Currently the undecorated classes migration decorates base classes if no
explicit constructor is defined on all classes in the inheritance chain.
We only want to decorate base classes which define a constructor that is
inherited. Additionally for best practice, all classes in between the class
that inherits the constructor and the one that defines it are also decorated.
PR Close#32319
The `undecorated-classes-with-di` migration currently creates invalid object literals from parsed
NGC metadata files if there are object literal properties with keys that contain special characters.
e.g. consider a decorated base class with a host binding using `[class.X]`. Currently the migration
parses and converts the metadata to TypeScript code but incorrectly uses `[class.X]` unquoted as
identifier.
PR Close#32319
Apparently the names of the bazel test targets in the schematics are
incorrect. This commit updates the target names to match their bazel
package name.
PR Close#32318
ec4381dd40 enabled Ivy by default. This is
problematic as migrations like `undecorated-classes-with-di` depend on the
`AngularCompilerProgram` (NGC) in order to perform the migration from
version 8 to version 9. In order to ensure that the migration always runs
with NGC (and doesn't get the `NgtscProgram`), we need to explicitly disable
ivy when creating the `@angular/compiler-cli` program for the migration.
PR Close#32318
Adds support for `getDefinitionAt` when called on a templateUrl
property assignment.
The currrent architecture for getting definitions is designed to be
called on templates, so we have to introduce a new
`getTsDefinitionAndBoundSpan` method to get Angular-specific definitions
in TypeScript files and pass a `readTemplate` closure that will read the
contents of a template using `TypeScriptServiceHost#getTemplates`. We
can probably go in and make this nicer in a future PR, though I'm not
sure what the best architecture should be yet.
Part of angular/vscode-ng-language-service#111
PR Close#32238
Previously, the `SwPush` API docs were using hard-coded code snippets.
This commit switches to using code snippets from an actual example app,
which ensures that the code shown in the docs will at least continue to
compile successfully.
PR Close#32139
Reworks the compiler to output the factories for directives, components and pipes under a new static field called `ngFactoryFn`, instead of the usual `factory` property in their respective defs. This should eventually allow us to inject any kind of decorated class (e.g. a pipe).
**Note:** these changes are the first part of the refactor and they don't include injectables. I decided to leave injectables for a follow-up PR, because there's some more cases we need to handle when it comes to their factories. Furthermore, directives, components and pipes make up most of the compiler output tests that need to be refactored and it'll make follow-up PRs easier to review if the tests are cleaned up now.
This is part of the larger refactor for FW-1468.
PR Close#31953
Binding metadata are only needed:
- for property bindings;
- when TestBed tests are being run.
This commit guards binding metadata storage with the ngDevMode flag
which saves ~6% of a proerty binding processing time in the production
mode (and reduces bundle size).
PR Close#32317
After a series of recent refactorings `enterView` and `leaveView` became
identical. This PR merges both into one concept of view selectio (similar
to a node selection). This reduces number of concepts and code size.
PR Close#32263
This commit removes all the (duplicated) logic of setting lView[BINDING_INDEX]
from `enterView`. `enterView` is on the critcal path perf-wise so we should
avoid having any logic in there and minimise memory read / write.
This simple refactoring in this PR reduces time spent in noop change detection
by ~12% (from ~800ms down to ~700ms on a local machine where measurements were
taken).
PR Close#32263
When ngcc is called for a specific entry-point, it has to determine
which dependencies to transitively process. To accomplish this, ngcc
traverses the full import graph of the entry-points it encounters, for
which it uses a dependency host to find all module imports. Since
imports look different in the various bundle formats ngcc supports, a
specific dependency host is used depending on the information provided
in an entry-points `package.json` file. If there's not enough
information in the `package.json` file for ngcc to be able to determine
which dependency host to use, ngcc would fail with an error.
If, however, the entry-point is not compiled by Angular, it is not
necessary to process any of its dependencies. None of them can have
been compiled by Angular so ngcc does not need to know about them.
Therefore, this commit changes the behavior to avoid recursing into
dependencies of entry-points that are not compiled by Angular.
In particular, this fixes an issue for packages that have dependencies
on the `date-fns` package. This package has various secondary
entry-points that have a `package.json` file only containing a `typings`
field, without providing additional fields for ngcc to know which
dependency host to use. By not needing a dependency host at all, the
error is avoided.
Fixes#32302
PR Close#32303
This PR makes finding class declarations properties in decorators are
applied to more generic to all properties that may be in a decorator,
and adds helper methods enabling getting the property assignment of a
property value and verifying that a property assignment is actually in a
decorator applied to a class.
This is done so that it will be easier to provide Angular definitions
for decorator properties moving forward. Most immediately, this will
provide decorator class verification for #32238.
PR Close#32252
The TemplateInfo type is an extension of AstResult, but it is not
necessary at all. Instead, improve the current interface for AstResult
by removing all optional fileds and include the TemplateSource in
AstResult instead.
PR Close#32250
Prior to this change, the `BINDING_INDEX` of a given lView was reset after processing a template. However change detection can be triggered as a result of View queries processing, thus leading to subsequent `refreshView` call (and executing a template), which in turn operates with the binding index that is not reset after the previous `refreshView` call. This commit updates the logic to reset binding index before we execute a template, so binding index is correct for instructions inside template function.
PR Close#32201
In ngc is was valid to set the "flatModuleOutFile" option to "null". This is sometimes
necessary if a tsconfig extends from another one but the "fatModuleOutFile" option
needs to be unset (note that "undefined" does not exist as value in JSON)
Now if ngtsc is used to compile the project, ngtsc will fail with an error because it
tries to do string manipulation on the "flatModuleOutFile". This happens because
ngtsc only skips flat module indices if the option is set to "undefined".
Since this is not compatible with what was supported in ngc and such exceptions
should be avoided, the flat module check is now aligned with ngc.
```
TypeError: Cannot read property 'replace' of null
at Object.normalizeSeparators (/home/circleci/project/node_modules/@angular/compiler-cli/src/ngtsc/util/src/path.js:35:21)
at new NgtscProgram (/home/circleci/project/node_modules/@angular/compiler-cli/src/ngtsc/program.js:126:52)
```
Additionally setting the `flatModuleOutFile` option to an empty string
currently results in unexpected behavior. No errors is thrown, but the
flat module index file will be `.ts` (no file name; just extension).
This is now also fixed by treating an empty string similarly to
`null`.
PR Close#32235
Previously, ngtsc attempted to use the .d.ts schema for HTML elements to
check bindings to DOM properties. However, the TypeScript lib.dom.d.ts
schema does not perfectly align with the Angular DomElementSchemaRegistry,
and these inconsistencies would cause issues in apps. There is also the
concern of supporting both CUSTOM_ELEMENTS_SCHEMA and NO_ERRORS_SCHEMA which
would have been very difficult to do in the existing system.
With this commit, the DomElementSchemaRegistry is employed in ngtsc to check
bindings to the DOM. Previous work on producing template diagnostics is used
to support generation of this different kind of error with the same high
quality of error message.
PR Close#32171
This commit adds a no-op test for exposing the bug in the way language
service handles CRLF line endings in templates.
There is no easy fix for now, but the test should be enabled once a fix
is in place.
PR Close#32245
This commit drops our custom, change-detection specific, equality comparison util
in favour of the standard Object.is which has desired semantics.
There are multiple advantages of this approach:
- less code to maintain on our end;
- avoid NaN checks if both values are equal;
- re-write NaN checks so we don't trigger V8 deoptimizations.
PR Close#32212
Angular hooks come after 2 flavours:
- init hooks (OnInit, AfterContentInit, AfterViewInit);
- check hooks (OnChanges, DoChanges, AfterContentChecked, AfterViewChecked).
We need to do more processing for init hooks to ensure that those hooks
are run once and only once for a given directive (even in case of errors).
As soon as all init hooks execute to completion we are only left with the
checks to execute.
It turns out that keeping track of the remaining init hooks to execute is
rather expensive (multiple LView flags reads, writes and checks). But we can
observe that non of this tracking is needed as soon as all init hooks are
completed.
This PR takes advantage of the above observations and splits hooks processing
functions into:
- init-specific (slower but less common);
- check-specific (faster and more common).
NOTE: there is code duplication in this PR and it is left like this intentinally:
hand-inlining this perf-critical code makes the view refresh process substentially
faster.
PR Close#32131
Currently, it's not possible to tree-shake away the
coordination layer between HammerJS and Angular's
EventManager. This means that you get the HammerJS
support code in your production bundle whether or
not you actually use the library.
This commit removes the Hammer providers from the
default platform_browser providers list and instead
provides them as part of a `HammerModule`. Apps on
Ivy just need to import the `HammerModule` at root
to turn on Hammer support. Otherwise all Hammer code
will tree-shake away. View Engine apps will require
no change.
BREAKING CHANGE
Previously, in Ivy applications, Hammer providers
were included by default. With this commit, apps
that want Hammer support must import `HammerModule`
in their root module.
PR Close#32203
Historically, the Angular Compiler has produced both native TypeScript
diagnostics (called ts.Diagnostics) and its own internal Diagnostic format
(called an api.Diagnostic). This was done because TypeScript ts.Diagnostics
cannot be produced for files not in the ts.Program, and template type-
checking diagnostics are naturally produced for external .html template
files.
This design isn't optimal for several reasons:
1) Downstream tooling (such as the CLI) must support multiple formats of
diagnostics, adding to the maintenance burden.
2) ts.Diagnostics have gotten a lot better in recent releases, with support
for suggested changes, highlighting of the code in question, etc. None of
these changes have been of any benefit for api.Diagnostics, which have
continued to be reported in a very primitive fashion.
3) A future plugin model will not support anything but ts.Diagnostics, so
generating api.Diagnostics is a blocker for ngtsc-as-a-plugin.
4) The split complicates both the typings and the testing of ngtsc.
To fix this issue, this commit changes template type-checking to produce
ts.Diagnostics instead. Instead of reporting a special kind of diagnostic
for external template files, errors in a template are always reported in
a ts.Diagnostic that highlights the portion of the template which contains
the error. When this template text is distinct from the source .ts file
(for example, when the template is parsed from an external resource file),
additional contextual information links the error back to the originating
component.
A template error can thus be reported in 3 separate ways, depending on how
the template was configured:
1) For inline template strings which can be directly mapped to offsets in
the TS code, ts.Diagnostics point to real ranges in the source.
This is the case if an inline template is used with a string literal or a
"no-substitution" string. For example:
```typescript
@Component({..., template: `
<p>Bar: {{baz}}</p>
`})
export class TestCmp {
bar: string;
}
```
The above template contains an error (no 'baz' property of `TestCmp`). The
error produced by TS will look like:
```
<p>Bar: {{baz}}</p>
~~~
test.ts:2:11 - error TS2339: Property 'baz' does not exist on type 'TestCmp'. Did you mean 'bar'?
```
2) For template strings which cannot be directly mapped to offsets in the
TS code, a logical offset into the template string will be included in
the error message. For example:
```typescript
const SOME_TEMPLATE = '<p>Bar: {{baz}}</p>';
@Component({..., template: SOME_TEMPLATE})
export class TestCmp {
bar: string;
}
```
Because the template is a reference to another variable and is not an
inline string constant, the compiler will not be able to use "absolute"
positions when parsing the template. As a result, errors will report logical
offsets into the template string:
```
<p>Bar: {{baz}}</p>
~~~
test.ts (TestCmp template):2:15 - error TS2339: Property 'baz' does not exist on type 'TestCmp'.
test.ts:3:28
@Component({..., template: TEMPLATE})
~~~~~~~~
Error occurs in the template of component TestCmp.
```
This error message uses logical offsets into the template string, and also
gives a reference to the `TEMPLATE` expression from which the template was
parsed. This helps in locating the component which contains the error.
3) For external templates (templateUrl), the error message is delivered
within the HTML template file (testcmp.html) instead, and additional
information contextualizes the error on the templateUrl expression from
which the template file was determined:
```
<p>Bar: {{baz}}</p>
~~~
testcmp.html:2:15 - error TS2339: Property 'baz' does not exist on type 'TestCmp'.
test.ts:10:31
@Component({..., templateUrl: './testcmp.html'})
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Error occurs in the template of component TestCmp.
```
PR Close#31952
When a template contains a binding without a value, the template parser
creates an `EmptyExpr` node. This would previously be translated into
an `undefined` value, which would cause a crash downstream as `undefined`
is not included in the allowed type, so it was not handled properly.
This commit prevents the crash by returning an actual expression for empty
bindings.
Fixes#30076Fixes#30929
PR Close#31594
This commit switches the default value of the enableIvy flag to true.
Applications that run ngc will now by default receive an Ivy build!
This does not affect the way Bazel builds in the Angular repo work, since
those are still switched based on the value of the --define=compile flag.
Additionally, projects using @angular/bazel still use View Engine builds
by default.
Since most of the Angular repo tests are still written against View Engine
(particularly because we still publish VE packages to NPM), this switch
also requires lots of `enableIvy: false` flags in tsconfigs throughout the
repo.
Congrats to the team for reaching this milestone!
PR Close#32219
This option makes ngc behave as tsc, and was originally implemented before
ngtsc existed. It was designed so we could build JIT-only versions of
Angular packages to begin testing Ivy early, and is not used at all in our
current setup.
PR Close#32219