Commit Graph

837 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Rickabaugh 73da2792c9 fix(ivy): properly compile NgModules with forward referenced types (#29198)
Previously, ngtsc would resolve forward references while evaluating the
bootstrap, declaration, imports, and exports fields of NgModule types.
However, when generating the resulting ngModuleDef, the forward nature of
these references was not taken into consideration, and so the generated JS
code would incorrectly reference types not yet declared.

This commit fixes this issue by introducing function closures in the
NgModuleDef type, similarly to how NgComponentDef uses them for forward
declarations of its directives and pipes arrays. ngtsc will then generate
closures when required, and the runtime will unwrap them if present.

PR Close #29198
2019-03-12 18:26:42 -07:00
Alex Rickabaugh ccb70e1c64 fix(ivy): reuse default imports in type-to-value references (#29266)
This fixes an issue with commit b6f6b117. In this commit, default imports
processed in a type-to-value conversion were recorded as non-local imports
with a '*' name, and the ImportManager generated a new default import for
them. When transpiled to ES2015 modules, this resulted in the following
correct code:

import i3 from './module';

// somewhere in the file, a value reference of i3:
{type: i3}

However, when the AST with this synthetic import and reference was
transpiled to non-ES2015 modules (for example, to commonjs) an issue
appeared:

var module_1 = require('./module');
{type: i3}

TypeScript renames the imported identifier from i3 to module_1, but doesn't
substitute later references to i3. This is because the import and reference
are both synthetic, and never went through the TypeScript AST step of
"binding" which associates the reference to its import. This association is
important during emit when the identifiers might change.

Synthetic (transformer-added) imports will never be bound properly. The only
possible solution is to reuse the user's original import and the identifier
from it, which will be properly downleveled. The issue with this approach
(which prompted the fix in b6f6b117) is that if the import is only used in a
type position, TypeScript will mark it for deletion in the generated JS,
even though additional non-type usages are added in the transformer. This
again would leave a dangling import.

To work around this, it's necessary for the compiler to keep track of
identifiers that it emits which came from default imports, and tell TS not
to remove those imports during transpilation. A `DefaultImportTracker` class
is implemented to perform this tracking. It implements a
`DefaultImportRecorder` interface, which is used to record two significant
pieces of information:

* when a WrappedNodeExpr is generated which refers to a default imported
  value, the ts.Identifier is associated to the ts.ImportDeclaration via
  the recorder.
* when that WrappedNodeExpr is later emitted as part of the statement /
  expression translators, the fact that the ts.Identifier was used is
  also recorded.

Combined, this tracking gives the `DefaultImportTracker` enough information
to implement another TS transformer, which can recognize default imports
which were used in the output of the Ivy transform and can prevent them
from being elided. This is done by creating a new ts.ImportDeclaration for
the imports with the same ts.ImportClause. A test verifies that this works.

PR Close #29266
2019-03-12 18:02:08 -07:00
Andrew Kushnir fe76494759 fix(ivy): use default selector for Components if selector is empty (#29239)
Prior to this change default selector for Components was not applied in case selector is missing or defined as an empty string. This update aligns this behavior between Ivy and VE: now default selector is used for Components when it's needed. Directives with empty selector are not allowed and trigger a compile-time error in both Ivy and VE.

PR Close #29239
2019-03-12 14:09:46 -07:00
Alan Agius df354d1b34 fix(bazel): add missing binary path for api-extractor (#29202)
`api-extractor` binary is required for external consumers of `ng_module` that want to use the `bundle_dts` flag.

This also sets a different api-exttractor binary to use for ng_module, based if it's internal or external.

PR Close #29202
2019-03-12 10:49:49 -07:00
Andrew Kushnir 1d88c2bb81 fix(ivy): handle aliased Angular decorators (#29195)
Prior to this change the code didn't take into account the fact that decorators can be aliases while importing into a script. As a result, these decorators were not recognized by Angular and various failures happened because of that. Now we take aliases into account and resolve decorator name properly.

PR Close #29195
2019-03-11 11:20:41 -07:00
Alan ca20f571b8 fix(ivy): always convert `rootDirs` to `AbsoluteFsPath` in `getRootDirs` (#29151)
`getCurrentDirectory` directory doesn't return a posix separated normalized path. While `rootDir` and `rootDirs` should return posix separated paths, it's best to not assume as other paths within the compiler options can be returned not posix separated such as `basePath`

See: https://github.com/Microsoft/TypeScript/blob/master/src/compiler/sys.ts#L635

This partially fixes #29140, however there needs to be a change in the CLI as well to handle this, as at the moment we are leaking devkit paths which is not correct.

Fixes #29140

PR Close #29151
2019-03-11 08:31:52 -07:00
Alan Agius a5b8420234 fix(ivy): render alias exports for private declarations if possible (#28735)
Sometimes declarations are not exported publicly but are exported under
a private name. In this case, rather than adding a completely new
export to the entry point, we should create an export that aliases the
private name back to the original public name.

This is important when the typings files have been rolled-up using a tool
such as the [API Extractor](https://api-extractor.com/). In this case
the internal type of an aliased private export will be removed completely
from the typings file, so there is no "original" type to re-export.

For example:

If there are the following TS files:

**entry-point.ts**

```ts
export {Internal as External} from './internal';
```

**internal.ts**

```ts
export class Internal {
  foo(): void;
}
```

Then the API Extractor might roll up the .d.ts files into:

```ts
export declare class External {
  foo(): void;
}
```

In this case ngcc should add an export so the file looks like:

```ts
export declare class External {
  foo(): void;
}
export {External as Internal};
```

PR Close #28735
2019-03-11 07:17:19 -07:00
Alex Rickabaugh 49dccf4bfc fix(ivy): process separate declarations and exports for summaries (#29193)
ngsummary files were generated with an export for each class declaration.
However, some Angular code declares classes (class Foo) and exports them
(export {Foo}) separately, which was causing incomplete summary files.

This commit expands the set of symbol names for which summary exports will
be generated, fixing this issue.

PR Close #29193
2019-03-08 16:11:32 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh 3a6ba00286 fix(ivy): escape all required characters in reexport aliases (#29194)
Previously, the compiler did not escape . or $, and this was causing issues
in google3. Now these characters are escaped.

PR Close #29194
2019-03-08 16:10:57 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh c37ec8b255 fix(ivy): produce ts.Diagnostics for NgModule scope errors (#29191)
Previously, when the NgModule scope resolver discovered semantic errors
within a users NgModules, it would throw assertion errors. TODOs in the
codebase indicated these should become ts.Diagnostics eventually.

Besides producing better-looking errors, there is another reason to make
this change asap: these assertions were shadowing actual errors, via an
interesting mechanism:

1) a component would produce a ts.Diagnostic during its analyze() step
2) as a result, it wouldn't register component metadata with the scope
   resolver
3) the NgModule for the component references it in exports, which was
   detected as an invalid export (no metadata registering it as a
   component).
4) the resulting assertion error would crash the compiler, hiding the
   real cause of the problem (an invalid component).

This commit should mitigate this problem by converting scoping errors to
proper ts.Diagnostics. Additionally, we should consider registering some
marker indicating a class is a directive/component/pipe without actually
requiring full metadata to be produced for it, which would allow suppression
of errors like "invalid export" for such invalid types.

PR Close #29191
2019-03-08 14:21:48 -08:00
Alan b012ab210b test: add interm fix for test that rely on an index.d.ts file (#28884)
At the moment, certain tests relies on resolving the module with an index.d.ts, this root cause might be some implementations are missing from the mocks.

Similar to: 58b4045359

PR Close #28884
2019-03-08 12:36:55 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh b6f6b1178f fix(ivy): generate type references to a default import (#29146)
This commit refactors and expands ngtsc's support for generating imports of
values from imports of types (this is used for example when importing a
class referenced in a type annotation in a constructor).

Previously, this logic handled "import {Foo} from" and "import * as foo
from" style imports, but failed on imports of default values ("import
Foo from"). This commit moves the type-to-value logic to a separate file and
expands it to cover the default import case. Doing this also required
augmenting the ImportManager to track default as well as non-default import
generation. The APIs were made a little cleaner at the same time.

PR Close #29146
2019-03-08 11:57:08 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh 37c5a26421 perf(ivy): switch ngtsc to use single-file emit (#29147)
In the TypeScript compiler API, emit() can be performed either on a single
ts.SourceFile or on the entire ts.Program simultaneously.

ngtsc previously used whole-program emit, which was convenient to use while
spinning up the project but has a significant drawback: it causes a type
checking operation to occur for the whole program, including .d.ts files.
In large Bazel environments (such as Google's codebase), an ngtsc invocation
can have a few .ts files and thousands of .d.ts inputs. This unwanted type
checking is therefore a significant drain on performance.

This commit switches ngtsc to emit each .ts file individually, avoiding the
unwanted type checking.

PR Close #29147
2019-03-08 11:56:46 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 142ac41cac fix(ivy): ngcc - handle prototype pseudo-member from typings file in ESM5 host (#29158)
When processing a JavaScript program, TS may come across a symbol that has
been imported from a TypeScript typings file.

In this case the compiler may pass the ReflectionHost a `prototype` symbol
as an export of the class.

This pseudo-member symbol has no declarations, which previously caused the
code in `Esm5ReflectionHost.reflectMembers()` to crash.

Now we just quietly ignore such a symbol and leave `Esm2015ReflectionHost`
to deal with it.

(As it happens `Esm2015ReflectionHost` also quietly ignores this symbol).

PR Close #29158
2019-03-08 09:34:20 -08:00
Andrew Kushnir fd5cd100a3 fix(ivy): move i18n instructions after listener ones (#29173)
Prior to this commit, i18n instructions (i18n, i18nStart) were generated before listener instructions. As a result, event listeners were attached to the wrong element (text node, not the parent element). This change updates the order of instructions and puts i18n ones after listeners, to make sure listeners are attached to the right elements.

PR Close #29173
2019-03-07 15:36:39 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 5ad2097be8 fix(ivy): teach template type checker about template attributes (#29041)
For the template type checking to work correctly, it needs to know
what attributes are bound to expressions or directives, which may
require expressions in the template to be evaluated in a different
scope.

In inline templates, there are attributes that are now marked as
"Template" attributes. We need to ensure that the template
type checking code looks at these "bound" attributes as well as the
"input" attributes.

PR Close #29041
2019-03-07 11:27:36 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin f535f31d78 fix(ivy): match attribute selectors for content projection with inline-templates (#29041)
The content projection mechanism is static, in that it only looks at the static
template nodes before directives are matched and change detection is run.
When you have a selector-based content projection the selection is based
on nodes that are available in the template.

For example:

```
<ng-content selector="[some-attr]"></ng-content>
```

would match

```
<div some-attr="..."></div>
```

If you have an inline-template in your projected nodes. For example:

```
<div *ngIf="..." some-attr="..."></div>
```

This gets pre-parsed and converted to a canonical form.

For example:

```
<ng-template [ngIf]="...">
  <div some-attr=".."></div>
</ng-template>
```

Note that only structural attributes (e.g. `*ngIf`) stay with the `<ng-template>`
node. The other attributes move to the contained element inside the template.

When this happens in ivy, the ng-template content is removed
from the component template function and is compiled into its own
template function. But this means that the information about the
attributes that were on the content are lost and the projection
selection mechanism is unable to match the original
`<div *ngIf="..." some-attr>`.

This commit adds support for this in ivy. Attributes are separated into three
groups (Bindings, Templates and "other"). For inline-templates the Bindings
and "other" types are hoisted back from the contained node to the `template()`
instruction, so that they can be used in content projection matching.

PR Close #29041
2019-03-07 11:27:36 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 423ac01dcf refactor: rename `AttributeMarker.ProjectOnly` to `AttributeMarker.Bindings` (#29041)
PR Close #29041
2019-03-07 11:27:35 -08:00
Alex Eagle 887faffa25 docs: cleanup contributors (#28930)
- remove individuals from @angular/* package.json, we don't keep them up-to-date
- switch keys in contributors.json to GitHub handles, seems like a better identifier and lets us grab avatar images from GitHub account
- move emeritus ppl to a new Alumni group (won't yet appear on the site)
- add "lead/mentor" keys so we know who is coordinating work
- add a script that generates an "org chart" graphic

PR Close #28930
2019-03-06 14:48:30 -08:00
Andrew Kushnir dc6192c8e5 fix(ivy): properly detect "inputs" and "outputs" field names that should be wrapped in quotes (#29126)
Prior to this change, the RegExp that was used to check for dashes in field names used "g" (global) flag that retains lastIndex, which might result in skipping some fields that should be wrapped in quotes (since lastIndex advanced beyond the next "-" location). This commit removes this flag and updates the test to make sure there are no regressions.

PR Close #29126
2019-03-06 11:01:53 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh 881807dc36 fix(ivy): never use imported type references as values (#29111)
ngtsc occasionally converts a type reference (such as the type of a
parameter in a constructor) to a value reference (argument to a
directiveInject call). TypeScript has a bad habit of sometimes removing
the import statement associated with this type reference, because it's a
type only import when it initially looks at the file.

A solution to this is to always add an import to refer to a type position
value that's imported, and not rely on the existing import.

PR Close #29111
2019-03-05 16:47:41 -08:00
Marc Laval 25166d4f41 fix(ivy): support property values changed in ngOnChanges (forward rref case) (#29054)
PR Close #29054
2019-03-05 14:27:08 -08:00
Alan b446095c4d refactor: remove unused functions and classes in diagnostics (#28923)
PR Close #28923
2019-03-05 11:40:08 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh 866d500324 fix(ivy): copy top-level comments into generated factory shims (#29065)
When ngtsc generates a .ngfactory shim, it does so based on the contents of
an original file in the program. Occasionally these original files have
comments at the top which are load-bearing (e.g. they contain jsdoc
annotations which are significant to downstream bundling tools). The
generated factory shims should preserve this comment.

This commit adds a step to the ngfactory generator to preserve the top-level
comment from the original source file.

FW-1006 #resolve
FW-1095 #resolve

PR Close #29065
2019-03-04 15:59:07 -08:00
Andrew Kushnir aa57bdbf90 fix(ivy): wrap "inputs" and "outputs" keys if they contain unsafe characters (#28919)
Prior to this change, keys in "inputs" and "outputs" objects generated by compiler were not checked against unsafe characters. As a result, in some cases the generated code was throwing JS error. Now we check whether a given key contains any unsafe chars and wrap it in quotes if needed.

PR Close #28919
2019-03-04 14:40:42 -08:00
Andrew Kushnir dcafddefb8 fix(ivy): change for-of to forEach for pipes represented with Map (#29068)
This commit fixes the problem with using for-of for pipes represented with Map (by replacing it with forEach operation).

PR Close #29068
2019-03-01 19:00:25 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh a06824aef6 fix(ivy): correctly evaluate enum references in template expressions (#29062)
The ngtsc partial evaluator previously would not handle an enum reference
inside a template string expression correctly. Enums are resolved to an
`EnumValue` type, which has a `resolved` property with the actual value.

When effectively toString-ing a `ResolvedValue` as part of visiting a
template expression, the partial evaluator needs to translate `EnumValue`s
to their fully resolved value, which this commit does.

PR Close #29062
2019-03-01 15:47:24 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh b1df9a30f4 fix(ivy): use the imported name of decorators for detection (#29061)
Currently, ngtsc has a bug where if you alias the name of a decorator when
importing it, it won't be detected properly. This is because the compiler
uses the aliased name and not the original, declared name of the decorator
for detection.

This commit fixes the compiler to compare against the declared name of
decorators when available, and adds a test to prevent regression.

PR Close #29061
2019-03-01 15:19:34 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh 3e5c1bcb9f fix(ivy): track cyclic imports that are added (#29040)
ngtsc has cyclic import detection, to determine when adding an import to a
directive or pipe would create a cycle. However, this detection must also
account for already inserted imports, as it's possible for both directions
of a circular import to be inserted by Ivy (as opposed to at least one of
those edges existing in the user's program).

This commit fixes the circular import detection for components to take into
consideration already added edges. This is difficult for one critical
reason: only edges to files which will *actually* be imported should be
considered. However, that depends on which directives & pipes are used in
a given template, which is currently only known by running the
TemplateDefinitionBuilder during the 'compile' phase. This is too late; the
decision whether to use remote scoping (which consults the import graph) is
made during the 'resolve' phase, before any compilation has taken place.

Thus, the only way to correctly consider synthetic edges is for the compiler
to know exactly which directives & pipes are used in a template during
'resolve'. There are two ways to achieve this:

1) refactor `TemplateDefinitionBuilder` to do its work in two phases, with
directive matching occurring as a separate step which can be performed
earlier.

2) use the `R3TargetBinder` in the 'resolve' phase to independently bind the
template and get information about used directives.

Option 1 is ideal, but option 2 is currently used for practical reasons. The
cost of binding the template can be shared with template-typechecking.

PR Close #29040
2019-03-01 15:18:50 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh b50283ed67 fix(ivy): support dynamic host attribute bindings (#29033)
In the @Component decorator, the 'host' field is an object which represents
host bindings. The type of this field is complex, but is generally of the
form {[key: string]: string}. Several different kinds of bindings can be
specified, depending on the structure of the key.

For example:

```
@Component({
  host: {'[prop]': 'someExpr'}
})
```

will bind an expression 'someExpr' to the property 'prop'. This is known to
be a property binding because of the square brackets in the binding key.

If the binding key is a plain string (no brackets or parentheses), then it
is known as an attribute binding. In this case, the right-hand side is not
interpreted as an expression, but is instead a constant string.

There is no actual requirement that at build time, these constant strings
are known to the compiler, but this was previously enforced as a side effect
of requiring the binding expressions for property and event bindings to be
statically known (as they need to be parsed). This commit breaks that
relationship and allows the attribute bindings to be dynamic. In the case
that they are dynamic, the references to the dynamic values are reflected
into the Ivy instructions for attribute bindings.

PR Close #29033
2019-03-01 15:18:13 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh a23a0bc3a4 feat(ivy): support tracking the provenance of DynamicValue (#29033)
DynamicValues are generated whenever a partially evaluated expression is
unable to be resolved statically. They contain a reference to the ts.Node
which wasn't resolvable.

They can also be nested. For example, the expression 'a + b' is resolvable
only if 'a' and 'b' are themselves resolvable. If either 'a' or 'b' resolve
to a DynamicValue, the whole expression must also resolve to a DynamicValue.

Previously, if 'a' resolved to a DynamicValue, the entire expression might
have been resolved to the same DynamicValue. This correctly indicated that
the expression wasn't resolvable, but didn't return a reference to the
shallow node that couldn't be resolved (the expression 'a + b'), only a
reference to the deep node that couldn't be resolved ('a').

In certain situations, it's very useful to know the shallow unresolvable
node (for example, to use it verbatim in the output). To support this,
the partial evaluator is updated to always wrap DynamicValue to point to
each unresolvable expression as it's processed, ensuring the receiver can
determine exactly which expression node failed to resolve.

PR Close #29033
2019-03-01 15:18:13 -08:00
Greg Magolan ea09430039 build: rules_nodejs 0.26.0 & use @npm instead of @ngdeps now that downstream angular build uses angular bundles (#28871)
PR Close #28871
2019-02-28 12:06:36 -08:00
Rado Kirov 03d2e5cb1d refactor: Consistently use index access on index signature types. (#28937)
This change helps highlight certain misoptimizations with Closure
compiler. It is also stylistically preferable to consistently use index
access on index sig types.

Roughly, when one sees '.foo' they know it is always checked for typos
in the prop name by the type system (unless 'any'), while "['foo']" is
always not.

Once all angular repos are conforming this will become a tsetse.info
check, enforced by bazel.

PR Close #28937
2019-02-28 02:49:14 -08:00
Andrew Kushnir 772b24ccc3 fix(ivy): avoid missing imports for types that can be represented as values (#28941)
Prior to this change, TypeScript stripped out some imports in case we reference a type that can be represented as a value (for ex. classes). This fix ensures that we use correct symbol identifier, which makes TypeScript retain the necessary import statements.

PR Close #28941
2019-02-27 15:13:40 -08:00
Kristiyan Kostadinov efa10e33a9 fix(ivy): resolve forwardRef when analyzing NgModule (#28942)
Fixes forward refs not being resolved when an NgModule is being analyzed by ngtsc.

This PR resolves FW-1094.

PR Close #28942
2019-02-27 14:02:41 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh 827e89cfc4 feat(ivy): support inline <style> and <link> tags in components (#28997)
Angular supports using <style> and <link> tags inline in component
templates, but previously such tags were not implemented within the ngtsc
compiler. This commit introduces that support.

FW-1069 #resolve

PR Close #28997
2019-02-27 11:56:40 -08:00
Andrew Kushnir 40833ba54b fix(ivy): process property bindings in i18n blocks similar to non-i18n bindings (#28969)
Prior to this change i18n block bindings were converted to Expressions right away (once we first access them), when in non-i18n cases we processed them differently: the actual conversion happens at instructions generation. Because of this discrepancy, the output for bindings in i18n blocks was generated incorrectly (with invalid indicies in pipeBindN fns and invalid references to non-existent local variables). Now the bindings processing is unified and i18nExp instructions should contain right bind expressions.

PR Close #28969
2019-02-27 11:56:12 -08:00
Alan Agius 34bdebcdd2 feat(ivy): add support for windows concrete types for paths (#28752)
This commit introduces support for the windows paths in the new concrete types mechanism that was introduced in this PR https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/28523

Normalized posix paths that start with either a `/` or `C:/` are considered to be an absolute path.

Note: `C:/` is used as a reference, as other drive letters are also supported.

Fixes #28754

PR Close #28752
2019-02-27 11:27:04 -08:00
Andrew Kushnir 034de06ab1 fix(ivy): avoid duplicate i18n consts to be present in generated output (#28967)
Prior to this change, the logic that outputs i18n consts (like `const MSG_XXX = goog.getMsg(...)`) didn't have a check whether a given const that represent a certain i18n message was already included into the generated output. This commit adds the logic to mark corresponding i18n contexts after translation was generated, to avoid duplicate consts in the output.

PR Close #28967
2019-02-27 10:33:41 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh d127d05dc3 fix(ivy): correctly resolve shorthand property declarations (#28936)
The partial evaluator in ngtsc can handle a shorthand property declaration
in the middle evaluation, but fails if evaluation starts at the shorthand
property itself. This is because evaluation starts at the ts.Identifier
of the property (the ts.Expression representing it), not the ts.Declaration
for the property.

The fix for this is to detect in TypeScriptReflectionHost when a ts.Symbol
refers to a shorthand property, and to use the ts.TypeChecker method
getShorthandAssignmentValueSymbol() to resolve the value of the assignment
instead.

FW-1089 #resolve

PR Close #28936
2019-02-27 08:48:54 -08:00
Wassim Chegham dad5a258b8 style: enforce buildifier lint on CI (#28186)
PR Close #28186
2019-02-26 16:57:41 -08:00
Wassim Chegham ce68b4d839 style: enforce buildifier lint on CI (#28186)
PR Close #28186
2019-02-26 16:57:41 -08:00
Marc Laval 8f8f9a6e61 fix(ivy): ngtsc should correctly bind to context in nested template with many bindings (#28982)
PR Close #28982
2019-02-26 11:54:13 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh c1392ce618 feat(ivy): produce and consume ES2015 re-exports for NgModule re-exports (#28852)
In certain configurations (such as the g3 repository) which have lots of
small compilation units as well as strict dependency checking on generated
code, ngtsc's default strategy of directly importing directives/pipes into
components will not work. To handle these cases, an additional mode is
introduced, and is enabled when using the FileToModuleHost provided by such
compilation environments.

In this mode, when ngtsc encounters an NgModule which re-exports another
from a different file, it will re-export all the directives it contains at
the ES2015 level. The exports will have a predictable name based on the
FileToModuleHost. For example, if the host says that a directive Foo is
from the 'root/external/foo' module, ngtsc will add:

```
export {Foo as ɵng$root$external$foo$$Foo} from 'root/external/foo';
```

Consumers of the re-exported directive will then import it via this path
instead of directly from root/external/foo, preserving strict dependency
semantics.

PR Close #28852
2019-02-22 12:15:58 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh 15c065f9a0 refactor(ivy): extract selector scope logic to a new ngtsc package (#28852)
This commit splits apart selector_scope.ts in ngtsc and extracts the logic
into two separate classes, the LocalModuleScopeRegistry and the
DtsModuleScopeResolver. The logic is cleaned up significantly and new tests
are added to verify behavior.

LocalModuleScopeRegistry implements the NgModule semantics for compilation
scopes, and handles NgModules declared in the current compilation unit.
DtsModuleScopeResolver implements simpler logic for export scopes and
handles NgModules declared in .d.ts files.

This is done in preparation for the addition of re-export logic to solve
StrictDeps issues.

PR Close #28852
2019-02-22 12:15:58 -08:00
Kristiyan Kostadinov 32ae84da28 fixup! fix(ivy): incorrectly remapping certain properties that refer to inputs (#28765)
PR Close #28765
2019-02-21 17:59:50 -08:00
Greg Magolan ebffde7143 build: update to rules_typescript 0.25.1 (#28625)
Updated a spot in the compiler which assumed es5 downlevelling get ready for es2015 devmode in the future.

PR Close #28625
2019-02-21 07:46:21 -08:00
Andrew Kushnir 95d9aa22ef fix(ivy): allow HTML comments to be present inside <ng-content> (#28849)
Prior to this change presence of HTML comments inside <ng-content> caused compiler to throw an error that <ng-content> is not empty. Now HTML comments are not considered as a meaningful content, thus no error is thrown. This behavior is now aligned in Ivy/VE.

PR Close #28849
2019-02-21 00:13:40 -08:00
Andrew Kushnir df627e65df fix(ivy): correct absolute path processing for templateUrl and styleUrls (#28789)
Prior to this change absolute file paths (like `/a/b/c/style.css`) were calculated taking current component file location into account. As a result, absolute file paths were calculated using current file as a root. This change updates this logic to ignore current file path in case of absolute paths.

PR Close #28789
2019-02-21 00:13:12 -08:00
Andrew Kushnir 72d043f669 fix(ivy): check the presence of .css resource for styleUrls (#28770)
Prior to this change, Ivy and VE CSS resource resolution was different: in addition to specified styleUrl (with .scss, .less and .styl extensions), VE also makes an attempt to resolve resource with .css extension. This change introduces similar logic for Ivy to make sure Ivy behavior is backwards compatible.

PR Close #28770
2019-02-21 00:12:43 -08:00