Exported functions or static method that return a `ModuleWithProviders`
compatible structure need to provide information about the referenced
`NgModule` type in their return type.
This allows ngtsc to be able to understand the type of `NgModule` that is
being returned from calls to the function, without having to dig into the
internals of the compiled library.
There are two ways to provide this information:
* Add a type parameter to the `ModuleWithProviders` return type. E.g.
```
static forRoot(): ModuleWithProviders<SomeNgModule>;
```
* Convert the return type to a union that includes a literal type. E.g.
```
static forRoot(): (SomeOtherType)&{ngModule:SomeNgModule};
```
This commit updates the rendering of typings files to include this type
information on all matching functions/methods.
PR Close#27326
To support updating `ModuleWithProviders` calls,
we need to be able to map exported functions between
source and typings files, as well as classes.
PR Close#27326
Prior to this commit, we had two different modes for change detection
execution for Ivy, depending on whether you called `bootstrap()` or
`renderComponent()`. In the former case, we would complete creation
mode for all components in the tree before beginning update mode for
any component. In the latter case, we would run creation mode and
update mode together for each component individually.
Maintaining code to support these two different execution orders was
unnecessarily complex, so this commit aligns the two bootstrapping
mechanisms to execute in the same order. Now creation mode always
runs for all components before update mode begins.
This change also simplifies our rendering logic so that we use
`LView` flags as the source of truth for rendering mode instead of
`rf` function arguments. This fixed some related bugs (e.g. calling
`ViewRef.detectChanges` synchronously after the view's creation
would create view nodes twice, view queries would execute twice, etc).
PR Close#27744
This option means guards and resolvers will ignore changes when a provided predicate function returns `false`. This supports use cases where an application needs to ignore some param updates but not others. For example, changing a sort param in the URL might need to be ignored, whereas changing the a `project` param might require re-run of guards and resolvers.
Related to #26861#18253#27464
PR Close#27682
Typescript 3.2 introduced BigInt type, and consequently the
implementation for checkExpressionWorker() in checkers.ts is refactored.
For NumberLiteral and StringLiteral types, 'text' filed must be present
in the Node type, therefore they must be LiteralLikeNode instead of
Node.
PR Close#27536
* We should try loading Angular.JS for the upgrade tests in their minfied output. There seems to be a lot flakiness in regards to loading `AngularJS` within Travis, and the `onerror` messages aren't really too helpful. In order to reduce the payload that will be passed through the Saucelabs tunnel, we should try to load the minfied output files.
PR Close#27711
This commit fixes a bug whereby the path of the entry_module is not
consistent with the workspace name, which does not permit dashes
in the name.
PR Close#27719
It looks like `fixmeIvy` imports were accidentally removed from Router integration tests, thus causing build errors. The necessary imports are now restored and the project should build normally.
PR Close#27720
We invoked `hostBindings` function in Create and Update modes with different element index due to the fact that we did not subtract HEADER_OFFSET from the index before passing it to `hostBindings` function in Create mode. Now we subtract HEADER_OFFSET value before invoking `hostBindings`, which makes Ceate and Update calls consistent.
PR Close#27694
Context discovery was only available on elements. This PR adds support for containers and ICU expressions.
FW-378 #resolve
FW-665 #comment linker integration tests
PR Close#27644
Currently whenever the upgrade test helper fails to load a given AngularJS version, the error that will be rejected is technically not an error because the `onerror` callback is not returning an error, but an "ErrorEvent".
Since that `ErrorEvent` is basically just rejected, browsers will print
the error as followed:
```
Failed: [object Event]
```
This is not helpful at all and also implies that there _might_ be more
information hidden within the `Event` instance. Unfortunately that's not
the case (at least on browsers we test against) and the logic to extract
the data from the event would be not worth the effort, we just return a
simple custom `Error` that won't imply that there is more information
hidden.
PR Close#27706
Relative imports in Typescript files only work when module_name is
defined in ts_library (when run in Node.js).
See issue https://github.com/bazelbuild/rules_typescript/issues/360
With that fixed, `ng test` now works.
`ng build` requires `node_modules` to be available in the project
directory, so it's not usable yet. Running `yarn` in project directory
does not work because of postinstall version check.
PR Close#27715
In ngUpgrade (dynamic) we create a dynamic Angular `Directive` that wraps AngularJS components
that are being upgraded. The constructor of this `Directive` class returns a different instance
than `this`. It is this instance that actually contains the life-cycle hook handlers.
This would break in ivy, since the methods on the prototype of the original class are wired up,
rather than the instance methods. This results in hooks like `ngOnInit` not being called.
This commit refactors the code to extend the inner class that was being returned so that the
prototype chain is correct for both ViewEngine and ivy.
This change resolves a number of failing ivy tests, but also exposes other failures that were
masked by this issue. The tests have been updated accordingly.
(FW-812)
PR Close#27660
`NgModule` requires that `Component`s/`Directive`s/`Pipe`s are listed in
declarations, and that each `Component`s/`Directive`s/`Pipe` is declared
in exactly one `NgModule`. This change adds runtime checks to ensure
that these sementics are true at runtime.
There will need to be seperate set of checks for the AoT path of the
codebase to verify that same set of semantics hold. Due to current
design there does not seem to be an easy way to share the two checks
because JIT deal with references where as AoT deals with AST nodes.
PR Close#27604
With the bundle info being assembled into a single object before the
transform is started, we now greedily create a TypeScript program up-front.
If a marker file exists that indicates that the bundle could be skipped
the program creation has already taken place which takes a significant
amount of time. This commit moves the marker check to occur before the
bundle is assembled.
PR Close#27438
ngcc would feed ngtsc with the function declaration inside of an IIFE as
that is considered the class symbol's declaration node, according to
TypeScript's `ts.Symbol.valueDeclaration`. ngtsc however only considered
variable decls and actual class decls as potential class declarations,
so given the function declaration node it would fail to generate the
`setClassMetadata` call.
ngtsc no longer makes its own assumptions about what classes look like,
but always asks the reflection host to yield this kind of information.
PR Close#27438
While creating FESM files, rollup usually drops all unused symbols.
All *__POST_R3__ are unused unless ngcc rewires stuff. To prevent this DCE
we reexport them as private symbols. If ngcc is not used, these symbols will
be dropped when we optimize an application bundle.
PR Close#27438
Prior to this change, we were unable to match directives using `ng-template` tags (for example the following selector would not work even though there might be some <ng-template>s in a template: `ng-template[directiveA]`. As a result, that broke some components that relies on such selectors to work. In order to resolve the problem, we now pass tag name to the `template` instruction (where we passed `null` before) and this tag name is used for matching at runtime. This update should also help support projecting containers, because the tag name is required to properly match such elements.
PR Close#27636
A surprising interaction with the MagicString library caused inserted
Ivy definitions to be dropped during the removal of decorators, iff all
decorators on the class could be removed. In that case, the removal
location corresponds with the exact location where Ivy definitions were
inserted into.
This commit moves the removal of decorators to occur before Ivy
definitions are inserted. This effectively avoids the problem, as later
inserted text fragments will be retained by MagicString.
PR Close#27159
All the tests in `packages/core/test/view/` are specific to the `ViewEngine` and shouldn't run for ivy. This PR introduces a new BUILD.bazel file to run those tests separately.
PR Close#27645
If a template contains specific TypeScript syntax, such as a non-null
assertion, the code that is emitted from ngcc into a JavaScript bundle
should not retain such syntax as it is invalid in JS.
A full-blown TypeScript emit of a complete ts.SourceFile would be
required to be able to emit JS and possibly downlevel into a lower
language target, which is not an option for ngcc as it currently
operates on partial ASTs, not full source files.
Instead, ngtsc no longer produces TypeScript specific syntax in the first
place, such that TypeScript print logic will only generate JS code.
PR Close#27051
The default 10 items are often not enough to debug deeply nested compilation operations.
This PR is based on @martinprobst's http://cl/225528216.
PR Close#27678
In Ivy, a pure call to `setClassMetadata` is inserted to retain the
information that would otherwise be lost while eliding the Angular
decorators. In the past, the Angular constructor decorators were
wrapped inside of an anonymous function which was only evaluated once
`ReflectionCapabilities` was requested for such metadata. This approach
prevents forward references from inside the constructor parameter
decorators from being evaluated before they are available.
In the `setClassMetadata` call, the constructor parameters were not wrapped
within an anonymous function, such that forward references were evaluated
too early, causing runtime errors.
This commit changes the `setClassMetadata` call to pass the constructor
parameter decorators inside of an anonymous function again, such that
forward references are not resolved until requested by
`ReflectionCapabilities`, therefore avoiding the early reads of forward refs.
PR Close#27561
With ngcc's ability to fixup pre-Ivy ModuleWithProviders such that they
include a reference to the NgModule type, the type may become a qualified
name:
```
import {ModuleWithProviders} from '@angular/core';
import * as ngcc0 from './module';
export declare provide(): ModuleWithProviders<ngcc0.Module>;
```
ngtsc now takes this situation into account when reflecting a
ModuleWithProvider's type argument.
PR Close#27562