The base path for package and entry-points is known so there is
no need to store these in the file. Also this commit avoids storing
empty arrays unnecessarily.
PR Close#36486
Previously, even if an entry-point did not need to be processed,
ngcc would always parse the files of the entry-point to compute
its dependencies. This can take a lot of time for large node_modules.
Now these dependencies are cached in the entry-point manifest,
and read from there rather than computing them every time.
See https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/36414\#issuecomment-608401834
FW-2047
PR Close#36486
When the compiler needs to convert a type reference to a value
expression, it may encounter a type that refers to a namespaced symbol.
Such namespaces need to be handled specially as there's various forms
available. Consider a namespace named "ns":
1. One can refer to a namespace by itself: `ns`. A namespace is only
allowed to be used in a type position if it has been merged with a
class, but even if this is the case it may not be possible to convert
that type into a value expression depending on the import form. More
on this later (case a below)
2. One can refer to a type within the namespace: `ns.Foo`. An import
needs to be generated to `ns`, from which the `Foo` property can then
be read.
3. One can refer to a type in a nested namespace within `ns`:
`ns.Foo.Bar` and possibly even deeper nested. The value
representation is similar to case 2, but includes additional property
accesses.
The exact strategy of how to deal with these cases depends on the type
of import used. There's two flavors available:
a. A namespaced import like `import * as ns from 'ns';` that creates
a local namespace that is irrelevant to the import that needs to be
generated (as said import would be used instead of the original
import).
If the local namespace "ns" itself is referred to in a type position,
it is invalid to convert it into a value expression. Some JavaScript
libraries publish a value as default export using `export = MyClass;`
syntax, however it is illegal to refer to that value using "ns".
Consequently, such usage in a type position *must* be accompanied by
an `@Inject` decorator to provide an explicit token.
b. An explicit namespace declaration within a module, that can be
imported using a named import like `import {ns} from 'ns';` where the
"ns" module declares a namespace using `declare namespace ns {}`.
In this case, it's the namespace itself that needs to be imported,
after which any qualified references into the namespace are converted
into property accesses.
Before this change, support for namespaces in the type-to-value
conversion was limited and only worked correctly for a single qualified
name using a namespace import (case 2a). All other cases were either
producing incorrect code or would crash the compiler (case 1a).
Crashing the compiler is not desirable as it does not indicate where
the issue is. Moreover, the result of a type-to-value conversion is
irrelevant when an explicit injection token is provided using `@Inject`,
so referring to a namespace in a type position (case 1) could still be
valid.
This commit introduces logic to the type-to-value conversion to be able
to properly deal with all type references to namespaced symbols.
Fixes#36006
Resolves FW-1995
PR Close#36106
Although this code has been part of Angular 9.x I only noticed this
error when upgrading to Angular 9.1.x because historically the source
locale data was not injected when localizing, but as of
angular/angular-cli#16394 (9.1.0) it is now included. This tipped me off
that my other bundles were not being built properly, and this change
allows me to build a valid ES5 bundle (I have also added a verification
step to my build pipeline to alert me if this error appears again in any
of my bundles).
I found the `locales/global/*.js` file paths being referenced by the
`I18nOptions` in
@angular-devkit/build-angular/src/utils/i18n-options.ts,
and following that it looks like it is actually loaded and used in
@angular-devkit/build-angular/src/utils/process-bundle.ts. I saw the
function `terserMangle` does appear that it is likely aware of the build
being ES5, but I'm not sure why this is not producing a valid ES5
bundle.
This change updates `tools/gulp-tasks/cldr/extract.js` to produce ES5
compliant `locales/global/*.js` and that fixes my issue. However, I am
not sure if @angular-devkit/build-angular should be modified to produce
a valid ES5 bundle instead or if the files could be TypeScript rather
than JavaScript files.
A test that a valid ES5 bundle is produced would be helpful, and I hope
this is reproducible and not some issue with my config.
PR Close#36342
Previously, it was not clear that the `minLength` and `maxLength` validators
can only be used with objects that contain a `length` property. This commit
clarifies this.
PR Close#36297
fixes#34614
There's an edge case where if I use two (or more) sibling <router-outlet>s in two (or more) child routes where their parent route doesn't have a component then preactivation will trigger all canDeactivate checks with the same component because it will use wrong OutletContext.
PR Close#36302
Previously we had a singleton `ROOT_SCOPE` object, from
which all `BindingScope`s derived. But this caused ngcc to
produce non-deterministic output when running multiple workers
in parallel, since each process had its own `ROOT_SCOPE`.
In reality there is no need for `BindingScope` reference names
to be unique across an entire application (or in the case of ngcc
across all the libraries). Instead we just need uniqueness within
a template.
This commit changes the compiler to create a new root `BindingScope`
each time it compiles a component's template.
Resolves#35180
PR Close#36362
In cc4b813e75 the `getBasePaths()`
function was changed to log a warning if a `basePath()` computed from
the `paths` mappings did not exist. It turns out this is a common and
accepted scenario, so we should not log warnings in this case.
Fixes#36518
PR Close#36525
This commit removes individual components from parsing-cases.ts and
colocate them with the actual tests. This makes the tests more readable.
PR Close#36495
1. update jasmine to 3.5
2. update @types/jasmine to 3.5
3. update @types/jasminewd2 to 2.0.8
Also fix several cases, the new jasmine 3 will help to create test cases correctly,
such as in the `jasmine 2.x` version, the following case will pass
```
expect(1 == 2);
```
But in jsamine 3, the case will need to be
```
expect(1 == 2).toBeTrue();
```
PR Close#34625
`zone.js` supports jest `test.each()` methods, but it
introduces a bug, which is the `done()` function will not be handled correctly.
```
it('should work with done', done => {
// done will be undefined.
});
```
The reason is the logic of monkey patching `test` method is different from `jasmine` patch
// jasmine patch
```
return testBody.length === 0
? () => testProxyZone.run(testBody, null)
: done => testProxyZone.run(testBody, null, [done]);
```
// jest patch
```
return function(...args) {
return testProxyZone.run(testBody, null, args);
};
```
the purpose of this change is to handle the following cases.
```
test.each([1, 2])('test.each', (arg1, arg2) => {
expect(arg1).toBe(1);
expect(arg2).toBe(2);
});
```
so in jest, it is a little complex, because the `testBody`'s parameter may be bigger than 1, so the
logic in `jasmine`
```
return testBody.length === 0
? () => testProxyZone.run(testBody, null)
: done => testProxyZone.run(testBody, null, [done]);
```
will not work for `test.each` in jest.
So in this PR, I created a dynamic `Function` to return the correct length of paramters (which is required by jest core), to handle
1. normal `test` with or without `done`.
2. each with parameters with or without done.
PR Close#36022
During static evaluation of expressions, the partial evaluator
may come across a binary + operator for which it needs to
evaluate its operands. Any of these operands may be a reference
to an enum member, in which case the enum member's value needs
to be used as literal value, not the enum member reference
itself. This commit fixes the behavior by resolving an
`EnumValue` when used as a literal value.
Fixes#35584
Resolves FW-1951
PR Close#36461
Previously, `isRelativePath()` assumed paths are *nix-style. This caused
Windows-style paths (such as `C:\foo\some-package\some-file.js`) to not
be recognized as "relative" imports.
This commit fixes this by using the OS-agnostic `isRooted()` helper and
also accounting for both styles of path delimiters: `/` and `\`
PR Close#36372
Currently destroy hooks are stored in memory as `[1, hook, 5, hook]` where
the numbers represent the index at which to find the context and `hook` is
the function to be invoked. This breaks down for `multi` providers,
because the value at the index will be an array of providers, resulting in
the hook being invoked with an array of all the multi provider values,
rather than the provider that was destroyed. In ViewEngine `ngOnDestroy`
wasn't being called for `multi` providers at all.
These changes fix the issue by changing the structure of the destroy hooks to `[1, hook, 5, [0, hook, 3, hook]]` where the indexes inside the inner array point to the provider inside of the multi provider array. Note that this is slightly different from the original design which called for the structure to be `[1, hook, 5, [hook, hook]`, because in the process of implementing it, I realized that we wouldn't get passing the correct context if only some of the `multi` providers have `ngOnDestroy` and others don't.
I've run the newly-added `view_destroy_hooks` benchmark against these changes and compared it to master. The difference seems to be insignificant (between 1% and 2% slower).
Fixes#35231.
PR Close#35840
When TypeScript downlevels ES2015+ code to ES5, it uses some helper
functions to emulate some ES2015+ features, such as spread syntax. The
TypeScript compiler can be configured to emit these helpers into the
transpiled code (which is controlled by the `noEmitHelpers` option -
false by default). It can also be configured to import these helpers
from the `tslib` module (which is controlled by the `importHelpers`
option - false by default).
While most of the time the helpers will be either emitted or imported,
it is possible that one configures their app to neither emit nor import
them. In that case, the helpers could, for example, be made available on
the global object. This is what `@nativescript/angular`
v9.0.0-next-2019-11-12-155500-01 does. See, for example, [common.js][1].
Ngcc must be able to detect and statically evaluate these helpers.
Previously, it was only able to detect emitted or imported helpers.
This commit adds support for detecting these helpers if they are neither
emitted nor imported. It does this by checking identifiers for which no
declaration (either concrete or inline) can be found against a list of
known TypeScript helper function names.
[1]: https://unpkg.com/browse/@nativescript/angular@9.0.0-next-2019-11-12-155500-01/common.js
PR Close#36418
This commit refactors the process for determining the type of an Angular
attribute to be use a function that takes an attribute name and returns
the Angular attribute kind and name, rather than requiring the user to
query match the attribute name with the regex and query the matching
array.
This refactor prepares for a future change that will improve the
experience of completing attributes in `()`, `[]`, or `[()]` contexts.
PR Close#36301
Recent ZoneJS-related commit (416c786774) update the `promise.ts` file, but it looks like original PR was not rebased after clang update. As a result, the `lint` CircleCI job started to fail in master after merging that PR (https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/36311). This commit updates the format of the `promise.ts` script according to the new clang rules.
PR Close#36487
Close#36142
In Firefox extensions, the `window.fetch` is not configurable, that means
```
const desc = Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor(window, 'fetch');
desc.writable === false;
```
So in this case, we should not try to patch `fetch`, otherwise, it will
throw error ('fetch is ReadOnly`)
PR Close#36311
In rare cases a project with configured `rootDirs` that has imports to
non-existent identifiers could fail in the migration.
This happens because based on the application code, the migration could
end up trying to resolve the `ts.Symbol` of such non-existent
identifiers. This isn't a problem usually, but due to a upstream bug
in the TypeScript compiler, a runtime error is thrown.
This is because TypeScript is unable to compute a relative path from the
originating source file to the imported source file which _should_
provide the non-existent identifier. An issue for this has been reported
upstream: https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/37731. The
issue only surfaces since our migrations don't provide an absolute base
path that is used for resolving the root directories.
To fix this, we ensure that we never use relative paths when parsing
tsconfig files. More details can be found in the TS issue.
Fixes#36346.
PR Close#36367
The source-map flattening was throwing an error when there
is a cyclic dependency between source files and source-maps.
The error was either a custom one describing the cycle, or a
"Maximum call stack size exceeded" one.
Now this is handled more leniently, resulting in a partially loaded
source file (or source-map) and a warning logged.
Fixes#35727Fixes#35757
Fixes https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/17106
Fixes https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/17115
PR Close#36452
Recently we added support for ignoring specified deep-import
warnings by providing sets of regular expressions within the
`ngcc.config.js` file. But this was only working for the project
level configuration.
This commit fixes ngcc so that it will also read these regular
expressions from package level configuration too.
Fixes#35750
PR Close#36423
The `browser` package.json property is now supported to the same
level as `main` - i.e. it is sniffed for UMD, ESM5 and CommonJS.
The `browser` property can also contain an object with file overrides
but this is not supported by ngcc.
Fixes#36062
PR Close#36396
Previously, `main` was only checked for `umd` or `commonjs`
formats. Now if there are `import` or `export` statements in the
source file it will be deemed to be in `esm5` format.
Fixes#35788
PR Close#36396
clang-format was recently updated and any PRs that touch files in the
language service will have to reformat all the files.
Instead of changing the formatting in those PRs, this PR formats all
files in language-service package once and for all.
PR Close#36426
The matcher is allowed to return null per
https://angular.io/api/router/UrlMatcher#usage-notes
And run `yarn gulp format` to pick up recent clang format changes.
Closes#29824
BREAKING CHANGE: UrlMatcher's type now reflects that it could always return
null.
If you implemented your own Router or Recognizer class, please update it to
handle matcher returning null.
PR Close#36402
Rebuild the yarn lock file from scratch to collapse instances where
one package is able to satisfy multiple dependencies. Currently we
have some situations where we have multiple versions when one would
work.
Example:
```
"@babel/code-frame@^7.0.0":
version "7.0.0"
resolved "https://registry.yarnpkg.com/@babel/cod
integrity sha512-OfC2uemaknXr87bdLUkWog7nYuliM9Ij
dependencies:
"@babel/highlight" "^7.0.0"
"@babel/code-frame@^7.5.5":
version "7.5.5"
resolved "https://registry.yarnpkg.com/@babel/cod
integrity sha512-27d4lZoomVyo51VegxI20xZPuSHusqbQ
dependencies:
"@babel/highlight" "^7.0.0"
"@babel/code-frame@^7.8.3":
version "7.8.3"
resolved "https://registry.yarnpkg.com/@babel/cod
integrity sha512-a9gxpmdXtZEInkCSHUJDLHZVBgb1QS0j
dependencies:
"@babel/highlight" "^7.8.3"
```
becomes
```
"@babel/code-frame@^7.0.0", "@babel/code-frame@^7.5.5", "@babel/code-frame@^7.8.3":
version "7.8.3"
resolved "https://registry.yarnpkg.com/@babel/cod
integrity sha512-a9gxpmdXtZEInkCSHUJDLHZVBgb1QS0j
dependencies:
"@babel/highlight" "^7.8.3"
```
PR Close#36377
The `NgccReflectionHost`s have logic for detecting certain known
declarations (such as `Object.assign()` and TypeScript helpers), which
allows the `PartialEvaluator` to evaluate expressions it would not be
able to statically evaluate otherwise.
In #36089, `DelegatingReflectionHost` was introduced, which delegates to
a TypeScript `ReflectionHost` when reflecting on TypeScript files, which
for ngcc's case means `.d.ts` files of dependencies. As a result, ngcc
lost the ability to detect TypeScript helpers imported from `tslib`,
because `DelegatingReflectionHost` was not able to apply the known
declaration detection logic while reflecting on `tslib`'s `.d.ts` files.
This commit fixes this by ensuring `DelegatingReflectionHost` calls the
`NgccReflectionHost`'s `detectKnownDeclaration()` method as necessary,
even when using the TypeScript `ReflectionHost`.
NOTE:
The previous commit exposed a bug in ngcc that was hidden due to the
tests' being inconsistent with how the `ReflectionHost`s are used in the
actual program. The changes in this commit are verified by ensuring the
failing tests are now passing (hence no new tests are added).
PR Close#36284
In #36089, `DelegatingReflectionHost` was introduced. Under the hood, it
delegates another `NgccReflectionHost` in order to reflect over the
program's source files, while using a different TypeScript
`ReflectionHost` to reflect over `.d.ts` files (which is how external
dependencies are represented in the program).
Previously, the `NgccReflectionHost`s were used directly in tests. This
does not exercise them in the way they are exercised in the actual
program, because (when used directly) they will also reflect on `.d.ts`
files too (instead of delegating to the TypeScript `ReflectionHost`).
This could hide bugs that would happen on the actual program.
This commit fixes this by using the `DelegatingReflectionHost` in the
various `NgccReflectionHost` tests.
NOTE:
This change will cause some of the existing tests to start failing.
These failures demonstrate pre-existing bugs in ngcc, that were hidden
due to the tests' being inconsistent with how the `ReflectionHost`s are
used in the actual program. They will be fixed in the next commit.
PR Close#36284
The `NgccReflectionHost`s have logic for detecting certain known
declarations (such as `Object.assign()` and TypeScript helpers), which
allows the `PartialEvaluator` to evaluate expressions it would not be
able to statically evaluate otherwise.
This commit moves the logic for identifying these known declarations to
dedicated methods. This is in preparation of allowing ngcc's
`DelegatingReflectionHost` (introduced in #36089) to also apply the
known declaration detection logic when reflecting on TypeScript sources.
PR Close#36284
In version 10, undecorated base classes that use Angular features need
to be decorated explicitly with `@Directive()`. Additionally, derived
classes of abstract directives need to be decorated.
The migration already handles this for undecorated classes that are
not explicitly decorated, but since in V9, abstract directives can be
used, we also need to handle this for explicitly decorated abstract
directives. e.g.
```
@Directive()
export class Base {...}
// needs to be decorated by migration when updating from v9 to v10
export class Wrapped extends Base {}
@Component(...)
export class Cmp extends Wrapped {}
```
PR Close#35339
We don't have an integration test for the `undecorated-classes-with-decorated-fields
migration. For consistency and to cover for the latest changes, we add
it to the `ng update` integration test.
PR Close#35339
The `undecorated-classes-with-decorated-fields` migration has been
introduced with 904a2018e0, but misses
logic for decorating derived classes of undecorated classes which use
Angular features. Example scenario:
```ts
export abstract class MyBaseClass {
@Input() someInput = true;
}
export abstract class BaseClassTwo extends MyBaseClass {}
@Component(...)
export class MyButton extends BaseClassTwo {}
```
Both abstract classes would need to be migrated. Previously, the migration
only added `@Directive()` to `MyBaseClass`, but with this change, it
also decorates `BaseClassTwo`.
This is necessary because the Angular Compiler requires `BaseClassTwo` to
have a directive definition when it flattens the directive metadata for
`MyButton` in order to perform type checking. Technically, not decorating
`BaseClassTwo` does not break at runtime.
We basically want to enforce consistent use of `@Directive` to simplify the
mental model. [See the migration guide](https://angular.io/guide/migration-undecorated-classes#migrating-classes-that-use-field-decorators).
Fixes#34376.
PR Close#35339
The import manager has been created for both the `missing-injectable`
and `undecorated-classes-with-di` migration. Both initial PRs brought
in the manager class, so the manager is duplicated in the schematics.
In order to reduce this duplication, and to expose the manager to other
schematics/migrations, we move it into the shared schematic utils.
PR Close#35339
Moves the `findBaseClassDeclarations` method into the shared
schematic utilities. This method will be useful for future
migrations, and for planned changes to the
`undecorated-classes-with-decorated-fields` migration.
PR Close#35339
Enables the `service-worker` tests on Saucelabs and fixes some issues that were preventing them from running on IE. The issues were:
1. We were serving es2017 code during tests. I've set it to es5.
2. The check which was verifying whether the environment is supported ended up hitting a `require` call in the browser which caused it to fail on browsers that don't support the `URL` API.
PR Close#36129
In Ivy, Angular decorators are compiled into static fields that are
inserted into a class declaration in a TypeScript transform. When
targeting Closure compiler such fields need to be annotated with
`@nocollapse` to prevent them from being lifted from a static field into
a variable, as that would prevent the Ivy runtime from being able to
find the compiled definitions.
Previously, there was a bug in TypeScript where synthetic comments added
in a transform would not be emitted at all, so as a workaround a global
regex-replace was done in the emit's `writeFile` callback that would add
the `@nocollapse` annotation to all static Ivy definition fields. This
approach is no longer possible when ngtsc is running as TypeScript
plugin, as a plugin cannot control emit behavior.
The workaround is no longer necessary, as synthetic comments are now
properly emitted, likely as of
https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/pull/22141 which has been
released with TypeScript 2.8.
This change is required for running ngtsc as TypeScript plugin in
Bazel's `ts_library` rule, to move away from the custom `ngc_wrapped`
approach.
Resolves FW-1952
PR Close#35932
Ngcc supports providing a project-level configuration to affect how
certain dependencies are processed and also has a built-in fallback
configuration for some unmaintained packages. Each entry in these
configurations could be scoped to specific versions of a package by
providing a version range. If no version range is provided for a
package, it defaults to `*` (with the intention of matching any
version).
Previously, the installed version of a package was tested against the
version range using the [semver][1] package's `satisfies()` function
with the default options. By default, `satisfies()` does not match
pre-releases (see [here][2] for more details on reasoning). While this
makes sense when determining what version of a dependency to install
(trying to avoid unexpected breaking changes), it is not desired in the
case of ngcc.
This commit fixes it by explicitly specifying that pre-release versions
should be matched normally.
[1]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/semver
[2]: https://github.com/npm/node-semver#prerelease-tags
PR Close#36370
From G3 bug ID: 116443331
The View Engine compiler crashes when it tries to compile a test in JIT mode
that includes the d3-scale-chromatic library [1]. The d3 package initializes
some arrays using the following pattern:
```js
export var scheme = new Array(3).concat(
"d8b365f5f5f55ab4ac",
// ... more entries
).map(colors);
```
The stack trace from the crash is as follows:
```
TypeError: Cannot read property 'visitExpression' of undefined
at ../../../third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts:505:39
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractEmitterVisitor.visitAllObjects third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts?l=526
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractEmitterVisitor.visitAllExpressions third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts?l=505
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractEmitterVisitor.visitLiteralArrayExpr third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts?l=484
at LiteralArrayExpr.visitExpression third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/output_ast.ts?l=791
at ../../../third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts:492:19
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractEmitterVisitor.visitAllObjects third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts?l=526
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractEmitterVisitor.visitLiteralMapExpr third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts?l=490
at LiteralMapExpr.visitExpression third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/output_ast.ts?l=819
at ../../../third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts:505:39
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractEmitterVisitor.visitAllObjects third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts?l=526
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractEmitterVisitor.visitAllExpressions third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts?l=505
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractEmitterVisitor.visitInvokeFunctionExpr third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts?l=318
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractJsEmitterVisitor.visitInvokeFunctionExpr third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_js_emitter.ts?l=112
at InvokeFunctionExpr.visitExpression third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/output_ast.ts?l=440
```
This is because the corresponding output AST for the array is of the form
```ts
[
undefined,
undefined,
undefined,
o.LiteralExpr,
// ...
]
```
The output AST is clearly malformed and breaks the type representation of
`LiteralArrayExpr` in which every entry is expected to be of type `Expression`.
This commit fixes the bug by using a plain `for` loop to iterate over the
entire length of the holey array and convert undefined elements to
`LiteralExpr`.
[1]: https://github.com/d3/d3-scale-chromatic/blob/master/src/diverging/BrBG.js
PR Close#36343
Previously, a bad baseUrl or path mapping passed to an `EntryPointFinder`
could cause the original `sourceDirectory` to be superceded by a higher
directory. This could result in none of the sourceDirectory entry-points being
processed.
Now missing basePaths computed from path-mappings are discarded with
a warning. Further, if the `baseUrl` is the root directory then a warning is
given as this is most likely an error in the tsconfig.json.
Resolves#36313Resolves#36283
PR Close#36331
Currently the language service only provides support for determining the
type of array-like members when the array-like object is an `Array`.
However, there are other kinds of array-like objects, including
`ReadonlyArray`s and `readonly`-property arrays. This commit adds
support for retrieving the element type of arbitrary array-like objects.
Closes#36191
PR Close#36312
The previous optimizations in #35756 to the
`DirectoryWalkerEntryPointFinder` were over zealous
with regard to packages that have entry-points stored
in "container" directories in the package, where the
container directory was not an entry-point itself.
Now we will also walk such "container" folders as long
as they do not contain `.js` files, which we regard as an
indicator that the directory will not contain entry-points.
Fixes#36216
PR Close#36305
This commit simplifies the `DirectoryWalkerEntryPointFinder` inter-method
calling to make it easier to follow, and also to support controlling
walking of a directory based on its children.
PR Close#36305
__zone_symbol__UNPATCHED_EVENTS and __zone_symbol__PASSIVE_EVENTS should be string[] type not boolean.
For example:
```
const config = window as ZoneGlobalConfigurations;
config.__zone_symbol__UNPATCHED_EVENTS = ['scroll'];
config.__zone_symbol__PASSIVE_EVENTS = ['scroll'];
```
PR Close#36258
`Bluebird.each` and `Bluebird.mapSeries` will accept a callback with `value` parameter,
the `value` should be the item in the array, not array itself.
For example:
```
const arr = [1, 2];
Bluebird.each(arr, function(value, idx) {
console.log(`value: ${value}, idx: ${idx}`);
})
```
the output will be
```
value: 1, idx: 0
value: 2, idx: 1
```
This PR fix the test cases for `each` and `mapSeries` APIs.
PR Close#36295
Prior to this commit, the `packages/core/src/render3/interfaces/query.ts` file used to import `QueryList` using `../../linker`, which contains a lot of re-exports and as a result, this one import caused a lot of circular deps cycles reported by the tool that checks such deps. In other places in the code the `QueryList` is imported using more narrow import (`linker/query_list`), so this commit uses the same pattern. This change allowed to reduce the number of known cycles from 343 to 207, the golden file was updated accordingly.
PR Close#36286
Previously we only searched for package paths below the set of `basePaths`
that were computed from the `basePath` provided to ngcc and the set of
`pathMappings`.
In some scenarios, such as hoisted packages, the entry-point is not within
any of the `basePaths` identified above. For example:
```
project
packages
app
node_modules
app-lib (depends on lib1)
node_modules
lib1 (depends on lib2)
node_modules
lib2 (depends on lib3/entry-point)
lib3
entry-point
```
When CLI is compiling `app-lib` ngcc will be given
`project/packages/app/node_modules` as the `basePath.
If ngcc is asked to target `lib2`, the `targetPath` will be
`project/node_modules/lib1/node_modules/lib2`.
Since `lib2` depends upon `lib3/entry-point`, ngcc will need to compute
the package path for `project/node_modules/lib3/entry-point`.
Since `project/node_modules/lib3/entry-point` is not contained in the `basePath`
`project/packages/app/node_modules`, ngcc failed to compute the `packagePath`
correctly, instead assuming that it was the same as the entry-point path.
Now we also consider the nearest `node_modules` folder to the entry-point
path as an additional `basePath`. If one is found then we use the first
directory directly below that `node_modules` directory as the package path.
In the case of our example this extra `basePath` would be `project/node_modules`
which allows us to compute the `packagePath` of `project/node_modules/lib3`.
Fixes#35747
PR Close#36249
Prior to this commit, Ivy TestBed was accessing locale ID before `APP_INITIALIZER` functions were called. This execution order is not consistent with the app bootstrap logic in `application_ref.ts`. This commit updates Ivy TestBed execution order to call initializers first (since they might affect `LOCALE_ID` token value) and accessing and setting locale ID after that.
Fixes#36230.
PR Close#36237
Currently the `ts-circular-deps` tool uses a hard-coded module resolver
that only works in the `angular/angular` repository.
If the tool is consumed in other repositories through the shared
dev-infra package, the module resolution won't work, and a few
resolvable imports (usually cross-entry-points) are accidentally
skipped. For each test, the resolution might differ, so tests can
now configure their module resolution in a configuration file.
Note that we intentionally don't rely on tsconfig's for module
resolution as parsing their mappings rather complicates the
circular dependency tool. Additionally, not every test has a
corresponding tsconfig file.
Also, hard-coding mappings to `@angular/*` while accepting a
path to the packages folder would work, but it would mean
that the circular deps tool is no longer self-contained. Rather,
and also for better flexibility, a custom resolver should be
specified.
PR Close#36226
Previously, some of the built-in ServiceWorker registration strategies,
namely `registerWithDelay:<timeout>` and `registerWhenStable:<timeout>`,
would register potentially long-running timeout, thus preventing the app
from stabilizing before the timeouts expired. This was especially
problematic for the `registerWhenStable:<timeout>` strategy, which waits
for the app to stabilize, because the strategy itself would prevent the
app from stabilizing and thus the ServiceWorker would always be
registered after the timeout.
This commit fixes this by subscribing to the registration strategy
observable outside the Angular zone, thus not affecting the app's
stabilization.
PR Close#35870
Previously, when using the default ServiceWorker registration strategy
Angular would wait indefinitely for the [app to stabilize][1], before
registering the ServiceWorker script. This could lead to a situation
where the ServiceWorker would never be registered when there was a
long-running task (such as an interval or recurring timeout).
Such tasks can often be started by a 3rd-party dependency (beyond the
developer's control or even without them realizing). In addition, this
situation is particularly hard to detect, because the ServiceWorker is
typically not used during development and on production builds a
previous ServiceWorker instance might be already active.
This commit fixes this by changing the default registration strategy
from `registerWhenStable` to `registerWhenStable:30000`, which will
ensure that the ServiceWorker will be registered after 30s at the
latest, even if the app has not stabilized by then.
Fixes#34464
PR Close#35870
Previously, when using the `registerWhenStable` ServiceWorker
registration strategy (which is also the default) Angular would wait
indefinitely for the [app to stabilize][1], before registering the
ServiceWorker script. This could lead to a situation where the
ServiceWorker would never be registered when there was a long-running
task (such as an interval or recurring timeout).
Such tasks can often be started by a 3rd-party dependency (beyond the
developer's control or even without them realizing). In addition, this
situation is particularly hard to detect, because the ServiceWorker is
typically not used during development and on production builds a
previous ServiceWorker instance might be already active.
This commit enhances the `registerWhenStable` registration strategy by
adding support for an optional `<timeout>` argument, which guarantees
that the ServiceWorker will be registered when the timeout expires, even
if the app has not stabilized yet.
For example, with `registerWhenStable:5000` the ServiceWorker will be
registered as soon as the app stabilizes or after 5 seconds if the app
has not stabilized by then.
Related to #34464.
[1]: https://angular.io/api/core/ApplicationRef#is-stable-examples
PR Close#35870
`KeyValuePipe` currently accepts `null` values as well as `Map`s and a
few others. However, due to the way in which TS overloads work, a type
of `T|null` will not be accepted by `KeyValuePipe`'s signatures, even
though both `T` and `null` individually would be.
To make this work, each signature that accepts some type `T` has been
duplicated with a second one below it that accepts a `T|null` and
includes `null` in its return type.
Fixes#35743
PR Close#36093
Previously ngcc never preserved whitespaces but this is at odds
with how the ViewEngine compiler works. In ViewEngine, library
templates are recompiled with the current application's tsconfig
settings, which meant that whitespace preservation could be set
in the application tsconfig file.
This commit allows ngcc to use the `preserveWhitespaces` setting
from tsconfig when compiling library templates. One should be aware
that this disallows different projects with different tsconfig settings
to share the same node_modules folder, with regard to whitespace
preservation. But this is already the case in the current ngcc since
this configuration is hard coded right now.
Fixes#35871
PR Close#36189
This commit augments the `FactoryDef` declaration of Angular decorated
classes to contain information about the parameter decorators used in
the constructor. If no constructor is present, or none of the parameters
have any Angular decorators, then this will be represented using the
`null` type. Otherwise, a tuple type is used where the entry at index `i`
corresponds with parameter `i`. Each tuple entry can be one of two types:
1. If the associated parameter does not have any Angular decorators,
the tuple entry will be the `null` type.
2. Otherwise, a type literal is used that may declare at least one of
the following properties:
- "attribute": if `@Attribute` is present. The injected attribute's
name is used as string literal type, or the `unknown` type if the
attribute name is not a string literal.
- "self": if `@Self` is present, always of type `true`.
- "skipSelf": if `@SkipSelf` is present, always of type `true`.
- "host": if `@Host` is present, always of type `true`.
- "optional": if `@Optional` is present, always of type `true`.
A property is only present if the corresponding decorator is used.
Note that the `@Inject` decorator is currently not included, as it's
non-trivial to properly convert the token's value expression to a
type that is valid in a declaration file.
Additionally, the `ComponentDefWithMeta` declaration that is created for
Angular components has been extended to include all selectors on
`ng-content` elements within the component's template.
This additional metadata is useful for tooling such as the Angular
Language Service, as it provides the ability to offer suggestions for
directives/components defined in libraries. At the moment, such
tooling extracts the necessary information from the _metadata.json_
manifest file as generated by ngc, however this metadata representation
is being replaced by the information emitted into the declaration files.
Resolves FW-1870
PR Close#35695
Previously, when an input property was initially set to `undefined` it
would not be correctly recognized as a change (and trigger
`ngOnChanges()`).
This commit ensures that explicitly setting an input to `undefined` is
correctly handled the same as setting the property to any other value.
This aligns the behavior of Angular custom elements with that of the
corresponding components when used directly (not as custom elements).
PR Close#36140
Previously, when an input property was set on an `NgElement` before
instantiating the underlying component, the `SimpleChange` object passed
to `ngOnChanges()` would have `firstChange` set to false, even if this
was the first change (as far as the component instance was concerned).
This commit fixes this by ensuring `SimpleChange#firstChange` is set to
true on first change, regardless if the property was set before or after
instantiating the component. This alignthe behavior of Angular custom
elements with that of the corresponding components when used directly
(not as custom elements).
Jira issue: [FW-2007](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-2007)
Fixes#36130
PR Close#36140
When computing the dependencies between packages which are not in
node_modules, we may need to rely upon path-mappings to find the path
to the imported entry-point.
This commit allows ngcc to use the path-mappings from a tsconfig
file to find dependencies. By default any tsconfig.json file in the directory
above the `basePath` is loaded but it is possible to use a path to a
specific file by providing the `tsConfigPath` property to mainNgcc,
or to turn off loading any tsconfig file by setting `tsConfigPath` to `null`.
At the command line this is controlled via the `--tsconfig` option.
Fixes#36119
PR Close#36180
I was not able to reproduce IE 10/11 failrue of the disabled
tests on SauceLabs any more. I did some cleanup of the test
in question but I doubt it was the root cause of the problem.
PR Close#35962
Previously, an expansion case could only start with an alpha numeric character.
This commit fixes this by allowing an expansion case to start with any character
except `}`.
The [ICU spec](http://userguide.icu-project.org/formatparse/messages) is pretty vague:
> Use a "select" argument to select sub-messages via a fixed set of keywords.
It does not specify what can be a "keyword" but from looking at the surrounding syntax it
appears that it can indeed be any string that does not contain a `}` character.
Closes#31586
PR Close#36123
This commit propagates the correct value span in an ExpressionBinding of
a microsyntax expression to ParsedProperty, which in turn porpagates the
span to the template ASTs (both VE and Ivy).
PR Close#36133
When using `platformBrowserDynamic().bootstrapModule()`, it is possible
to set `defaultEncapsulation` and `preserveWhitespaces` as default
configuration to influence how components are compiled. When compiling
components in JIT with Ivy, these options were not taken into account.
This commit publishes the options to be globally available, so that the
lazy compilation of JIT components has access to the configured
bootstrap options. Note that this approach does not allow changing the
options once they have been set, as Ivy's compilation model does not
allow for multiple compilations to exist at the same time.
For applications that bootstrap multiple modules, it is now required
to provide the exact same bootstrap options. An error is logged if
incompatible bootstrap options are provided, in which case the updated
options will be ignored.
Fixes#35230
Resolved FW-1838
PR Close#35534
When two entry-points overlap, ngcc may attempt to process some
files twice. Previously, when this occured ngcc would just exit with an
error preventing any other entry-points from being processed.
This commit changes ngcc so that if `errorOnFailedEntryPoint` is false, it will
simply log an error and continue to process entry-points. This is useful when
ngcc is processing the entire node_modules folder and there are some invalid
entry-points that the project doesn't actually use.
PR Close#36083
Previously, when an entry-point contained code that caused its compilation
to fail, ngcc would exit in the middle of processing, possibly leaving other
entry-points in a corrupt state.
This change adds a new `errorOnFailedEntryPoint` option to `mainNgcc` that
specifies whether ngcc should exit immediately or log an error and continue
processing other entry-points.
The default is `false` so that ngcc will not error but continue processing
as much as possible. This is useful in post-install hooks, and async CLI
integration, where we do not have as much control over which entry-points
should be processed.
The option is forced to true if the `targetEntryPointPath` is provided,
such as the sync integration with the CLI, since in that case it is targeting
an entry-point that will actually be used in the current project so we do want
ngcc to exit with an error at that point.
PR Close#36083
Later when we implement the ability to continue processing when tasks have
failed to compile, we will also need to avoid processing tasks that depend
upon the failed task.
This refactoring exposes this list of dependent tasks in a way that can be
used to skip processing of tasks that depend upon a failed task.
It also changes the blocking model of the parallel mode of operation so
that non-typings tasks are now blocked on their corresponding typings task.
Previously the non-typings tasks could be triggered to run in parallel to
the typings task, since they do not have a hard dependency on each other,
but this made it difficult to skip task correctly if the typings task failed,
since it was possible that a non-typings task was already in flight when
the typings task failed. The result of this is a small potential degradation
of performance in async parallel processing mode, in the rare cases that
there were not enough unblocked tasks to make use of all the available
workers.
PR Close#36083
Moving the definition of the `onTaskCompleted` callback into `mainNgcc()`
allows it to be configured based on options passed in there more easily.
This will be the case when we want to configure whether to log or throw
an error for tasks that failed to be processed successfully.
This commit also creates two new folders and moves the code around a bit
to make it easier to navigate the code§:
* `execution/tasks`: specific helpers such as task completion handlers
* `execution/tasks/queues`: the `TaskQueue` implementations and helpers
PR Close#36083
When ngcc is compiling an entry-point, it uses a `ReflectionHost` that
is specific to its format, e.g. ES2015, ES5, UMD or CommonJS. During the
compilation of that entry-point however, the reflector may be used to
reflect into external libraries using their declaration files.
Up until now this was achieved by letting all `ReflectionHost` classes
consider their parent class for reflector queries, thereby ending up in
the `TypeScriptReflectionHost` that is a common base class for all
reflector hosts. This approach has proven to be prone to bugs, as
failing to call into the base class would cause incompatibilities with
reading from declaration files.
The observation can be made that there's only two distinct kinds of
reflection host queries:
1. the reflector query is about code that is part of the entry-point
that is being compiled, or
2. the reflector query is for an external library that the entry-point
depends on, in which case the information is reflected
from the declaration files.
The `ReflectionHost` that was chosen for the entry-point should serve
only reflector queries for the first case, whereas a regular
`TypeScriptReflectionHost` should be used for the second case. This
avoids the problem where a format-specific `ReflectionHost` fails to
handle the second case correctly, as it isn't even considered for such
reflector queries.
This commit introduces a `ReflectionHost` that delegates to the
`TypeScriptReflectionHost` for AST nodes within declaration files,
otherwise delegating to the format-specific `ReflectionHost`.
Fixes#35078
Resolves FW-1859
PR Close#36089
The format property for ES5 bundles should be "module" or "es5"/"esm5",
but was "main" instead. The "main" property is appropriate for CommonJS
and UMD bundles, not for ES5 bundles.
PR Close#36089
Currently, when Angular code is built with Bazel and with Ivy, generated
factory shims (.ngfactory files) are not processed via the majority of
tsickle's transforms. This is a subtle effect of the build infrastructure,
but it boils down to a TsickleHost method `shouldSkipTsickleProcessing`.
For ngc_wrapped builds (Bazel + Angular), this method is defined in the
`@bazel/typescript` (aka bazel rules_typescript) implementation of
`CompilerHost`. The default behavior is to skip tsickle processing for files
which are not present in the original `srcs[]` of the build rule. In
Angular's case, this includes all generated shim files.
For View Engine factories this is probably desirable as they're quite
complex and they've never been tested with tsickle. Ivy factories however
are smaller and very straightforward, and it makes sense to treat them like
any other output.
This commit adjusts two independent implementations of
`shouldSkipTsickleProcessing` to enable transformation of Ivy shims:
* in `@angular/bazel` aka ngc_wrapped, the upstream `@bazel/typescript`
`CompilerHost` is patched to treat .ngfactory files the same as their
original source file, with respect to tsickle processing.
It is currently not possible to test this change as we don't have any test
that inspects tsickle output with bazel. It will be extensively tested in
g3.
* in `ngc`, Angular's own implementation is adjusted to allow for the
processing of shims when compiling with Ivy. This enables a unit test to
be written to validate the correct behavior of tsickle when given a host
that's appropriately configured to process factory shims.
For ngtsc-as-a-plugin, a similar fix will need to be submitted upstream in
tsc_wrapped.
PR Close#35848
PR Close#35975
Updates to the latest `@bazel/ibazel` version that properly
resolves local `@bazel/bazelisk` installations.
The support for this temporarily broke from `0.12.0` to `0.12.2`.
https://github.com/bazelbuild/bazel-watcher/issues/352.
PR Close#36097
This commit improves the context of a non-callable function error
message by providing the affected call target and its non-callable type.
PR Close#35271
This commit performs a few updates to internal functions that would be required in upcoming changes to support synthetic host bindings in Directives.
* the `elementPropertyInternal` function was refactored to accept renderer as an argument (prior to that, there was a function that loads the renderer in some specific way for animation bindings)
* `elementPropertyInternal`, `elementAttributeInternal` and `listenerInternal` functions were updated to have a fixed set of arguments (for better performance)
* `elementPropertyInternal` and `elementAttributeInternal` functions were updated to take `tNode` as an argument instead of passing node index (that was used to retrieve `tNode` internally), in some cases we already have `tNode` available or we can retrieve it from the state
The refactoring was triggered by the need to pass different renderers to the `elementPropertyInternal` to support synthetic host bindings in Directives (see this comment for additional context: https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/35568/files#r388034584).
PR Close#35884
This has a couple benefits:
- we now use a .bazelversion file rather than package.json to pin the version of bazel we want. This means even if you install bazel on your computer rather than via yarn, you'll still get a warning if your bazel version is wrong.
- you no longer end up downloading three copies of bazel due to bugs in both npm and yarn where they download all tarballs before checking the metadata to see which are usable on the local platform.
- bazelisk correctly handles the tools/bazel trick for wrapping functionality, which we want to use to instrument developer build latencies
PR Close#36078
This commit propagates the `sourceSpan` and `valueSpan` of a `VariableBinding`
in a microsyntax expression to `ParsedVariable`, and subsequently to
View Engine Variable AST and Ivy Variable AST.
Note that this commit does not propagate the `keySpan`, because it involves
significant changes to the template AST.
PR Close#36047
To create the symbols of a module, the static symbol resolver first gets
all the symbols loaded in the module by an export statement. For `export
* from './module'`-like statements, all symbols from `./module` must be
loaded. In cases where the exporting module is actually the same module
that the export statement is in, this causes an unbounded recursive
resolution of the same module.
Exports of the same module are not needed, as their symbols will be
resolved when the symbols in the module metadata's `metadata` key is
explored.
This commit resolves the unbounded recursion by loading exporting
modules only if they differ from the module currently being resolved.
Closes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/593
PR Close#35262
Prior to this commit, Ivy compiler didn't handle directive inputs with interpolations located on `<ng-template>` elements (e.g. `<ng-template dir="{{ field }}">`). That was the case for regular inputs as well as inputs that should be processed via i18n subsystem (e.g. `<ng-template i18n-dir dir="Hello {{ name }}">`). This commit adds support for such expressions for explicit `<ng-template>`s as well as a number of tests to confirm the behavior.
Fixes#35752.
PR Close#35984
Close#31687, #31684
Zone.js patches rxjs internal `_subscribe` and `_unsubscribe` methods, but zone.js doesn't do null check, so in some operator such as `retryWhen`, the `_unsubscribe` will be set to null, and will cause
zone patched version throw error.
In this PR, if `_subscribe` and `_unsubscribe` is null, will not do the patch.
PR Close#35990
`zone.js` added `removeAllListeners` and `eventListeners` methods in `EventTarget.prototype`, but those methods only exists when user import `zone.js` and also enables `EventTarget` monkey patching.
If user:
1. Does not import `zone.js` and uses `noop` zone when bootstrapping Angular app. OR
2. Disable monkey patching of `EventTarget` patch by defining `__Zone_disable_EventTarget = true`.
Then `removeAllListeners` and `eventListeners` methods will not be present.
PR Close#35954
Close#27840.
By default, `zone.js` wrap uncaught promise error and wrap it to a new Error object with some
additional information includes the value of the error and the stack trace.
Consider the following example:
```
Zone.current
.fork({
name: 'promise-error',
onHandleError: (delegate: ZoneDelegate, current: Zone, target: Zone, error: any): boolean => {
console.log('caught an error', error);
delegate.handleError(target, error);
return false;
}
}).run(() => {
const originalError = new Error('testError');
Promise.reject(originalError);
});
```
The `promise-error` zone catches a wrapped `Error` object whose `rejection` property equals
to the original error, and the message will be `Uncaught (in promise): testError....`,
You can disable this wrapping behavior by defining a global configuraiton
`__zone_symbol__DISABLE_WRAPPING_UNCAUGHT_PROMISE_REJECTION = true;` before importing `zone.js`.
PR Close#35873
Monkey patch `MessagePort.prototype.onmessage` and `MessagePort.prototype.onmessageerror` to make
these properties's value(callback function) run in the zone when these value are set.
PR Close#34610
Previously, calculations related to the position of and difference between
SegmentMarkers required extensive computation based around the line,
line start positions and columns of each segment.
PR Close#36027
The merging algorithm needs to find, for a given segment, what the next
segment in the source file is. This change modifies the `generatedSegment`
properties in the mappings so that they have a link directly to the following
segment.
PR Close#36027
By computing and caching the start of each line, rather than the length
of each line, we can save a lot of duplicated computation in the `segmentDiff()`
and `offsetSegment()` functions.
PR Close#36027
Previously the list of original segments that was searched for incoming
mappings did not differentiate between different original source files.
Now there is a separate array of segments to search for each of the
original source files.
PR Close#36027
The `@angular/core` package has a large number of source files
and mappings which exposed performance issues in the new source-map
flattening algorithm.
This change uses a binary search (rather than linear) when finding
matching mappings to merge. Initial measurements indicate that this
reduces processing time for `@angular/core` by about 50%.
PR Close#36027
Prior to this commit, i18n runtime logic relied on the assumption that provided translation is syntactically correct, specifically around ICU syntax. However provided translations might contain some errors that lead to parsing failure. Specifically when translation contains curly braces, runtime i18n logic tries to parse them as an ICU expression and fails. This commit validates ICU parsing result (making sure it was parsed correctly) and throws an error if parsing error happens. The error that is thrown also contains translated message text for easier debugging.
Note: the check and the error message introduced in this PR is a safeguard against the problem that led to unhandled i18n runtime logic crash. So the framework behavior remains the same, we just improve the error message and it should be safe to merge to the patch branch.
Resolves#35689.
PR Close#35923
ts-api-guardian uses `require.resolve` to resolve the actual and golden files under bazel. In Windows for these files to be resolved correct the full path including the workspace name as per the MANIFEST entries is required.
This used to be the case until the recent changes done to use npm_integration tests
83c74ceacf/tools/public_api_guard/public_api_guard.bzl (L19)83c74ceacf/tools/public_api_guard/public_api_guard.bzl (L28)
```
bazel test //packages/... --test_tag_filters=api_guard
//packages/animations:animations_api (cached) PASSED in 18.4s
//packages/common:common_api (cached) PASSED in 25.5s
//packages/compiler-cli:compiler_options_api (cached) PASSED in 12.4s
//packages/compiler-cli:error_code_api (cached) PASSED in 11.6s
//packages/core:core_api (cached) PASSED in 20.6s
//packages/core:ng_global_utils_api (cached) PASSED in 13.5s
//packages/elements:elements_api (cached) PASSED in 11.9s
//packages/forms:forms_api (cached) PASSED in 13.9s
//packages/http:http_api (cached) PASSED in 14.8s
//packages/localize:localize_api (cached) PASSED in 6.3s
//packages/platform-browser:platform-browser_api (cached) PASSED in 18.1s
//packages/platform-browser-dynamic:platform-browser-dynamic_api (cached) PASSED in 14.0s
//packages/platform-server:platform-server_api (cached) PASSED in 13.9s
//packages/platform-webworker:platform-webworker_api (cached) PASSED in 13.7s
//packages/platform-webworker-dynamic:platform-webworker-dynamic_api (cached) PASSED in 11.7s
//packages/router:router_api (cached) PASSED in 19.9s
//packages/service-worker:service-worker_api (cached) PASSED in 18.1s
//packages/upgrade:upgrade_api (cached) PASSED in 13.5s
```
Reference: DEV-71
PR Close#36034
Close#35878.
Before zone.js 0.10, the rollup config would refer to `rxjs` when bundling `zone-patch-rxjs.js`
From zone.js 0.10, we started to use bazel to build `zone-patch-rxjs.js` and the configuration was wrongly defined to include a copy of `rxjs` in the `zone-patch-rxjs.js`.
PR Close#35983
In some scenarios it is useful for the developer to indicate
to ngcc that it should not use the entry-point manifest
file, and instead write a new one.
In the ngcc command line tool, this option is set by specfying
```
--invalidate-entry-point-manifest
```
PR Close#35931
The `DirectoryWalkerEntryPointFinder` has to traverse the
entire node_modules library everytime it executes in order to
identify the entry-points that need to be processed. This is
very time consuming (several seconds for big projects on
Windows).
This commit changes the `DirectoryWalkerEntryPointFinder` to
use the `EntryPointManifest` to store the paths to entry-points
that were found when doing this initial node_modules traversal
in a file to be reused for subsequent calls.
This dramatically speeds up ngcc processing when it has been run once
already.
PR Close#35931
The new `EntryPointManifest` class can read and write a
manifest file that contains all the paths to the entry-points
that have been found in a node_modules folder.
This can be used to speed up finding entry-points in
subsequent runs.
The manifest file stores the ngcc version and hashes of
the package lock-file and project config, since if these
change the manifest will need to be recomputed.
PR Close#35931
Today, the language service infers the type of variables bound to the
"ngIf" template context member of an NgIf directive, but does not do the
same for the the "$implicit" context member. This commit adds support
for that.
Fixes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/676
PR Close#35941
This commit adds fine-grained text spans to TemplateBinding for microsyntax expressions.
1. Source span
By convention, source span refers to the entire span of the binding,
including its key and value.
2. Key span
Span of the binding key, without any whitespace or keywords like `let`
The value span is captured by the value expression AST.
This is part of a series of PRs to fix source span mapping in microsyntax expression.
For more info, see the doc https://docs.google.com/document/d/1mEVF2pSSMSnOloqOPQTYNiAJO0XQxA1H0BZyESASOrE/edit?usp=sharing
PR Close#35897
95c729f5d1 added support for TypeScript v3.8. Since
these versions are now supported, the `typescript` peer dependency
range in `@angular/bazel` needs to be updated to not report unsatisfied
peer dependencies.
PR Close#36013
Currently, when running the ngcc binary directly and provide an invalid option ngcc will not error out and the user might have a hard time telling why ngcc is behaving not as expected.
With this change we now output an actionable error:
```
yarn ngcc --unknown-option
Options:
--version Show version number [boolean]
-s, --source A path (relative to the working directory)
of the `node_modules` folder to process.
[default: "./node_modules"]
-p, --properties An array of names of properties in
package.json to compile (e.g. `module` or
`es2015`)
Each of these properties should hold the
path to a bundle-format.
If provided, only the specified properties
are considered for processing.
If not provided, all the supported format
properties (e.g. fesm2015, fesm5, es2015,
esm2015, esm5, main, module) in the
package.json are considered. [array]
-t, --target A relative path (from the `source` path) to
a single entry-point to process (plus its
dependencies).
--first-only If specified then only the first matching
package.json property will be compiled.
[boolean]
--create-ivy-entry-points If specified then new `*_ivy_ngcc`
entry-points will be added to package.json
rather than modifying the ones in-place.
For this to work you need to have custom
resolution set up (e.g. in webpack) to look
for these new entry-points.
The Angular CLI does this already, so it is
safe to use this option if the project is
being built via the CLI. [boolean]
--legacy-message-ids Render `$localize` messages with legacy
format ids.
The default value is `true`. Only set this
to `false` if you do not want legacy
message ids to
be rendered. For example, if you are not
using legacy message ids in your
translation files
AND are not doing compile-time inlining of
translations, in which case the extra
message ids
would add unwanted size to the final source
bundle.
It is safe to leave this set to true if you
are doing compile-time inlining because the
extra
legacy message ids will all be stripped
during translation.
[boolean] [default: true]
--async Whether to compile asynchronously. This is
enabled by default as it allows
compilations to be parallelized.
Disabling asynchronous compilation may be
useful for debugging.
[boolean] [default: true]
-l, --loglevel The lowest severity logging message that
should be output.
[choices: "debug", "info", "warn", "error"]
--invalidate-entry-point-manifest If this is set then ngcc will not read an
entry-point manifest file from disk.
Instead it will walking the directory tree
as normal looking for entry-points, and
then write a new manifest file.
[boolean] [default: false]
--help Show help [boolean]
Unknown arguments: unknown-option, unknownOption
```
PR Close#36010
Moves the public api .d.ts files from tools/public_api_guard to
goldens/public-api.
Additionally, provides a README in the goldens directory and a script
assist in testing the current state of the repo against the goldens as
well as a command for accepting all changes to the goldens in a single
command.
PR Close#35768
Pure pipes are not invoked again until their arguments are modified. The same
rule should apply to pure pipes that throw an exception. This fix ensures that
a pure pipe is not re-invoked if it throws an exception and arguments are not
changed.
PR Close#35827
This commit adds support in the Angular monorepo and in the Angular
compiler(s) for TypeScript 3.8. All packages can now compile with
TS 3.8.
For most of the repo, only a handful few typings adjustments were needed:
* TS 3.8 has a new `CustomElementConstructor` DOM type, which enforces a
zero-argument constructor. The `NgElementConstructor` type previously
declared a required `injector` argument despite the fact that its
implementation allowed `injector` to be optional. The interface type was
updated to reflect the optionality of the argument.
* Certain error messages were changed, and expectations in tests were
updated as a result.
* tsserver (part of language server) now returns performance information in
responses, so test expectations were changed to only assert on the actual
body content of responses.
For compiler-cli and schematics (which use the TypeScript AST) a major
breaking change was the introduction of the export form:
```typescript
export * as foo from 'bar';
```
This is a `ts.NamespaceExport`, and the `exportClause` of a
`ts.ExportDeclaration` can now take this type as well as `ts.NamedExports`.
This broke a lot of places where `exportClause` was assumed to be
`ts.NamedExports`.
For the most part these breakages were in cases where it is not necessary
to handle the new `ts.NamedExports` anyway. ngtsc's design uses the
`ts.TypeChecker` APIs to understand syntax and so automatically supports the
new form of exports.
The View Engine compiler on the other hand extracts TS structures into
metadata.json files, and that format was not designed for namespaced
exports. As a result it will take a nontrivial amount of work if we want to
support such exports in View Engine. For now, these new exports are not
accounted for in metadata.json, and so using them in "folded" Angular
expressions will result in errors (probably claiming that the referenced
exported namespace doesn't exist).
Care was taken to only use TS APIs which are present in 3.7/3.6, as Angular
needs to remain compatible with these for the time being.
This commit does not update angular.io.
PR Close#35864
Prior to this commit, while calculating the scope for a module, Ivy compiler processed `declarations` field first and `imports` after that. That results in a couple issues:
* for Pipes with the same `name` and present in `declarations` and in an imported module, Pipe from imported module was selected. In View Engine the logic is opposite: Pipes from `declarations` field receive higher priority.
* for Directives with the same selector and present in `declarations` and in an imported module, we first invoked the logic of a Directive from `declarations` field and after that - imported Directive logic. In View Engine, it was the opposite and the logic of a Directive from the `declarations` field was invoked last.
In order to align Ivy and View Engine behavior, this commit updates the logic in which we populate module scope: we first process all imports and after that handle `declarations` field. As a result, in Ivy both use-cases listed above work similar to View Engine.
Resolves#35502.
PR Close#35850
Fixes the following issues which caused the `elements` unit tests to break on IE:
1. `core.js` wasn't included which caused an error about `Promise` and `Symbol` to be thrown.
2. We were using a version of `@webcomponents/custom-elements` which was shipping ES6 code to npm. As a result, IE was throwing a syntax error.
PR Close#35940
This commit splits the ngtsc `core` package's api entrypoint, which
previously was a single `api.ts` file, into an api/ directory with multiple
files. This is done to isolate the parts of the API definitions pertaining
to the public-facing `angularCompilerOptions` field in tsconfig.json into a
single file, which will enable a public API guard test to be added in a
future commit.
PR Close#35885
`@angular/platform-browser/animations` has a dependency on `@angular/animations` however, this is not listed in `peerDependencies`
With this change we add this package as an optional peerDependency as it's only required when using the `@angular/platform-browser/animations` entrypoint.
Fixes#35888
PR Close#35949
This commit accomplishes two tasks:
- Fixes the span of queried pipes to only be applied on pipe names
- By consequence, fixes how pipes are located in arguments (previously,
pipes with arguments could not be found because the span of a pipe
uses a relative span, while the template position is absolute)
The screenshots attached to the PR for this commit demonstrate the
change.
Closes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/677
PR Close#35986
Currently, when Angular code is built with Bazel and with Ivy, generated
factory shims (.ngfactory files) are not processed via the majority of
tsickle's transforms. This is a subtle effect of the build infrastructure,
but it boils down to a TsickleHost method `shouldSkipTsickleProcessing`.
For ngc_wrapped builds (Bazel + Angular), this method is defined in the
`@bazel/typescript` (aka bazel rules_typescript) implementation of
`CompilerHost`. The default behavior is to skip tsickle processing for files
which are not present in the original `srcs[]` of the build rule. In
Angular's case, this includes all generated shim files.
For View Engine factories this is probably desirable as they're quite
complex and they've never been tested with tsickle. Ivy factories however
are smaller and very straightforward, and it makes sense to treat them like
any other output.
This commit adjusts two independent implementations of
`shouldSkipTsickleProcessing` to enable transformation of Ivy shims:
* in `@angular/bazel` aka ngc_wrapped, the upstream `@bazel/typescript`
`CompilerHost` is patched to treat .ngfactory files the same as their
original source file, with respect to tsickle processing.
It is currently not possible to test this change as we don't have any test
that inspects tsickle output with bazel. It will be extensively tested in
g3.
* in `ngc`, Angular's own implementation is adjusted to allow for the
processing of shims when compiling with Ivy. This enables a unit test to
be written to validate the correct behavior of tsickle when given a host
that's appropriately configured to process factory shims.
For ngtsc-as-a-plugin, a similar fix will need to be submitted upstream in
tsc_wrapped.
PR Close#35848
XLIFF translation files can contain multiple `<file>` elements,
each of which contains translations. In ViewEngine all these
translations are merged into a single translation bundle.
Previously in Ivy only the translations from the last `<file>`
element were being loaded. Now all the translations from each
`<file>` are merged into a single translation bundle.
Fixes#35839
PR Close#35936
TemplateAst values are currently typed as the base class AST, but they
are actually constructed with ASTWithSource. Type them as such, because
ASTWithSource gives more information about the consumed expression AST
to downstream customers (namely, the expression AST source).
Unblocks #35271
PR Close#35892
This commit improves the `canParse()` method to check that the file is
valid XML and has the expected root node. Previously it was relying upon
a regular expression to do this.
PR Close#35793
Previously, the `Xliff2TranslationParser` only matched files that had a narrow
choice of extensions (e.g. `xlf`) and also relied upon a regular expression
match of an optional XML namespace directive.
This commit relaxes the requirement on both of these and, instead, relies
upon parsing the file into XML and identifying an element of the form
`<xliff version="2.0">` which is the minimal requirement for such files.
PR Close#35793
Previously, the `Xliff1TranslationParser` only matched files that had a narrow
choice of extensions (e.g. `xlf`) and also relied upon a regular expression
match of an optional XML namespace directive.
This commit relaxes the requirement on both of these and, instead, relies
upon parsing the file into XML and identifying an element of the form
`<xliff version="1.2">` which is the minimal requirement for such files.
PR Close#35793
This modifies the internal (but shared with CLI) API for loading/parsing
translation files. Now the parsers will return a new `Diagnostics` object
along with any translations and locale extracted from the file.
It is up to the caller to decide what to do about this, if there are errors
it is suggested that an error is thrown, which is what the `TranslationLoader`
class does.
PR Close#35793
Calling `tick(0, null)` defaults `processNewMacroTasksSynchronously` flag to `true`, however calling `tick(0, null, {})` defaults `processNewMacroTasksSynchronously` to `undefined`. This is undesirable behavior since unless the flag is set explicitly it should still default to `true`.
PR Close#35814
Currently, the `ng_module` rule incorrectly uses manifest paths for
generated imports from the Angular compiler.
This breaks packaging as prodmode output (i.e. `esnext`) is copied in
various targets (`es5` and `es2015`) to the npm package output.
e.g. imports are generated like:
_node_modules/my-pkg/es2015/imports/public-api.js_
```ts
import * as i1 from "angular/packages/bazel/test/ng_package/example/imports/second";
```
while it should be actually:
```ts
import * as i1 from "./second";
```
The imports can, and should be relative so that the files are
self-contained and do not rely on custom module resolution.
PR Close#35841
The options for `flatModuleId` and `flatModuleOutFile` had been removed in the CLI
from generated libraries with 718ee15b9a.
This has been done because `ng-packagr` (which is used to build the
libraries) automatically set these options in-memory when it compiles the library.
No migration has been created for this because there was no actual need to get rid of
this. Keeping the options in the library `tsconfig` does not cause any problems unless
the `tsconfig` is used outside of `ng-packagr`. This was not anticipated, but is now
commonly done in `ng update` migrations.
The `ng update` migrations try to create an instance of the `AngularCompilerProgram` by
simply parsing the `tsconfig`. The migrations make the valid assumption that `tsconfig` files
are not incomplete/invalid. They _definitely_ are in the file system though. It just works for
libraries because `ng-packagr` in-memory completes the invalid `tsconfig` files, so that they
can be passed to the `@angular/compiler-cli`.
We can't have this logic in the `ng update` migrations because it's
out-of-scope for individual migrations to distinguish between libraries
and applications. Also it would be out-of-scope to parse the
`ng-packagr` configuration and handle the tsconfig in-memory completion.
As a workaround though, we can remove the flat-module bundle options
in-memory when creating the compiler program. This is acceptable since
we don't emit the program and the flat module bundles are not needed.
Fixes#34985.
PR Close#35824
This version of `LockFile` creates an "unlocker" child-process that monitors
the main ngcc process and deletes the lock file if it exits unexpectedly.
This resolves the issue where the main process could not be killed by pressing
Ctrl-C at the terminal.
Fixes#35761
PR Close#35861
The previous implementation mixed up the management
of locking a piece of code (both sync and async) with the
management of writing and removing the lockFile that is
used as the flag for which process has locked the code.
This change splits these two concepts up. Apart from
avoiding the awkward base class it allows the `LockFile`
implementation to be replaced cleanly.
PR Close#35861
This reduces the time that `findEntryPoints` takes from 9701.143ms to 4177.278ms, by reducing the file operations done.
Reference: #35717
PR Close#35756
This reverts commit 00f3c58bb9.
Rolling back because it could be breaking e2e tests that assert that
there are no errors in the console after the assertions have run. We can
re-add this in v10.
PR Close#35845
Changes the Ivy unknown element/property messages from being logged with `console.warn` to `console.error`. This should make them a bit more visible without breaking existing apps. Furthermore, a lot of folks filter out warning messages in the dev tools' console, whereas errors are usually still shown.
Fixes#35699.
PR Close#35798
Using the --silent flag prevents the spammy logging messages in the
bazel execution logs.
```
INFO: From Bundling JavaScript packages/zone.js/dist/zone-rollup.umd.js [rollup]:
bazel-out/k8-fastbuild/bin/packages/zone.js/lib/browser/rollup-legacy-main.mjs → bazel-out/k8-fastbuild/bin/packages/zone.js/dist/zone-rollup.umd.js...
created bazel-out/k8-fastbuild/bin/packages/zone.js/dist/zone-rollup.umd.js in 736ms
```
PR Close#35835
It's an error to declare a variable twice on a specific template:
```html
<div *ngFor="let i of items; let i = index">
</div>
```
This commit introduces a template type-checking error which helps to detect
and diagnose this problem.
Fixes#35186
PR Close#35674
This is a follow up to #35637 which resolved a similar issue for `ComponentFactoryResolver`, but not the root cause. When a `NgModuleRef` is created, it instantiates an `Injector` internally which in turn resolves all of injector types. This can result in a circular call that results in an error, because the module is one of the injector types being resolved.
These changes work around the issue by allowing the constructor to run before resolving the injector types.
Fixes#35677.
Fixes#35639.
PR Close#35731
This patch is a follow-up patch to 35c9f0dc2f.
It changes the `computeStyle` function to handle situations where
non string based values are returned from `window.getComputedStyle`.
This situation usually ocurrs in Node-based test environments where
the element or `window.getComputedStyle` is mocked out.
PR Close#35810
Switches our tslint setup to the standard `tslint.json` linter excludes.
The set of files that need to be linted is specified through a Yarn script.
For IDEs, open files are linted with the closest tslint configuration, if the
tslint IDE extension is set up, and the source file is not excluded.
We cannot use the language service plugin for tslint as we have multiple nested
tsconfig files, and we don't want to add the plugin to each tsconfig. We
could reduce that bloat by just extending from a top-level tsconfig that
defines the language service plugin, but unfortunately the tslint plugin does
not allow the use of tslint configs which are not part of the tsconfig project.
This is problematic since the tslint configuration is at the project root, and we
don't want to copy tslint configurations next to each tsconfig file.
Additionally, linting of `d.ts` files has been re-enabled. This has been
disabled in the past and a TODO has been left. This commit fixes the
lint issues and re-enables linting.
PR Close#35800
The test libs should only be included in one jasmine_node_test
otherwise `bazel build //packages/language-service/...` would
end up running `feature_test` and `infra_test` twice.
PR Close#35816
`ɵɵgetInheritedFactory()` is called from generated code for a component which extends another class. This function is detected by Closure to have a side effect and is not able to tree shake the component as a result. Marking it with `noSideEffects()` tells Closure it can remove this function under the relevant tree shaking conditions.
PR Close#35769
`ɵɵNgOnChangesFeature()` would set `ngInherit`, which is a side effect and also not necessary. This was pulled out to module scope so the function itself can be pure. Since it only curries another function, the call is entirely unnecessary. Updated the compiler to only generate a reference to this function, rather than a call to it, and removed the extra curry indirection.
PR Close#35769
This marks the function are "pure" and eligible to be tree shaken by Closure. Without this, initializing `ngDevMode` is considered a side effect which prevents this function from being tree shaken and also any component which calls it.
PR Close#35769
This is useful for propagating return values without them being converted to a string. It still provides the same guarantees to Closure, which will assume that the function invoked is pure and can be tree-shaken accordingly.
PR Close#35769
This commit performs a modularization of the Language Service's existing
diagnostic messages. Such a modularization has two primary advantages:
- Centralization and decoupling of error messages from the code that
generates them makes it easy to add/delete/edit diagnostic messages,
and allows for independent iteration of diagnostic messages and
diagnostic generation.
- Prepares for additional features like annotating the locations where a
diagnostic is generated and enabling the configuration of which
diagnostics should be reported by the language service.
Although it would be preferable to place the diagnostics registry in an
independent JSON file, for ease of typing diagnostic types as an enum
variant of 'ts.DiagnosticCategory', the registry is stored as an object.
Part of #32663.
PR Close#35678
Before this change ngIvy implementation of queries would throw upon
encountering null / undefined query result collected from an embedded
view. It turns out that we might have a provider that explicitly provides
a null / undefined value in a place of a token queried for.
This commit removes a check from the ngIvy query implementation that was
asserting on a query result to be defined.
Fixes#35673
PR Close#35796
Before this change `[class]` and `[className]` were both converted into `ɵɵclassMap`. The implication of this is that at runtime we could not differentiate between the two and as a result we treated `@Input('class')` and `@Input('className)` as equivalent.
This change makes `[class]` and `[className]` distinct. The implication of this is that `[class]` becomes `ɵɵclassMap` instruction but `[className]` becomes `ɵɵproperty' instruction. This means that `[className]` will no longer participate in styling and will overwrite the DOM `class` value.
Fix#35577
PR Close#35668
Prior to this commit, i18n attributes defined on `<ng-template>` tags were not processed by the compiler. This commit adds the necessary logic to handle i18n attributes in the same way how these attrs are processed for regular elements.
PR Close#35681
Prior to this patch, the `margin` and `padding` properties were not
detected properly by Firefox due to them being shorthand properties.
This patch ensures that both `margin` and `padding` are converted
read as `top right bottom left` in the event that the shorthand
property detection fails for auto-styling in Angular animations.
Fix#35463 (FW-1886)
PR Close#35701
With this change we spawn workers lazily based on the amount of work that needs to be done.
Before this change we spawned the maximum of workers possible. However, in some cases there are less tasks than the max number of workers which resulted in created unnecessary workers
Reference: #35717
PR Close#35719
The `ng_package` rule currently creates incorrect UMD module exports
if an entry-point has a module name with numbers included.
For example, consider an entry-point called `@angular/cdk/a11y`. The UMD
module name should be `ng.cdk.a11y`. Instead, `ng_package` currently generates
an UMD module export called `ng.cdk.a11Y`.
This is because the logic for converting dash-case to camel case is
invalid as it uses Starlark's `title()` method. The title method
converts text to title case while we actually just want to capitalize
the first letter of a dash-case segment.
Fixes angular/components#18652.
PR Close#35792
Adds a new entry-point to the `@angular/bazel` `ng_package` test that
contains numbers in the name. e.g. `example/a11y`. This test is added
to replicate a bug where the UMD module export for such entry-points
is incorrectly generated. i.e. `example.a11Y` is generated instead of
`example.a11y`.
PR Close#35792
This commit updates the host bindings micro benchmark to run tests with mutliple directives (where each directive contains host bindings). The number of directives is configurable as a constant in the micro benchmark file. This change is needed to have an ability to measure/compare perf in different scenarios.
PR Close#35736
This commit extends the range of tNode types that may have local refs to include `TNodeType.Container` to account for `<ng-template>`s. Original changes in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/33415 didn't include that type and as a result, an error is thrown at runtime in case an i18n block contains an `<ng-template>` with local refs.
PR Close#35758
When the `NgIf` directive is used in a template, its context variables
can be used to capture the bound value. This is typically used together
with a pipe or function call, where the resulting value is captured in a
context variable. There's two syntax forms available:
1. Binding to `NgIfContext.ngIf` using the `as` syntax:
```html
<span *ngIf="(user$ | async) as user">{{user.name}}</span>
```
2. Binding to `NgIfContext.$implicit` using the `let` syntax:
```html
<span *ngIf="user$ | async; let user">{{user.name}}</span>
```
Because of the semantics of `ngIf`, it is known that the captured
context variable is non-nullable, however the template type checker
would not consider them as such and still report errors when
`strictNullTypes` is enabled.
This commit updates `NgIf`'s context guard to make the types of the
context variables non-nullable, avoiding the issue.
Fixes#34572
PR Close#35125
This commit removes the `NullAstVisitor` and `visitAstChildren` exported
from `packages/compiler/src/expression_parser/ast.ts` because they
contain duplicate and buggy implementation, and their use cases could be
sufficiently covered by `RecursiveAstVisitor` if the latter implements the
`visit` method. This use case is only needed in the language service.
With this change, any visitor that extends `RecursiveAstVisitor` could
just define their own `visit` function and the parent class will behave
correctly.
A bit of historical context:
In language service, we need a way to tranverse the expression AST in a
selective manner based on where the user's cursor is. This means we need a
"filtering" function to decide which node to visit and which node to not
visit. Instead of refactoring `RecursiveAstVisitor` to support this,
`visitAstChildren` was created. `visitAstChildren` duplicates the
implementation of `RecursiveAstVisitor`, but introduced some bugs along
the way. For example, in `visitKeyedWrite`, it visits
```
obj -> key -> obj
```
instead of
```
obj -> key -> value
```
Moreover, because of the following line
```
visitor.visit && visitor.visit(ast, context) || ast.visit(visitor, context);
```
`visitAstChildren` visits every node *twice*.
PR Close#35619
This commit differentiates language service feature and language service
infrastructure tests. This is primarily to make testing of different
components at the development level easier. This commit continues a
small effort to expand our test coverage and normalize testing
structure.
Also adds test coverage to language service tests. We have quite a bit
to go on that front 🙂.
PR Close#35688
The `packages/localize/src/tools` folder was excluded
from the top level `tsconfig.json` which meant that in IDEs
these source files were not being given the correct configuration.
It was originally excluded because it required the native `node` typings
but this is no longer a requirement.
Removing this folder from the exclusion list exposed a new issue
where there was a typings mismatch between `@babel/...` sources
and the associated `@types/babel__...` typings packages.
A clean up of the package.json and yarn.lock appears to fix this.
PR Close#35711
For view and content queries, the Ivy compiler attempts to statically
evaluate the predicate token so that string predicates containing
comma-separated reference names can be split into an array of strings
during compilation. When the predicate is a dynamic value that cannot be
statically interpreted at compile time, the compiler would previously
produce an error. This behavior breaks a use-case where an `InjectionToken`
is being used as query predicate, as the usage of the `new` keyword
prevents such predicates from being statically evaluated.
This commit changes the behavior to no longer produce an error for
dynamic values. Instead, the expression is emitted as is into the
generated code, postponing the evaluation to happen at runtime.
Fixes#34267
Resolves FW-1828
PR Close#35307
Prior to this change, the logic that compiles Injectable in JIT mode used incorrect configuration that triggers a problem when `ChangeDetectorRef` is used as a dependency. This commit updates the logic to generate correct inject instruction to add the `ChangeDetectorRef` dependency in case it's requested in @Injectable class.
PR Close#35706
This commit adds micro benchmark for host bindings, so that we can assess the impact of changes related to host bindings (for example PR #35568).
PR Close#35705
Source-maps in the wild could be badly formatted,
causing the source-map flattening processing to fail
unexpectedly. Rather than causing the whole of ngcc
to crash, we gracefully fallback to just returning the
generated source-map instead.
PR Close#35718
Previously when rendering flattened source-maps, it was assumed that no
mapping would come from a line that is outside the lines of the actual
source content. It turns out this is not a valid assumption.
Now the code that renders flattened source-maps will handle such
mappings, with the additional benefit that the rendered source-map
will only contain mapping lines up to the last mapping, rather than a
mapping line for every content line.
Fixes#35709
PR Close#35718
If a package has a source-map but it does not provide
the actual content of the sources, then the source-map
flattening was crashing.
Now we ignore such mappings that have no source
since we are not able to compute the merged
mapping if there is no source file.
Fixes#35709
PR Close#35718
This commit adds a new ngcc configuration, `ignorableDeepImportMatchers`
for packages. This is a list of regular expressions matching deep imports
that can be safely ignored from that package. Deep imports that are not
ignored cause a warning to be logged.
// FW-1892
Fixes#35615
PR Close#35683
If an injectable has a `useClass`, Ivy injects the token in `useClass`, rather than the original injectable, if the injectable is re-provided under a different token. The correct behavior is that it should inject the re-provided token, no matter whether it has `useClass`.
Fixes#34110.
PR Close#34574
ɵAnimationDriver can be safely removed from private exports as AnimationDriver
is already a public export. Since its already available, we can safely remove
its declaration and migrate its only usage in our repo to rely on the public
AnimationDriver symbol.
PR Close#35690
Template type-checking within the Ivy compiler has been disabled internally
in g3 until compatibility with the whole codebase could be verified. As that
verification is now complete and template type-checking is known to be
compatible with g3, this commit enables it.
PR Close#35672
This commit normalizes hover and util tests in the language service.
This is part of a small effort to simplify and normalize the language
service testing structure, which currently contains specs that are
largely created and left without relation to other tests.
PR Close#35656
It's possible to pass a directive as an input to itself. Consider:
```html
<some-cmp #ref [value]="ref">
```
Since the template type-checker attempts to infer a type for `<some-cmp>`
using the values of its inputs, this creates a circular reference where the
type of the `value` input is used in its own inference:
```typescript
var _t0 = SomeCmp.ngTypeCtor({value: _t0});
```
Obviously, this doesn't work. To resolve this, the template type-checker
used to generate a `null!` expression when a reference would otherwise be
circular:
```typescript
var _t0 = SomeCmp.ngTypeCtor({value: null!});
```
This effectively asks TypeScript to infer a value for this context, and
works well to resolve this simple cycle. However, if the template
instead tries to use the circular value in a larger expression:
```html
<some-cmp #ref [value]="ref.prop">
```
The checker would generate:
```typescript
var _t0 = SomeCmp.ngTypeCtor({value: (null!).prop});
```
In this case, TypeScript can't figure out any way `null!` could have a
`prop` key, and so it infers `never` as the type. `(never).prop` is thus a
type error.
This commit implements a better fallback pattern for circular references to
directive types like this. Instead of generating a `null!` in place for the
reference, a type is inferred by calling the type constructor again with
`null!` as its input. This infers the widest possible type for the directive
which is then used to break the cycle:
```typescript
var _t0 = SomeCmp.ngTypeCtor(null!);
var _t1 = SomeCmp.ngTypeCtor({value: _t0.prop});
```
This has the desired effect of validating that `.prop` is legal for the
directive type (the type of `#ref`) while also avoiding a cycle.
Fixes#35372Fixes#35603Fixes#35522
PR Close#35622
NG6002/NG6003 are errors produced when an NgModule being compiled has an
imported or exported type which does not have the proper metadata (that is,
it doesn't appear to be an @NgModule, or @Directive, etc. depending on
context).
Previously this error message was a bit sparse. However, Github issues show
that this is the most common error users receive when for whatever reason
ngcc wasn't able to handle one of their libraries, or they just didn't run
it. So this commit changes the error message to offer a bit more useful
context, instructing users differently depending on whether the class in
question is from their own project, from NPM, or from a monorepo-style local
dependency.
PR Close#35620
When binding to `[style]` we correctly sanitized/unwrapped properties but we did not do it for the object itself.
```
@HostBinding("style")
style: SafeStyle = this.sanitizer.bypassSecurityTrustStyle(
"background: red; color: white; display: block;"
);
```
Above code would fail since the `[style]` would not unwrap the `SafeValue` and would treat it as object resulting in incorrect behavior.
Fix#35476 (FW-1875)
PR Close#35564
The library used by ngcc to update the source files (MagicString) is able
to generate a source-map but it is not able to account for any previous
source-map that the input text is already associated with.
There have been various attempts to fix this but none have been very
successful, since it is not a trivial problem to solve.
This commit contains a novel approach that is able to load up a tree of
source-files connected by source-maps and flatten them down into a single
source-map that maps directly from the final generated file to the original
sources referenced by the intermediate source-maps.
PR Close#35132
Currently we resolve the `NgModuleRef.componentFactoryResolver` by going through the injector, but the problem is that `ComponentFactoryResolver` has a dependency on `NgModuleRef`, which means that if the module that's attached to the ref tries to inject `ComponentFactoryResolver` in its constructor, we'll create a circular dependency which throws at runtime.
These changes resolve the issue by creating the `ComponentFactoryResolver` manually ahead of time without going through the injector. We can do this safely, because the only dependency for the resolver is the current module ref which is providing it.
Aside from fixing the issue, another advantage to this approach is that it should reduce the amount of generated JS, because it removes a getter and a provider definitio.
Fixes#35580.
PR Close#35637
Technically, function definitions can live anywhere because they are
hoisted. However, in this case Closure optimizations break when exported
function definitions are referred in another static object that is
exported.
The bad pattern is:
```
exports const obj = {f};
export function f() {...}
```
which turns to the following in Closure's module system:
```
goog.module('m');
exports.obj = {f};
function f() {...}
exports.f = f;
```
which badly optimizes to (note module objects are collapsed)
```
var b = a; var a = function() {...}; // now b is undefined.
```
This is an optimizer bug and should be fixed in Closure, but in the
meantime this change is a noop and will unblock other changes we want to
make.
PR Close#32230
For example, '<div><p string-model~{cursor}></p></div>', when provide the hover info for 'string-model', the 'path.head' is root tag 'div'. Use the parent of 'path.tail' instead.
PR Close#35317
Currently if TestBed detects that TestBed.overrideModule was used for module X, transitive scopes are recalculated recursively for all modules that X imports and previously calculated data (stored in cache) is ignored. This behavior was introduced in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/33787 to fix stale transitive scopes issue (cache was not updated if module overrides are present).
The perf issue comes from a "diamond" problem, where module X is overridden which imports modules A and B, which both import module C. Under previous logic, module C gets its transitive deps recomputed multiple times, during the recompute for both A and B. For deep graphs and big common/shared modules this can be super costly.
This commit updates the logic to recalculate ransitive scopes for the overridden module, while keeping previously calculated scopes of other modules untouched.
PR Close#35454
Prior to this commit the service worker only treated 504 errors as "effectively offline".
This commit changes the behaviour to treat both 503 (Service Unavailable) and 504 as "offline".
Fixes#35571
PR Close#35595
The only test case for `ngFor` exercises an incorrect usage which causes
two bound attributes to be generated . This commit adds a canonical and
correct usage to show the difference between the two.
PR Close#35671
Now Angular doesn't support add event listeners as passive very easily.
User needs to use `elem.addEventListener('scroll', listener, {passive: true});`
or implements their own EventManagerPlugin to do that.
Angular may finally support new template syntax to support passive event, for now,
this commit introduces a temp solution to allow user to define the passive event names
in zone.js configurations.
User can define a global varibale like this.
```
(window as any)['__zone_symbol__PASSIVE_EVENTS'] = ['scroll'];
```
to let all `scroll` event listeners passive.
PR Close#34503
As a part of the process of setting up Router providers, we use `ApplicationRef` as a dependency while providing `Router` token. The thing is that `ApplicationRef` is actually unused (all referenced were removed in 5a849829c4 (diff-c0baae5e1df628e1a217e8dc38557fcb)), but it's still listed as dependency. This is causing problems in case `Router` is used as a dependency for factory functions provided as `APP_INITIALIZERS` multi-token (causing cyclic dependency). This commit removes unused `ApplicationRef` dependency in `Router`, so it can be used without causing cyclic dependency issue.
PR Close#35642
Previously if there were two path-mapped libraries that are in
different directories but the path of one started with same string
as the path of the other, we would incorrectly return the shorter
path - e.g. `dist/my-lib` and `dist/my-lib-second`. This was because
the list of `basePaths` was searched in ascending alphabetic order and
we were using `startsWith()` to match the path.
Now the `basePaths` are searched in reverse alphabetic order so the
longer path will be matched correctly.
// FW-1873
Fixes#35536
PR Close#35592
* it's tricky to get out of the runfiles tree with `bazel test` as `BUILD_WORKSPACE_DIRECTORY` is not set but I employed a trick to read the `DO_NOT_BUILD_HERE` file that is one level up from `execroot` and that contains the workspace directory. This is experimental and if `bazel test //:test.debug` fails than `bazel run` is still guaranteed to work as `BUILD_WORKSPACE_DIRECTORY` will be set in that context
* test //integration:bazel_test and //integration:bazel-schematics_test exclusively
* run "exclusive" and "manual" bazel-in-bazel integration tests in their own CI job as they take 8m+ to execute
```
//integration:bazel-schematics_test PASSED in 317.2s
//integration:bazel_test PASSED in 167.8s
```
* Skip all integration tests that are now handled by angular_integration_test except the tests that are tracked for payload size; these are:
- cli-hello-world*
- hello_world__closure
* add & pin @babel deps as newer versions of babel break //packages/localize/src/tools/test:test
@babel/core dep had to be pinned to 7.6.4 or else //packages/localize/src/tools/test:test failed. Also //packages/localize uses @babel/generator, @babel/template, @babel/traverse & @babel/types so these deps were added to package.json as they were not being hoisted anymore from @babel/core transitive.
NB: integration/hello_world__systemjs_umd test must run with systemjs 0.20.0
NB: systemjs must be at 0.18.10 for legacy saucelabs job to pass
NB: With Bazel 2.0, the glob for the files to test `"integration/bazel/**"` is empty if integation/bazel is in .bazelignore. This glob worked under these conditions with 1.1.0. I did not bother testing with 1.2.x as not having integration/bazel in .bazelignore is correct.
PR Close#33927
When a pipe inherits its constructor, and as a result its factory, from an injectable in AOT mode, it can end up throwing an error, because the inject implementation hasn't been set yet. These changes ensure that the implementation is set before the pipe's factory is invoked.
Note that this isn't a problem in JIT mode, because the factory inheritance works slightly differently, hence why this test isn't going through `TestBed`.
Fixes#35277.
PR Close#35468
Under View Engine's default (non-fullTemplateTypeCheck) checking, object and
array literals which appear in templates are treated as having type `any`.
This allows a number of patterns which would not otherwise compile, such as
indexing an object literal by a string:
```html
{{ {'a': 1, 'b': 2}[value] }}
```
(where `value` is `string`)
Ivy, meanwhile, has always inferred strong types for object literals, even
in its compatibility mode. This commit fixes the bug, and adds the
`strictLiteralTypes` flag to specifically control this inference. When the
flag is `false` (in compatibility mode), object and array literals receive
the `any` type.
PR Close#35462
In its default compatibility mode, the Ivy template type-checker attempts to
emulate the View Engine default mode as accurately as is possible. This
commit addresses a gap in this compatibility that stems from a View Engine
type-checking bug.
Consider two template expressions:
```html
{{ obj?.field }}
{{ fn()?.field }}
```
and suppose that the type of `obj` and `fn()` are the same - both return
either `null` or an object with a `field` property.
Under View Engine, these type-check differently. The `obj` case will catch
if the object type (when not null) does not have a `field` property, while
the `fn()` case will not. This is due to how View Engine represents safe
navigations:
```typescript
// for the 'obj' case
(obj == null ? null as any : obj.field)
// for the 'fn()' case
let tmp: any;
((tmp = fn()) == null ? null as any : tmp.field)
```
Because View Engine uses the same code generation backend as it does to
produce the runtime code for this expression, it uses a ternary for safe
navigation, with a temporary variable to avoid invoking 'fn()' twice. The
type of this temporary variable is 'any', however, which causes the
`tmp.field` check to be meaningless.
Previously, the Ivy template type-checker in compatibility mode assumed that
`fn()?.field` would always check for the presence of 'field' on the non-null
result of `fn()`. This commit emulates the View Engine bug in Ivy's
compatibility mode, so an 'any' type will be inferred under the same
conditions.
As part of this fix, a new format for safe navigation operations in template
type-checking code is introduced. This is based on the realization that
ternary based narrowing is unnecessary.
For the `fn()` case in strict mode, Ivy now generates:
```typescript
(null as any ? fn()!.field : undefined)
```
This effectively uses the ternary operator as a type "or" operation. The
resulting type will be a union of the type of `fn()!.field` with
`undefined`.
For the `fn()` case in compatibility mode, Ivy now emulates the bug with:
```typescript
(fn() as any).field
```
The cast expression includes the call to `fn()` and allows it to be checked
while still returning a type of `any` from the expression.
For the `obj` case in compatibility mode, Ivy now generates:
```typescript
(obj!.field as any)
```
This cast expression still returns `any` for its type, but will check for
the existence of `field` on the type of `obj!`.
PR Close#35462
I think the bug is introduced in my PR#34847. For example, 'model="{{title}}"', the attribute value cannot be parsed by 'parseTemplateBindings'.
PR Close#35494
In ES5 code, TypeScript requires certain helpers (such as
`__spreadArrays()`) to be able to support ES2015+ features. These
helpers can be either imported from `tslib` (by setting the
`importHelpers` TS compiler option to `true`) or emitted inline (by
setting the `importHelpers` and `noEmitHelpers` TS compiler options to
`false`, which is the default value for both).
Ngtsc's `StaticInterpreter` (which is also used during ngcc processing)
is able to statically evaluate some of these helpers (currently
`__assign()`, `__spread()` and `__spreadArrays()`), as long as
`ReflectionHost#getDefinitionOfFunction()` correctly detects the
declaration of the helper. For this to happen, the left-hand side of the
corresponding call expression (i.e. `__spread(...)` or
`tslib.__spread(...)`) must be evaluated as a function declaration for
`getDefinitionOfFunction()` to be called with.
In the case of imported helpers, the `tslib.__someHelper` expression was
resolved to a function declaration of the form
`export declare function __someHelper(...args: any[][]): any[];`, which
allows `getDefinitionOfFunction()` to correctly map it to a TS helper.
In contrast, in the case of emitted helpers (and regardless of the
module format: `CommonJS`, `ESNext`, `UMD`, etc.)), the `__someHelper`
identifier was resolved to a variable declaration of the form
`var __someHelper = (this && this.__someHelper) || function () { ... }`,
which upon further evaluation was categorized as a `DynamicValue`
(prohibiting further evaluation by the `getDefinitionOfFunction()`).
As a result of the above, emitted TypeScript helpers were not evaluated
in ES5 code.
---
This commit changes the detection of TS helpers to leverage the existing
`KnownFn` feature (previously only used for built-in functions).
`Esm5ReflectionHost` is changed to always return `KnownDeclaration`s for
TS helpers, both imported (`getExportsOfModule()`) as well as emitted
(`getDeclarationOfIdentifier()`).
Similar changes are made to `CommonJsReflectionHost` and
`UmdReflectionHost`.
The `KnownDeclaration`s are then mapped to `KnownFn`s in
`StaticInterpreter`, allowing it to statically evaluate call expressions
involving any kind of TS helpers.
Jira issue: https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1689
PR Close#35191
This is in preparation of using the `KnownFn` type for known TypeScript
helpers (in addition to built-in functions/methods). This will in turn
allow simplifying the detection of both imported and emitted TypeScript
helpers.
PR Close#35191
When statically evaluating CommonJS code it is possible to find that we
are looking for the declaration of an identifier that actually came from
a typings file (rather than a CommonJS file).
Previously, the CommonJS reflection host would always try to use a
CommonJS specific algorithm for finding identifier declarations, but
when the id is actually in a typings file this resulted in the returned
declaration being the containing file of the declaration rather than the
declaration itself.
Now the CommonJS reflection host will check to see if the file
containing the identifier is a typings file and use the appropriate
stategy.
(Note: This is the equivalent of #34356 but for CommonJS.)
PR Close#35191
In #33705 we made it so that we generate pure functions for object/array literals in order to avoid having them be shared across elements/views. The problem this introduced is that further down the line the `ContantPool` uses the generated literal in order to figure out whether to share an existing factory or to create a new one. `ConstantPool` determines whether to share a factory by creating a key from the AST node and using it to look it up in the factory cache, however the key generation function didn't handle function invocations and replaced them with `null`. This means that the key for `{foo: pureFunction0(...)}` and `{foo: null}` are the same.
These changes rework the logic so that instead of generating a `null` key
for function invocations, we generate a variable called `<unknown>` which
shouldn't be able to collide with anything.
Fixes#35298.
PR Close#35481
Currently Ivy always generates the `$event` function argument, even if it isn't being used by the listener expressions. This can lead to unnecessary bytes being generated, because optimizers won't remove unused arguments by default. These changes add some logic to avoid adding the argument when it isn't required.
PR Close#35097
The completions list don't include the 'ngTemplateOutlet'. The directive is a structural directive when it has injected the 'TemplateRef' or 'ViewContainerRef'.
PR Close#35466
In ES5 and ES2015, class identifiers may have aliases. Previously, the
`NgccReflectionHost`s recognized the following formats:
- ES5:
```js
var MyClass = (function () {
function InnerClass() {}
InnerClass_1 = InnerClass;
...
}());
```
- ES2015:
```js
let MyClass = MyClass_1 = class MyClass { ... };
```
In addition to the above, this commit adds support for recognizing an
alias outside the IIFE in ES5 classes (which was previously not
supported):
```js
var MyClass = MyClass_1 = (function () { ... }());
```
Jira issue: [FW-1869](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1869)
Partially addresses #35399.
PR Close#35527
`Esm5ReflectionHost#getInnerFunctionDeclarationFromClassDeclaration()`
was already called with `ts.Declaration`, not `ts.Node`, so we can
tighten its parameter type and get rid of a redundant check.
`getIifeBody()` (called inside
`getInnerFunctionDeclarationFromClassDeclaration()`) will check whether
the given `ts.Declaration` is a `ts.VariableDeclaration`.
PR Close#35527
Prior to this commit, decorator handling logic in Ngtsc used `Error` to throw errors. This commit replaces most of these instances with `FatalDiagnosticError` class, which provider a better diagnostics error (including location of the problematic code).
PR Close#35244
Some minification tooling modifies `$localize` calls
to contain a comma sequence of items, where the
cooked and raw values are assigned to variables.
This change improves our ability to recognize these
structures.
Fixes#35376
PR Close#35562
We have to do some extra work in the animations module when we identify a Node environment which we determine based on the `process` global. The problem is that by default Webpack will polyfill the `process`, causing us to incorrectly identify it. These changes make it so that the check isn't thrown off by Webpack.
Fixes#35117.
PR Close#35134
We recently updated chokidar to `3.0.0`. The latest version of
chokidar provides TypeScript types on its own and makes the extra
dependency on the `@types` unnecessary.
This seems to have caused the `build-packages-dist` script to fail with
an error like:
```
[strictDeps] transitive dependency on external/npm/node_modules/chokidar/types/index.d.ts
not allowed. Please add the BUILD target to your rule's deps.
```
It's unclear why that happens, but a reasonable theory would be that
the TS compilation accidentally picked up the types from `chokidar`
instead of `@types/chokidar`, and the strict deps `@bazel/typescript`
check reported this as issue because it's not an explicit target dependency.
PR Close#35371
ngcc uses a lockfile to prevent two ngcc instances from executing at the
same time. Previously, if a lockfile was found the current process would
error and exit.
Now, when in async mode, the current process is able to wait for the previous
process to release the lockfile before continuing itself.
PR Close#35131
In View Engine, host element of dynamically created component received attributes and classes extracted from component's selector. For example, if component selector is `[attr] .class`, the `attr` attribute and `.class` class will be add to host element. This commit adds similar logic to Ivy, to make sure this behavior is aligned with View Engine.
PR Close#34481
Before this change content queries with the `descendants: false` option, as implemented in ivy,
would not descendinto `<ng-container>` elements. This behaviour was different from the way the
View Engine worked. This change alligns ngIvy and VE behaviours when it comes to queries and the
`<ng-container>` elements and fixes a common bugs where a query target was placed inside the
`<ng-container>` element with a * directive on it.
Before:
```html
<needs-target>
<ng-container *ngIf="condition">
<div #target>...</div> <!-- this node would NOT match -->
</ng-container>
</needs-target>
```
After:
```html
<needs-target>
<ng-container *ngIf="condition">
<div #target>...</div> <!-- this node WILL match -->
</ng-container>
</needs-target>
```
Fixes#34768
PR Close#35384
When the same provider is resolved multiple times on the same node, the first invocation had the correct context, but all subsequent ones were incorrect because we were registering the hook multiple times under different indexes in `destroyHooks`.
Fixes#35167.
PR Close#35249
Currently the logic that handles ICUs located outside of i18n blocks may throw exceptions at runtime. The problem is caused by the fact that we store incorrect TNode index for previous TNode (index that includes HEADER_OFFSET) and do not store a flag whether this TNode is a parent or a sibling node. As a result, the logic that assembles the final output uses incorrect TNodes and in some cases throws exceptions (when incompatible structure is extracted from tView.data due to the incorrect index). This commit adjusts the index and captures whether TNode is a parent to make sure underlying logic manipulates correct TNode.
PR Close#35347
In https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/33058, we removed support
for the `ngForm` selector in the NgForm directive. We deleted most
of the deprecation notices in that PR, but we missed a paragraph
of documentation in the API docs for NgForm.
This commit removes the outdated paragraph that makes it seem like
the selector is still around and deprecated (as opposed to removed),
as it might confuse users.
PR Close#35435
Given:
```
<div class="s1" [class]="null" [ngClass]="exp">
```
Notice that `[class]` binding is not a `string`. As a result the existing logic would not concatenate `[class]` with `class="s1"`. The resulting falsy value would than be sent to `ngClass` which would promptly clear all styles on the `<div>`
The new logic correctly handles falsy values for `[class]` bindings.
Fix#35335
PR Close#35350
Root cause is that for perf reasons we cache `LFrame` so that we don't have to allocate it all the time. To be extra fast we clear the `LFrame` on `enterView()` rather that on `leaveView()`. The implication of this strategy is that the deepest `LFrame` will retain objects until the `LFrame` allocation depth matches the deepest object.
The fix is to simply clear the `LFrame` on `leaveView()` rather then on `enterView()`
Fix#35148
PR Close#35156
Includes new feature to honor .bazelignore in external repositories. rules_nodejs 1.3.0 now generates a .bazelignore for the @npm repository so that Bazel ignores the @npm//:node_modules folder.
PR Close#35430
Brings in feat: builtin: expose @npm//foo__all_files filegroup that includes all files in the npm package (https://github.com/bazelbuild/rules_nodejs/commit/8d77827) that is needed for npm_integration_test @npm//puppeteer pkg_tar on OSX (as the OSX Chrrome libs are extracted to paths that contain spaces)
PR Close#35430
In the `loadRenderer` we make an assumption that the value will always be an `LView`, but if there's a directive on the same node which injects `ViewContainerRef` the `LView` will be wrapped in an `LContainer`. These changes add a call to unwrap the value before we try to read the value off of it.
Fixes#35342.
PR Close#35343
There is currently a bug in Chrome 80 that makes Array.reduce
not work according to spec. The functionality in forms that
retrieves controls from FormGroups and FormArrays (`form.get`)
relied on Array.reduce, so the Chrome bug broke forms for
many users.
This commit refactors our forms code to rely on Array.forEach
instead of Array.reduce to fix forms while we are waiting
for the Chrome fix to go live.
See https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=1049982.
PR Close#35349
Under strict mode, the language service fails to typecheck nullable
symbols that have already been verified to be non-null.
This generates incorrect (false positive) and confusing diagnostics
for users.
To work around this issue in the short term, this commit changes the
diagnostic message from an error to a suggestion, and prompts users to
use the safe navigation operator (?) or non-null assertion operator (!).
For example, instead of
```typescript
{{ optional && optional.toString() }}
```
the following is cleaner:
```typescript
{{ optional?.toString() }}
{{ optional!.toString() }}
```
Note that with this change, users who legitimately make a typo in their
code will no longer see an error. I think this is acceptable, since
false positive is worse than false negative. However, if users follow
the suggestion, add ? or ! to their code, then the error will be surfaced.
This seems a reasonable trade-off.
References:
1. Safe navigation operator (?)
https://angular.io/guide/template-syntax#the-safe-navigation-operator----and-null-property-paths
2. Non-null assertion operator (!)
https://angular.io/guide/template-syntax#the-non-null-assertion-operator---
PR closes https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/35070
PR closes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/589
PR Close#35200
Currently, would-be binding attributes that are missing binding names
are not parsed as bindings, and fall through as regular attributes. In
some cases, this can lead to a runtime error; trying to assign `#` as a
DOM attribute in an element like in `<div #></div>` fails because `#` is
not a valid attribute name.
Attributes composed of binding prefixes but not defining a binding
should be considered invalid, as this almost certainly indicates an
unintentional elision of a binding by the developer. This commit
introduces error reporting for attributes with a binding name prefix but
no actual binding name.
Closes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/293.
PR Close#34595
Support for re-exports in UMD were added in e9fb5fdb8. This commit adds
some tests for re-exports (similar to the ones used for
`CommonJsReflectionHost`).
PR Close#35312
we should be documenting when an API is eligible for removal and not when it will be removed.
The actual removal depends on many factors, e.g. if we were able to automate the refactoring to
the recommended API in time or not.
PR Close#35263
Prior to this change, element namespace was not set for host elements of dynamically created components that resulted in incorrect rendering in a browser. This commit adds the logic to pick and set correct namespace for host element when component is created dynamically.
PR Close#35136
In Ivy's template type checker, event bindings are checked in a closure
to allow for accurate type inference of the `$event` parameter. Because
of the closure, any narrowing effects of template guards will no longer
be in effect when checking the event binding, as TypeScript assumes that
the guard outside of the closure may no longer be true once the closure
is invoked. For more information on TypeScript's Control Flow Analysis,
please refer to https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/9998.
In Angular templates, it is known that an event binding can only be
executed when the view it occurs in is currently rendered, hence the
corresponding template guard is known to hold during the invocation of
an event handler closure. As such, it is desirable that any narrowing
effects from template guards are still in effect within the event
handler closure.
This commit tweaks the generated Type-Check Block (TCB) to repeat all
template guards within an event handler closure. This achieves the
narrowing effect of the guards even within the closure.
Fixes#35073
PR Close#35193
The `TargetedEntryPointFinder` must work out what the
containing package is for each entry-point that it finds.
The logic for doing this was flawed in the case that the
package was in a path-mapped directory and not in a
node_modules folder. This meant that secondary entry-points
were incorrectly setting their own path as the package
path, rather than the primary entry-point path.
Fixes#35188
PR Close#35227
This commit implements an experimental integration with tsc_wrapped, where
it can load the Angular compiler as a plugin and perform Angular
transpilation at a user's request.
This is an alternative to the current ngc_wrapped mechanism, which is a fork
of tsc_wrapped from several years ago. tsc_wrapped has improved
significantly since then, and this feature will allow Angular to benefit
from those improvements.
Currently the plugin API between tsc_wrapped and the Angular compiler is a
work in progress, so NgTscPlugin does not yet implement any interfaces from
@bazel/typescript (the home of tsc_wrapped). Instead, an interface is
defined locally to guide this standardization.
PR Close#34792
This commit moves the calculation of `ignoreFiles` - the set of files to be
ignored by a consumer of the `NgCompiler` API - from its `prepareEmit`
operation to its initialization. It's now available as a field on
`NgCompiler`.
This will allow a consumer to skip gathering diagnostics for `ignoreFiles`
as well as skip emit.
PR Close#34792
A bug previously caused the template type-checking diagnostics produced by
TypeScript for template expressions to use -99-prefixed error codes. These
codes are converted to "NG" errors instead of "TS" errors during diagnostic
printing. This commit fixes the issue.
PR Close#35146
- Adds `TView` into `LFrame`, read the `TView` from `LView` on `enterView`.
- Before this change the `TView` was ofter looked up from `LView` as `lView[TVIEW]`. This is suboptimal since reading from an Array, requires that the read checks array size before the read. This means that such a read has a much higher cost than reading from the property directly. By passing in the `TView` explicitly it makes the code more explicit and faster.
- Some rearrangements of arguments so that `TView` would come before `LView` for consistency.
PR Close#35069
In #34021 the ngtsc compiler gained the ability to emit type parameter
constraints, which would generate imports for any type reference that
is used within the constraint. However, the `AbsoluteModuleStrategy`
reference emitter strategy did not consider interface declarations as a
valid declaration it can generate an import for, throwing an error
instead.
This commit fixes the issue by including interface declarations in the
logic that determines whether something is a declaration.
Fixes#34837
PR Close#34849
In #33551, a bug in `ngc --watch` mode was fixed so that a component is
recompiled when its template file is changed. Due to insufficient
normalization of files paths, this fix did not have the desired effect
on Windows.
Fixes#32869
PR Close#34015
Inside `*ngFor` the second run of the styling instructions can get into situation where it tries to read a value from a binding which has not yet executed. As a result the read is `NO_CHANGE` value and subsequent property read cause an exception as it is of wrong type.
Fix#35118
PR Close#35133
This commit cleans up `expression_type.ts` by
1. Removing the unnecessary `TypeDiagnostic` class. It's replaced by
`ng.Diagnostic`.
2. Consolidating `reportError()` and `reportWarning()` to
`reportDiagnostic()`.
This is prep work so that we could make some of the type diagnostics a
suggestion in later PRs.
PR Close#35085
`TNode.directives` was introduced in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/34938. Turns out that it is unnecessary because the information is already present it `TData` when combining with `TNode.directiveStart` and `TNode.directiveEnd`
Mainly this is true (conceptually):
```
expect(tNode.directives).toEqual(
tData.slice(
tNode.directivesStart,
tNode.directivesEnd - tNode.DirectivesStart -1
)
);
```
The refactoring removes `TNode.directives` and adds `TNode.directiveStyling` as we still need to keep location in the directive in `TNode`
PR Close#35050
These tests are used for perf testing and don't run as part of CI, as a result they bit-rotted. This fixes that. Long term these tests should be run as part of CI.
PR Close#35071
To support parallel CLI builds we instruct developers to pre-process
their node_modules via ngcc at the command line.
Despite doing this ngcc was still trying to set a lock when it was being
triggered by the CLI for packages that are not going to be processed,
since they are not compiled by Angular for instance.
This commit checks whether a target package needs to be compiled
at all before attempting to set the lock.
Fixes#35000
PR Close#35057
If ngcc gets updated to a new version then the artifacts
left in packages that were processed by the previous
version are possibly invalid.
Previously we just errored if we found packages that
had already been processed by an outdated version.
Now we automatically clean the packages that have
outdated artifacts so that they can be reprocessed
correctly with the current ngcc version.
Fixes#35082
PR Close#35079
Now `hasBeenProcessed()` will no longer throw if there
is an entry-point that has been built with an outdated
version of ngcc.
Instead it just returns `false`, which will include it in this
processing run.
This is a precursor to adding functionality that will
automatically revert outdate build artifacts.
PR Close#35079
Fixes issue with yarn_install not following yarn-path in .yarnrc when bazel run from yarn with `yarn bazel ...` (rules_nodejs: fix: unset YARN_IGNORE_PATH in yarn_install before calling yarn #1588)
PR Close#34961
Fixes#18013
Previously it was hard to debug an `expectOne` if the request had no match, as the error message was:
Expected one matching request for criteria "Match URL: /some-url?query=hello", found none.
This commit adds a bit more info to the error, by listing the actual requests received:
Expected one matching request for criteria "Match URL: /some-url?query=hello", found none. Requests received are: POST /some-url?query=world.
PR Close#27005
Previous to this commit, HTTP params like `{ a: '1', b: [], c: '3' }` resulted in a request like `a=1&&c=3` (note the double &&).
The ideal fix would probably be to stringify these params to `a=1&b=&c=3` like we do for empty string values. But that might be breaking as some APIs may rely on the absence of the parameter.
This fixes the issue in a compatible way by just removing the extra and unnecessary `&`, resulting in `a=1&c=3`.
PR Close#34896
This reverts commit cb142b6df9.
The intention of this commit was for a consumer of the `compile` function to
pass the `bazelHost` it returns into future invocations, reusing the
`FileCache` between them. However, first-party ngc_wrapped does not do this,
which caused a performance regression as the `FileCache` was no longer
shared between compilations.
PR Close#35063
Update from chokidar 2.x to 3.x in ngc/ngtsc, to eliminate any possibility
of a security issue with a downstream dependency of the package.
FW-1809 #resolve
PR Close#35047
This change changes the priority order of static styling.
Current priority:
```
(least priority)
- Static
- Component
- Directives
- Template
- Dynamic Binding
- Component
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
- Directives
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
- Template
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
(highest priority)
```
The issue with the above priority is this use case:
```
<div style="color: red;" directive-which-sets-color-blue>
```
In the above case the directive will win and the resulting color will be `blue`. However a small change of adding interpolation to the example like so. (Style interpolation is coming in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/34202)
```
<div style="color: red; width: {{exp}}px" directive-which-sets-color-blue>
```
Changes the priority from static binding to interpolated binding which means now the resulting color is `red`. It is very surprising that adding an unrelated interpolation and style can change the `color` which was not changed. To fix that we need to make sure that the static values are associated with priority of the source (directive or template) where they were declared. The new resulting priority is:
```
(least priority)
- Component
- Static
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
- Directives
- Static
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
- Template
- Static
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
(highest priority)
```
PR Close#34938
The current logic pulls multiproviders up to the parent module's
provider list. The result is that the multi provider being defined both in
the imported ModuleWithProviders and the parent and getting an extra
item in the multi provided array of values. This PR fixes that problem
by not pulling providers in ModuleWithProviders up to the parent module.
PR Close#34914
The language service reports an error when a directive's template
context is missing a member that is being used in a template (e.g. if
`$implicit` is being used with a template context typed as `any`).
While this diagnostic message is valuable, typing template contexts
loosely as `any` or `object` is very widespread in community packages,
and often still compiles correctly, so reporting the diagnostic as an
error may be misleading to users.
This commit changes the diagnostic to be a warning, and adds additional
information about how the user can eliminate the warning entirely -- by
refining the template context type.
Closes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/572
PR Close#35036
Sometimes, a request for definitions will return multiple of the same
definition. This can happen in at least the cases of
- two-way bindings (one of the same definition for the property and
event binding)
- multiple template binding expressions in the same attribute
- something like "*ngFor="let i of items; trackBy: test" has two
template bindings, resulting in two template binding ASTs at the
same location (the attribute span). The language service then parses
both of these bindings individually, resulting in two independent
but identical definitions. For more context, see https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/34847#discussion_r371006680.
This commit prunes duplicate definitions by signing definitions with
their location, and checking if that location signature has been seen in
a previous definition returned to the client.
PR Close#34995
In #34974 the top level dependency on `@babel/core` was bumped to
7.8.3. This commit ensures that the package.json that gets included
in the `@angular/localize` distributable is at the same version.
PR Close#35008
There are different `DebugNode`/`DebugElement` implementations (and
associated helper functions) for ViewEngine and Ivy. Additionally, these
classes/functions, which are defined inside the `core` package, are
imported by the `platform-browser` package.
Previously, this code was not tree-shaken as expected in Ivy. #30130
partially addressed the issue, but only for the case where `core` and
`platform-browser` end up in the same closure after webpack's scope
hoisting. In cases where this is not the case, our webpack/terser based
tooling is not capable of tree-shaking it.
This commit fixes the problem, by ensuring that the code retained in Ivy
mode (due to the cross-package import) does not unnecessarily reference
`DebugNode`/`DebugElement`, allowing the code to be tree-shaken away.
This results in a 7.6KB reduction in the size of the main angular.io
bundle.
Jira issue: [FW-1802](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1802)
PR Close#35003
The message now gives concrete advice to developers who
experience the error due to running multiple simultaneous builds
via webpack.
Fixes#35000
PR Close#35001
This commit adds support for completions of properties on `$event`
variables in bound outputs.
This is the second major PR to support completions for `$event`
variables (https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/531).
The final completion support that must be provided is for `$event`
variables in bindings targeting DOM events, like `(click)`.
PR Close#34570
This commit makes `findOutputBinding` a utility function for the
language service, which will be used by the `expression_diagnostics`
module in #34570. Keeping the function in `locate_symbol` results in a
circular dependency between `expression_diagnostics` and
`locate_symbol`.
PR Close#34997
We had some logic for generating and passing in the `elIndex` parameter into the `hostBindings` function, but it wasn't actually being used for anything. The only place left that had a reference to it was the `StylingBuilder` and it only stored it without referencing it again.
PR Close#34969
Component's decorator handler exposes `preanalyze` method to preload async resources (templates, stylesheets). The logic in preanalysis phase may throw `FatalDiagnosticError` errors that contain useful information regarding the origin of the problem. However these errors from preanalysis phase were not intercepted in TraitCompiler, resulting in just error message text be displayed. This commit updates the logic to handle FatalDiagnosticError and transform it before throwing, so that the result diagnostic errors contain the necessary info.
PR Close#34801
For the structural directive, the 'path' will contain multiple `BoundDirectivePropertyAst` which depends on the number of directive property in the attribute value(e.g. '*ngFor="let item of []; trackBy: test;"', it has 2 `BoundDirectivePropertyAst`, 'ngForOf' and 'ngForTrackBy').
PR Close#34847
the test failures most likely result from the babel updates in the previous commit.
it does look like we lost the file path from the error message, which is something that we
should follow up no in a separate change.
PR Close#34974
Previously we relied on this package being hoisted and available, which is error prone and it would
be just a matter of time before the build would break due rehoisting of deps upon future npm package.json
changes.
PR Close#34974
It's not clear how this ever worked (npm hoisting is a suspect though), but this dep is required because
one of the tests imports @babel/generator in the ts sources.
The lack of this dep is breaking builds on the master branch.
More discussion about this issue on Slack: https://angular-team.slack.com/archives/C07DT5M6V/p1579934766007500
PR Close#34974
As part of the effort to tighten the API surface of
`TypeScriptServiceHost` in preparation for the migration to Ivy, I realized
some recently added APIs are not strictly needed.
They can be safely removed without sacrificing functionality.
This allows us to clean up the code, especially in the implementation of
QuickInfo, where the `TypeScriptServiceHost` is leaked outside of the
`LanguageService` class.
This refactoring also cleans up some duplicate code where the QuickInfo
object is generated. The logic is now consolidated into a simple
`createQuickInfo` method shared across two different implementations.
PR Close#34941
Previously we would write to class/style as strings `element.className` and `element.style.cssText`. Turns out that approach is good for initial render but not good for updates. Updates using this approach are problematic because we have to check to see if there was an out of bound write to style and than perform reconciliation. This also requires the browser to bring up CSS parser which is expensive.
Another problem with old approach is that we had to queue the DOM writes and flush them twice. Once on element advance instruction and once in `hostBindings`. The double flushing is expensive but it also means that a directive can observe that styles are not yet written (they are written after directive executes.)
The new approach uses `element.classList.add/remove` and `element.style.setProperty/removeProperty` API for updates only (it continues to use `element.className` and `element.style.cssText` for initial render as it is cheaper.) The other change is that the styling changes are applied immediately (no queueing). This means that it is the instruction which computes priority. In some circumstances it may result in intermediate writes which are than overwritten with new value. (This should be rare)
Overall this change deletes most of the previous code and replaces it with new simplified implement. The simplification results in code savings.
PR Close#34804
This change introduces several functions for manipulating items in an array in an efficient (binary search) way.
- `arraySplice` a faster version of `Array.splice()`.
- `arrayInsert` a faster version of `Array.splice(index, 0, value)`.
- `arrayInsert2` a faster version of `Array.splice(index, 0, value1, value2)`.
- `arrayInsertSorted` a way to insert a value into sorted list.
- `arrayRemoveSorted` a way to remove a value from a sorted list.
- `arrayIndexOfSorted` a way to find a value in a sorted list.
- `ArrayMap` Efficient implementation of `Map` as an `Array`.
- `arrayMapSet`, `arrayMapGet`, `arrayMapIndexOf`, and `arrayMapDelete` for manipulating `ArrayMap`s.
PR Close#34804
NOTE: This change must be reverted with previous deletes so that it code remains in build-able state.
This change deletes old styling code and replaces it with a simplified styling algorithm.
The mental model for the new algorithm is:
- Create a linked list of styling bindings in the order of priority. All styling bindings ere executed in compiled order and than a linked list of bindings is created in priority order.
- Flush the style bindings at the end of `advance()` instruction. This implies that there are two flush events. One at the end of template `advance` instruction in the template. Second one at the end of `hostBindings` `advance` instruction when processing host bindings (if any).
- Each binding instructions effectively updates the string to represent the string at that location. Because most of the bindings are additive, this is a cheap strategy in most cases. In rare cases the strategy requires removing tokens from the styling up to this point. (We expect that to be rare case)S Because, the bindings are presorted in the order of priority, it is safe to resume the processing of the concatenated string from the last change binding.
PR Close#34616
NOTE: This change deletes code and creates a BROKEN SHA. If reverting this SHA needs to be reverted with the next SHA to get back into a valid state.
PR Close#34616
This change reverts https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/28711
NOTE: This change deletes code and creates a BROKEN SHA. If reverting this SHA needs to be reverted with the next SHA to get back into a valid state.
The change removes the fact that `NgStyle`/`NgClass` is special and colaborates with the `[style]`/`[class]` to merge its styles. By reverting to old behavior we have better backwards compatiblity since it is no longer treated special and simply overwrites the styles (same as VE)
PR Close#34616
Compiler keeps track of number of slots (`vars`) which are needed for binding instructions. Normally each binding instructions allocates a single slot in the `LView` but styling instructions need to allocate two slots.
PR Close#34616
The `computeStaticStyling` will be used for computing static styling value during `firstCreatePass`.
The function takes into account static styling from the template as well as from the host bindings. The host bindings need to be merged in front of the template so that they have the correct priority.
PR Closes#34418
Parsing styling is now simplified to be used like so:
```
for (let i = parseStyle(text); i <= 0; i = parseStyleNext(text, i)) {
const key = getLastParsedKey();
const value = getLastParsedValue();
...
}
```
This change makes it easier to invoke the parser from other locations in the system without paying the cost of creating and iterating over `Map` of styles.
PR Closes#34418
This change moves information from instructions to declarative position:
- `ɵɵallocHostVars(vars)` => `DirectiveDef.hostVars`
- `ɵɵelementHostAttrs(attrs)` => `DirectiveDef.hostAttrs`
When merging directives it is necessary to know about `hostVars` and `hostAttrs`. Before this change the information was stored in the `hostBindings` function. This was problematic, because in order to get to the information the `hostBindings` would have to be executed. In order for `hostBindings` to be executed the directives would have to be instantiated. This means that the directive instantiation would happen before we had knowledge about the `hostAttrs` and as a result the directive could observe in the constructor that not all of the `hostAttrs` have been applied. This further complicates the runtime as we have to apply `hostAttrs` in parts over many invocations.
`ɵɵallocHostVars` was unnecessarily complicated because it would have to update the `LView` (and Blueprint) while existing directives are already executing. By moving it out of `hostBindings` function we can access it statically and we can create correct `LView` (and Blueprint) in a single pass.
This change only changes how the instructions are generated, but does not change the runtime much. (We cheat by emulating the old behavior by calling `ɵɵallocHostVars` and `ɵɵelementHostAttrs`) Subsequent change will refactor the runtime to take advantage of the static information.
PR Close#34683
This adds `insertTStyleValue` but does not hook it up to anything yet.
The purpose of this function is to create a linked-list of styling
related bindings. The bindings can be traversed during flush.
The linked list also keeps track of duplicates. This is important
for binding to know if it needs to check other styles for reconciliation.
PR Close#34004
This change introduces class/style reconciliation algorithm for DOM elements.
NOTE: The code is not yet hooked up, it will be used by future style algorithm.
Background:
Styling algorithm currently has [two paths](https://hackmd.io/@5zDGNGArSxiHhgvxRGrg-g/rycZk3N5S)
when computing how the style should be rendered.
1. A direct path which concatenates styling and uses `elemnent.className`/`element.style.cssText` and
2. A merge path which uses internal data structures and uses `element.classList.add/remove`/`element.style[property]`.
The situation is confusing and hard to follow/maintain. So a future PR will remove the merge-path and do everything with
direct-path. This however breaks when some other code adds class or style to the element without Angular's knowledge.
If this happens instead of switching from direct-path to merge-path algorithm, this change provides a different mental model
whereby we always do `direct-path` but the code which writes to the DOM detects the situation and reconciles the out of bound write.
The reconciliation process is as follows:
1. Detect that no one has modified `className`/`cssText` and if so just write directly (fast path).
2. If out of bounds write did occur, switch from writing using `className`/`cssText` to `element.classList.add/remove`/`element.style[property]`.
This does require that the write function computes the difference between the previous Angular expected state and current Angular state.
(This requires a parser. The advantage of having a parser is that we can support `style="width: {{exp}}px" kind of bindings.`)
Compute the diff and apply it in non destructive way using `element.classList.add/remove`/`element.style[property]`
Properties of approach:
- If no out of bounds style modification:
- Very fast code path: Just concatenate string in right order and write them to DOM.
- Class list order is preserved
- If out of bounds style modification detected:
- Penalty for parsing
- Switch to non destructive modification: `element.classList.add/remove`/`element.style[property]`
- Switch to alphabetical way of setting classes.
PR Close#34004
Fixes Ivy detecting changes inside child embedded views, even though they're detached.
Note that there's on subtlety here: I made the changes inside `refreshDynamicEmbeddedViews` rather than `refreshView`, because we support detecting changes on a detached view (evidenced by a couple of unit tests), but only if it's triggered directly from the view's `ChangeDetectorRef`, however we shouldn't be detecting changes in the detached child view when something happens in the parent.
Fixes#34816.
PR Close#34846
Previously, NgtscProgram lived in the main @angular/compiler-cli package
alongside the legacy View Engine compiler. As a result, the main package
depended on all of the ngtsc internal packages, and a significant portion of
ngtsc logic lived in NgtscProgram.
This commit refactors NgtscProgram and moves the main logic of compilation
into a new 'core' package. The new package defines a new API which enables
implementers of TypeScript compilers (compilers built using the TS API) to
support Angular transpilation as well. It involves a new NgCompiler type
which takes a ts.Program and performs Angular analysis and transformations,
as well as an NgCompilerHost which wraps an input ts.CompilerHost and adds
any extra Angular files.
Together, these two classes are used to implement a new NgtscProgram which
adapts the legacy api.Program interface used by the View Engine compiler
onto operations on the new types. The new NgtscProgram implementation is
significantly smaller and easier to reason about.
The new NgCompilerHost replaces the previous GeneratedShimsHostWrapper which
lived in the 'shims' package.
A new 'resource' package is added to support the HostResourceLoader which
previously lived in the outer compiler package.
As a result of the refactoring, the dependencies of the outer
@angular/compiler-cli package on ngtsc internal packages are significantly
trimmed.
This refactoring was driven by the desire to build a plugin interface to the
compiler so that tsc_wrapped (another consumer of the TS compiler APIs) can
perform Angular transpilation on user request.
PR Close#34887
Right now, if an Angular diagnostic is generated for a TypeScript node,
the span points to the decorator Identifier, i.e. the Identifier node
like `@NgModule`, `@Component`, etc.
This is weird. It should point to the class name instead.
Note, we do not have a more fine-grained breakdown of the span when
diagnostics are emitted, this work remains to be done.
PR Close#34932
In #34288, ngtsc was refactored to separate the result of the analysis
and resolve phase for more granular incremental rebuilds. In this model,
any errors in one phase transition the trait into an error state, which
prevents it from being ran through subsequent phases. The ngcc compiler
on the other hand did not adopt this strict error model, which would
cause incomplete metadata—due to errors in earlier phases—to be offered
for compilation that could result in a hard crash.
This commit updates ngcc to take advantage of ngtsc's `TraitCompiler`,
that internally manages all Ivy classes that are part of the
compilation. This effectively replaces ngcc's own `AnalyzedFile` and
`AnalyzedClass` types, together with all of the logic to drive the
`DecoratorHandler`s. All of this is now handled in the `TraitCompiler`,
benefiting from its explicit state transitions of `Trait`s so that the
ngcc crash is a thing of the past.
Fixes#34500
Resolves FW-1788
PR Close#34889
This syntax is invalid in these source files and does result in
compilation errors as the constructor parameters could not be resolved.
This hasn't been an issue until now as those errors were ignored in the
tests, but future work to introduce the Trait system of ngtsc into
ngcc will cause these errors to prevent compilation, resulting in broken
tests.
PR Close#34889
Previously, while trying to build an `NgccReflectionHost`'s
`privateDtsDeclarationMap`, `computePrivateDtsDeclarationMap()` would
try to collect exported declarations from all source files of the
program (i.e. without checking whether they were within the target
package, as happens for declarations in `.d.ts` files).
Most of the time, that would not be a problem, because external packages
would be represented as `.d.ts` files in the program. But when an
external package had no typings, the JS files would be used instead. As
a result, the `ReflectionHost` would try to (unnecessarilly) parse the
file in order to extract exported declarations, which in turn would be
harmless in most cases.
There are certain cases, though, where the `ReflectionHost` would throw
an error, because it cannot parse the external package's JS file. This
could happen, for example, in `UmdReflectionHost`, which expects the
file to contain exactly one statement. See #34544 for more details on a
real-world failure.
This commit fixes the issue by ensuring that
`computePrivateDtsDeclarationMap()` will only collect exported
declarations from files within the target package.
Jira issue: [FW-1794](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1794)
Fixes#34544
PR Close#34811
The value changes emitted additionally when enable disable were called
documented the above behaviour in AbstractControl class documentaion
Fixes#34407
PR Close#34497
This commit fixes a bug in the incremental rebuild engine of ngtsc, where if
a component was removed from its NgModule, it would not be properly
re-emitted.
The bug stemmed from the fact that whether to emit a file was a decision
based purely on the updated dependency graph, which captures the dependency
structure of the rebuild program. This graph has no edge from the component
to its former module (as it was removed, of course), so the compiler
erroneously decides not to emit the component.
The bug here is that the compiler does know, from the previous dependency
graph, that the component file has logically changed, since its previous
dependency (the module file) has changed. This information was not carried
forward into the set of files which need to be emitted, because it was
assumed that the updated dependency graph was a more accurate source of that
information.
With this commit, the set of files which need emit is pre-populated with the
set of logically changed files, to cover edge cases like this.
Fixes#34813
PR Close#34912
It was previously defined in core without being exposed publicly, whereas `getLocaleCurrencyName` and `getLocaleCurrencySymbol` were defined in common, and publicly exposed.
This commit now privately exposes `ɵgetLocaleCurrencyCode` from core, and reexports it publicly from common.
PR Close#34810
This commit elaborates diagnostics produced for invalid template
contexts by including the name of the embedded template type using the
template context, and in the common case that the implicity property is
being referenced (e.g. in a `for .. of ..` expression), suggesting to
refine the type of the context. This suggestion is provided because
users will sometimes use a base class as the type of the context in the
embedded view, and a more specific context later on (e.g. in an
`ngOnChanges` method).
Closes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/251
PR Close#34751
Previously, the template type-checker would always construct a generic
template context type with correct bounds, even when strictTemplates was
disabled. This meant that type-checking of expressions involving that type
was stricter than View Engine.
This commit introduces a 'strictContextGenerics' flag which behaves
similarly to other 'strictTemplates' flags, and switches the inference of
generic type parameters on the component context based on the value of this
flag.
PR Close#34649
FileToModuleHost aliasing supports compilation within environments that have
two properties:
1. A `FileToModuleHost` exists which defines canonical module names for any
given TS file.
2. Dependency restrictions exist which prevent the import of arbitrary files
even if such files are within the .d.ts transitive closure of a
compilation ("strictdeps").
In such an environment, generated imports can only go through import paths
which are already present in the user program. The aliasing system supports
the generation and consumption of such imports at runtime.
`FileToModuleHost` aliasing does not emit re-exports in .d.ts files. This
means that it's safe to rely on alias re-exports in generated .js code (they
are guaranteed to exist at runtime) but not in template type-checking code
(since TS will not be able to follow such imports). Therefore, non-aliased
imports should be used in template type-checking code.
This commit adds a `NoAliasing` flag to `ImportFlags` and sets it when
generating imports in template type-checking code. The testing environment
is also patched to support resolution of FileToModuleHost canonical paths
within the template type-checking program, enabling testing of this change.
PR Close#34649
Previously, `ReferenceEmitter.emit()` took an `ImportMode` enum value, where
one value of the enum allowed forcing new imports to be generated when
emitting a reference to some value or type.
This commit refactors `ImportMode` to be an `ImportFlags` value instead.
Using a bit field of flags will allow future customization of reference
emitting.
PR Close#34649
Previously, when generating template type-checking code, casts to 'any' were
produced as `expr as any`, regardless of the expression. However, for
certain expression types, this led to precedence issues with the cast. For
example, `a !== b` is a `ts.BinaryExpression`, and wrapping it directly in
the cast yields `a !== b as any`, which is semantically equivalent to
`a !== (b as any)`. This is obviously not what is intended.
Instead, this commit adds a list of expression types for which a "bare"
wrapping is permitted. For other expressions, parentheses are added to
ensure correct precedence: `(a !== b) as any`
PR Close#34649
Currently, the template type-checker gives an error if there are multiple
bindings to the same input. This commit aligns the behavior of the template
type-checker with the View Engine runtime: only the first binding to a field
has any effect. The rest are ignored.
PR Close#34649
It's possible to declare multiple inputs for a directive/component which all
map to the same property name. This is usually done in error, as only one of
any bindings to the property will "win".
In the template type-checker, an error was previously being raised as a
result of this ambiguity. Specifically, a type constructor was produced
which required a binding for each field, but only one of the fields had
a value via the binding. TypeScript would (rightfully) error on missing
values for the remaining fields. This ultimately was happening when the
code which generated the default values for "unset" inputs belonging to
directives or pipes used the final mapping from properties to fields as
a source for field names.
Instead, this commit uses the original list of fields to generate unset
input values, which correctly provides values for fields which shared a
property name but didn't receive the final binding.
PR Close#34649
Consider a library that uses a shared constant for host bindings. e.g.
```ts
export const BASE_BINDINGS= {
'[class.mat-themed]': '_isThemed',
}
----
@Directive({
host: {...BASE_BINDINGS, '(click)': '...'}
})
export class Dir1 {}
@Directive({
host: {...BASE_BINDINGS, '(click)': '...'}
})
export class Dir2 {}
```
Previously when these components were shipped as part of the
library to NPM, consumers were able to consume `Dir1` and `Dir2`.
No errors showed up.
Now with Ivy, when ngcc tries to process the library, an error
will be thrown. The error is stating that the host bindings should
be an object (which they obviously are). This happens because
TypeScript transforms the object spread to individual
`Object.assign` calls (for compatibility).
The partial evaluator used by the `@Directive` annotation handler
is unable to process this expression because there is no
integrated support for `Object.assign`. In View Engine, this was
not a problem because the `metadata.json` files from the library
were used to compute the host bindings.
Fixes#34659
PR Close#34661
Ngcc adds properties to the `package.json` files of the entry-points it
processes to mark them as processed for a format and point to the
created Ivy entry-points (in case of `--create-ivy-entry-points`). When
running ngcc in parallel mode (which is the default for the standalone
ngcc command), multiple formats can be processed simultaneously for the
same entry-point and the order of completion is not deterministic.
Previously, ngcc would append new properties at the end of the target
object in `package.json` as soon as the format processing was completed.
As a result, the order of properties in the resulting `package.json`
(when processing multiple formats for an entry-point in parallel) was
not deterministic. For tools that use file hashes for caching purposes
(such as Bazel), this lead to a high probability of cache misses.
This commit fixes the problem by ensuring that the position of
properties added to `package.json` files is deterministic and
independent of the order in which each format is processed.
Jira issue: [FW-1801](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1801)
Fixes#34635
PR Close#34870
This commit adds a regression test to check that the language service
recognizes inputs and outputs declared in a directive decorator.
See #34874.
PR Close#34875
In Angular, symbol can have multiple definitions (e.g. a two-way
binding). This commit adds support for for multiple definitions for a
queried location in a template.
PR Close#34782
by DebugElement.triggerEventHandler. ZoneJS tracks the eventListeners on
a node but we need to be able to differentiate between those added by
Angular and those that were added outside the Angular context. This fix
aligns with the behavior that was present in View Engine (not calling
those listeners). If we decide later that we want to call those
listeners, we still need a way to differentiate between those that
we have wrapped in dom_renderer and those that were not (because they
were added outside the Angular context).
PR Close#34514
The Angular CLI will continue to call ngcc on all possible packages, even if they
have already been processed by ngcc in a postinstall script.
In a parallel build environment, this was causing ngcc to complain that it was
being run in more than one process at the same time.
This commit moves the check for whether the targeted package has been
processed outside the locked code section, since there is no issue with
multiple ngcc processes from doing this check.
PR Close#34722
Previously, it was possible for multiple instance of ngcc to be running
at the same time, but this is not supported and can cause confusing and
flakey errors at build time.
Now, only one instance of ngcc can run at a time. If a second instance
tries to execute it fails with an appropriate error message.
See https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/32431#issuecomment-571825781
PR Close#34722
This commit adds an `exclusive` parameter to the
`FileSystem.writeFile()` method. When this parameter is
true, the method will fail with an `EEXIST` error if the
file already exists on disk.
PR Close#34722
Fixes Ivy throwing an error when trying to access the `DebugNode.classes` of an SVG element. The problem is that the `className` of an SVG element is an `SVGAnimatedString`, rather than a plain string.
Fixes#34868.
PR Close#34872
This commit makes the Angular Language Service interface a strict subset
of TypeScript's Language Service by renaming all methods to be
consistent with TypeScript's.
The custom Angular `LanguageService` interface was needed before the
inception of TypeScript tsserver plugin, but is now obsolete since
Angular LS is a proper tsserver plugin.
This allows us to easily adapt to upstream TS changes in the future, and
also allows us to reuse all data types defined in TypeScript.
PR Close#34888
This patch removes the need for the styleSanitizer() instruction in
favor of passing the sanitizer into directly into the styleProp
instruction.
This patch also increases the binding index size for all style/class bindings in preparation for #34418
PR Close#34480
Pipes in host binding expressions are not supported in View Engine and Ivy, but in some more complex cases (like `(value | pipe) === true`) compiler was not reporting errors. This commit extends Ivy logic to detect pipes in host binding expressions and throw in cases bindings are present. View Engine behavior remains the same.
PR Close#34655
In #28162 we introduced an extra `removeNode` call for host elements which can cause the parent element to be removed before all child animations have finished. The issue is only in Ivy, because that the only place where we pass in the `isHostElement` flag. These changes fix the issue by not re-triggering the removal logic if the element has in-progress animations.
Fixes#33597.
PR Close#34702
Before ivy it was possible to configure a mutable service value
in an application initializer (by providing an `APP_INITIALIZER`)
that could be read in the provider of `LOCALE_ID`. This is a common
scenario if you wanted to load the locale id asynchronously from
an HTTP request for instance.
When using the ivy, the runtime needs to be told what the current
locale is, which is done by calling the `setLocaleId()` function with
the value injected by the `LOCALE_ID` token. Previously this was
being done before the application initializers were run, which meant
that the `LOCALE_ID` provider was being executed before the
app initializers had a chance to get a new value for it.
Now this initalization of the locale for the ivy runtime is done after the
application initializers have been run.
Closes#34701
PR Close#34830
Since I was learning the codebase and had a hard time understanding what was going on I've done a
bunch of changes in one commit that under normal circumstances should have been split into several
commits. Because this code is likely going to be overwritten with Misko's changes I'm not going to
spend the time with trying to split this up.
Overall I've done the following:
- I processed review feedback from #34307
- I did a bunch of renaming to make the code easier to understand
- I refactored some internal functions that were either inefficient or hard to read
- I also updated lots of type signatures to correct them and to remove many casts in the code
PR Close#34307
Prior to this change, in Ivy mode ngStyle/ngClass would accidentally emit value changes for static
(string-based) values even if the value itself had not changed. This patch ensures that
the style/class diffing code is more strict and when it signals ngClass/ngStyle that there has been
a value change.
Fixes#34336, #34444
PR Close#34307
remove unnecessary underscore suffix and the corresponding TODO comments,
because the rollup bug was fixed: github.com/rollup/rollup/issues/2047
PR Close#34757
Typescript 3.7 now emits d.ts files for getters differently than prior versions,
and there seems to be a bug in how it strips private types without replacing them
with explicit 'any' type. This then leads to compilation failures in projects compiled
against our packages that don't have skipLibCheck turned on but do have strict or
noImplicitAny check on.
I'm working around this by marking the affected getters as @internal and
adding a test to prevent future regressions.
I believe this is a TypeScript bug, and I filed a bug report:
https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/36216
PR Close#34798
This release resolves the bootstrap require patching issue with jasmine_node_test. Require patches are now included before any bootstrap scripts.
PR Close#34736
This is recommended in the Bazel docs as $(location) is ambiguous and can mean either $(execpath) or $(rootpath) depending on the context.
PR Close#34736
This brings in a few minor fixes including a better way to patch require for bootstrap scripts
Also remove install_source_map_support attribute from nodejs_binary targets This attribute will be removed from nodejs_binary in the future
PR Close#34736
For the purposes of the integration test the zone.js script & bundle script tags can just go into the source index.html itself. The purpose of the integration test is is to test @angular/bazel & ng_module & ng_package so there is no need to exercise html_insert_assets in integration/bazel.
PR Close#34736
The major one that affects the angular repo is the removal of the bootstrap attribute in nodejs_binary, nodejs_test and jasmine_node_test in favor of using templated_args --node_options=--require=/path/to/script. The side-effect of this is that the bootstrap script does not get the require.resolve patches with explicitly loading the targets _loader.js file.
PR Close#34736