Moves most of the tests from `render3/integration_spec` into `acceptance`. Note that there are still a handful of tests left in render3, because we don't have a way of moving all of them to go through `TestBed` since they either have r3-specific assertions or we don't have access to the same APIs as the raw instructions.
PR Close#30461
Ports render3 onDestroy tests over to be acceptance tests. Removes old render3 tests if possible.
Note the onlyInIvy test for one area where Ivy has a different behavior than ViewEngine
PR Close#30445
We were on 69 for both of these platforms which is fairly old. This update also requires a temporary patch to the @bazel/karma npm package to disable chrome sandboxing on OSX as it is broken under Bazel as of chromium 73. Windows is still on Chromium 66 but updating this will require upstream changes to rules_webtesting as the archive name & executable name has changed as of 72 for Windows and hard-coded paths in rules_webtesting break things.
PR Close#30502
Previously we were relying upon the `.get()` method to return `undefined`
but it is clearer and safer to always check with `.has()` first.
PR Close#25445
Previously the same `Renderer` was used to render typings (.d.ts)
files. But the new `UmdRenderer` is not able to render typings files
correctly.
This commit splits out the typings rendering from the src rendering.
To achieve this the previous renderers have been refactored from
sub-classes of the abstract `Renderer` class to classes that implement
the `RenderingFormatter` interface, which are then passed to the
`Renderer` and `DtsRenderer` to modify its rendering behaviour.
Along the way a few utility interfaces and classes have been moved
around and renamed for clarity.
PR Close#25445
In some cases the `forwardRef` helper has been imported via a namespace,
e.g. `core.forwardRef(...)`.
This commit adds support for unwrapping such namespaced imports when
ngtsc is statically evaluating code.
PR Close#25445
Previously these fake files were full TypeScript source
files (`.ts`) but this is not necessary as we only need the
typings not the implementation.
PR Close#25445
Previously we were using an anonymous type `{specifier: string; qualifier: string;}`
throughout the code base. This commit gives this type a name and ensures it
is only defined in one place.
PR Close#25445
Previously, ngtsc would fail to evaluate expressions that access properties
from e.g. the `window` object. This resulted in hard to debug error messages
as no indication on where the problem originated was present in the output.
This commit cleans up the handling of unknown property accesses, such that
evaluating such expressions no longer fail but instead result in a `DynamicValue`.
Fixes#30226
PR Close#30247
- Adds inheritance tests for many combinations of directive, component and bare class inheritance
- Adds tests that are failing in ivy, but should work, marks them with `xit` and a TODO.
- Removes render3 unit tests that cover the same things.
PR Close#30442
A structural directive can specify a template guard for an input, such that
the type of that input's binding can be narrowed based on the guard's return
type. Previously, such template guards could only be methods, of which an
invocation would be inserted into the type-check block (TCB). For `NgIf`,
the template guard narrowed the type of its expression to be `NonNullable`
using the following declaration:
```typescript
export declare class NgIf {
static ngTemplateGuard_ngIf<E>(dir: NgIf, expr: E): expr is NonNullable<E>
}
```
This works fine for usages such as `*ngIf="person"` but starts to introduce
false-positives when e.g. an explicit non-null check like
`*ngIf="person !== null"` is used, as the method invocation in the TCB
would not have the desired effect of narrowing `person` to become
non-nullable:
```typescript
if (NgIf.ngTemplateGuard_ngIf(directive, ctx.person !== null)) {
// Usages of `ctx.person` within this block would
// not have been narrowed to be non-nullable.
}
```
This commit introduces a new strategy for template guards to allow for the
binding expression itself to be used as template guard in the TCB. Now,
the TCB generated for `*ngIf="person !== null"` would look as follows:
```typescript
if (ctx.person !== null) {
// This time `ctx.person` will successfully have
// been narrowed to be non-nullable.
}
```
This strategy can be activated by declaring the template guard as a
property declaration with `'binding'` as literal return type.
See #30235 for an example where this led to a false positive.
PR Close#30248
Removing the sandbox improves build time by almost 40%.
For a hello world (ng new) application:
ng build with sandbox: 22.0 seconds
ng build without sandbox: 13.3 seconds
PR Close#30460
The LocationShim (replacement for `$location`) was added to centralize dealing with the browser URL. Additionally, an `onUrlChange` method was added to Angular's Location service. This PR adds a corresponding method to the LocationShim so updates from AngularJS can be tracked in Angular.
PR Close#30466
This is a tentative fix for the error `Cannot write file '/node_modules/@angular/core/core.ngfactory.d.ts' because it would overwrite input file.` that is showing in codefresh windows ci.
PR Close#30482
It's unnecessary for a jasmine_node_test rule to depend on a TypeScript library. This dependency is already satisfied via the 'data' and also having it in 'deps' causes CI flakiness on Windows
PR Close#30482
In View Engine, we would simply ignore host style bindings on template nodes. In Ivy,
we are throwing a "Cannot read length of undefined" error instead. For backwards
compatibility, we should also ignore these bindings rather than blowing up.
PR Close#30498
after reading the context. there are some clues to infer the payload should be the `item`, not `item.name`.
1. EventEmitter<Item>.
2. the desc say that:
The component defines a deleteRequest property that returns an EventEmitter. When the user clicks delete, the component invokes the delete() method, telling the EventEmitter to emit an **Item** object.
PR Close#30429