Previously these fake files were full TypeScript source
files (`.ts`) but this is not necessary as we only need the
typings not the implementation.
PR Close#25445
Previously we were using an anonymous type `{specifier: string; qualifier: string;}`
throughout the code base. This commit gives this type a name and ensures it
is only defined in one place.
PR Close#25445
Preserve compatibility with rollup_bundle rule.
Add missing npm dependencies, which are now enforced by the strict_deps plugin in tsc_wrapped
PR Close#30370
At the moment the module resolver will end up in an infinite loop in Windows because we are assuming that the root directory is always `/` however in windows this can be any drive letter example `c:/` or `d:/` etc...
With this change we also resolve the drive letter in windows, when using `AbsoluteFsPath.from` for consistence so under `/foo` will be converted to `c:/foo` this is also needed because of relative paths with different drive letters.
PR Close#30297
If an entry-point has a missing dependency then all the entry-points
that would have pointed to that dependency are also removed from
the dependency graph.
Previously we were still processing the dependencies of an entry-point
even if it had already been removed from the graph because it depended
upon a missing dependency that had previously been removed due to another
entry-point depending upon it.
This caused the dependency processing to crash rather than gracefully
logging and handling the missing invalid entry-point.
Fixes#29624
PR Close#30270
Packages that do not follow APF may have the declaration files in the same
directory as one source format, typically ES5. This is problematic for ngcc,
as it needs to create a TypeScript program with all JavaScript sources of
an entry-point, whereas TypeScript's module resolution mechanism would have
resolved an internal module import to the external facing .d.ts declaration
file, instead of the JavaScript source file. This behavior results in the
program to be analysed being incomplete.
This commit introduces a custom compiler host that recognizes the above
scenario and rewires the resolution of a .d.ts declaration file to its
JavaScript counterpart, if applicable.
Fixes#29939
PR Close#30017
This commit introduces a new interface, which abstracts access
to the underlying `FileSystem`. There is initially one concrete
implementation, `NodeJsFileSystem`, which is simply wrapping the
`fs` library of NodeJs.
Going forward, we can provide a `MockFileSystem` for test, which
should allow us to stop using `mock-fs` for most of the unit tests.
We could also implement a `CachedFileSystem` that may improve the
performance of ngcc.
PR Close#29643
By passing a `pathMappings` configuration (a subset of the
`ts.CompilerOptions` interface), we can instuct ngcc to process
additional paths outside the `node_modules` folder.
PR Close#29643
When working out the dependencies between entry-points
ngcc must parse the import statements and then resolve the
import path to the actual file. This is complicated because module
resolution is not trivial.
Previously ngcc used the node.js `require.resolve`, with some
hacking to resolve modules. This change refactors the `DependencyHost`
to use a new custom `ModuleResolver`, which is optimized for this use
case.
Moreover, because we are in full control of the resolution,
we can support TS `paths` aliases, where not all imports come from
`node_modules`. This is the case in some CLI projects where there are
compiled libraries that are stored locally in a `dist` folder.
See //FW-1210.
PR Close#29643
Previously we completely ignored entry-points that had not been
compiled with Angular, since we do not need to compile them
with ngcc. But this makes it difficult to reason about dependencies
between entry-points that were compiled with Angular and those that
were not.
Now we do track these non-Angular compiled entry-points but they
are marked as `compiledByAngular: false`.
PR Close#29643
The test now attempts to compile an entry-point (@angular/common/http/testing)
that has a transient "private" dependency. A private dependency is one that is
only visible by looking at the compiled JS code, rather than the generated TS
typings files.
This proves that we can't rely on typings files alone for computing the
dependencies between entry-points.
PR Close#29643
The `Transformer` and `Renderer` classes do not
actually need a `sourcePath` value as by the time
they are doing their work we are only working directly
with full absolute paths.
PR Close#29643
Only the JS files that are actually part of the entry-point
should be copied to the new entry-point folder in the
`NewEntryPointFileWriter`.
Previously some typings and external JS files were
being copied which was messing up the node_modules
structure.
Fixes https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/14193
PR Close#30085
Previously, ngcc would insert new imports at the beginning of the file, for
convenience. This is problematic for imports that have side-effects, as the
side-effects imposed by such imports may affect the behavior of subsequent
imports.
This commit teaches ngcc to insert imports after any existing imports. Special
care has been taken to ensure inserted constants will still follow after the
inserted imports.
Resolves FW-1271
PR Close#30029
Previously, all of a program's files would be copied into the __ivy_ngcc__
folder where ngcc then writes its modifications into. The set of source files
in a program however is much larger than the source files contained within
the entry-point of interest, so many more files were copied than necessary.
Even worse, it may occur that an unrelated file in the program would collide
with an already existing source file, resulting in incorrectly overwriting
a file with unrelated content. This behavior has actually been observed
with @angular/animations and @angular/platform-browser/animations, where
the former package would overwrite declaration files of the latter package.
This commit fixes the issue by only copying relevant source files when cloning
a bundle's content into __ivy_ngcc__.
Fixes#29960
PR Close#30020
Previously, Template.templateAttrs was introduced to capture attribute
bindings which originated from microsyntax (e.g. bindings in *ngFor="...").
This means that a Template node can have two different structures, depending
on whether it originated from microsyntax or from a literal <ng-template>.
In the literal case, the node behaves much like an Element node, it has
attributes, inputs, and outputs which determine which directives apply.
In the microsyntax case, though, only the templateAttrs should be used
to determine which directives apply.
Previously, both the t2_binder and the TemplateDefinitionBuilder were using
the wrong set of attributes to match directives - combining the attributes,
inputs, outputs, and templateAttrs of the Template node regardless of its
origin. In the TDB's case this wasn't a problem, since the TDB collects a
global Set of directives used in the template, so it didn't matter whether
the directive was also recognized on the <ng-template>. t2_binder's API
distinguishes between directives on specific nodes, though, so it's more
sensitive to mismatching.
In particular, this showed up as an assertion failure in template type-
checking in certain cases, when a directive was accidentally matched on
a microsyntax template element and also had a binding which referenced a
variable declared in the microsyntax. This resulted in the type-checker
attempting to generate a reference to a variable that didn't exist in that
scope.
The fix is to distinguish between the two cases and select the appropriate
set of attributes to match on accordingly.
Testing strategy: tested in the t2_binder tests.
PR Close#29698
Previously the template type-checking code only considered the metadata of
directive classes actually referenced in the template. If those directives
had base classes, any inputs/outputs/etc of the base classes were not
tracked when generating the TCB. This resulted in bindings to those inputs
being incorrectly attributed to the host component or element.
This commit uses the new metadata package to follow directive inheritance
chains and use the full metadata for a directive for TCB generation.
Testing strategy: Template type-checking tests included.
PR Close#29698
Previously, metadata registration (the recording of collected metadata
during analysis of directives, pipes, and NgModules) was only used to
produce the `LocalModuleScope`, and thus was handled by the
`LocalModuleScopeRegistry`.
However, the template type-checker also needs information about registered
directives, outside of the NgModule scope determinations. Rather than
reuse the scope registry for an unintended purpose, this commit introduces
new abstractions for metadata registration and lookups in a separate
'metadata' package, which the scope registry implements.
This paves the way for a future commit to make use of this metadata for the
template type-checking system.
Testing strategy: this commit is a refactoring which introduces no new
functionality, so existing tests are sufficient.
PR Close#29698
The `Δ` caused issue with other infrastructure, and we are temporarily
changing it to `ɵɵ`.
This commit also patches ts_api_guardian_test and AIO to understand `ɵɵ`.
PR Close#29850
Previously we always walked the whole folder tree looking for
entry-points before we tested whether a target package had been
processed already. This could take >10secs!
This commit does a quick check of the target package before doing
the full walk which brings down the execution time for ngcc in this
case dramatically.
```
$ time ./node_modules/.bin/ivy-ngcc -t @angular/common/http/testing
Compiling @angular/core : fesm2015 as esm2015
Compiling @angular/core : fesm5 as esm5
Compiling @angular/core : esm2015 as esm2015
Compiling @angular/core : esm5 as esm5
Compiling @angular/common/http : fesm2015 as esm2015
Compiling @angular/common/http : fesm5 as esm5
Compiling @angular/common/http : esm2015 as esm2015
Compiling @angular/common/http : esm5 as esm5
Compiling @angular/common/http/testing : fesm2015 as esm2015
Compiling @angular/common/http/testing : fesm5 as esm5
Compiling @angular/common/http/testing : esm2015 as esm2015
Compiling @angular/common/http/testing : esm5 as esm5
real 0m19.766s
user 0m28.533s
sys 0m2.262s
```
```
$ time ./node_modules/.bin/ivy-ngcc -t @angular/common/http/testing
The target entry-point has already been processed
real 0m0.666s
user 0m0.605s
sys 0m0.113s
```
PR Close#29740
Prior to this change, all module metadata would be included in the
`defineNgModule` call that is set as the `ngModuleDef` field of module
types. Part of the metadata is scope information like declarations,
imports and exports that is used for computing the transitive module
scope in JIT environments, preventing those references from being
tree-shaken for production builds.
This change moves the metadata for scope computations to a pure function
call that patches the scope references onto the module type. Because the
function is marked pure, it may be tree-shaken out during production builds
such that references to declarations and exports are dropped, which in turn
allows for tree-shaken any declaration that is not otherwise referenced.
Fixes#28077, FW-1035
PR Close#29598
With the new API, where you can choose to only process the first
matching format, it is possible to process an entry-point multiple
times, if you pass in a different format each time.
Previously, ngcc would always try to process the typings files for
the entry-point along with processing the first format of the current
execution of ngcc. But this meant that it would be trying to process
the typings a second time.
Now we only process the typings if they have not already been
processed as part of processing another format in another
even if it was in a different execution of ngcc.
PR Close#29657
In ES2015, classes could have been emitted as a variable declaration
initialized with a class expression. In certain situations, an intermediary
variable suffixed with `_1` is present such that the variable
declaration's initializer becomes a binary expression with its rhs being
the class expression, and its lhs being the identifier of the intermediate
variable. This structure was not recognized, resulting in such classes not
being considered as a class in `Esm2015ReflectionHost`.
As a consequence, the analysis of functions/methods that return a
`ModuleWithProviders` object did not take the methods of such classes into
account.
Another edge-case with such intermediate variable was that static
properties would not be considered as class members. A testcase was added
to prevent regressions.
Fixes#29078
PR Close#29119
This commit adds a `tracePerformance` option for tsconfig.json. When
specified, it causes a JSON file with timing information from the ngtsc
compiler to be emitted at the specified path.
This tracing system is used to instrument the analysis/emit phases of
compilation, and will be useful in debugging future integration work with
@angular/cli.
See ngtsc/perf/README.md for more details.
PR Close#29380