Incremental rebuilds is a fundamental part of the development
workflow. `@bazel/ibazel` should be added to the dev dependencies
of a Bazel project.
PR Close#28090
This update aligns Ivy behavior with ViewEngine related to empty bindings (for example <div [someProp]></div>): empty bindings are ignored.
PR Close#28059
There was an issue where init_browser_spec.js was being run out of order, this change adds it as a runtime dependency so it is executed when it needs to be preventing tests from bombing when they try to read from isNode from global scope before it is defined
PR Close#27965
__NG_ELEMENT_ID__ static fields are a part of how the Ivy node injector
works. In order to survive closure minification correctly, they need to
be annotated with @nocollapse.
PR Close#28050
ngtsc has a hack to add @nocollapse jsdoc annotations to generated static
fields. This hack is currently broken (likely due to a TypeScript change
in the way writeFile() works).
This commit fixes the hack and introduces an ngtsc_spec test to ensure it
does not regress again.
PR Close#28050
When an @NgModule decorator executes, the module is added to a queue in
render3/jit/module.ts. Reading an ngComponentDef property causes this queue
to be flushed, ensuring that the component gets the correct module scope
applied.
In before_each.ts, a global beforeEach is added to all Angular tests which
calls TestBed.resetTestingModule() prior to running each test. This in turn
clears the module compilation queue (which is correct behavior, as modules
declared within the test should not leak outside of it via the queue).
So far this is okay. But before the first test runs, the module compilation
queue is full of modules declared in global scope. No definitions have been
read, so no flushes of the queue have been triggered. The global beforeEach
triggers a reset of the queue, aborting all of the in-progress global
compilation, breaking those classes when they're later used in tests.
This commit adds logic to TestBedRender3 to respect the state of the module
queue before the TestBed is first initialized or reset. The queue is flushed
prior to such an operation to ensure global compilation is allowed to finish
properly.
With this fix, a platform-server test now passes (previously the <my-child>
element was not detected as a component, because the encompassing module
never finished compilation.
FW-887 #resolve
PR Close#28033
Previously when testing code injected the Compiler, it received the
top-level Compiler implementation defined in linker/compiler.ts
(and governed by the __PRE_R3__ switch). Code running under the
TestBed, however, should always use a TestBed-aware Compiler
implementation.
This commit adds such an implementation to the TestBedRender3,
which passes compiled modules through the _compileNgModule()
function.
With this change, 3 formerly disabled router integration tests
now pass.
FW-855 #resolve
PR Close#28033
An @NgModule with invalid provider declarations produces errors under
normal circumstances. However, within the TestBed two small issues with
provider overrides interfered with the correct production of these errors:
1. a 'null' provider object caused a premature crash when the TestBed
attempted to check for a 'provide' property on it with hasOwnProperty().
2. the array of providers would have an empty override array appended to it
for each input provider, which would pollute the error messages produced
down the line.
This commit fixes both of these issues, by 1) checking for null and 2)
filtering out the empty override arrays.
Testing strategy: future commits change the way the TestBed compiles
modules, causing tests to become sensitive to this bug if not fixed.
PR Close#28033
An @NgModule with an 'id' property has its type registered in a global map
of modules by id. This happens during compilation of the module.
In Ivy, modules are first compiled when the @NgModule decorator executes.
In tests, they might be passed again through the TestBed's compiler,
resulting in a second compilation and registration.
Before this fix, this second registration would cause an error, as the id
was previously registered. This commit makes the registration idempotent,
so if the same module type is being registered for the same id then no
error is thrown.
Testing strategy: future commits change the way the TestBed compiles
modules, causing tests to become sensitive to this bug if not fixed.
PR Close#28033
Changes:
- Change the project type to `service-worker`, so that it gets
appropriate `package.json` (with `@angular/service-worker` dependency)
and `angular.json` (with `serviceWorker: true` in production config).
- Move `ngsw-config.json` to the correct directory.
- Specify custom test commands for aio's `yarn example-e2e` to also
verify that the ServiceWorker bits are set up correctly.
PR Close#28020
Previously, cli-based docs examples were tested using `yarn e2e ...`. In
some cases, it might make sense to run different or additional checks
for a docs example (when running `yarn example-e2e` in `aio/`).
Currently, the only option is to define a custom project type and
overwrite the `e2e` yarn script in `package.json`. Doing so (in addition
to being cumbersome and verbose) would also end up in the `.zip` archive
that users can download to run the example locally. This would be
confusing, if these custom tests are specific to our CI needs.
This commit adds support for defining a custom list of commands per
example. These commands (if specified) would be run instead of the
default `yarn e2e ...`, when testing the docs examples on CI (via
`yarn example-e2e`).
(This feature will be used to verify that the
`service-worker-getting-started` example is set up correctly in a
subsequent commit, but can be useful in other cases as well.)
PR Close#28020
File overwrites:
- **angular.json**: Add `serviceWorker: true` to production config.
- **package.json**: Add `@angular/service-worker` to dependencies.
This will make any `service-worker` examples work out-of-the-box, when
downloading and running locally from the `.zip` archives.
PR Close#28020
In ESM5 decorated classes can be indicated by calls to `__decorate()`.
Previously the `ReflectionHost.findDecoratedClasses()` call would identify
helper calls of the form:
```
SomeClass = tslib_1.__decorate(...);
```
But it was missing calls of the form:
```
SomeClass = SomeClass_1 = tslib_1.__decorate(...);
```
This form is common in `@NgModule()` decorations, where the class
being decorated is referenced inside the decorator or another
member.
This commit now ensures that a chain of assignments, of any length,
is now identified as a class decoration if it results in a call to
`__decorate()`.
Fixes#27841
PR Close#27848
* Interface that a class can implement to be a guard deciding if a children can be loaded.
'...if a children...' changed to '...if children...'
* Interface that a class can implement to be a guard deciding if children can be loaded.
PR Close#27894
This change matches the routes found in the following code example
for auth.guard.ts as well as the login.component.1.ts in the "Add
the LoginComponent" section.
PR Close#27879
Previously, we had the logic to schedule a change detection tick
inside markViewDirty(). This is fine when used in markDirty(),
the user-facing API, because it should always schedule change
detection. However, this doesn't work when used in markForCheck()
because historically markForCheck() does not trigger change
detection.
To be backwards compatible, this commit moves the scheduling
logic out of markViewDirty() and into markDirty(), so
markForCheck no longer triggers a tick.
PR Close#28048
Libraries that create components dynamically using component factories,
such as `@angular/upgrade` need to pass blocks of projected content
through to the `ComponentFactory.create()` method. These blocks
are extracted from the content by matching CSS selectors defined in
`<ng-content select="..">` tags found in the component's template.
The Angular compiler collects these CSS selectors when compiling a component's
template, and exposes them via the `ComponentFactory.ngContentSelectors`
property.
This change ensures that this property is filled correctly when the
component factory is created by compiling a component with the Ivy engine.
PR Close#27867
When a pipe returns an instance of WrappedValue we should "invalidate" value
of a binding where the pipe in question is used.
Before this change we've always wrtten the invalidation value (NO_CHANGE) to
the binding root this invalidating the first binding in a LView. This commit
corrects the binding index calculation so the binding with a pipe is invalidated.
PR Close#28044
Previous to this change, there was a lot of noise when
trying to find tests in FIND_PASSING_TESTS mode because
tests marked "onlyInIvy" were also listed as "already
passing". Since these tests are not "fixmes" that need
to be enabled, it is not useful to have them listed.
This commit removes "onlyInIvy" tests from consideration
when running in this manual mode. The tests should still
run on CI by default (since FIND_PASSING_TESTS mode will
be false).
PR Close#28036
There are various e2e tests with the `_spec.ts` suffix in the Angular project. Currently the protractor Bazel rule does not pick up these files and just ignores them. Since underscore is commonly used, we should support this.
Needed for the conversion fo the `examples` to Bazel.
PR Close#28022
Prior to this change Component decorator was resolving `encapsulation` value a bit incorrectly, which resulted in `encapsulation: NaN` in compiled code. Now we resolve the value as Enum memeber and throw if it's not the case. As a part of this update, the `changeDetection` field handling is also added, the resolution logic is the same as the one used for `encapsulation` field.
PR Close#27971