We are close enough to blacklist a few test targets, rather than whitelist targets to run...
Because bazel rules can be composed of other rules that don't inherit tags automatically,
I had to explicitly mark all of our ts_library and ng_module targes with "ivy-local" and
"ivy-jit" tags so that we can create a query that excludes all fixme- tagged targets even
if those targets are composed of other targets that don't inherit this tag.
This is the updated overview of ivy related bazel tags:
- ivy-only: target that builds or runs only under ivy
- fixme-ivy-jit: target that doesn't yet build or run under ivy with --compile=jit
- fixme-ivy-local: target that doesn't yet build or run under ivy with --compile=local
- no-ivy-jit: target that is not intended to build or run under ivy with --compile=jit
- no-ivy-local: target that is not intended to build or run under ivy with --compile=local
PR Close#26471
* If all guards return `true`, operator returns `true`
* `false` and `UrlTree` are now both valid returns from a guard
* Both these values wait for higher priority guards to resolve
* Highest priority `false` or `UrlTree` value will be returned
PR Close#26478
This is a major refactor of how the router previously worked. There are a couple major advantages of this refactor, and future work will be built on top of it.
First, we will no longer have multiple navigations running at the same time. Previously, a new navigation wouldn't cause the old navigation to be cancelled and cleaned up. Instead, multiple navigations could be going at once, and we imperatively checked that we were operating on the most current `router.navigationId` as we progressed through the Observable streams. This had some major faults, the biggest of which was async races where an ongoing async action could result in a redirect once the async action completed, but there was no way to guarantee there weren't also other redirects that would be queued up by other async actions. After this refactor, there's a single Observable stream that will get cleaned up each time a new navigation is requested.
Additionally, the individual pieces of routing have been pulled out into their own operators. While this was needed in order to create one continuous stream, it also will allow future improvements to the testing APIs as things such as Guards or Resolvers should now be able to be tested in much more isolation.
* Add the new `router.transitions` observable of the new `NavigationTransition` type to contain the transition information
* Update `router.navigations` to pipe off of `router.transitions`
* Re-write navigation Observable flow to a single configured stream
* Refactor `switchMap` instead of the previous `mergeMap` to ensure new navigations cause a cancellation and cleanup of already running navigations
* Wire in existing error and cancellation logic so cancellation matches previous behavior
PR Close#25740
This is a major refactor of how the router previously worked. There are a couple major advantages of this refactor, and future work will be built on top of it.
First, we will no longer have multiple navigations running at the same time. Previously, a new navigation wouldn't cause the old navigation to be cancelled and cleaned up. Instead, multiple navigations could be going at once, and we imperatively checked that we were operating on the most current `router.navigationId` as we progressed through the Observable streams. This had some major faults, the biggest of which was async races where an ongoing async action could result in a redirect once the async action completed, but there was no way to guarantee there weren't also other redirects that would be queued up by other async actions. After this refactor, there's a single Observable stream that will get cleaned up each time a new navigation is requested.
Additionally, the individual pieces of routing have been pulled out into their own operators. While this was needed in order to create one continuous stream, it also will allow future improvements to the testing APIs as things such as Guards or Resolvers should now be able to be tested in much more isolation.
* Add the new `router.transitions` observable of the new `NavigationTransition` type to contain the transition information
* Update `router.navigations` to pipe off of `router.transitions`
* Re-write navigation Observable flow to a single configured stream
* Refactor `switchMap` instead of the previous `mergeMap` to ensure new navigations cause a cancellation and cleanup of already running navigations
* Wire in existing error and cancellation logic so cancellation matches previous behavior
PR Close#25740
Previously, when you attempted to bootstrap a component that had a
router-outlet using ngsummaries, it would complain that the component
was not provided by any module even if it was. This commit fixes a
mistake (AFAICT) which caused the lookup of the component in the AOT
summaries to fail.
I believe this change is safe. I've run the affected tests within Google
and there were no breakages caused by this change.
PR Close#24892
CanLoad now defines UrlSegment[] as a second parameter of the function.
Users can store the initial url segments and refer to them later, e.g. to go
back to the original url after authentication via router.navigate(urlSegments).
Existing code still works as before because the second function parameter
does not have to be defined.
Closes#12411
PR Close#13127
With these changes, the types are a little stricter now and also not
compatible with Protractor's jasmine-like syntax. So, we have to also
use `@types/jasminewd2` for e2e tests (but not for non-e2e tests).
I also had to "augment" `@types/jasminewd2`, because the latest
typings from [DefinitelyTyped][1] do not reflect the fact that the
`jasminewd2` version (v2.1.0) currently used by Protractor supports
passing a `done` callback to a spec.
[1]: 566e039485/types/jasminewd2/index.d.ts (L9-L15)Fixes#23952Closes#24733
PR Close#19904
All errors for existing fields have been detected and suppressed with a
`!` assertion.
Issue/24571 is tracking proper clean up of those instances.
One-line change required in ivy/compilation.ts, because it appears that
the new syntax causes tsickle emitted node to no longer track their
original sourceFiles.
PR Close#24572
The recognizer code used to call Object.freeze() on queryParams before
using them to construct ActivatedRoutes, with the intent being to help
avoid common invalid usage. Unfortunately, Object.freeze() works
in-place, so this was also freezing the queryParams on the actual
UrlTree object, making it more difficult to manipulate UrlTrees in
things like UrlHandlingStrategy.
This change simply shallow-copies the queryParams before freezing them.
Fixes#22617
PR Close#22663
When asking the route reuse strategy to retrieve a detached route handle, store the
return value in a local variable for further processing instead of asking again later.
resolves#22474
PR Close#22475
This change brings Angular largely in line with how AngularJS previously serialized URLs. This is based on RFC 3986 and resolves issues such as the above #10280 where URLs could be parsed, re-serialized, then parsed again producing a different result on the second parsing.
Adjustments to be aware of in this commit:
* URI fragments will now serialize the same as query strings
* In the URI path or segments (portion prior to query string and/or fragment), the plus sign (`+`) and ampersand (`&`) will appear decoded
* In the URL path or segments, parentheses values (`(` and `)`) will now appear percent encoded as `%28` and `%29` respectively
* In the URL path or segments, semicolons will be encoded in their percent encoding `%3B`
NOTE: Parentheses and semicolons denoting auxillary routes or matrix params will still appear in their decoded form -- only parentheses and semicolons used as values in a segment or key/value pair for matrix params will be encoded.
While these changes are not considered breaking because applications should be decoding URLs and key/value pairs, it is possible that some unit tests will break if comparing hard-coded URLs in tests since that hard coded string will represent the old encoding. Therefore we are releasing this fix in the upcoming Angular v6 rather than adding it to a patch for v5.
Fixes: #10280
PR Close#22337
Fixes: #10280
This change brings Angular largely in line with how AngularJS previously serialized URLs. This is based on [RFC 3986](http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3986) and resolves issues such as the above #10280 where URLs could be parsed, re-serialized, then parsed again producing a different result on the second parsing.
Adjustments to be aware of in this commit:
* Query strings will now serialize with decoded slash (`/`) and question mark (`?`)
* URI fragments will now serialize the same as query strings, but hash sign (`#`) will also appear decoded
* In the URI path or segments (portion prior to query string and/or fragment), the plus sign (`+`) and ampersand (`&`) will appear decoded
* In the URL path or segments, parentheses values (`(` and `)`) will now appear percent encoded as `%28` and `%29` respectively
* In the URL path or segments, semicolons will be encoded in their percent encoding `%3B`
NOTE: Parentheses and semicolons denoting auxillary routes or matrix params will still appear in their decoded form -- only parentheses and semicolons used as values in a segment or key/value pair for matrix params will be encoded.
While these changes are not considered breaking because applications should be decoding URLs and key/value pairs, it is possible that some unit tests will break if comparing hard-coded URLs in tests since that hard coded string will represent the old encoding. Therefore we are releasing this fix in the upcoming Angular v6 rather than adding it to a patch for v5.
PR Close#22337
Currently, NavigationStart there is no way to know if an navigation was triggered imperatively or via the location change. These two use cases should be handled differently for a variety of use cases (e.g., scroll position restoration). This PR adds a navigation source field and restored navigation id (passed to navigations triggered by a URL change).
PR Close#21728
Currently, NavigationStart there is no way to know if an navigation was triggered imperatively or via the location change. These two use cases should be handled differently for a variety of use cases (e.g., scroll position restoration). This PR adds a navigation source field and restored navigation id (passed to navigations triggered by a URL change).
PR Close#21728
This helps ensure we use the same tsconfig.json file for all compilations.
Next steps are to make it the same tsconfig.json file used by the editor
PR Close#20964
Bazel runs on newer version of RxJs than is installed in Yarn. The never version subclasses `EmptyError` in a different way which fails the `instanceof` check. This change makes the `instanceof` check more robust with respect to `EmptyError`.
PR Close#21053