Prior to this fix if a root component was instantiated it create host
bindings, but never render them once update mode ran unless one or more
slot-allocated bindings were issued. Since styling in Ivy does not make
use of LView slots, the host bindings function never ran on the root
component.
This fix ensures that the `hostBindings` function does run for a root
component and also renders the schedlued styling instructions when
executed.
Jira Issue: FW-1062
PR Close#28664
Currently we install `firebase-tools` manually in the
integration tests run script. This is problematic
because it means that we cannot cache `firebase-tools`
properly and Yarn might time out downloading this
dependency. We can safely move this to the top level
`package.json` since Bazel now has a `.bazelignore` and
since we have a cache that works for PRs (with fallback
caching).
Note that the `.bazelignore` is relevant here because
`firebase-tools` has been mainly moved to the bash
script because it broke some Bazel calls.
See 4f0cae0676.
PR Close#28615
There are two ways to bootstrap an Ivy app: with `platformBrowserDynamic().bootstrapModule` and `renderComponent`.
To distinguish between these two approaches we call the `platformBrowserDynamic().bootstrapModule` way `ivy-compat` and the `renderComponent` way just `ivy`.
PR Close#28372
The logic to create additional files needed for Bazel are currently
hosted in `ng new`. Such files include the main.*.ts files needed
for AOT and a different angular.json to use Bazel builder, among others.
This commit refactors the logic into `ng add` so that it can be used to
perform the same modifications in an existing project. Users could do so
by running `ng add @angular/bazel`.
With this change, `ng new` effectively becomes an orchestrator that runs
the original `ng new` followed by `ng add @angular/bazel`.
PR Close#28436
By default, `webdriver-manager update` will download the latest
ChromeDriver version, which might not be compatible with the Chrome
version included in the [docker image used on CI], causing CI failures.
Previously, we used to pin the ChromeDriver version on CI in
[ngcontainer's Dockerfile][2]. This was accidentally broken in #26691,
while moving from ngcontainer to default CircleCI docker images.
This commit fixes the issue by pinning ChromeDriver to a known
compatible version.
[1]: bfd48d156d/.circleci/config.yml (L16)
[2]: bfd48d156d/tools/ngcontainer/Dockerfile (L63)
PR Close#28494
This commit fixes a bug in the Bazel builder in which the path to Bazel
executable is constructed using the project path. For non-default
project, the node_modules directory is actually one level above the
project path.
This PR fixes the bug by resolving node_modules with require.resolve().
It requires @bazel/bazel v0.22.1 because previous versions do not have
index.js or main field in package.json and would cause node module
resolution to fail.
This has been tested with both bazel and ibazel.
PR Close#28478
With the release of @angular/bazel v7.2.3, the npm install step right
after `ng new` installs this version. However there is a bug in the
builder which results in bazel executable not found.
This bug was not discovered before because the dependencies of the
project created by `ng new` are not pinned.
The fix is to pin the version of @angular/bazel to 7.2.2 which relies on
global installation of bazel.
PR Close#28460
yarn install was disabled in ng-new for Bazel schematics because
Bazel manages its own node_modules dependencies and therefore
there is no need to install dependencies twice.
However, the first yarn install is needed for `ng` commands to work,
most notably `ng build`.
This commit restores the original behavior.
PR Close#28381
The current build workflow depends on cross workspace dependency by
installing angular-cli as a Bazel repository. This is not ideal because
it introduces separate node_module directories other than the one
installed by Angular through the yarn_install rule (ngdeps).
This commit removes angular-cli from the Bazel workspace and installs
rollup and @angular-devkit/build-optimizer locally.
PR Close#28215
The current integration test for language service involves piping the
results of one process to another using Unix pipes.
This makes the test hard to debug, and hard to configure.
This commit refactors the integration test to use regular Jasmine
scaffolding.
More importantly, it tests the way the language service will actually
be installed by end users. Users would not have to add
`@angular/language-service` to the plugins section in tsconfig.json
Instead, all they need to do is install the *extension* from
the VS Code Marketplace and Angular Language Service will be loaded
as a global plugin.
PR Close#28168
A few integration tests now depend on @angular/cli.
This commit changes the affected tests to use the dependency
on @angular/cli defined at root package.json.
PR Close#28139
The integration test for bazel-schematics installs Angular in
two different locations:
1. Bazel workspace
2. package.json -> fetched from npm
Pull request #28142 changes the test to always install (1) from
source. This breaks when there's a major version bump since the
versions locally and the version in package.json no longer match.
This change updates package.json to fetch @angular/* packages
locally as well.
PR Close#28194
The current integration test for Bazel schematics downloads a
published version of Angular as required by the http_archive
rule in the CLI created WORKSPACE.
However, this makes the test less useful because it does not
actually test any changes to the Angular repo at source.
This PR replaces the http_archive method in the WORSPACE
with local_repository so that any local changes to the Angular
repo are tested accordingly.
With Typescript 3.2, the file e2e/src/app.po.ts generated by CLI
no longer compiles under Bazel due to missing type annotations.
A temporary file is placed in the integration/bazel-schematics
directory while the change is pending in CLI repo.
https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/pull/13406
PR Close#28061
In ESM5 decorated classes can be indicated by calls to `__decorate()`.
Previously the `ReflectionHost.findDecoratedClasses()` call would identify
helper calls of the form:
```
SomeClass = tslib_1.__decorate(...);
```
But it was missing calls of the form:
```
SomeClass = SomeClass_1 = tslib_1.__decorate(...);
```
This form is common in `@NgModule()` decorations, where the class
being decorated is referenced inside the decorator or another
member.
This commit now ensures that a chain of assignments, of any length,
is now identified as a class decoration if it results in a call to
`__decorate()`.
Fixes#27841
PR Close#27848
A constructor function may have been "synthesized" by TypeScript during
JavaScript emit, in the case no user-defined constructor exists and e.g.
property initializers are used. Those initializers need to be emitted
into a constructor in JavaScript, so the TypeScript compiler generates a
synthetic constructor.
This commit adds identification of such constructors as ngcc needs to be
able to tell if a class did originally have a constructor in the
TypeScript source. When a class has a superclass, a synthesized
constructor must not be considered as a user-defined constructor as that
prevents a base factory call from being created by ngtsc, resulting in a
factory function that does not inject the dependencies of the superclass.
Hence, we identify a default synthesized super call in the constructor
body, according to the structure that TypeScript emits.
PR Close#27897
I'm not sure why this problem is visible only now or how this worked before, but the CI
is now failing because @types/node is missing.
I also added the yarn.lock file which was previously omitted. We want the yarn.lock file in so that
our deps don't change over time without us knowing.
PR Close#27937
The build and test progress logs make the CI log output so long that it
can't be displayed in the UI and one has to download and view the file
locally instead. This makes it harder to get to the interesting lines,
such as error messages.
Similar to #26869, but for the `bazel-schematics` integration project.
PR Close#27934
Updates the app itself to reflect the result of using the `experimentalIvy` flag on the CLI.
The result is similar to:
npx @angular/cli@next new cli-hello-world-ivy --experimental-ivy --defaults
But replaces the current (cli `7.2.0-rc.0`) `renderComponent` bootstrap with the usual `platformBrowserDynamic` one.
It also keeps what the app did (display a pipe, tests it).
PR Close#27797
Relative imports in Typescript files only work when module_name is
defined in ts_library (when run in Node.js).
See issue https://github.com/bazelbuild/rules_typescript/issues/360
With that fixed, `ng test` now works.
`ng build` requires `node_modules` to be available in the project
directory, so it's not usable yet. Running `yarn` in project directory
does not work because of postinstall version check.
PR Close#27715