Now that we are using package.json properties to indicate which
entry-point format to compile, it turns out that we don't really
need to distinguish between flat and non-flat formats, unless we
are compiling `@angular/core`.
PR Close#29092
You can now specify a list of properties in the package.json that
should be considered (in order) to find the path to the format to compile.
The build marker system has been updated to store the markers in
the package.json rather than an additional external file.
Also instead of tracking the underlying bundle format that was compiled,
it now tracks the package.json property.
BREAKING CHANGE:
The `proertiesToConsider` option replaces the previous `formats` option,
which specified the final bundle format, rather than the property in the
package.json.
If you were using this option to compile only specific bundle formats,
you must now modify your usage to pass in the properties in the package.json
that map to the format that you wish to compile.
In the CLI, the `--formats` is no longer available. Instead use the
`--properties` option.
FW-1120
PR Close#29092
Currently when building AIO with Ivy, we run Ngcc and transform
all found formats. This potentially slows down the build (and
therefore the "test_aio_local_ivy" job). Since it's not necessary
to build all formats, and we only need "fesm5" and "fesm2015",
we can explicitly specify the required formats.
**Note**: Currently this does not have any big effect, because Angular
Material does not ship ES2015/ES5 files. The change primarily just
suppresses the Ngcc messages for Material not providing ES2015/ES5
entry-points.
Technically if new non-Ivy packages are added to AIO, this
speeds up the build as we don't build the unused formats.
PR Close#29117
Previously, `ng-packages-installer` would replace the version ranges for
all dependencies that were peer dependencies of an Angular package with
the version range used in the Angular package. This effectively meant
that the pinned version (from `yarn.lock`) for that dependency was
ignored (even if the pinned version satisfied the new version range).
This commit reduces non-determinism in CI jobs using the locally built
Angular packages by always using pinned versions of dependencies for
Angular package peer dependencies if possible.
For example, assuming the following versions for the RxJS dependency:
- **aio/package.json**: `rxjs: ^6.3.0`
- **aio/yarn.lock**: `rxjs@^6.3.0: 6.3.3`
- **@angular/core#peerDependencies**: `rxjs: ^6.0.0`
...the following versions would be used with `ng-packages-installer`:
- Before this commit:
- **aio/package.json**: `rxjs: ^6.0.0`
- **node_modules/rxjs/**: `6.4.0` (latest version satisfying `^6.0.0`)
- After this commit:
- **aio/package.json**: `rxjs: ^6.3.0`
- **node_modules/rxjs/**: `6.3.3` (because it satisfies `^6.0.0`)
PR Close#28510
Currently our version of Yarn is installed through
the "circleci/node" docker image. This is problematic
because in order to be able to update Yarn, we always
need to update the docker image to a version that
comes with the desired Yarn version. Sometimes there
is no docker image with the desired latest Yarn version,
and therefore we cannot easily update the Yarn version.
Additionally updating the docker image also means that
we need to update our version of NodeJS, as well as the
version of `openssl` might have changed (meaning that
our encrypted credential files may not be decodable with
the new version of `openssl`)
PR Close#28546
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 new version of dgeni-packages gives the main (implemented)
overload of a method the correct id and aliases, which allow it to be
automatically linked.
See 398f35da30Fixes#27820Closes#27821
PR Close#27864
Earlier versions may transitively depend on a malicious version of
`flatmap-stream` (see dominictarr/event-stream#116).
The `aio-builds-setup/` had an older version of `event-stream` (3.3.4),
which did not depend on `flatmap-stream`, but upgraded it anyway.
PR Close#27274
Some engineers were already on Yarn 0.10.x which was permitted by the range in our package.json#engines
However this introduced 'integrity sha512' lines into the yarn.lock files.
Then when engineers use yarn 0.9 (in particular, Bazel did this) then the lock files get tons of meaningless edits.
We could force everyone back to yarn 0.9 but this commit chooses to instead advance everyone past 0.10
PR Close#27193
Previously, `firebase-tools@3.x` was used and the deployment from
CircleCI failed with `Unexpected error` (HTTP code: 410).
This commit ensures that we use a recent version of `firebase-tools` for
deploying to Firebase. It also ensures that we use the locally installed
`firebase-tools` (not sure where it came from before 😁).
PR Close#26746