail to resolve `forwardRef` calls if they
contained additional parenthesis or casts. This commit changes the
behavior to first unwrap the AST nodes to see past such insignificant
nodes, resolving the issue.
Fixes#29639
PR Close#29886
Previously, only static evaluation of `Array.slice` was implemented in
ngtsc's static evaluator. This commit adds support for `Array.concat`.
Closes#29835
PR Close#29887
When compiling Angular classes, the compiler may decide to append statements with specific metadata that's only required for JIT. This includes things like decorator metadata as well as NgModule scope data.
When the compiler generates such calls, the call sites are marked with Uglify's PURE annotation, so the optimizer will remove them in production builds. However, Closure does not have the PURE (or similar) annotation. We have a utility function `noSideEffects` in the runtime for this purpose. This commit wraps `setClassMetadata` and `setNgModuleScope` function bodies in `noSideEffect` closures to allow Closure remove them.
PR Close#29947
The `TNode.cleanup` data structure can contain sequences of 4-element
sequence of entries (event handlers, directive outputs) mixed with
2-element sequence of entries (QueryList cleanup). Before this fix
we would always skip 4 elements in the `TNode.cleanup` while looking
up event handler cleanups. 4-element skips are not correct in case
of query cleanup presence and this commit corrects the algorithm to
jump 4 or 2 elements depending on a type of cleanup encountered.
PR Close#29957
If a component has its definition set by defineComponent (as opposed to
JIT getter), then it will generate a factory that uses directiveInject()
to retrieve its dependencies. This can be problematic in test code because
tests could use the injection utility before bootstrapping the component,
and directiveInject() relies on the view having been created.
This commit tweaks directiveInject() to fall back to inject() if the view
has not been created. This will allow injection to work in tests even if
it is called before the component is bootstrapped.
PR Close#29948
Previous to this commit, providing a component or directive in a test
module without @Injectable() would throw because the injectable factory
would not be found. Providing components in tests in addition to declaring
or importing them is not necessary, but it should not throw an error.
This commit ensures factory data is saved when component defs and directive
defs are created, which allows them to be processed by the module injector.
Note that bootstrapping is still required for this setup to work because
directiveInject() does not support cases where the view has not been
created. This case will be handled in a future commit.
PR Close#29945
We had a bug where event.preventDefault() was not always called if listeners
were coalesced. This is because we were overwriting the previous listener's
result every time we called the next listener, so listeners early in the chain
that returned false would be ignored and preventDefault would not be called.
This commit fixes that issue, so now preventDefault() is called if any listener
in a coalesced chain returns false. This brings us in line with View Engine
behavior.
PR Close#29934
The config path is an optional argument to `ts.parseJsonConfigFileContent`. When passed, it is added to the returned object as `options.configFilePath`, and `tsc` itself passes it in.
The new TS 3.4 [incremental](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/release-notes/typescript-3-4.html) build functionality relies on this property being present: 025d826339/src/compiler/emitter.ts (L56-L57)
When using The compiler-cli `readConfiguration` the config path option isn't passed, preventing consumers (like @ngtools/webpack) from obtaining a complete config object.
This PR fixes this omission and should allow JIT users of @ngtools/webpack to set the `incremental` option in their tsconfig and have it be used by the TS program.
I tested this in JIT and saw a small decrease in build times in a small project. In AOT the incremental option didn't seem to be used at all, due to how `ngc` uses the TS APIs.
Related to https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/13941.
PR Close#29872
Overriding multi provider values (providers with `multi: true` flag) via TestBed require additional handling: all existing multi-provider values for the same token should be removed from the override list, so that they are not included into the final value of a given provider. This commit adds this logic to make sure we handle multi providers correctly.
PR Close#29919
Fix the following error with future Bazel version:
```
Invalid label: invalid target name 'internal/npm_package:npm_package.bzl': target names may not contain ':'
```
PR Close#29777
Because the styling context may be stored in a different location
and be apart of a sub array, reading the styling context each time
a host binding is evaluated is costly. This patch ensures that the
active styling context is cached so that multiple interactions with
styling bindings can easily retrieve the styling context efficiently.
PR Close#29818
Currently if there are multiple source files within a given
TypeScript source file, only the last template in the source
file is checked as we store templates in a `Map` with the
source file paths as keys.
This is problematic as multiple templates can live within the
same source file and we therefore accidentally overwrite
existing entries in the resolved templates map.
PR Close#29841
Introduces a new strategy for the `static-query` schematic that
is enabled by default. In order to provide a migration that works
for the most Angular applications and makes the upgrade as easy
as possible, the template strategy leverages the view engine
Angular compiler logic in order to determine the query timing
that is currently used within applications using view engine.
PR Close#29815
The `@angular/compiler` package currently contains the logic for determining whether
given queries are used statically or dynamically. This logic would be necessary in order
to build a schematic that leverages the Angular compiler API's in order to simulate the
query timing based on what ViewEngine computed at compilation-time/runtime.
Exporting the logic that is necessary to detect the timing should not affect the public
API as the `@angular/compiler` package is denoted as private in `PUBLIC_API.md`
PR Close#29815
In order to support multiple strategies for detecting the query timing, the
query usage logic has been moved into a query usage strategy.
PR Close#29815
`NodeJsSyncHost` is no longer provided by BuilderContext in
architect v2, and its usage caused subtle path resolution issues
in Windows.
This PR cleans up `@angular/bazel` builder to use all native path
and fs methods.
PR Close#29796
Plural ICU expressions depend on the locale (different languages have different plural forms). Until now the locale was hard coded as `en-US`.
For compatibility reasons, if you use ivy with AOT and bootstrap your app with `bootstrapModule` then the `LOCALE_ID` token will be set automatically for ivy, which is then used to get the correct plural form.
If you use JIT, you need to define the `LOCALE_ID` provider on the module that you bootstrap.
For `TestBed` you can use either `configureTestingModule` or `overrideProvider` to define that provider.
If you don't use the compat mode and start your app with `renderComponent` you need to call `ɵsetLocaleId` manually to define the `LOCALE_ID` before bootstrap. We expect this to change once we start adding the new i18n APIs, so don't rely on this function (there's a reason why it's a private export).
PR Close#29249
Prior to this change, element attributes annotated with i18n- prefix were removed from element attribute list and processed separately by i18n-specific logic. This behavior is causing issues with directive matching, since attributes are not present in the list of attrs for matching purposes. This commit updates i18n logic to retain attributes in the main attribute list, thus allowing directive matching logic to work correctly.
PR Close#29856
In order to be backwards compatible with View Engine, Ivy should log
errors by default in the TestBed error handler rather than re-throwing
them. Re-throwing the errors is a breaking change that causes issues with
libraries like ngrx that have async behavior and custom error handling.
This logging approach has issues (for both VE and Ivy) because it can allow
tests to pass inappropriately if errors are thrown inside listeners. However,
since re-throwing would be breaking and requires a larger redesign, we should
wait until post-Ivy.
PR Close#29853
Previously, this check was done with bracket property access on the
global object: global['goog']
This will not be minified when Closure compiles this code, which:
1) breaks, because 'goog' will have been minified but the check won't have
taken that into consideration
2) causes build failures in g3, because the actual property 'goog' is
forbidden in some published JS code (to ensure obfuscation).
A TODO is added to validate that this logic is correct, as it's difficult to
test within the Angular repo.
PR Close#29873
The `Δ` caused issue with other infrastructure, and we are temporarily
changing it to `ɵɵ`.
This commit also patches ts_api_guardian_test and AIO to understand `ɵɵ`.
PR Close#29850
The code failed presubmit in google3 because the original ts config was not as strict
as the one used elsewhere in angular/angular and google3.
PR Close#29843
So far using runtime i18n with ivy meant that you needed to use Closure and `goog.getMsg` (or a polyfill). This PR changes the compiler to output both closure & non-closure code, while the unused option will be tree-shaken by minifiers.
This means that if you use the Angular CLI with ivy and load a translations file, you can use i18n and the application will not throw at runtime.
For now it will not translate your application, but at least you can try ivy without having to remove all of your i18n code and configuration.
PR Close#28689
Queries can technically be also accessed within component templates
e.g.
```html
<my-comp [binding]="myQuery"></my-comp>
```
In that case the query with the property "myQuery" is accessed
statically and needs to be marked with `static: true`. There are
other edge cases that need to be handled as the template property
read doesn't necessarily resolve to the actual query property.
For example:
```html
<foo #myQuery></foo>
<my-comp [binding]="myQuery"></my-comp>
```
In this scenario the binding doesn't refer to the actual query
because the template reference variable takes precedence. The
query doesn't need to be marked with "static: true" this time.
This commit ensures that the `static-query` migration schematic
now handles this cases properly. Also template property reads
that access queries from within a `<ng-template>` are ignored
as these can't access the query before the view has been initialized.
Resolves FW-1216
PR Close#29713
- Removes `@publicApi` annotation from ivy instructions
- Adds new `@codeGenApi` annotation to ivy instructions
- Updates ts_api_guardian to support the new annotation properly
PR Close#29820
Currently in Ivy we pass both the raw and parsed selectors to the projectionDef instruction, because the parsed selectors are used to match most nodes, whereas the raw ones are used to match against nodes with the ngProjectAs attribute. The raw selectors add a fair bit of code that won't be used in most cases, because ngProjectAs is somewhat rare.
These changes rework the compiler not to output the raw selectors in the projectionDef, but to parse the selector in ngProjectAs and to store it on the TAttributes. The logic for matching has also been changed so that it matches the pre-parsed ngProjectAs selector against the list of projection selectors.
PR Close#29578
- Adds the instructions
- Adds tests for all instructions
- Adds TODO to remove all tests when we are able to test this with TestBed after the compiler is updated
PR Close#29576
- moves the property instruction to its own file
- moves shared functions that should not be public to the existing `shared.ts` file.
- adds the export of `property.ts` to `all.ts`
PR Close#29576
While investigating styling performance regressions, it was discovered
that a single `fn(...args)` operation was causing a performance hit
because the generated es5 `__spread` operation uses `[].concat` and
reads from the `arguments` values (which are not very efficient). This
patch changes that around to use `fn.apply` instead.
PR Close#29795
Currently the `static-query` and `template-var-assignment` schematic only runs
for `8.0.0` which does not include any betas or release candidates. We want to
run the schematic in the beta's and RC in order to get early feedback about the
schematics. Enabling it promptly with V8 stable release can result in accidental
breakages that we would like to fix/identify before.
PR Close#29735
Queries can not only be accessed within derived classes, but also in
the super class through abstract methods. e.g.
```
abstract class BaseClass {
abstract getEmbeddedForm(): NgForm {}
ngOnInit() {
this.getEmbeddedForm().doSomething();
}
}
class Subclass extends BaseClass {
@ViewChild(NgForm) form: NgForm;
getEmbeddedForm() { return this.form; }
}
```
Same applies for abstract properties which are implemented in the base class
through accessors. This case is also now handled by the schematic.
Resolves FW-1213
PR Close#29688
Currently the static-query schematic is not able to properly handle
call expressions that pass function declarations that access a given
query. e.g.
```ts
ngOnInit() {
this._callFunction(() => this.myQuery.doSomething());
}
_callFunction(cb: any) { cb(); }
```
In that case the passed function is executed synchronously in
the "ngOnInit" lifecycle and therefore the query needs to be
detected as "static".
We can fix this by keeping track of the current function context
and using it to resolve identifiers to the passed arguments.
PR Close#29663
Currently we only check getters for property access expressions. This is wrong
because property access expressions do not always cause the "getter" to be
triggered. e.g.
```ts
set a() {...}
get a() {...}
ngOnInit() {
this.a = true;
}
```
In that case the schematic currently incorrectly checks the "getter", while this is a binary
expression and the property access is used as left-side of the binary expression. In that
case we need to check the setter declaration of the property and not the "getter". In order
to fix this, we need to also check `ts.BinaryExpression` nodes and check getters/setters
based on the used operator token. There are three types of binary expressions:
1) Value assignment (using `=`). In that case only the setter is triggered.
2) Compound assignment (e.g. using `+=`). In that case `getter` and `setter` are triggered.
3) Comparison (e.g. using `===`). In that case only the getter is triggered.
PR Close#29663