This simple refactor of the build rules renames the .ngfactory.js shim
generator to 'shims' instead of 'factories', in preparation for adding
.ngsummary.js shim generation.
Testing strategy: this commit does not introduce any new behavior and
merely moves files and symbols around. It's sufficient that the existing
ngtsc tests pass.
PR Close#26495
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
* If all guards return `true`, operator returns `true`
* `false` and `UrlTree` are now both valid returns from a guard
* Both these values wait for higher priority guards to resolve
* Highest priority `false` or `UrlTree` value will be returned
PR Close#26478
Since the SW immediately takes over all clients, it is safe to delete
caches used by older (e.g. beta) `@angular/service-worker` versions to
avoid running into browser storage quota limitations.
PR Close#26319
This commit also removes the extra jasminewd2 typings, since the changes
have been merged in the official typings with
DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped#28957.
PR Close#26139
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
Previously we only removed assignments to `Class.decorators = [];`
if the array was not empty.
Now we also remove calls to `__decorate([])`, similarly.
PR Close#26236
Previously, classes that were declared via variable declarations,
rather than class declarations, were being excluded from the
parsed classes.
PR Close#26236
The most recent Angular distributions have begun to use __decorate instead of Class.decorators.
This prevents `ngcc` from recognizing the classes and then fails to perform the transform to
ivy format.
Example:
```
var ApplicationModule = /** @class */ (function () {
// Inject ApplicationRef to make it eager...
function ApplicationModule(appRef) {
}
ApplicationModule = __decorate([
NgModule({ providers: APPLICATION_MODULE_PROVIDERS }),
__metadata("design:paramtypes", [ApplicationRef])
], ApplicationModule);
return ApplicationModule;
}());
```
Now `ngcc` recognizes `__decorate([...])` declarations and performs its transform.
See FW-379
PR Close#26236
In some formats variables are declared as `var` or `let` and only
assigned a value later in the code.
The ngtsc resolver still needs to be able to resolve this value,
so the host now provides a `host.getVariableValue(declaration)`
method that can do this resolution based on the format.
The hosts make some assumptions about the layout of the
code, so they may only work in the constrained scenarios that
ngcc expects.
PR Close#26236
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 builds on the NgtscTestEnvironment helper work before and
introduces template_typecheck_spec.ts, which contains compiler tests
for template type-checking.
PR Close#26203
This commit gets ready for the introduction of ngtsc template
type-checking tests by refactoring test environment setup into a
custom helper. This helper will simplify the authoring of future
ngtsc tests.
Ngtsc tests previously returned a numeric error code (a la ngtsc's CLI
interface) if any TypeScript errors occurred. The helper has the
ability to run ngtsc and return the actual array of ts.Diagnostics, which
greatly increases the ability to write clean tests.
PR Close#26203
This commit enables generation and checking of a type checking ts.Program
whenever the fullTemplateTypeCheck flag is enabled in tsconfig.json. It
puts together all the pieces built previously and causes diagnostics to be
emitted whenever type errors are discovered in a template.
Todos:
* map errors back to template HTML
* expand set of type errors covered in generated type-check blocks
PR Close#26203
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
Before type checking can be turned on in ngtsc, appropriate metadata for
each component and directive must be determined. This commit adds tracking
of the extra metadata in *DefWithMeta types to the selector scope handling,
allowing for later extraction for type-checking purposes.
PR Close#26203
This commit introduces the template type-checking context API, which manages
inlining of type constructors and type-check blocks into ts.SourceFiles.
This API will be used by ngtsc to generate a type-checking ts.Program.
An TypeCheckProgramHost is provided which can wrap a normal ts.CompilerHost
and intercept getSourceFile() calls. This can be used to provide source
files with type check blocks to a ts.Program for type-checking.
PR Close#26203
This commit introduces the main functionality of the type-check compiler:
generation of type check blocks. Type check blocks are blocks of TypeScript
code which can be inlined into source files, and when processed by the
TypeChecker will give information about any typing errors in template
expressions.
PR Close#26203
Template type-checking will make use of expression and statement
translation as well as the ImportManager, so this code needs to
live in a separate build target which can be depended on by both
the main ngtsc transform as well as the template type-checking
mechanism. This refactor introduces a separate build target
for that code.
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
This commit introduces //packages/compiler-cli/src/ngtsc/typecheck as a
container for template type-checking code, and implements an initial API:
type constructor generation.
Type constructors are static methods on component/directive types with
no runtime implementation. The methods are used during compilation to
enable inference of a component or directive's generic type parameters
from the types of expressions bound to any of their @Inputs. A type
constructor looks like:
class Directive<T> {
someInput: T;
static ngTypeCtor<T>(init: Partial<Pick<Directive<T>, 'someInput'>>): Directive<T>;
}
It can be used to infer a type for T based on the input:
const _dir = Directive.ngTypeCtor({someInput: 'string'}); // Directive<T>
PR Close#26203
This commit introduces the "t2" API, which processes parsed template ASTs
and performs a number of functions such as binding (the process of
semantically interpreting cross-references within the template) and
directive matching. The API is modeled on TypeScript's TypeChecker API,
with oracle methods that give access to collected metadata.
This work is a prerequisite for the upcoming template type-checking
functionality, and will also become the basis for a refactored
TemplateDefinitionBuilder.
PR Close#26203
This commit adds a generic type parameter to the SelectorMatcher
class and its associated response types. This makes the API for
matching selectors and obtaining information about the matched
directives significantly more ergonomic and type-safe.
PR Close#26203
Upcoming implementation work for template type-checking will need to reuse the
code which matches directives inside a template, so this refactor commit moves
the code to a shared location in preparation.
This commit pulls the code needed to match directives against a template node
out of the TemplateDefinitionBuilder into a utility function, in preparation
for template type-checking and other TemplateDefinitionBuilder refactoring.
PR Close#26203
* Pull out `activateRoutes` into new operator
* Add `asyncTap` operator
* Use `asyncTap` operator for router hooks and remove corresponding abstracted operators
* Clean up formatting
* Minor performance improvements
PR Close#25740
This is a major refactor of how the router previously worked. There are a couple major advantages of this refactor, and future work will be built on top of it.
First, we will no longer have multiple navigations running at the same time. Previously, a new navigation wouldn't cause the old navigation to be cancelled and cleaned up. Instead, multiple navigations could be going at once, and we imperatively checked that we were operating on the most current `router.navigationId` as we progressed through the Observable streams. This had some major faults, the biggest of which was async races where an ongoing async action could result in a redirect once the async action completed, but there was no way to guarantee there weren't also other redirects that would be queued up by other async actions. After this refactor, there's a single Observable stream that will get cleaned up each time a new navigation is requested.
Additionally, the individual pieces of routing have been pulled out into their own operators. While this was needed in order to create one continuous stream, it also will allow future improvements to the testing APIs as things such as Guards or Resolvers should now be able to be tested in much more isolation.
* Add the new `router.transitions` observable of the new `NavigationTransition` type to contain the transition information
* Update `router.navigations` to pipe off of `router.transitions`
* Re-write navigation Observable flow to a single configured stream
* Refactor `switchMap` instead of the previous `mergeMap` to ensure new navigations cause a cancellation and cleanup of already running navigations
* Wire in existing error and cancellation logic so cancellation matches previous behavior
PR Close#25740
In some cases, example when the user clears the caches in DevTools but
the SW remains active on another tab and keeps references to the deleted
caches, trying to write to the cache throws errors (e.g.
`Entry was not found`).
When this happens, the SW can no longer work correctly and should enter
a degraded mode allowing requests to be served from the network.
Possibly related:
- https://github.com/GoogleChrome/workbox/issues/792
- https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=639034
This commits remedies this situation, by ensuring the SW can enter the
degraded `EXISTING_CLIENTS_ONLY` mode and forward requests to the
network.
PR Close#26042
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
* Pull out `activateRoutes` into new operator
* Add `asyncTap` operator
* Use `asyncTap` operator for router hooks and remove corresponding abstracted operators
* Clean up formatting
* Minor performance improvements
PR Close#25740
This is a major refactor of how the router previously worked. There are a couple major advantages of this refactor, and future work will be built on top of it.
First, we will no longer have multiple navigations running at the same time. Previously, a new navigation wouldn't cause the old navigation to be cancelled and cleaned up. Instead, multiple navigations could be going at once, and we imperatively checked that we were operating on the most current `router.navigationId` as we progressed through the Observable streams. This had some major faults, the biggest of which was async races where an ongoing async action could result in a redirect once the async action completed, but there was no way to guarantee there weren't also other redirects that would be queued up by other async actions. After this refactor, there's a single Observable stream that will get cleaned up each time a new navigation is requested.
Additionally, the individual pieces of routing have been pulled out into their own operators. While this was needed in order to create one continuous stream, it also will allow future improvements to the testing APIs as things such as Guards or Resolvers should now be able to be tested in much more isolation.
* Add the new `router.transitions` observable of the new `NavigationTransition` type to contain the transition information
* Update `router.navigations` to pipe off of `router.transitions`
* Re-write navigation Observable flow to a single configured stream
* Refactor `switchMap` instead of the previous `mergeMap` to ensure new navigations cause a cancellation and cleanup of already running navigations
* Wire in existing error and cancellation logic so cancellation matches previous behavior
PR Close#25740
`TypeScript` only supports merging and extending of `compilerOptions`. This is an implementation to support extending and inheriting of `angularCompilerOptions` from multiple files.
Closes: #22684
PR Close#22717
Previously, when you attempted to bootstrap a component that had a
router-outlet using ngsummaries, it would complain that the component
was not provided by any module even if it was. This commit fixes a
mistake (AFAICT) which caused the lookup of the component in the AOT
summaries to fail.
I believe this change is safe. I've run the affected tests within Google
and there were no breakages caused by this change.
PR Close#24892
Create getter methods `getXXXDef` for each definition which
uses `hasOwnProperty` to verify that we don't accidently read form the
parent class.
Fixes: #24011Fixes: #25026
PR Close#25736
Various user code uses 'instanceof' to check whether a particular instance
is a TemplateRef, ElementRef, etc. Ivy needs to work with these checks.
PR Close#25775
Previously, if ngtsc encountered a VariableDeclaration without an
initializer, it would assume that the variable was undefined, and
return that result.
However, for symbols exported from external modules that resolve to
.d.ts files, variable declarations are of the form:
export declare let varName: Type;
This form also lacks an initializer, but indicates the presence of an
importable symbol which can be referenced. This commit changes the
static resolver to understand variable declarations with the 'declare'
keyword and to generate references when it encounters them.
PR Close#25775
The bootstrap property of @NgModule was not previously compiled by
the compiler in AOT or JIT modes (in Ivy). This commit adds support
for bootstrap.
PR Close#25775
Closure requires @nocollapse on Ivy definition static fields in order
to not convert them to standalone constants. However tsickle, the tool
which would ordinarily be responsible for adding @nocollapse, doesn't
properly annotate fields which are added synthetically via transforms.
So this commit adds @nocollapse by applying regular expressions against
code during the final write to disk.
PR Close#25775
This fix is for the issue below when compiling I18N Angular apps using closure.
For certain locales closure converts the input locale id to a different equivalent locale string. For example if the input locale is 'id'(for Indonesia) goog.LOCALE is set to 'in' and the closure locale data is registered only for 'in'. The Angular compiler uses the original input locale string, 'id' to set the LOCALE_ID token and there is a mismatch of locale used to register and locale used when requesting the locale data.
The fix is for the closure-locale.ts code to register the locale data for all equivalent locales names so that it doesn't matter what goog.LOCALE is actually set to.
PR Close#25867
Add following to your `~/.bazelrc`. This will run the build faster locally
(outside of sandbox), but continue running the builds with sandboxing
on CI.
```
build --spawn_strategy=standalone --strategy=ESM5=sandboxed
```
PR Close#25870
`ngcc` adds marker files to each folder that has been
compiled, containing the version of the ngcc used.
When compiling, it will ignore folders that contain these
marker files, as long as the version matches.
PR Close#25557
defineComponent() and friends can return a flyweight EMPTY object for
specific fields when they contain no data. InheritDefinitionFeature
was attempting to write into these flyweight objects, which have been
protected with Object.freeze().
This commit adds detection to InheritDefinitionFeature to identify the
frozen objects.
PR Close#25755
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.
We don't have an infrastructure to test this fix, so I just manually inspected
the bundles before and after to verify that the fix works.
PR Close#25780
Closure compiler requires that the i18n message constants of the form
const MSG_XYZ = goog.getMessage('...');
have names that are unique across an entire compilation, even if the
variables themselves are local to a given module. This means that in
practice these names must be unique in a codebase.
The best way to guarantee this requirement is met is to encode the
relative file name of the file into which the constant is being written
into the constant name itself. This commit implements that solution.
PR Close#25689
TypeScript has a more modern diagnostic emit function which produces
contextually annotated error information, using colors in the console
to indicate where in the code the error occurs.
This commit swiches ngtsc to use this format for diagnostics when
emitting them after a failed compilation.
PR Close#25647
This commit takes the first steps towards ngtsc producing real
TypeScript diagnostics instead of simply throwing errors when
encountering incorrect code.
A new class is introduced, FatalDiagnosticError, which can be thrown by
handlers whenever a condition in the code is encountered which by
necessity prevents the class from being compiled. This error type is
convertable to a ts.Diagnostic which represents the type and source of
the error.
Error codes are introduced for Angular errors, and are prefixed with -99
(so error code 1001 becomes -991001) to distinguish them from other TS
errors.
A function is provided which will read TS diagnostic output and convert
the TS errors to NG errors if they match this negative error code
format.
PR Close#25647
Previously, benchpress would use `console.time()` and
`console.timeEnd()` to measure the start and end of a test in the
performance log. This used to work over navigations - if you called
`console.time(id)` then navigated to a different page, calling
`console.timeEnd(id)` would still insert an event in the performance
log.
As of Chrome 65, this is no longer the case. `console.timeEnd(id)` will
simply not insert an event in the performance log unless
`console.time(id)` was called on the same page. Likewise, using
`performance.measure()` does not work if the starting mark was on a
different page.
This simple workaround uses `performance.mark()` to insert events in the
performance log at the start and end of the test. Benchpress looks for
'-bpstart' and '-bpend' in the name of the performance mark, and
normalizes that to the start and end events expected by PerflogMetric
PR Close#24114
When using ViewEncapsulation.ShadowDom, Angular will not remove the child nodes of the DOM node a root Component is bootstrapped into. This enables developers building Angular Elements to use the `<slot>` element to do native content projection.
PR Close#24861
By pulling in `compiler` into `core` the `compiler` was not
100% tree-shakable and about 8KB of code was retained
when tree-shaken with closure.
PR Close#25531
In tsc 3.0 the check that enables program structure reuse in tryReuseStructureFromOldProgram has changed
and now uses identity comparison on arrays within CompilerOptions. Since we recreate the options
on each incremental compilation, we now fail this check.
After this change the default set of options is reused in between incremental compilations, but we still
allow options to be overriden if needed.
PR Close#25275
One of the tests was creating TestComponent instance _and_ using
global state making this test not predictable. Fixing the test
by making sure that TestComponent is instantiated only once.
PR Close#25632
This fixes a bug in ngtsc where each @Directive was compiled using a
separate ConstantPool. This resulted in two issues:
* Directive constants were not shared across the file
* Extra statements from directive compilation were dropped instead of
added to the file
This commit fixes both issues and adds a test to verify @Directive is
working properly.
PR Close#25620
Workaround was added in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/25335. It was necessary for .ngfactory & .ngsummary files to have proper AMD module names starting with @angular when building angular downstream from source using Bazel. The underlying issue has been resolved in the compiler and these files now get proper AMD module names without the need for this workaround. The workaround had an unexpected consequence https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/11835 which is fixed by its removal.
PR Close#25604
This commit adds support for enumeration values. An enumeration value
is now a first-class return value of the resolver, which provides both
a Reference to the enum type itself and the name of the value from that
enum. Resolving an enum itself returns a Map<string, EnumValue>.
PR Close#25619
Ivy definitions in .d.ts files often reference the type of a class.
Sometimes, those classes have generic type parameters. When this is
the case, ngtsc needs to emit generic type parameters in the .d.ts
files (usually by passing 'any').
PR Close#25406
Since non-flat module formats (esm2015, esm5) have different structure
than their flat counterparts (and since we are operating on JS files
inside `node_modules/`, we need to configure TS to include deeply nested
JS files (by specifying a sufficiently high `maxNodeModuleJsDepth`).
Remains to be determined if this has any (noticeable) performance
implications.
PR Close#25406
In some code formats (e.g. ES5) methods can actually be function
expressions. For example:
```js
function MyClass() {}
// this static method is declared as a function expression
MyClass.staticMethod = function() { ... };
```
PR Close#25406
ngtsc's static resolver can evaluate function calls where parameters
have default values. In TypeScript code these default values live on the
function definition, but in ES5 code the default values are represented
by statements in the function body.
A new ReflectionHost method getDefinitionOfFunction() abstracts over
this difference, and allows the static reflector to more accurately
evaluate ES5 code.
PR Close#25406
This is needed to let ts_compile_actions take explicit list of srcs and deps to generate tsc actions from another rule. This is no-op for ngc for now.
PR Close#25558
CanLoad now defines UrlSegment[] as a second parameter of the function.
Users can store the initial url segments and refer to them later, e.g. to go
back to the original url after authentication via router.navigate(urlSegments).
Existing code still works as before because the second function parameter
does not have to be defined.
Closes#12411
PR Close#13127
Provides a runtime and compile time switch for ivy including
`ApplicationRef.bootstrapModule`.
This is done by naming the symbols such that `ngcc` (angular
Compatibility compiler) can rename symbols in such a way that running
`ngcc` command will switch the `@angular/core` module from `legacy` to
`ivy` mode.
This is done as follows:
```
const someToken__PRE_NGCC__ = ‘legacy mode’;
const someToken__POST_NGCC__ = ‘ivy mode’;
export someSymbol = someToken__PRE_NGCC__;
```
The `ngcc` will search for any token which ends with `__PRE_NGCC__`
and replace it with `__POST_NGCC__`. This allows the `@angular/core`
package to be rewritten to ivy mode post `ngcc` execution.
PR Close#25238
At the moment `cacheAge` can we undefined when having `Cache-Control` set to `no-cache` due the mapping method in `needToRevalidate`
Closes#25442
PR Close#25408
A small bug caused base factory variable statements for @Component to
not be emitted properly. At the same time as this is fixed, those
statements are now emitted as const.
PR Close#25425
When an Angular decorated class is inherited, it might be the case that
the entire inheritance chain actually has no constructor defined. In
that event, a factory which simply instantiates the type without any
arguments should be used.
PR Close#25425
This turns on generation of ngfactory.js files when compiling in Ivy
mode in g3. They're not turned on for Bazel users as there appears to
be a strange interaction with the way our tests run in Bazel mode.
PR Close#25392
When @angular/core is compiled by ngtsc, a factory file is generated
for ApplicationModule, that is currently invalid because r3_symbols
does not export NgModuleFactory. This change fixes that issue and
ensures the generated ngfactory file for @angular/core is valid.
PR Close#25392
When generating the 'directives:' property of ngComponentDef, ngtsc
needs to be conscious of declaration order. If a directive being
written into the array is declarated after the component currently
being compiled, then the entire directives array needs to be wrapped
in a closure.
This commit fixes ngtsc to pay attention to such ordering issues
within directives arrays.
PR Close#25392
This commit creates an API for factory functions which allows them
to be inherited from one another. To do so, it differentiates between
the factory function as a wrapper for a constructor and the factory
function in ngInjectableDefs which is determined by a default
provider.
The new form is:
factory: (t?) => new (t || SomeType)(inject(Dep1), inject(Dep2))
The 't' parameter allows for constructor inheritance. A subclass with
no declared constructor inherits its constructor from the superclass.
With the 't' parameter, a subclass can call the superclass' factory
function and use it to create an instance of the subclass.
For @Injectables with configured providers, the factory function is
of the form:
factory: (t?) => t ? constructorInject(t) : provider();
where constructorInject(t) creates an instance of 't' using the
naturally declared constructor of the type, and where provider()
creates an instance of the base type using the special declared
provider on @Injectable.
PR Close#25392
Previously, ngtsc used a new ConstantPool for each decorator
compilation. This could result in collisions between constants in the
top-level scope.
Now, ngtsc uses a single ConstantPool for each source file being
compiled, and merges the constant statements into the file after the
import section.
PR Close#25392
The performCompilation() is always called with an undefined oldProgram option (even in watch mode).
This was regression introduced in: 957be960d2
Partial fix, discovered in: #21361
PR Close#21364
Inside of a nested template, an attempt to generate code for a banana-
in-a-box expression would cause a crash in the _AstToIrVisitor, as it
was not handling the case where a write would be generated to a local
variable.
This change supports such a mode of operation.
PR Close#25321
data about tasks.
When building a list of pending tasks for callers of whenStable(),
Testability will copy data about the task into a new object, in order to
avoid leaking references to tasks.
This change copies more properties from Tasks into the list of pending
tasks, as well as a reference to Task.data to give callers more
information about the tasks that are pending.
Specifically, this also copies runCount and task ID, which are needed in
order for callers to know when a given task is repeating.
PR Close#25010
The example unit test should test the service when the backend
application is not available, by providing a mock error response.
Although, the test will
fail as the mock response from the server is valid (it does not simulate
a
error response, but valid response with an error status 404).
This merge request fix this issue by replacing MockResponse with
MockError
This PR resolves 19499 issue
PR Close#25306
before:
```
Expected to find features 'import * as i0 from "@angular/core";
import { Directive, Input } from '@angular/core';
```
after:
```
Failed to find "template" after "...Component_Factory() { return new
MyComponent(); }," in:
'import * as i0 from "@angular/core";
import { Directive, Input } from '@angular/core';```
```
PR Close#25291
To match the View Engine behavior.
We should make this configurable so that the node injector is tree shaken when
directives do not need to be published.
PR Close#25291
Previously the compiler compliance tests ran and built test code with
real dependencies on @angular/core and @angular/common. This meant that
any changes to the compiler would result in long rebuild processes
for tests to rerun.
This change removes those dependencies and causes test code to be built
against the fake_core stub of @angular/core that the ngtsc tests use.
This change also removes the dependency on @angular/common entirely, as
locality means it's possible to reference *ngIf without needing to link
to an implementation.
PR Close#25248
Existing bootstrap code in the wild depends on the existence of
.ngfactory files, which Ivy does not need. This commit adds the
capability in ngtsc to generate .ngfactory files which bridge
existing bootstrap code with Ivy.
This is an initial step. Remaining work includes complying with
the compiler option to specify a generated file directory, as well
as presumably testing in g3.
PR Close#25176
Before this change bound properties would not be used when matching directives
at runtime.
That is `<ng-template [ngIf]=cond>...</ng-template>` would not trigger the
`ngIf` directive.
PR Close#25272
This commit adds basic support for <ng-container> - most of the
functionality should work as long as <ng-container> is a child of
a regular element.
PR Close#25227
This has been deprecated to keep selector consistent with other core Angular selectors. As element selectors are in kebab-case.
Now deprecated:
```
<ngForm #myForm="ngForm">
```
After:
```
<ng-form #myForm="ngForm">
```
You can also choose to supress this warnings by providing a config for `FormsModule` during import:
```ts
imports: [
FormsModule.withConfig({warnOnDeprecatedNgFormSelector: 'never'});
]
Closes: #23678
PR Close#23721
The optional property on `ts.CompilerHost` is called `realpath` (lower
case), not `realPath` (lower camel case).
It is not clear to me what the impact of this is, but the author's
intent was clearly to override `realpath`.
PR Close#25023
Before the `ngDevMode` had to be set explicitly or it would throw
an exception at runtime. This changes it so that if `ngDevModu` is
`undefined` than we default to `ngDevMode = true`. In other words
unless the developer has explicitly asked to make a prodution build
by setting `ngDevMode = false` as compilation constant, the default
is `ngDevMode = true`.
This also fixes a minor bug where the setup code would read
`global['ngDevMode']` but all other code would read `global.ngDevMode`.
This would cause issues with closure compiler since the
reading of the `ngDevMode` must be consistent.
PR Close#25208
Update XMB placeholders(<ph>) to include the original value on top of an
example. Placeholders can by definition have one example(<ex>) tag and a
text node. The text node is used by TC as the "original" value from the
placeholder, while the example should represent a dummy value.
For example: <ph name="PET"><ex>Gopher</ex>{{ petName }}</ph>.
This change makes sure that we have the original text, but it *DOES NOT*
make sure that the example is correct. The example has the same wrong
behavior of showing the interpolation text rather than a useful
example.
No breaking changes, but tools that depend on the previous behavior and
don't consider the full XMB definition may fail to parse the XMB.
Fixes b/72565847
PR Close#25079
In some code formats (e.g. ES5) methods can actually be function
expressions. For example:
```js
function MyClass() {}
// this static method is declared as a function expression
MyClass.staticMethod = function() { ... };
```
PR Close#24897
The `ReflectionHost` interface that is being implemented only expects a
return value of `boolean`.
Moreover, if you want to extend this class to support non-TS code formats,
e.g. ES5, the result of this call returning true does not mean that the `node`
is a `ClassDeclaration`. It could be a `VariableDeclaration`.
PR Close#24897
- `directiveInjector()` is used to inject anything in the directive / component
/ pipe factories so adding `InjectionToken<T>` as a supported token type.
- `getOrCreateInjectable()` should search first in the node injector tree and
then in the module injector tree (was either or before the PR).
PR Close#25166
This commit replaces the "not implemented" error when calling
listLazyRoutes() with an empty result, which will allow testing
in the CLI before listLazyRoutes() is implemented.
PR Close#25080
loadNgStructureAsync() for ngtsc has a bug where it returns a
Promise<Promise[]> instead of awaiting the entire array of Promises.
This commit uses Promise.all() to await the whole set.
PR Close#25080
compile_strategy() is used to decide whether to build Angular code
using ngc (legacy) or ngtsc (local). In order for g3 BUILD rules
to switch properly and allow testing of Ivy in g3, they need to
import this function.
This commit removes the _ prefix which allows the function to be
imported.
PR Close#25080
ngtsc used to have a custom ts.CompilerHost which delegated to the plain
ts.CompilerHost. There's no need for this wrapper class and it causes
issues with CLI integration, so delete it.
PR Close#25080
ngtsc used to assume that all .d.ts dependencies (that is, third party
packages) were imported via an absolute module path. It turns out this
assumption isn't valid; some build tools allow relative imports of
other compilation units.
In the absolute case, ngtsc assumes (and still does) that all referenced
types are available through the entrypoint from which an @NgModule was
imported. This commit adds support for relative imports, in which case
ngtsc will use relative path resolution to determine the imports.
PR Close#25080
There is a bug in the existing handling for cross-file references.
Suppose there are two files, module.ts and component.ts.
component.ts declares two components, one of which uses the other.
In the Ivy model, this means the component will get a directives:
reference to the other in its defineComponent call.
That reference is generated by looking at the declared components
of the module (in module.ts). However, the way ngtsc tracks this
reference, it ends up comparing the identifier of the component
in module.ts with the component.ts file, detecting they're not in
the same file, and generating a relative import.
This commit changes ngtsc to track all identifiers of a reference,
including the one by which it is declared. This allows toExpression()
to correctly decide that a local reference is okay in component.ts.
PR Close#25080
When ngtsc encounters a reference to a type (for example, a Component
type listed in an NgModule declarations array), it traces the import
of that type and attempts to determine the best way to refer to it.
In the event the type is defined in the same file where a reference
is being generated, the identifier of the type is used. If the type
was imported, ngtsc has a choice. It can use the identifier from the
original import, or it can write a new import to the module where the
type came from.
ngtsc has a bug currently when it elects to rely on the user's import.
When writing a .d.ts file, the user's import may have been elided as
the type was not referred to from the type side of the program. Thus,
in .d.ts files ngtsc must always assume the import may not exist, and
generate a new one.
In .js output the import is guaranteed to still exist, so it's
preferable for ngtsc to continue using the existing import if one is
available.
This commit changes how @angular/compiler writes type definitions, and
allows it to use a different expression to write a type definition than
is used to write the value. This allows ngtsc to specify that types in
type definitions should always be imported. A corresponding change to
the staticallyResolve() Reference system allows the choice of which
type of import to use when generating an Expression from a Reference.
PR Close#25080
@ContentChild[ren] and @ViewChild[ren] can contain a forwardRef() to a
type. This commit allows ngtsc to unwrap the forward reference and
deal with the node inside.
It includes two modes of support for forward reference resolution -
a foreign function resolver which understands deeply nested forward
references in expressions that are being statically evaluated, and
an unwrapForwardRef() function which deals only with top-level nodes.
Both will be useful in the future, but for now only unwrapForwardRef()
is used.
PR Close#25080
It specifies --no-sandbox flag when running the protractor tests as
root. This is needed for running the tests inside a docker container.
PR Close#24906
Fixes#25018.
Instantiating a NgModuleRef from NgModuleFactory reuses the NgModuleDefinition if it is already present. However the NgModuleDefinition has a providers array which modified when tree shakable providers are instantiated. This corrupts the provider definitions the next time the same factory is used to create a new NgModuleRef - Two provider definitions can end up with the same index anf the injector could potentially return a completely wrong object for a provider token.
This scenario is more likely on the server where the same NgModuleFactory is reused across requests.
The fix clones the cached NgModuleDefinition so that any tree shakable providers added later do not affect the cached copy.
PR Close#25022
Ivy definition types have a generic type which specifies the return
type of the factory function. For example:
static ngDirectiveDef<NgForOf, '[ngFor][ngForOf]'>
However, in this case NgForOf itself has a type parameter <T>. Thus,
writing the above is incorrect.
This commit modifies ngtsc to understand the genericness of NgForOf and
to write the following:
static ngDirectiveDef<NgForOf<any>, '[ngFor][ngForOf]'>
PR Close#24862
Previously ngtsc would use a tuple of class types for listing metadata
in .d.ts files. For example, an @NgModule's declarations might be
represented with the type:
[NgIf, NgForOf, NgClass]
If the module had no declarations, an empty tuple [] would be produced.
This has two problems.
1. If the class type has generic type parameters, TypeScript will
complain that they're not provided.
2. The empty tuple type is not actually legal.
This commit addresses both problems.
1. Class types are now represented using the `typeof` operator, so the
above declarations would be represented as:
[typeof NgIf, typeof NgForOf, typeof NgClass].
Since typeof operates on a value, it doesn't require generic type
arguments.
2. Instead of an empty tuple, `never` is used to indicate no metadata.
PR Close#24862
Previously, some of the *Def symbols were not exported or were exported
as public API. This commit ensures every definition type is in the
private export namespace.
PR Close#24862
This commit moves the compiler compliance tests into compiler-cli,
and uses ngtsc to run them instead of the custom compilation
pipeline used before. Testing against ngtsc allows for validation
of the real compiler output.
This commit also fixes a few small issues that prevented the tests
from passing.
PR Close#24862
Previously, when translating an assignment expression (e.g. x = 3), the
translator would always print the statement as X = Y. However, if the
expression is included in a larger expression (X = (Y = Z)), the
translator would print "X = Y = Z" without regard for the outer
expression context.
Now, the translator understands when it's printing an expression
statement (X = Y;) vs an expression in a larger context (X = (Y = Z);)
and encapsulates the latter in parentheses.
PR Close#24862
Previously, references had the concept of an identifier, but would not
properly detect whether the identifier should be used or not when
generating an expression. This change fixes that logic.
Additionally, now whenever an identifier resolves to a reference (even
one imported from another module) as part of resolving an expression,
the reference is updated to use that identifier. This ensures that for
a class Foo declared in foo.ts, but referenced in an expression in
bar.ts, the Reference returned includes the identifier from bar.ts,
meaning that writing an expression in bar.ts for the Reference will not
generate an import.
PR Close#24862
Previously ngtsc had a bug where it would only detect the presence of
ngOnChanges as a static method. This commit flips the condition and only
recognizes ngOnChanges as a non-static method.
PR Close#24862
Previously, the static resolver did its own interpretation of statements
in the TypeScript AST, which only functioned on TypeScript code. ES5
code in particular would not work with the resolver as it had hard-coded
assumptions about AST structure.
This commit changes the resolver to use a ReflectionHost instead, which
abstracts away understanding of the structural side of the AST. It adds 3
new methods to the ReflectionHost in support of this functionality:
* getDeclarationOfIdentifier
* getExportsOfModule
* isClass
PR Close#24862
This change adds support for host bindings to ngtsc, and parses them
both from decorators and from the metadata in the top-level annotation.
PR Close#24862
ngInjectorDef.imports is generated from @NgModule.imports plus
@NgModule.exports. A problem arises as a result, because @NgModule
exports contain not only other modules (which will have ngInjectorDef
fields), but components, directives, and pipes as well. Because of
locality, it's difficult for the compiler to filter these out at
build time.
It's not impossible, but for now filtering them out at runtime will
allow testing of the compiler against complex applications.
PR Close#24862
@NgModule()s get compiled to two fields: ngModuleDef and ngInjectorDef.
Both fields contain imports, as both selector scopes and injectors have
the concept of composed units of configuration. Previously these fields
were generated by static resolution of imports and exports in metadata.
Support for ModuleWithProviders requires they be generated differently.
ngModuleDef's imports/exports are generated as resolved lists of types,
whereas ngInjectorDef's imports should reflect the raw expressions that
the developer wrote in the metadata.
This change modifies the NgModule handler and properly copies raw nodes
for the imports and exports into the ngInjectorDef.
PR Close#24862
Previously ngtsc had a few bugs handling special token types:
* Injector was not properly translated to INJECTOR
* ChangeDetectorRef was not injected via injectChangeDetectorRef()
This commit fixes these two bugs, and also adds a test to ensure
they continue to work correctly.
PR Close#24862
Within an @NgModule it's common to include in the imports a call to
a ModuleWithProviders function, for example RouterModule.forRoot().
The old ngc compiler was able to handle this pattern because it had
global knowledge of metadata of not only the input compilation unit
but also all dependencies.
The ngtsc compiler for Ivy doesn't have this knowledge, so the
pattern of ModuleWithProviders functions is more difficult. ngtsc
must be able to determine which module is imported via the function
in order to expand the selector scope and properly tree-shake
directives and pipes.
This commit implements a solution to this problem, by adding a type
parameter to ModuleWithProviders through which the actual module
type can be passed between compilation units.
The provider side isn't a problem because the imports are always
copied directly to the ngInjectorDef.
PR Close#24862
Metadata in Ivy must be literal. For example,
@NgModule({...})
is legal, whereas
const meta = {...};
@NgModule(meta)
is not.
However, some code contains additional superfluous parentheses:
@NgModule(({...}))
It is desirable that ngtsc accept this form of literal object.
PR Close#24862
This commit adds the ivy-local tag to //packages/router. Since the
router depends on //packages/upgrade, it makes that package
compatible with ngtsc as well.
PR Close#24862
This change turns on preserve-symlinks in nodejs to verify hermeticity of the Angular build.
BREAKING CHANGE: Use of @angular/bazel rules now requires calling ng_setup_workspace() in your WORKSPACE file.
For example:
local_repository(
name = "angular",
path = "node_modules/@angular/bazel",
)
load("@angular//:index.bzl", "ng_setup_workspace")
ng_setup_workspace()
PR Close#24881
Adds an example of using the `currency` pipe with a currency that has no cents like CLP,
which will format the amount with no digits if `digitsInfo` is not provided:
<!-- outputs CA$14.00 -->
{{ 14 | currency:'CAD' }}
<!-- outputs CLP14 -->
{{ 14 | currency:'CLP' }}
Amends the docs, adds an example and fix an error with a current example.
PR Close#24661
This change fixes up several comments that accidentally used the JSDoc
tag @internal in regular block comments (`/*` instead of `/**`).
This prevents a problem with Closure Compiler that balks at `@` tags
occuring in regular block comments, because it assumes they were
intended to be tags for the compiler.
When occuring in `/**` JSDoc, tsickle escapes the tags, so they do not
cause problems.
PR Close#24928
for non-inline templates
- Non-inline templates used to ouput the path to the component TS file
instead of the path to the original HTML file.
- Inline templates keep the same behavior.
Fixes#24884
PR Close#24885
Travis (saucelabs) has been super flaky when running IE
web worker tests lately. This patch temporarily disables
these tests on IE (not edge) until things get more stable.
PR Close#24908
It's possible to declare an argument-less NgModule:
@NgModule() export class Foo {}
Update the @NgModule compiler to support this usage.
PR Close#24738
Previously the Ivy template compiler would throw on encountering
an animation binding (e.g. [@anim]). This is unneccessary and
precludes testing existing code. This commit changes the error to a
warning.
PR Close#24738
When writing selectors as string literal types in .d.ts files,
strip newlines to avoid generating invalid code. Newlines carry
no meaning in selectors anyway.
PR Close#24738
On accident a few of the definition types were emitted as public API
symbols. Much of the Ivy API surface is still prefixed with ɵ,
indicating it's a private API. The definition types should be private
for now.
PR Close#24738
This commit changes the @NgModule provider to understand that sometimes
an import will resolve to an object instead of a type, and that object
could be of the ModuleWithProviders type. In that case, the 'ngModule'
property is read, and its value used instead.
This still will not handle ModuleWithProviders references across
compilation units; that work is coming in a future PR.
PR Close#24738
InjectorDef is parameterized on the type of the injector
configuration class (e.g. the @NgModule decorated type). Previously
this parameter was not included when generating .d.ts files that
contained InjectorDefs.
PR Close#24738