Commit Graph

1625 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
JiaLiPassion ef4736d052 build: update jasmine to 3.5 (#34625)
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
2020-04-08 12:10:34 -07:00
JoostK 64022f51d4 fix(compiler): resolve enum values in binary operations (#36461)
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
2020-04-07 15:21:51 -07:00
JoostK f9f6e2e1b3 style(compiler): reformat partial evaluator source tree (#36461)
PR Close #36461
2020-04-07 15:21:51 -07:00
George Kalpakas aecf9de738 fix(ngcc): correctly identify relative Windows-style import paths (#36372)
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
2020-04-07 15:21:27 -07:00
George Kalpakas 5fa7b8ba56 fix(ngcc): detect non-emitted, non-imported TypeScript helpers (#36418)
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
2020-04-07 10:19:22 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin ee70a18a75 fix(ngcc): don't crash on cyclic source-map references (#36452)
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 #35727
Fixes #35757
Fixes https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/17106
Fixes https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/17115

PR Close #36452
2020-04-06 13:19:53 -07:00
Alan Agius 76a8cd57ae fix(ngcc): add process title (#36448)
Add process.title, so it's clearly in the task manager when ngcc is running

See: https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/36414#issuecomment-609644282

PR Close #36448
2020-04-06 13:19:17 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin f9fb8338f5 fix(ngcc): support ignoring deep-imports via package config (#36423)
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
2020-04-06 11:32:09 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 6b3aa60446 fix(ngcc): support simple `browser` property in entry-points (#36396)
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
2020-04-06 11:31:10 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 2463548fa7 fix(ngcc): sniff `main` property for ESM5 format (#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
2020-04-06 11:31:10 -07:00
Ayaz Hafiz e893c5a330 fix(compiler-cli): pass real source spans where they are empty (#31805)
Some consumers of functions that take `ParseSourceSpan`s currently pass
empty and incorrect source spans. This fixes those cases.

PR Close #31805
2020-04-06 09:28:27 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 8be8466a00 style(ngcc): reformat of ngcc after clang update (#36447)
PR Close #36447
2020-04-06 09:26:57 -07:00
George Kalpakas ca25c957bf fix(ngcc): correctly detect imported TypeScript helpers (#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.

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
2020-04-03 11:08:46 -07:00
George Kalpakas 93f07aee6c test(ngcc): use `DelegatingReflectionHost` for testing `NgccReflectionHost`s (#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
2020-04-03 11:08:46 -07:00
George Kalpakas 0af6e9fcbb refactor(ngcc): move logic for identifying known declarations to method (#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
2020-04-03 11:08:46 -07:00
JoostK 75afd80ae8 refactor(compiler): add `@nocollapse` annotation using a synthetic comment (#35932)
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
2020-04-01 15:37:06 -07:00
George Kalpakas 326240eb91 fix(ngcc): allow ngcc configuration to match pre-release versions of packages (#36370)
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
2020-04-01 13:32:32 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin cc4b813e75 fix(ngcc): handle bad path mappings when finding entry-points (#36331)
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 #36313
Resolves #36283

PR Close #36331
2020-04-01 13:30:46 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 38ad1d97ab fix(ngcc): handle entry-points within container folders (#36305)
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
2020-04-01 13:20:52 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 372b9101e2 refactor(ngcc): simplify `DirectoryWalkerEntryPointFinder` (#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
2020-04-01 13:20:52 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 7e62aa0c6e refactor(ngcc): rename INVALID_ENTRY_POINT to INCOMPATIBLE_ENTRY_POINT (#36305)
This name better reflects its meaning.

PR Close #36305
2020-04-01 13:20:52 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin c6dd900f60 fix(ngcc): do not write entry-point manifest outside node_modules (#36299)
Fixes #36296

PR Close #36299
2020-03-30 11:03:26 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 5ac308060d refactor(ngcc): rename `workerCount` to `maxWorkerCount` (#36298)
Now that we spawn workers lazily as needed, this private property is
really the upper limit on how many workers we might spawn.

PR Close #36298
2020-03-30 11:02:52 -07:00
George Kalpakas 5cee709266 fix(ngcc): do not spawn more processes than intended in parallel mode (#36280)
When running in parallel mode, ngcc spawns multiple worker processed to
process the various entry-points. The number of max allowed processes is
determined by the number of CPU cores available to the OS. There is also
currently an [upper limit of 8][1]. The number of active workers is in
turn inferred by the number of [task assignments][2].

In the past, counting the entries of `ClusterMaster#taskAssignments` was
enough, because worker processes were spawned eagerly at the beginning
and corresponding entries were created in `taskAssignments`.
Since #35719 however, worker processes are spawned lazily on an as
needed basis. Because there is some delay between
[spawning a process][3] and [inserting it][4] into `taskAssignments`,
there is a short period of time when `taskAssignment.size` does not
actually represent the number of spawned processes. This can result in
spawning more than `ClusterMaster#workerCount` processes.

An example of this can be seen in #36278, where the debug logs indicate
9 worker processes had been spawned (`All 9 workers are currently busy`)
despite the hard limit of 8.

This commit fixes this by using `cluster.workers` to compute the number
of spawned worker processes. `cluster.workers` is updated synchronously
with `cluster.fork()` and thus reflects the number of spawned workers
accurately at all times.

[1]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/b8e9a30d3b6/packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/src/main.ts#L429
[2]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/b8e9a30d3b6/packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/src/execution/cluster/master.ts#L108
[3]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/b8e9a30d3b6/packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/src/execution/cluster/master.ts#L110
[4]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/b8e9a30d3b6/packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/src/execution/cluster/master.ts#L199

PR Close #36280
2020-03-27 14:12:28 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 995cd15a69 fix(ngcc): correctly identify the package path of secondary entry-points (#36249)
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
2020-03-27 11:17:45 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin b8e9a30d3b fix(ngcc): use preserve whitespaces from tsconfig if provided (#36189)
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
2020-03-24 14:25:06 -07:00
JoostK 32ce8b1326 feat(compiler): add dependency info and ng-content selectors to metadata (#35695)
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
2020-03-24 14:21:42 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 380de1e7b4 fix(ngcc): use path-mappings from tsconfig in dependency resolution (#36180)
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
2020-03-24 10:16:12 -07:00
ayazhafiz df890d7629 fix(compiler): record correct end of expression (#34690)
This commit fixes a bug with the expression parser wherein the end index
of an expression node was recorded as the start index of the next token,
not the end index of the current token.

Closes #33477
Closes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/433

PR Close #34690
2020-03-20 10:19:02 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin c9f554cda7 fix(ngcc): do not crash on overlapping entry-points (#36083)
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
2020-03-18 15:56:21 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin ff665b9e6a fix(ngcc): do not crash on entry-point that fails to compile (#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
2020-03-18 15:56:21 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 1790b63a5d refactor(ngcc): expose the TaskDependencies mapping on BaseTaskQueue (#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
2020-03-18 15:56:21 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 39d4016fe9 refactor(ngcc): abstract `onTaskCompleted` out of executors (#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
2020-03-18 15:56:21 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 712f2642d5 refactor(ngcc): add message text to task outcomes (#36083)
This sets up the task execution to be able to report failed compiles

PR Close #36083
2020-03-18 15:56:21 -07:00
JoostK 9e70bcb34f fix(ngcc): consistently delegate to TypeScript host for typing files (#36089)
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
2020-03-17 13:34:04 -07:00
JoostK 1bc3893c65 test(ngcc): use "module" format property for ES5 bundles (#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
2020-03-17 13:34:04 -07:00
Alex Rickabaugh e3ecdc6a63 feat(bazel): transform generated shims (in Ivy) with tsickle (#35975)
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
2020-03-17 10:17:28 -07:00
Keen Yee Liau 31bec8ce61 feat(compiler): Propagate source span and value span to Variable AST (#36047)
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
2020-03-16 10:52:57 -07:00
Andrew Kushnir 79659ee5aa fix(compiler): support directive inputs with interpolations on `<ng-template>`s (#35984)
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
2020-03-16 10:51:18 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 772bb5e742 perf(ngcc): store the position of SegmentMarkers to avoid unnecessary computation (#36027)
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
2020-03-13 08:00:29 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 47025e07ce perf(ngcc): link segment markers for faster traversal (#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
2020-03-13 08:00:28 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin e8900824dd perf(ngcc): use line start positions for computing offsets in source-map flattening (#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
2020-03-13 08:00:28 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin a40be00e17 fix(ngcc): handle multiple original sources when flattening source-maps (#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
2020-03-13 08:00:28 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 348ff0c8ea perf(ngcc): use binary search when flattening mappings (#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
2020-03-13 08:00:28 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin c852ec9283 test(ngcc): remove unused `FileSystem` variable (#36027)
PR Close #36027
2020-03-13 08:00:28 -07:00
Alan Agius 2e493edf80 build: provide full paths to `ts_api_guardian_test_npm_package` and `ts_api_guardian_test` (#36034)
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
2020-03-12 09:49:00 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 37a48391f2 refactor(ngcc): remove unused `LockFileWithSignalHandlers` (#35938)
PR Close #35938
2020-03-12 09:46:18 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 8ea61a19cd feat(ngcc): support invalidating the entry-point manifest (#35931)
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
2020-03-11 15:01:59 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin ec9f4d5bc6 perf(ngcc): use the `EntryPointManifest` in `DirectoryWalkerEntryPointFinder` (#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
2020-03-11 15:01:59 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 560542c2a8 refactor(ngcc): add entry-point manifest functionality (#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
2020-03-11 15:01:59 -07:00