In Ivy when elements are created a series of static attribute names are provided
over to the construction instruction of that element. Static attribute names
include non-binding attribues (like `<div selected>`) as well as animation bindings
that do not have a RHS value (like `<div @foo>`). Because of this distinction,
value-less animation triggers are rendered first before value-full animation
bindings are and this improper ordering has caused various existing tests to fail.
This patch ensures that animation bindings are evaluated in the order that they
exist within the HTML template code (or host binding code).
PR Close#28165
With the refactoring or how styles/classes are implmented in Ivy,
interpolation has caused the binding code to mess up since interpolation
itself takes up its own slot in Ivy's memory management code. This patch
makes sure that interpolation works as expected with class and style
bindings.
Jira issue: FW-944
PR Close#28190
In VE the renderer.begin() and renderer.end() methods are only called
when CD is called on an element. This patch ensures that Ivy does the
same thing.
Jira issue: FW-945
PR Close#28192
When we look for matching annotations in TestBed, we should always take the last
matching annotation. Otherwise, we will return superclass data for subclasses,
which would have unintended consequences like directives matching the wrong selectors.
PR Close#28195
Initial thinking was that the bug is in the content projection logic but
it turned out to be a wrong assumption - hence adding a test to illustrate
that basic content projection of view containers works correctly.
What fails in the marked test is the logic quering debug nodes - content
peojection is fine but we never create the 'B' text node since we call
show() method on the "wrong" directive instance.
PR Close#28152
Fixes the `ModuleWithComponentFactories.componentFactories` not being populated when calling `compileModuleAndAllComponentsSync` in Ivy.
These changes resolve FW-929.
PR Close#28112
Prior to this change element's i18n attributes like "i18n-title" were processed after "i18n" ones that placed "i18n" and "i18nAttributes" instructions in wrong order, thus "i18nAttributes" failed to target its host element at runtime. This change updates processing order and puts "i18nAttributes" instructions in front of "i18n" ones to resolve the problem.
PR Close#28163
There were two issues with multiple ICU expressions in the same i18n block:
- the regexp that was used to parse the text wasn't able to handle multiple ICU expressions, I've replaced it with parsing the text and searching for brackets (which is what we ended up doing in the end anyway)
- we allocate node indexes for nodes generated by the ICU expressions which increases the expando value, but we would create the nodes for those cases during the update phase. In the mean time we would create some nodes during the creation phase (comment nodes for ICU expressions, text nodes, ...) with an auto increment index. This means that any node created after an ICU expression would get the following index value, but the ICU case nodes expected to use the same index as well... There was a mismatch between the auto generated index, and the expected index which was causing problems when we needed to select those nodes for updates later on. To fix it, I've added the expected node index to the list of mutate codes that we generate, and we do not use an auto increment value anymore.
FW-905 #resolve
PR Close#28083
The implementation of the `compileComponents` method for `TestBedRender3` was missing.
We now pass each component through `resolveComponentResources` when `TestBed.compileComponents` is called so that `templateUrl` and `styleUrls` can be resolved asynchronously and used once `TestBed.createComponent` is called.
The component's metadata are overriden in `TestBed` instead of mutating the original metadata like this is the case outside of TestBed. The reason for that is that we need to ensure that we didn't mutate anything so that the following tests can run with the same original metadata, otherwise we it could trigger or hide some errors.
FW-553 #resolve
PR Close#27778
Throws a similar error to ViewEngine when encountering an `@Output` that hasn't been initialized to an `Observable`.
These changes resolve FW-680.
PR Close#28085
Up until this point, all static attribute values (things like `title` and `id`)
defined within the `host` are of a Component/Directive definition were
generated into a `def.attributes` array and then processed at runtime.
This design decision does not lend itself well to tree-shaking and is
inconsistent with other static values such as styles and classes.
This fix ensures that all static attribute values (attributes, classes,
and styles) that exist within a host definition for components and
directives are all assigned via the `elementHostAttrs` instruction.
```
// before
defineDirective({
...
attributes: ['title', 'my title']
...
})
//now
defineDirective({
...
hostBindings: function() {
if (create) {
elementHostAttrs(..., ['title', 'my-title']);
}
...
}
...
})
```
PR Close#28089
Angular allows for `<ng-content>` elements to include a selector which
filters which content-projected entries are inserted into the container
depending on whether or not the selector is matched.
With Ivy this feature has not fully worked due to the massive changes
that took place inside of Ivy's styling algorithm code (which is
responsible for assigning classes and styles to an element). This
fix ensures that content-projection can correctly identify which slot
an element should be placed into when class-based selectors are used.
PR Close#27849
Fixes the `DebugNode.references` returning a reference to the underlying comment node, rather than the `TemplateRef` that the reference is pointing to. The issue comes from the fact that `discoverLocalRefs` falls back directly to returning the native node, if the ref isn't pointing to a directive, rather than looking through the locals.
These changes resolve FW-870.
PR Close#28101
When requesting a queries instance for a node, it was previously
decided whether it needs to be cloned if the node was not already marked
as hosting a query. This check is in place to have only a single queries
instance per node.
The issue with this approach is that no clone is created for subsequent
instantiations of a component, as the TNode is already marked as hosting
a query during first template pass, whereas the cloning of queries
should be independent of first template pass.
To overcome this issue, the queries are assigned an owner TNode such
that it can reliably be determined if a clone needs to be created.
PR Close#27892
This update fixes the way the @internal and @nocollapse annotations are used together, which produced errors while running it with Closure compiler. Now two annotations are a part of the same comment block.
PR Close#28138
Prior to this change we performed prop and attr name validation at compile time, which failed in case a given prop/attr is an input to a Directive (thus should not be a subject to this check). Since Directive matching in Ivy happens at runtime, the corresponding checks are now moved to runtime as well.
PR Close#28054
This change is a prerequasity for a later change which will turn the
'di' into its own bazel package. In order to do that we have to:
- have `Injector` type be importable by Ivy. This means that we need
to create `Injector` as a pure type in `interface` folder which is
already a bazel package which Ivy can depend on.
- Remove the dependency of `class Injector` on Ivy so that it can be
compiled in isolation. We do that by using `-1` as special value for
`__NG_ELEMENT_ID__` which tells the Ivy `NodeInjector` than
`Injector` is being requested.
PR Close#28066
This update aligns Ivy behavior with ViewEngine related to empty bindings (for example <div [someProp]></div>): empty bindings are ignored.
PR Close#28059
__NG_ELEMENT_ID__ static fields are a part of how the Ivy node injector
works. In order to survive closure minification correctly, they need to
be annotated with @nocollapse.
PR Close#28050
When an @NgModule decorator executes, the module is added to a queue in
render3/jit/module.ts. Reading an ngComponentDef property causes this queue
to be flushed, ensuring that the component gets the correct module scope
applied.
In before_each.ts, a global beforeEach is added to all Angular tests which
calls TestBed.resetTestingModule() prior to running each test. This in turn
clears the module compilation queue (which is correct behavior, as modules
declared within the test should not leak outside of it via the queue).
So far this is okay. But before the first test runs, the module compilation
queue is full of modules declared in global scope. No definitions have been
read, so no flushes of the queue have been triggered. The global beforeEach
triggers a reset of the queue, aborting all of the in-progress global
compilation, breaking those classes when they're later used in tests.
This commit adds logic to TestBedRender3 to respect the state of the module
queue before the TestBed is first initialized or reset. The queue is flushed
prior to such an operation to ensure global compilation is allowed to finish
properly.
With this fix, a platform-server test now passes (previously the <my-child>
element was not detected as a component, because the encompassing module
never finished compilation.
FW-887 #resolve
PR Close#28033
Previously when testing code injected the Compiler, it received the
top-level Compiler implementation defined in linker/compiler.ts
(and governed by the __PRE_R3__ switch). Code running under the
TestBed, however, should always use a TestBed-aware Compiler
implementation.
This commit adds such an implementation to the TestBedRender3,
which passes compiled modules through the _compileNgModule()
function.
With this change, 3 formerly disabled router integration tests
now pass.
FW-855 #resolve
PR Close#28033
An @NgModule with invalid provider declarations produces errors under
normal circumstances. However, within the TestBed two small issues with
provider overrides interfered with the correct production of these errors:
1. a 'null' provider object caused a premature crash when the TestBed
attempted to check for a 'provide' property on it with hasOwnProperty().
2. the array of providers would have an empty override array appended to it
for each input provider, which would pollute the error messages produced
down the line.
This commit fixes both of these issues, by 1) checking for null and 2)
filtering out the empty override arrays.
Testing strategy: future commits change the way the TestBed compiles
modules, causing tests to become sensitive to this bug if not fixed.
PR Close#28033
An @NgModule with an 'id' property has its type registered in a global map
of modules by id. This happens during compilation of the module.
In Ivy, modules are first compiled when the @NgModule decorator executes.
In tests, they might be passed again through the TestBed's compiler,
resulting in a second compilation and registration.
Before this fix, this second registration would cause an error, as the id
was previously registered. This commit makes the registration idempotent,
so if the same module type is being registered for the same id then no
error is thrown.
Testing strategy: future commits change the way the TestBed compiles
modules, causing tests to become sensitive to this bug if not fixed.
PR Close#28033
Previously, we had the logic to schedule a change detection tick
inside markViewDirty(). This is fine when used in markDirty(),
the user-facing API, because it should always schedule change
detection. However, this doesn't work when used in markForCheck()
because historically markForCheck() does not trigger change
detection.
To be backwards compatible, this commit moves the scheduling
logic out of markViewDirty() and into markDirty(), so
markForCheck no longer triggers a tick.
PR Close#28048
Libraries that create components dynamically using component factories,
such as `@angular/upgrade` need to pass blocks of projected content
through to the `ComponentFactory.create()` method. These blocks
are extracted from the content by matching CSS selectors defined in
`<ng-content select="..">` tags found in the component's template.
The Angular compiler collects these CSS selectors when compiling a component's
template, and exposes them via the `ComponentFactory.ngContentSelectors`
property.
This change ensures that this property is filled correctly when the
component factory is created by compiling a component with the Ivy engine.
PR Close#27867
When a pipe returns an instance of WrappedValue we should "invalidate" value
of a binding where the pipe in question is used.
Before this change we've always wrtten the invalidation value (NO_CHANGE) to
the binding root this invalidating the first binding in a LView. This commit
corrects the binding index calculation so the binding with a pipe is invalidated.
PR Close#28044
exportAs in @Directive metadata supports multiple values, separated by
commas. Previously it was treated as a single value string.
This commit modifies the compiler to understand that exportAs is a
string[]. It stops short of carrying the multiple values through to the
runtime. Instead, it only emits the first one. A future commit will modify
the runtime to accept all the values.
PR Close#28001
Currently the ImportManager class handles various rewriting actions of
imports when compiling @angular/core. This is required as code compiled
within @angular/core cannot import from '@angular/core'. To work around
this, imports are rewritten to get core symbols from a particular file,
r3_symbols.ts.
In this refactoring, this rewriting logic is moved out of the ImportManager
and put behind an interface, ImportRewriter. There are three implementers
of the interface:
* NoopImportRewriter, used for compiling all non-core packages.
* R3SymbolsImportRewriter, used when ngtsc compiles @angular/core.
* NgccFlatImportRewriter, used when ngcc compiles @angular/core (special
logic is needed because ngcc has to rewrite imports in flat bundles
differently than in non-flat bundles).
This is a precursor to using this rewriting logic in other contexts besides
the ImportManager.
PR Close#27998
TestBed used to have its own implementation of the `transitiveScopesFor` function, customized for TestBed needs (to compile NgModules). This change unifies the `transitiveScopesFor` function usage by importing it from the `jit/module.ts` script and adding extra argument to configure its behavior (how to compile NgModule), so that TestBed can leverage it.
PR Close#27860
These tests validate the ability of the View Engine TestBed to consume
summary metadata, a mechanism which allows the TestBed to use
AOT-compiled components & directives in tests. It achieves this through
two operations which are independently obsolete in Ivy:
1. It injects CompileMetadataResolver, a View Engine specific compiler
internal class which extracts global analysis metadata from classes,
and uses it to construct summary metadata. This happens in a
beforeEach() block which calls createSummaries().
2. It uses TestBed.initTestEnvironment to pass summary metadata to the
TestBed itself. Any such metadata is ignored in Ivy.
Operation #1 makes it impossible to run these tests under Ivy, as the
CompileMetadataResolver is not available with an Ivy compiler.
Ivy itself does not rely on summary data, and the R3TestBed can depend
directly on AOT compiled components without it. Thus, the spirit of thes
tests is obsolete in an Ivy world.
FW-838 #resolve
PR Close#28027
Previously the canInsertNativeNode and getRenderParent functions had almost
_exaclty_ the same logic. What was worse that getRenderParent was calling
canInsertNativeNode thus executing the same, non-trivial logic twice.
This commit merges canInsertNativeNode and getRenderParent into one function.
Now getRenderParent will return a native parent or null if a node can't be
inserted (content projection, root of a view that is not inserted etc.).
PR Close#28011
Previously presence and type of a parent tNode was split among
canInsertNativeNode, canInsertNativeChildOfView and canInsertNativeChildOfElement.
This commit centralises the logic in canInsertNativeNode thus simplifying
the overall logic and making canInsertNativeChildOfElement trivial.
PR Close#28011
The problem that `fixmeIvy`s refer to is resolved, but the tests are still broken due to other issue (not possible to retrieve host property bindings for DebugElement).
PR Close#28003
This commit adds sanitization for `elementProperty` and `elementAttribute` instructions used in `hostBindings` function, similar to what we already have in the `template` function. Main difference is the fact that for some attributes (like "href" and "src") we can't define which SecurityContext they belong to (URL vs RESOURCE_URL) in Compiler, since information in Directive selector may not be enough to calculate it. In order to resolve the problem, Compiler injects slightly different sanitization function which detects proper Security Context at runtime.
PR Close#27939
Previously the appendChild / removeChild could take null as an argument for
a child to be added / removed. This is difficult to understand since the
mentioned methods are noop if a child is null.
This commit clarifies the appendChild / removeChild signature to systematically
require a child node to be added removed. It turns out that null could be passed
only for a very specific i18n cases so now we guard a call to removeChild with
an explicit check on the i18n side.
PR Close#27987
This update introduces support for global object (window, document, body) listeners, that can be defined via host listeners on Components and Directives.
PR Close#27772
`i18nAttributes` was throwing an error when it was called multiple times in the create part of the template function with the same index, for example when we create multiple components with the same template. It shouldn't throw in this case, and just use the cache when available.
FW-903 #resolve
PR Close#27911
Fixes Ivy's `QueryList` not being an instance of the exported ViewEnginer `QueryList`.
Also reworks `first`, `last` and `length` to be regular properties, rather than setters. Reworking `length` was required to be able to extend the ViewEngine `QueryList`, but I reworked `first` and `last` as well since getters generate a lot more code when transpiled to ES5.
These changes fix FW-706.
PR Close#27942
`R3TestBed` allows consumers to configure a "testing module", declare components, override various metadata, etc. To do this, it implements its own JIT compilation, where components/directives/modules have Ivy definition fields generated based on testing metadata. It results in tests interfering with each other. One test might override something in a component that another test tries to use normally, causing failures.
In order to resolve this problem, we store current components/directives/modules defs before applying overrides and re-compiling. Once the test is complete, we restore initial defs, so the next tests interact with "clean" components.
PR Close#27786
Previously, there could be identical template/listener function names
for a component's template, if it had multiple similarly structured
nested sub-templates or listeners.
This resulted in build errors:
`Identifier '<SOME_IDENTIFIER>' has already been declared`
This commit fixes this by ensuring that the template index is included
in the `contextName` passed to the `TemplateDefinitionBuilder`
responsible for processing nested sub-templates.
Similarly, the template or element index is included in the listener
names.
PR Close#27766
This PR assures that content projection works if an <ng-content> tag is
placed inside an <ng-template> in one component and that <ng-template>
is inserted into a different component. It fixes a bug where the
projection instruction code would walk up the insertion tree to find
selector data instead of the declaration tree.
PR Close#27783
Prior to this change, ICU extraction logic was not taking into account nested bindings (that look like this: �0:1�) and only accounted for top level bindings (like this �0�). As a result, ICUs were not parsed and remained as text in the output. Now the extraction logic (regular expressions) take into account the nested bindings format as well.
PR Close#27914
Some of the animation tests have been failing because animation gets
triggered multiple times. The reason for this is that the compiler was
generating static attribute bindings in addition to dynamic bindings.
This created multiple writes to the animation render which failed the
tests.
PR Close#27805
Forward refs in some places (like imports/export/providers/viewProviders/queries) were not resolved before passing to compilation phase. Now we resolve missing refs before invoking compile function.
PR Close#27737
Prior to this change, provider overrides defined via TestBed.overrideProvider were not applied to Components/Directives. Now providers are taken into account while compiling Components/Directives (metadata is updated accordingly before being passed to compilation).
PR Close#27693
In some cases in our tests we can define multiple overrides for a given class. As a result, only the last override is actually applied due to the fact that we store overrides in a Type<->Override map. This update changes the logic to keep all overrides defined in a given test for a Type (i.e. Type<->Override[] map) and applies them one by one at resolution phase. This behavior is more inline with the previous TestBed.
PR Close#27734
Previously ivy code generation was emmiting the projectionDef instruction in
a template where the <ng-content> tag was found. This code generation logic was
incorrect since the ivy runtime expects the projectionDef instruction to be present
in the main template only.
This PR ammends the code generation logic so that the projectionDef instruction is
emmitedin the main template only.
PR Close#27755
Prior to this commit, we had two different modes for change detection
execution for Ivy, depending on whether you called `bootstrap()` or
`renderComponent()`. In the former case, we would complete creation
mode for all components in the tree before beginning update mode for
any component. In the latter case, we would run creation mode and
update mode together for each component individually.
Maintaining code to support these two different execution orders was
unnecessarily complex, so this commit aligns the two bootstrapping
mechanisms to execute in the same order. Now creation mode always
runs for all components before update mode begins.
This change also simplifies our rendering logic so that we use
`LView` flags as the source of truth for rendering mode instead of
`rf` function arguments. This fixed some related bugs (e.g. calling
`ViewRef.detectChanges` synchronously after the view's creation
would create view nodes twice, view queries would execute twice, etc).
PR Close#27744
We invoked `hostBindings` function in Create and Update modes with different element index due to the fact that we did not subtract HEADER_OFFSET from the index before passing it to `hostBindings` function in Create mode. Now we subtract HEADER_OFFSET value before invoking `hostBindings`, which makes Ceate and Update calls consistent.
PR Close#27694
Context discovery was only available on elements. This PR adds support for containers and ICU expressions.
FW-378 #resolve
FW-665 #comment linker integration tests
PR Close#27644
`NgModule` requires that `Component`s/`Directive`s/`Pipe`s are listed in
declarations, and that each `Component`s/`Directive`s/`Pipe` is declared
in exactly one `NgModule`. This change adds runtime checks to ensure
that these sementics are true at runtime.
There will need to be seperate set of checks for the AoT path of the
codebase to verify that same set of semantics hold. Due to current
design there does not seem to be an easy way to share the two checks
because JIT deal with references where as AoT deals with AST nodes.
PR Close#27604
While creating FESM files, rollup usually drops all unused symbols.
All *__POST_R3__ are unused unless ngcc rewires stuff. To prevent this DCE
we reexport them as private symbols. If ngcc is not used, these symbols will
be dropped when we optimize an application bundle.
PR Close#27438
Prior to this change, we were unable to match directives using `ng-template` tags (for example the following selector would not work even though there might be some <ng-template>s in a template: `ng-template[directiveA]`. As a result, that broke some components that relies on such selectors to work. In order to resolve the problem, we now pass tag name to the `template` instruction (where we passed `null` before) and this tag name is used for matching at runtime. This update should also help support projecting containers, because the tag name is required to properly match such elements.
PR Close#27636
All the tests in `packages/core/test/view/` are specific to the `ViewEngine` and shouldn't run for ivy. This PR introduces a new BUILD.bazel file to run those tests separately.
PR Close#27645
In Ivy, a pure call to `setClassMetadata` is inserted to retain the
information that would otherwise be lost while eliding the Angular
decorators. In the past, the Angular constructor decorators were
wrapped inside of an anonymous function which was only evaluated once
`ReflectionCapabilities` was requested for such metadata. This approach
prevents forward references from inside the constructor parameter
decorators from being evaluated before they are available.
In the `setClassMetadata` call, the constructor parameters were not wrapped
within an anonymous function, such that forward references were evaluated
too early, causing runtime errors.
This commit changes the `setClassMetadata` call to pass the constructor
parameter decorators inside of an anonymous function again, such that
forward references are not resolved until requested by
`ReflectionCapabilities`, therefore avoiding the early reads of forward refs.
PR Close#27561
Currently the `ViewRef.destroy` method assumes that its index inside the view container will always be valid, however if it has been removed already, it'll be -1 which will throw an error.
The error manifested itself in one of the unit tests where a view had been detached during the test and then `TestBed` attempted to destroy its `ComponentRef` which ended threw an `Error during cleanup of component`.
PR Close#27585
Since Renderer is shared across root and child views, we need to avoid `destroy` method invocation for child views and only invoke is for root view when needed. Prior to this change, the `destroy` function was called whenever child view was destroyed, thus causing errors at runtime.
PR Close#27592
Previously in Ivy, host bindings did not work if they shared a public name
with an Input because they used the `elementProperty` instruction as is.
This instruction was originally built for inside component templates, so it
would either set a directive input OR a native property. This is the
correct behavior for inside a template, but for host bindings, we always
want the native properties to be set regardless of the presence of an Input.
This change adds an extra argument to `elementProperty` so we can tell it to
ignore directive inputs and only set native properties (if it is in the
context of a host binding).
PR Close#27589
In `ViewRef.detectChanges`, we are passing `ViewRef.context` into `detectChanges` to trigger change detection. This only makes sense for component `ViewRefs` (i.e. injected `ChangeDetectorRefs`) because with embedded views, `context` is not a component instance where the view has been monkey-patched. It's a just a normal object, so the view will be undefined.
In order to resolve this problem, we now invoke `detectChangesInternal` and also pass `LView` (to make sure we always have a view available).
PR Close#27521
We had two `NodeInjector` classes: one in `view_compatibility` and one in `di`. We replaced the one in `di` with the one from `view_compatibility` and reconciled their differences.
PR Close#27541
While generating attributes for `projection` instruction, we checked whether attribute name is equal to 'select' in lower case. However in other cases we treat 'select' attribute name as case-insensitive. This PR makes 'select' attribute consistently case-insensitive.
PR Close#27500
Prior to this change, animation properties were defined as element attributes, which caused errors at runtime. Now all animation-related attributes are defined as element properties.
Also as a part of this update, we start to account for bindings used in animations, which was previously missing.
PR Close#27496
Analogously to directives, the `ngInjectableDef` field in .d.ts files is
annotated with the type of service that it represents. If the service
contains required generic type arguments, these must be included in
the .d.ts file.
PR Close#27037
(FW-777)
When an Injector is provided, R3Injector instantiates it by calling its
constructor instead of its factory, not resolving dependencies.
With this fix, the ngInjectorDef is checked and the factory is correctly
used if it is found.
PR Close#27456
When detaching a view by its index via `ViewContainerRef.detach(index)`, in `ViewEngine` we used to return a new `ViewRef` ([for reference](https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/master/packages/core/src/view/refs.ts#L227)), however in Ivy we return the same `ViewRef` which means that its internal `_viewContainerRef` is never reset and we'll throw an error if the consumer tried to attach it to the `ApplicationRef`. These changes return a new `ViewRef` in order to match the original behavior.
These changes also add the same errors as `ViewEngine` when attempting to attach a view that is attached already. This was the original goal of this PR, however it ended up uncovering the issues with the `ViewRef`.
PR Close#27437
Prior to this change, the number of host vars stored for directives with `hostBindings` in expando block was incorrect for inherited directives (in case both parent and child directive have `hostBindings` defined). Now if we identify that we already added a `hostBinding` into expando block, we just increase the corresponding number of host binding vars
PR Close#27392
In Angular, it used to be an accepted practice to use strings as dependency
injection tokens. E.g. {provide: 'test', useValue: 'provided'}. However,
the Ivy node injection system did not support this. The Ivy DI system
attempts to patch a Bloom bit index onto each type registered with it, and
this patch operation does not work for a string token.
This commit adds string token support to the bloom filter system by
reserving bit 0 for string tokens. This eliminates the need for each string
token to store its own Bloom bit, at the expense of slightly more expensive
lookups of string tokens.
PR Close#27383
Previously the concept of multiple directives with the same selector was
not supported by ngtsc. This is due to the treatment of directives for a
component as a Map from selector to the directive, which is an erroneous
representation.
Now the directives for a component are stored as an array which supports
multiple directives with the same selector.
Testing strategy: a new ngtsc_spec test asserts that multiple directives
with the same selector are matched on an element.
PR Close#27298
BREAKING CHANGE:
The public API for `DebugNode` was accidentally too broad. This change removes
1. Public constructor. Since `DebugNode` is a way for Angular to communicate information
on to the developer there is no reason why the developer should ever need to
Instantiate the `DebugNode`
2. We are also removing `removeChild`, `addChild`, `insertBefore`, and `insertChildAfter`.
All of these methods are used by Angular to constructor the correct `DebugNode` tree.
There is no reason why the developer should ever be constructing a `DebugNode` tree
And these methods should have never been made public.
3. All properties have been change to `readonly` since `DebugNode` is used by Angular
to communicate to developer and there is no reason why these APIs should be writable.
While technically breaking change we don’t expect anyone to be effected by this change.
PR Close#27223
This fixes an issue where a value would hide the type.
```
export interface Foo {
someMethod(): void;
}
export const Foo: Function = ...;
```
In the above example the `Foo` constant will hide the `interface Foo` symbol.
This change properly saves the interface in addition to the type.
PR Close#27223
A recent commit (probably 2c7386c) has changed the import graph of the
DI types in core, and somehow results in the ngc compiler deciding to
re-export core DI types from application factories which tangentially
use inject(). This is not really surprising; ngc's import graph can be
very unstable.
However, this results in a re-export of InjectFlags surviving JS
compilation. InjectFlags was a const enum, akin to an interface in TS,
with no runtime repesentation. This causes a warning to be emitted by
Webpack when it sees the re-export of InjectFlags.
This commit avoids the issue by removing 'const' from the declaration
of InjectFlags, causing it to have a runtime value. This is a temporary
fix. The real fix will be for ngc to no longer write exports of const
enums.
Testing strategy: manually verified. Due to the problem only manifesting
when recompiling after a change and then running Webpack, there is no
existing framework via which this could be easily tested with an
integration test. Additionally, the potential for this issue is gone in
Ivy, so this solution is only temporarily needed.
Fixes#27251.
PR Close#27279
These paths are no longer needed / used.
I had to disable one jit mode spec because it fails now that we actually run it.
I root caused the jit test failure as missing forwardRef support. See FW-645.
PR Close#27278
Currently we store the `_appRef` when a `ViewRef` is attached, however we don't use it for anything. These changes use it to detach the view from the `ApplicationRef` when it is destroyed. These changes also fix that the `ComponentRef` doesn't remove its `ViewRef` on destroy.
PR Close#27276
When ngtsc compiles @angular/core, it rewrites core imports to the
r3_symbols.ts file that exposes all internal symbols under their
external name. When creating the FESM bundle, the r3_symbols.ts file
causes the external symbol names to be rewritten to their internal name.
Under ngcc compilations of FESM bundles, the indirection of
r3_symbols.ts is no longer in place such that the external names are
retained in the bundle. Previously, the external name `ɵdefineNgModule`
was explicitly declared internally to resolve this issue, but the
recently added `setClassMetadata` was not declared as such, causing
runtime errors.
Instead of relying on the r3_symbols.ts file to perform the rewrite of
the external modules to their internal variants, the translation is
moved into the `ImportManager` during the compilation itself. This
avoids the need for providing the external name manually.
PR Close#27055
Currently the `useJit` option from `TestBed.configureCompiler` isn't supported. These changes rework the existing test suites not to pass in `useJit` when running with Ivy.
PR Close#27067
Adds support for the `providers` that are passed in through `TestBed.configureCompiler` and scopes the error only if the consumer has passed in `useJit`.
PR Close#27066
This API is part of our public api surface and needs to be monitored by the public_api_guard.
I also had to go back and mark all of the exported functions with @publicApi jsdoc tag.
PR Close#27008
When compiling the flat-file version of the `@angular/core` we need to be aware
that we cannot rely upon imported names to access the ivy definition functions.
The compiler is already clever enough to use local function calls rather than
trying to add a namespaced import, but there is a problem if the local name of the
function is different to the exported name. This is the case for functions that
are not part of the public API, and so are exported under a barred-O private alias.
In `@angular/core` the only decorations in use are `@NgModule` and `@Injectable`.
There are no directives, components, pipes, etc.
Since `defineInjectable` is part of the public API of `@angular/core`, the compiler
is able to generate code that references the original non-barred-O version of the
function.
But the `defineNgModule` is not part of the public API and so the compiler must
generate code that refers to it by the private barred-O version of the function.
This commit imports and then re-exports this barred-O version of `defineModule` to
ensure that the symbol is available in the local scope of the flat-file versions of
the `@angular/core` library.
PR Close#26403
This commit causes a call to setClassMetadata() to be emitted for every
type being compiled by ngtsc (every Angular type). With this metadata,
the TestBed should be able to recompile these classes when overriding
decorator information.
Testing strategy: Tests in the previous commit for
generateSetClassMetadataCall() verify that the metadata as generated is
correct. This commit enables the generation for each DecoratorHandler,
and a test is added to ngtsc_spec to verify all decorated types have
metadata generated for them.
PR Close#26860
This commit introduces the setClassMetadata() private function, which
adds metadata to a type in a way that can be accessed via Angular's
ReflectionCapabilities. Currently, it writes to static fields as if
the metadata being added was downleveled from decorators by tsickle.
The plan is for ngtsc to emit code which calls this function, passing
metadata on to the runtime for testing purposes. Calls to this function
would then be tree-shaken away for production bundles.
Testing strategy: proper operation of this function will be an integral
part of TestBed metadata overriding. Angular core tests will fail if this
is broken.
PR Close#26860
These tests were previously not running on CI so they have always been broken,
or got broken just recently :-(.
test(ivy): mark failing test targets with fixme-ivy-jit and fixme-ivy-local tags
PR Close#26735
Comment nodes that are child nodes of unsafe elements are identified as text nodes. This results in the comment node being returned as an encoded string.
Add a check to ignore such comment nodes.
PR Close#25879
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
Originally, the ivy_switch mechanism used Bazel genrules to conditionally
compile one TS file or another depending on whether ngc or ngtsc was the
selected compiler. This was done because we wanted to avoid importing
certain modules (and thus pulling them into the build) if Ivy was on or
off. This mechanism had a major drawback: ivy_switch became a bottleneck
in the import graph, as it both imports from many places in the codebase
and is imported by many modules in the codebase. This frequently resulted
in cyclic imports which caused issues both with TS and Closure compilation.
It turns out ngcc needs both code paths in the bundle to perform the switch
during its operation anyway, so import switching was later abandoned. This
means that there's no real reason why the ivy_switch mechanism needed to
operate at the Bazel level, and for the ivy_switch file to be a bottleneck.
This commit removes the Bazel-level ivy_switch mechanism, and introduces
an additional TypeScript transform in ngtsc (and the pass-through tsc
compiler used for testing JIT) to perform the same operation that ngcc
does, and flip the switch during ngtsc compilation. This allows the
ivy_switch file to be removed, and the individual switches to be located
directly next to their consumers in the codebase, greatly mitigating the
circular import issues and making the mechanism much easier to use.
As part of this commit, the tag for marking switched variables was changed
from __PRE_NGCC__ to __PRE_R3__, since it's no longer just ngcc which
flips these tags. Most variables were renamed from R3_* to SWITCH_* as well,
since they're referenced mostly in render2 code.
Test strategy: existing test coverage is more than sufficient - if this
didn't work correctly it would break the hello world and todo apps.
PR Close#26550
Using Renderer’s setElementAttribute or setElementStyle with a null or undefined value removes the
corresponding attribute or style. The argument type should allow this when using strictNullChecks.
Closes#13686
PR Close#17065
The 'animations' field of @Component metadata should be copied directly
into the ngComponentDef for that component and should not pass through
static resolution.
Previously the animations array was statically resolved and then the
values were translated back when generating ngComponentDef.
PR Close#26322
While creating FESM files, rollup usually drops all unused symbols.
All *__POST_NGCC__ are unused unless ngcc rewires stuff. To prevent this DCE
we reexport them as private symbols. If ngcc is not used, these symbols will
be dropped when we optimize an application bundle.
PR Close#26071
This commit adds an ngTemplateGuard_ngIf static method to the NgIf
directive and an ngTemplateContextGuard static method to NgFor. The
function of these two static methods is to enable type narrowing
within generated type checking code for consumers of the directives.
PR Close#26203
Previously in Ivy, metadata for directives/components/modules/etc was
carried in .d.ts files inside type information encoded on the
DirectiveDef, ComponentDef, NgModuleDef, etc types of Ivy definition
fields. This works well, but has the side effect of complicating Ivy's
runtime code as these extra generic type parameters had to be specified
as <any> throughout the codebase. *DefInternal types were introduced
previously to mitigate this issue, but that's the wrong way to solve
the problem.
This commit returns *Def types to their original form, with no metadata
attached. Instead, new *DefWithMeta types are introduced that alias the
plain definition types and add extra generic parameters. This way the
only code that needs to deal with the extra metadata parameters is the
compiler code that reads and writes them - the existence of this metadata
is transparent to the runtime, as it should be.
PR Close#26203
Properties are not allowed usage notes, and in this case the example
is so simple it didn't warrant moving it to the overall class documentation.
PR Close#26039