This is important to not confuse users nor downstream tools that
consume our source maps. For generated content for which we don’t
have an original source file, we use the generated file now.
Fixes#19538
The current `flattenSummaries` function re-process the same NgModule
summary even if it has been processed before. Certain modules like
CommonModule are repeated multiple times in the module tree and it is
expanded out every time.
This was making unit tests using AOT summaries really slow. This will
also slow down JIT bootstrap applications that load AOT summaries for
component libraries.
The fix is to remember which summaries were seen before and not to
process them again.
Each node now has two index: nodeIndex and checkIndex.
nodeIndex is the index in both the view definition and the view data.
checkIndex is the index in in the update function (update directives and update
renderer).
While nodeIndex and checkIndex have the same value for now, having both of them
will allow changing the structure of view definition after compilation (ie for
runtime translations).
For now, we always create all generated files, but diff them
before we pass them to TypeScript.
For the user files, we compare the programs and only emit changed
TypeScript files.
This also adds more diagnostic messages if the `—diagnostics` flag
is passed to the command line.
This service worker is a conceptual derivative of the existing @angular/service-worker maintained at github.com/angular/mobile-toolkit, but has been rewritten to support use across a much wider variety of applications.
Entrypoints include:
@angular/service-worker: a library for use within Angular client apps to communicate with the service worker.
@angular/service-worker/gen: a library for generating ngsw.json files from glob-based SW config files.
@angular/service-worker/ngsw-worker.js: the bundled service worker script itself.
@angular/service-worker/ngsw-cli.js: a CLI tool for generating ngsw.json files from glob-based SW config files.
Closure no longer needs to have the imports rewritten avoid rewriting
as this can cause issues when the source directory structure differs
from what is deployed.
Fixes: #19026
This is needed as:
- closure declares globals itself for minified names, which sometimes clobber our `ng` global
- we can't declare a closure extern as the namespace `ng` is already used within Google for typings for angularJS (via `goog.provide('ng....')`).
This is necessary to enable type-based optimizations with Closure.
Without explicity making these options the same named type, Closure
thinks they are different types and cannot disambiguate the `fromObject`
property.
Added the compiler options `strictInjectionParameters` that defaults
to `false`. If enabled the compiler will report errors for parameters
of an `@Injectable` that cannot be determined instead of generating a
warning.
This is planned to be switched to default to `true` for Angular 6.0.
Also adds auto upgrade from lower version based
on the .d.ts file (e.g. from version 3 to 4).
This is needed as we are now also capturing type aliases
in metadata files (and we rely on this),
see 6e3498ca8e.
The new expression lowering lowers everything after `useValue` / `useFactory`
into a separate exported variable. If the value was a `forwardRef`, this
was passed to the runtime and resulted in errors.
This change unwraps `forwardRef`s during runtime again.
Note: we can’t unwrap the `forwardRef` into an exported variable
during compile time, as this would defeat the purpose of the
`forwardRef` in referring to something that can’t be referred to
at this position.