When injecting with `@Attribute`, namespaced attributes should not match (in order to have feature parity with View Engine).
This PR resolves FW-1137
PR Close#29257
BREAKING CHANGE:
Certain elements (like `<tr>` or `<col>`) require parent elements to be of a certain type by the HTML specification
(ex. <tr> can only be inside <tbody> / <thead>). Before this change Angular template parser was auto-correcting
"invalid" HTML using the following rules:
- `<tr>` would be wrapped in `<tbody>` if not inside `<tbody>`, `<tfoot>` or `<thead>`;
- `<col>` would be wrapped in `<colgroup>` if not inside `<colgroup>`.
This meachanism of automatic wrapping / auto-correcting was problematic for several reasons:
- it is non-obvious and arbitrary (ex. there are more HTML elements that has rules for parent type);
- it is incorrect for cases where `<tr>` / `<col>` are at the root of a component's content, ex.:
```html
<projecting-tr-inside-tbody>
<tr>...</tr>
</projecting-tr-inside-tbody>
```
In the above example the `<projecting-tr-inside-tbody>` component culd be "surprised" to see additional
`<tbody>` elements inserted by Angular HTML parser.
PR Close#29219
Currently the project `bazelrc` file imports a user bazelrc if present. This
has been added in order to allow user-specific Bazel configuration settings
when working within the Angular project. Since we currently import that
user configuration before setting the project-specific settings, it's not
possible for developers to overwrite given options (e.g. the `symlink_prefix`).
Moving the import to the end of the file solves that problem.
PR Close#29279
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
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
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
Recently we moved the Saucelabs job into a cronjob in order to avoid
heavy flakiness that we experienced due to a Saucelabs connect bug
that has been supposedly fixed by the Saucelabs team (no new version
is released yet though).
Our initial assumption was that we very rarely hit specific browser failures
and can therefore move the Saucelabs tests into a cronjob, but after some
days of having the cronjob, we realized that we actually hit browser-specific
failures quite often and that we should run the tests for every PR (like before)
PR Close#29255
With 6215799, we introduced a schematic for the new static-query timing.
Currently when someone runs the update schematic manually within his
CLI project (the schematic does not run automatically yet), he might have
noticed that the migration is executed for the same `tsconfig` file multiple
times. This can happen because the `getProjectTsConfigPaths` function
can incorrectly return the same tsconfig multiple times. The paths are not
properly deduped as we don't normalize the determined project tsconfig paths
PR Close#29133
Currently the static-query migration does not properly handle functions which
are declared externally. This is because we don't resolve the symbol of the
call-expression through its type. Currently we just determine the symbol of the
call-expression through the given call expression node, which doesn't necessarily
refer to the *value declaration* of the call expression. e.g. the symbol refers to the
import declaration which imports the external function. This means that we currently
can't check the external function as we couldn't find the actual value declaration.
We can fix this by resolving the type of the call expression and using the type in order
to retrieve the symbol containing the *value declaration*
PR Close#29133
Currently when the static-query runs for a project with multiple TypeScript
configuration files (e.g. a usual CLI project), the migration incorrectly
applies the code transformation multiple times. This is because the migration
is currently based on the source file contents in the file system, while the
actual source file contents could have already changed in the devkit schematic
tree.
PR Close#29133
With 6215799055, we introduced a schematic
for the Angular core package that automatically migrates unexplicit
query definitions to the explicit query timing (static <-> dynamic).
As the initial foundation was already big enough, it was planned
to come up with a follow-up that handles asynchronous query
usages properly. e.g. queries could be used in Promises,
`setTimeout`, `setInterval`, `requestAnimationFrame` and more, but
the schematic would incorrectly declare these queries as static.
This commit ensures that we properly handle these micro/macro
tasks and don't incorrectly consider queries as static.
The declaration usage visitor should only check the synchronous
control flow and completely ignore any statements within function
like expressions which aren't explicitly executed in a synchronous
way. e.g. IIFE's still work as the function expression is
synchronously invoked.
PR Close#29133
With 63fb6c08cf1d69f912a0a4e9a28846d6e6985d04, the bug that required
us to temporarily disable these two SystemJS JIT tests has been fixed.
Therefore we can re-enable these tests.
PR Close#29083
Currently with ViewEngine, if someone runs the platform's
`bootstrapModule` method in order to boostrap a module in
JIT mode, external component resources are properly resolved
*automatically*.
Currently with Ivy, the developer would need to manually call
`resolveComponentResources` in order to asynchronously fetch
the determined external component resources. In order to make
this backwards compatible with ViewEngine, and also since
platforms can already specify a `ResourceLoader` compiler
provider, we need to automatically resolve all external
component resources on module bootstrap.
--
Since the `ResourceLoader` is part of the `@angular/compiler`,
because ViewEngine performed the factory creation in the compiler,
we can't access the `ResourceLoader` token from within core.
In order to workaround this without introducing a breaking change,
we just proxy the `ResourceLoader` token to `core` through the
compiler facade. In the future, we should be able to move the
`ResourceLoader` to core when ViewEngine code no longer exists in
the `@angular/compiler`.
PR Close#29083
Dynamic nodes are created at the end of the view stack, but we were removing all the placeholders between `i18nStart` and the last created node index, instead of removing everything between `i18nStart` and `i18nEnd`. This caused errors when dynamic nodes where created in multiple i18n blocks because we would remove all of the dynamic nodes created in the previous i18n blocks.
PR Close#29252
`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
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