In TS 3.9 the compiler will start to wrap ES2015 classes in an IIFE to help with
tree-shaking when the class has "associated" statements.
E.g.
```ts
let PlatformLocation = /** @class */ (() => {
...
class PlatformLocation {
}
...
return PlatformLocation;
})();
```
This commit updates `Esm2015ReflectionHost` to support this format.
PR Close#36884
This commit adds a new mock host for testing the ivy language service.
Unlike the existing mock_host which mocks the LanguageServiceHost, the
Ivy mock host mocks just the filesystem interface, aka ts.ServerHost.
This is because Ivy language service requires an actual Project to
perform operations like adding synthetic typecheck files to the project,
and by extension, to the ts.Program. These requirements make the existing
mock host unsuitable to be reused.
This new testing structure also improves test performance, because the
old mock host copies (it actually creates symlinks, but still that's
relatively expensive due to the sheer number of files involved) all
@angular/* packages along with the typescript package to a temporary
node_modules directory. This is done every time setup() is called.
Instead, this new mock host just loads them from a pre-determined path
in Bazel runfiles.
PR Close#36879
Previously the setup-rbe.sh script did not allow accounts that did
have domains of angular.io or google.com. Since we add emails from
other domains into everyone@angular.io, we are unable to be certain
in the script that the account is not actually a member of the
required group. This change adds the option to choose to continue
with an email account logged in which we cannot verify by domain.
PR Close#36846
Migrates away from inline searching for files and running buildifier
directly, instead using ng-dev for formatting. Additionally, provides
a deprecation message for any usages of the previous commands.
PR Close#36842
In an effort to centralize formatting and linting enforcement into one
location, buildifier is being added as a formatter for ng-dev's format
command. Allowing for format enforcement for all .bzl, .bazel, WORKSPACE
and BUILD files.
PR Close#36842
For testing on IE, shims must be served in es5. Because the shims
served in these tests come from node_modules and are not part of
the angular/angular source code, they must be transpiled to es5 if
they are published as es6. This macro allows for a uniform method
for running this transpilation during the build process.
PR Close#36802
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.
BREAKING CHANGE:
Warnings about unknown elements are now logged as errors. This won't break your app, but it may trip up tools that expect nothing to be logged via `console.error`.
Fixes#35699.
PR Close#36399
This change aligns behavior for resolvers which return EMPTY. Currently EMPTY resolvers have inconsistent behavior:
- One resolver that returns EMPTY => won't navigate and just ends on ResolveStart router event.
- Two resolvers where both return EMPTY => throws "Error: Uncaught (in promise): EmptyError: no elements in sequence"
- Two resolvers where one returns a value and the other one returns EMPTY => Navigates successfully.
With this change any EMPTY resolver will cancel navigation.
BREAKING CHANGE: Any resolver which return EMPTY will cancel navigation.
If you want to allow the navigation to continue, you will need to update the resolvers to emit
some value, (i.e. defaultIfEmpty(...), of(...), etc).
PR Close#24195
PR Close#24621
This commit makes the test project a filegroup so that it could be
shared with the Ivy tests.
Also removed `project/foo.ts` since it is no longer used.
PR Close#36865
This commit adds a new entry point for the Ivy version of language
service. The entry point is just a shell for now, implementation will be
added in subsequent PRs.
The Ivy version of language service could be loaded from the NPM package
via `require(@angular/language-service/bundles/ivy.umd.js)`
PR Close#36864
Create a common environment stamping script in the ng-dev tooling
as to be used in common release tasks. This is the first step in
consolidating pieces of the release scripting process into a single
location to develop a release tool.
PR Close#36844
Previously the `AsyncLocker` was configured to only wait
50x500ms before timing out. This is 25secs, which is often
less than a normal run of ngcc, so the chance of a timeout
flake was quite high.
The default is now 500x500ms, which is 250secs. If this is
too high for some projects then it can be changed via the
`ngcc.config.js` project file.
PR Close#36838
The commit adds support to the ngcc.config.js file for setting the
`retryAttempts` and `retryDelay` options for the `AsyncLocker`.
An integration test adds a new check for a timeout and actually uses the
ngcc.config.js to reduce the timeout time to prevent the test from taking
too long to complete.
PR Close#36838
Strictly this method only returns config for packages. So this commit
renames it to `getPackageConfig()`, which frees us up to add other
"getXxxxConfig()` methods later.
PR Close#36838
This test is basically duplicated (and slightly enhanced) in the
following test. So it is superfluous. (I suspect it was the result
of a broken rebase.)
PR Close#36838
When ngcc fails due to a timeout waiting for another process
to complete, it was not failing with a unique exit code, so that it
was not possible to know if the process can be restarted; compared to
ngcc failing for some more fatal reason.
Now if ngcc exits because of a timeout, the exit code will be 177.
PR Close#36838
When ngcc is having to pause and wait for another process
it provides a message to the user. This commit adds the extra
information about how to remove the lockfile if desired, since
this message is not shown if you Ctrl-C out of the process before
the timeout period ends.
PR Close#36838
Previously only one translation file per locale could be loaded.
Now the user can specify multiple files per locale, and the translations
from each of these files will be merged together by message id.
The merging is on a first-wins approach. So if to you have three files
to be merged:
```
['a.xlf', 'b.xmb', 'c.json']
```
Then any message from `a.xlf` will be used rather than a message from `b.xmb`
or `c.json` and so on. In practice this means that you should put the files
in order of most important first, with "fallback" translations later.
PR Close#36792
This commit introduces `Diagnostics.merge(other)` which will take the messages from
`other` and append them to the messages of `this`.
The translation loader is updated to use this new method.
PR Close#36792
Previously the `missingTranslation` option had to be checked before calling
`warn` or `error` on the `diagnostics` object.
Now this boilerplate is hidden inside the `Diagnostics.add()` method, which
will open it up to being used for other conditional diagnostics.
PR Close#36792
The Angular ServiceWorker always uses a copy of the request without
headers for caching assets (in order to avoid issues with opaque
responses). Therefore, it was previously not possible to retrieve
resources from the cache if the response contained [Vary](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Vary) headers.
In addition to that, `Vary` headers do not work in all browsers (or work
differently) and may not work as intended with ServiceWorker caches. See
[this article](https://www.smashingmagazine.com/2017/11/understanding-vary-header) and the linked resources for more info.
This commit avoids the aforementioned issues by making sure the Angular
ServiceWorker always sets the `ignoreVary` option passed to
[Cache#match()](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Cache/match) to `true`. This allows the ServiceWorker to correctly
retrieve cached responses with `Vary` headers, which was previously not
possible.
Fixes#36638
BREAKING CHANGE:
Previously, [Vary](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Vary)
headers would be taken into account when retrieving resources from the
cache, completely preventing the retrieval of cached assets (due to
ServiceWorker implementation details) and leading to unpredictable
behavior due to inconsistent/buggy implementations in different
browsers.
Now, `Vary` headers are ignored when retrieving resources from the
ServiceWorker caches, which can result in resources being retrieved even
when their headers are different. If your application needs to
differentiate its responses based on request headers, please make sure
the Angular ServiceWorker is [configured](https://angular.io/guide/service-worker-config)
to avoid caching the affected resources.
PR Close#34663
Previously it was not possible to provide `CacheQueryOptions` ([MDN](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Cache)) for querying the Cache.
This commit introduces a new parameter called `cacheQueryOptions` for `DataGroup` and `AssetGroup`.
Currently only `ignoreSearch` is supported as `ignoreVary` and `ignoreMethod` would require using
the complete Request object for matching which is not possible with the current implementation.
Closes#28443
PR Close#34663
`AsyncPipe` only uses `WrappedValue` when the latest value from the `Promise` or `Observable` is different from the previous one. This is already enough to trigger change detection so the `WrappedValue` is not necessary.
Fixes#29927
BREAKING CHANGE:
This change could result in ExpressionChangedAfterItHasBeenChecked errors that
were not detected before. The error could previously have gone undetected
because two WrappedValues are considered "equal" in all cases for the purposes
of the check, even if their respective unwrapped values are not.
Additionally, `[val]=(observable | async).someProperty` will no longer
trigger change detection if the value of `someProperty` is identical to
the value in the previous emit. If you need to force change detection,
either update the binding to use an object whose reference changes or
subscribe to the observable and call markForCheck as needed.
PR Close#36633
Only refresh transplanted views at the insertion location in Ivy.
Previously, Ivy would check transplanted views at both the insertion and
declaration points. This is achieved by adding a marker to the insertion
tree when we encounter a transplanted view that needs to be refreshed at
its declaration. We use this marker as an extra indication that we still
need to descend and refresh those transplanted views at their insertion
locations even if the insertion view and/or its parents are not dirty.
This change fixes several issues:
* Transplanted views refreshed twice if both insertion and declaration
are dirty. This could be an error if the insertion component changes
result in data not being available to the transplanted view because it
is slated to be removed.
* CheckAlways transplanted views not refreshed if shielded by
non-dirty OnPush (fixes#35400)
* Transplanted views still refreshed when insertion tree is detached
(fixes#21324)
PR Close#35968
Now that `ngcc/src/ngcc_options` imports `FileWriter` type, there is a
circular dependency detected by the `ts-circular-deps:check` lint check:
```
ngcc/src/ngcc_options.ts
→ ngcc/src/writing/file_writer.ts
→ ngcc/src/packages/entry_point_bundle.ts
→ ngcc/src/ngcc_options.ts
```
This commit moves the `PathMappings` type (and related helpers) to a
separate file to avoid the circular dependency.
NOTE:
The circular dependency was only with taking types into account. There
was no circular dependency for the actual (JS) code.
PR Close#36626
When running in parallel mode, worker processes forward errors thrown
during task processing to the master process, which in turn exits with
an error.
However, there are cases where the error is not directly related to
processing the entry-point. One such case is when there is not enough
memory (for example, due to all the other tasks being processed
simultaneously).
Previously, an `ENOMEM` error thrown on a worker process would propagate
to the master process, eventually causing ngcc to exit with an error.
Example failure: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/682198
This commit improves handling of these low-memory situations by
detecting `ENOMEM` errors and killing the worker process, thus allowing
the master process to decide how to handle that. The master process will
put the task back into the tasks queue and continue processing tasks
with the rest of the worker processes (and thus with lower memory
pressure).
PR Close#36626
Previously, when the last worker process crashed, the master process
would try to re-spawn it indefinitely. This could lead to an infinite
loop (if for some reason the worker process kept crashing).
This commit avoids this by limiting the number of re-spawn attempts to
3, after which ngcc will exit with an error.
PR Close#36626
Previously, when running in parallel mode and a worker process crashed
while processing a task, it was not possible for ngcc to continue
without risking ending up with a corrupted entry-point and therefore it
exited with an error. This, for example, could happen when a worker
process received a `SIGKILL` signal, which was frequently observed in CI
environments. This was probably the result of Docker killing processes
due to increased memory pressure.
One factor that amplifies the problem under Docker (which is often used
in CI) is that it is not possible to distinguish between the available
CPU cores on the host machine and the ones made available to Docker
containers, thus resulting in ngcc spawning too many worker processes.
This commit addresses these issues in the following ways:
1. We take advantage of the fact that files are written to disk only
after an entry-point has been fully analyzed/compiled. The master
process can now determine whether a worker process has not yet
started writing files to disk (even if it was in the middle of
processing a task) and just put the task back into the tasks queue if
the worker process crashes.
2. The master process keeps track of the transformed files that a worker
process will attempt to write to disk. If the worker process crashes
while writing files, the master process can revert any changes and
put the task back into the tasks queue (without risking corruption).
3. When a worker process crashes while processing a task (which can be a
result of increased memory pressure or too many worker processes),
the master process will not try to re-spawn it. This way the number
or worker processes is gradually adjusted to a level that can be
accomodated by the system's resources.
Examples of ngcc being able to recover after a worker process crashed:
- While idling: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/682197
- While compiling: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/682209
- While writing files: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/682267
Jira issue: [FW-2008](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-2008)
Fixes#36278
PR Close#36626
This commit adds a `revertFile()` method to `FileWriter`, which can
revert a transformed file (and its backup - if any) written by the
`FileWriter`.
In a subsequent commit, this will be used to allow ngcc to recover
when a worker process crashes in the middle of processing a task.
PR Close#36626
With this commit, the master process will keep track of the transformed
files that each worker process is intending to write to disk.
In a subsequent commit, this info will be used to allow ngcc to recover
when a worker process crashes in the middle of processing a task.
PR Close#36626
With this commit, worker processes will notify the master process about
the transformed files they are about to write to disk before starting
writing them.
In a subsequent commit, this will be used to allow ngcc to recover when
a worker process crashes in the middle of processing a task.
PR Close#36626
This commit enhances the `CompileFn`, which is used to process each
entry-point, to support running a passed-in callback (and wait for it to
complete) before proceeding with writing the transformed files to disk.
This functionality is currently not used. In a subsequent commit, it
will be used for passing info from worker processes to the master
process that will allow ngcc to recover when a worker process crashes in
the middle of processing a task.
PR Close#36626
Rename the `markTaskCompleted()` method to be consistent with the other
similar methods of `TaskQueue` (`markAsFailed()` and
`markAsUnprocessed()`).
PR Close#36626
This commit adds support for stopping processing an in-progress task
and moving it back to the list of pending tasks.
In a subsequent commit, this will be used to allow ngcc to recover when
a worker process crashes in the middle of processing a task.
PR Close#36626
Previously, ngcc would run in parallel mode (using the
`ClusterExecutor`) when there were at least 2 CPU cores (and all other
requirements where met). On systems with just 2 CPU cores, this meant
there would only be one worker process (since one CPU core is always
reserved for the master process). In these cases, the tasks would still
be processed serially (on the one worker process), but we would also pay
the overhead of communicating between the master and worker processes.
This commit fixes this by only running in parallel mode if there are
more than 2 CPU cores (i.e. at least 2 worker processes).
PR Close#36626
Previously, the "Compiling <entryPoint>" log message was printed before
starting to analyze and transform files, but after creating the
`EntryPointBundle` (which includes creating the TS program).
Since creating the `EntryPointBundle` involves some work, it is more
accurate to move the log message before creating the bundle.
PR Close#36626
Previously the exec command was used, however the exec command would
exit the original calling script regardless of the whether exit was
called. This caused the release script to always exit after the
pre-check phase.
PR Close#36862
If there's an error during the first creation pass of a `TView`, the data structure may be corrupted which will cause framework assertion failures downstream which can mask the user's error. These changes add a new flag to the `TView` that indicates whether the first creation pass was successful, and if it wasn't we try re-create the `TView`.
Fixes#31221.
PR Close#36381
An enum declaration in TypeScript code will be emitted into JavaScript
as a regular variable declaration, with the enum members being declared
inside an IIFE. For ngcc to support interpreting such variable
declarations as enum declarations with its members, ngcc needs to
recognize the enum declaration emit structure and extract all member
from the statements in the IIFE.
This commit extends the `ConcreteDeclaration` structure in the
`ReflectionHost` abstraction to be able to capture the enum members
on a variable declaration, as a substitute for the original
`ts.EnumDeclaration` as it existed in TypeScript code. The static
interpreter has been extended to handle the extracted enum members
as it would have done for `ts.EnumDeclaration`.
Fixes#35584
Resolves FW-2069
PR Close#36550
Enables some passing `platform-browser` tests on Saucelabs. The reason they were disabled was an error log which doesn't actually fail the test run and has been there for a long time.
PR Close#36797
The html parser already normalizes line endings (converting `\r\n` to `\n`)
for most text in templates but it was missing the expressions of ICU expansions.
In ViewEngine backticked literal strings, used to define inline templates,
were already normalized by the TypeScript parser.
In Ivy we are parsing the raw text of the source file directly so the line
endings need to be manually normalized.
This change ensures that inline templates have the line endings of ICU
expression normalized correctly, which matches the ViewEngine.
In ViewEngine external templates, defined in HTML files, the behavior was
different, since TypeScript was not normalizing the line endings.
Specifically, ICU expansion "expressions" are not being normalized.
This is a problem because it means that i18n message ids can be different on
different machines that are setup with different line ending handling,
or if the developer moves a template from inline to external or vice versa.
The goal is always to normalize line endings, whether inline or external.
But this would be a breaking change since it would change i18n message ids
that have been previously computed. Therefore this commit aligns the ivy
template parsing to have the same "buggy" behavior for external templates.
There is now a compiler option `i18nNormalizeLineEndingsInICUs`, which
if set to `true` will ensure the correct non-buggy behavior. For the time
being this option defaults to `false` to ensure backward compatibility while
allowing opt-in to the desired behavior. This option's default will be
flipped in a future breaking change release.
Further, when this option is set to `false`, any ICU expression tokens,
which have not been normalized, are added to the `ParseResult` from the
`HtmlParser.parse()` method. In the future, this collection of tokens could
be used to diagnose and encourage developers to migrate their i18n message
ids. See FW-2106.
Closes#36725
PR Close#36741
The `I18nComponent` was using `!` for some of its properties
because it had not initialized them. This is now resolved by explictly
marking them as optional.
PR Close#36741
Move the creation of the results objects into the wrapper functions.
This makes it easier to reason about what the parser and lexer classes
are responsible for - you create a new object for each tokenization or
parsing activity and they hold the state of the activity.
PR Close#36741
This property can actually be `null` when called from the language-service.
This change allows us to remove the use of `!` to subvert the type system.
PR Close#36741