Commit Graph

541 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
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
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
Pete Bacon Darwin a0ce8bc236 refactor(ngcc): show timings in 1/10ths of a second (#35931)
PR Close #35931
2020-03-11 15:01:59 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 74e47c503a refactor(ngcc): expose a hash of the project configuration (#35931)
This will be used in the entry-point manifest since a change to
configuration might change the entry-points that are found.

PR Close #35931
2020-03-11 15:01:59 -07:00
Alan Agius 1f89c6130e fix(ngcc): show helpful error when providing an invalid option (#36010)
Currently, when running the ngcc binary directly and provide an invalid option ngcc will not error out and the user might have a hard time telling why ngcc is behaving not as expected.

With this change we now output an actionable error:
```
 yarn ngcc --unknown-option
Options:
  --version                          Show version number               [boolean]
  -s, --source                       A path (relative to the working directory)
                                     of the `node_modules` folder to process.
                                                     [default: "./node_modules"]
  -p, --properties                   An array of names of properties in
                                     package.json to compile (e.g. `module` or
                                     `es2015`)
                                     Each of these properties should hold the
                                     path to a bundle-format.
                                     If provided, only the specified properties
                                     are considered for processing.
                                     If not provided, all the supported format
                                     properties (e.g. fesm2015, fesm5, es2015,
                                     esm2015, esm5, main, module) in the
                                     package.json are considered.        [array]
  -t, --target                       A relative path (from the `source` path) to
                                     a single entry-point to process (plus its
                                     dependencies).
  --first-only                       If specified then only the first matching
                                     package.json property will be compiled.
                                                                       [boolean]
  --create-ivy-entry-points          If specified then new `*_ivy_ngcc`
                                     entry-points will be added to package.json
                                     rather than modifying the ones in-place.
                                     For this to work you need to have custom
                                     resolution set up (e.g. in webpack) to look
                                     for these new entry-points.
                                     The Angular CLI does this already, so it is
                                     safe to use this option if the project is
                                     being built via the CLI.          [boolean]
  --legacy-message-ids               Render `$localize` messages with legacy
                                     format ids.
                                     The default value is `true`. Only set this
                                     to `false` if you do not want legacy
                                     message ids to
                                     be rendered. For example, if you are not
                                     using legacy message ids in your
                                     translation files
                                     AND are not doing compile-time inlining of
                                     translations, in which case the extra
                                     message ids
                                     would add unwanted size to the final source
                                     bundle.
                                     It is safe to leave this set to true if you
                                     are doing compile-time inlining because the
                                     extra
                                     legacy message ids will all be stripped
                                     during translation.
                                                       [boolean] [default: true]
  --async                            Whether to compile asynchronously. This is
                                     enabled by default as it allows
                                     compilations to be parallelized.
                                     Disabling asynchronous compilation may be
                                     useful for debugging.
                                                       [boolean] [default: true]
  -l, --loglevel                     The lowest severity logging message that
                                     should be output.
                                     [choices: "debug", "info", "warn", "error"]
  --invalidate-entry-point-manifest  If this is set then ngcc will not read an
                                     entry-point manifest file from disk.
                                     Instead it will walking the directory tree
                                     as normal looking for entry-points, and
                                     then write a new manifest file.
                                                      [boolean] [default: false]
  --help                             Show help                         [boolean]
Unknown arguments: unknown-option, unknownOption
```

PR Close #36010
2020-03-11 14:42:16 -04:00
Alex Rickabaugh 95c729f5d1 build: typescript 3.8 support (#35864)
This commit adds support in the Angular monorepo and in the Angular
compiler(s) for TypeScript 3.8. All packages can now compile with
TS 3.8.

For most of the repo, only a handful few typings adjustments were needed:

* TS 3.8 has a new `CustomElementConstructor` DOM type, which enforces a
  zero-argument constructor. The `NgElementConstructor` type previously
  declared a required `injector` argument despite the fact that its
  implementation allowed `injector` to be optional. The interface type was
  updated to reflect the optionality of the argument.
* Certain error messages were changed, and expectations in tests were
  updated as a result.
* tsserver (part of language server) now returns performance information in
  responses, so test expectations were changed to only assert on the actual
  body content of responses.

For compiler-cli and schematics (which use the TypeScript AST) a major
breaking change was the introduction of the export form:

```typescript
export * as foo from 'bar';
```

This is a `ts.NamespaceExport`, and the `exportClause` of a
`ts.ExportDeclaration` can now take this type as well as `ts.NamedExports`.
This broke a lot of places where `exportClause` was assumed to be
`ts.NamedExports`.

For the most part these breakages were in cases where it is not necessary
to handle the new `ts.NamedExports` anyway. ngtsc's design uses the
`ts.TypeChecker` APIs to understand syntax and so automatically supports the
new form of exports.

The View Engine compiler on the other hand extracts TS structures into
metadata.json files, and that format was not designed for namespaced
exports. As a result it will take a nontrivial amount of work if we want to
support such exports in View Engine. For now, these new exports are not
accounted for in metadata.json, and so using them in "folded" Angular
expressions will result in errors (probably claiming that the referenced
exported namespace doesn't exist).

Care was taken to only use TS APIs which are present in 3.7/3.6, as Angular
needs to remain compatible with these for the time being.

This commit does not update angular.io.

PR Close #35864
2020-03-10 17:51:20 -04:00
Pete Bacon Darwin c55f900081 fix(ngcc): a new LockFile implementation that uses a child-process (#35861)
This version of `LockFile` creates an "unlocker" child-process that monitors
the main ngcc process and deletes the lock file if it exits unexpectedly.

This resolves the issue where the main process could not be killed by pressing
Ctrl-C at the terminal.

Fixes #35761

PR Close #35861
2020-03-05 18:17:15 -05:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 4acd658635 refactor(ngcc): move locking code into its own folder (#35861)
PR Close #35861
2020-03-05 18:17:15 -05:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 94fa140888 refactor(ngcc): separate `(Async/Sync)Locker` and `LockFile` (#35861)
The previous implementation mixed up the management
of locking a piece of code (both sync and async) with the
management of writing and removing the lockFile that is
used as the flag for which process has locked the code.

This change splits these two concepts up. Apart from
avoiding the awkward base class it allows the `LockFile`
implementation to be replaced cleanly.

PR Close #35861
2020-03-05 18:17:15 -05:00
Pete Bacon Darwin bdaab4184d refactor(ngcc): expose logging level on the logger (#35861)
PR Close #35861
2020-03-05 18:17:15 -05:00
Alan Agius e0a35e13d5 perf(ngcc): reduce directory traversing (#35756)
This reduces the time that `findEntryPoints` takes from 9701.143ms to 4177.278ms, by reducing the file operations done.

Reference: #35717

PR Close #35756
2020-03-05 15:57:31 -05:00
Alan Agius d7efc45c04 perf(ngcc): only create tasks for non-processed formats (#35719)
Change the behaviour in `analyzeEntryPoints` to only create tasks for non-processed formats.

PR Close #35719
2020-03-02 08:17:02 -08:00
Alan Agius dc40a93317 perf(ngcc): spawn workers lazily (#35719)
With this change we spawn workers lazily based on the amount of work that needs to be done.

Before this change we spawned the maximum of workers possible. However, in some cases there are less tasks than the max number of workers which resulted in created unnecessary workers

Reference: #35717

PR Close #35719
2020-03-02 08:17:02 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 5d8f7da3aa refactor(ngcc): guard against a crash if source-map flattening fails (#35718)
Source-maps in the wild could be badly formatted,
causing the source-map flattening processing to fail
unexpectedly. Rather than causing the whole of ngcc
to crash, we gracefully fallback to just returning the
generated source-map instead.

PR Close #35718
2020-02-27 16:09:37 -05:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 73cf7d5cb4 fix(ngcc): handle mappings outside the content when flattening source-maps (#35718)
Previously when rendering flattened source-maps, it was assumed that no
mapping would come from a line that is outside the lines of the actual
source content. It turns out this is not a valid assumption.

Now the code that renders flattened source-maps will handle such
mappings, with the additional benefit that the rendered source-map
will only contain mapping lines up to the last mapping, rather than a
mapping line for every content line.

Fixes #35709

PR Close #35718
2020-02-27 16:09:36 -05:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 72c4fda613 fix(ngcc): handle missing sources when flattening source-maps (#35718)
If a package has a source-map but it does not provide
the actual content of the sources, then the source-map
flattening was crashing.

Now we ignore such mappings that have no source
since we are not able to compute the merged
mapping if there is no source file.

Fixes #35709

PR Close #35718
2020-02-27 16:09:36 -05:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 20b0c80b0b fix(ngcc): allow deep-import warnings to be ignored (#35683)
This commit adds a new ngcc configuration, `ignorableDeepImportMatchers`
for packages. This is a list of regular expressions matching deep imports
that can be safely ignored from that package. Deep imports that are not
ignored cause a warning to be logged.

// FW-1892

Fixes #35615

PR Close #35683
2020-02-27 10:48:48 -08:00
Alan Agius 59c0689ade refactor(ngcc): remove redundant await (#35686)
Inside an async function, return await is not needed. Since the return value of an async function is always wrapped in Promise.resolve,
PR Close #35686
2020-02-26 12:59:13 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin df816c9c80 feat(ngcc): implement source-map flattening (#35132)
The library used by ngcc to update the source files (MagicString) is able
to generate a source-map but it is not able to account for any previous
source-map that the input text is already associated with.

There have been various attempts to fix this but none have been very
successful, since it is not a trivial problem to solve.

This commit contains a novel approach that is able to load up a tree of
source-files connected by source-maps and flatten them down into a single
source-map that maps directly from the final generated file to the original
sources referenced by the intermediate source-maps.

PR Close #35132
2020-02-26 12:51:35 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 71b5970450 fix(ngcc): capture path-mapped entry-points that start with same string (#35592)
Previously if there were two path-mapped libraries that are in
different directories but the path of one started with same string
as the path of the other, we would incorrectly return the shorter
path - e.g. `dist/my-lib` and `dist/my-lib-second`. This was because
the list of `basePaths` was searched in ascending alphabetic order and
we were using `startsWith()` to match the path.

Now the `basePaths` are searched in reverse alphabetic order so the
longer path will be matched correctly.

// FW-1873

Fixes #35536

PR Close #35592
2020-02-24 09:11:43 -08:00
George Kalpakas bd6a39c364 fix(ngcc): correctly detect emitted TS helpers in ES5 (#35191)
In ES5 code, TypeScript requires certain helpers (such as
`__spreadArrays()`) to be able to support ES2015+ features. These
helpers can be either imported from `tslib` (by setting the
`importHelpers` TS compiler option to `true`) or emitted inline (by
setting the `importHelpers` and `noEmitHelpers` TS compiler options to
`false`, which is the default value for both).

Ngtsc's `StaticInterpreter` (which is also used during ngcc processing)
is able to statically evaluate some of these helpers (currently
`__assign()`, `__spread()` and `__spreadArrays()`), as long as
`ReflectionHost#getDefinitionOfFunction()` correctly detects the
declaration of the helper. For this to happen, the left-hand side of the
corresponding call expression (i.e. `__spread(...)` or
`tslib.__spread(...)`) must be evaluated as a function declaration for
`getDefinitionOfFunction()` to be called with.

In the case of imported helpers, the `tslib.__someHelper` expression was
resolved to a function declaration of the form
`export declare function __someHelper(...args: any[][]): any[];`, which
allows `getDefinitionOfFunction()` to correctly map it to a TS helper.

In contrast, in the case of emitted helpers (and regardless of the
module format: `CommonJS`, `ESNext`, `UMD`, etc.)), the `__someHelper`
identifier was resolved to a variable declaration of the form
`var __someHelper = (this && this.__someHelper) || function () { ... }`,
which upon further evaluation was categorized as a `DynamicValue`
(prohibiting further evaluation by the `getDefinitionOfFunction()`).

As a result of the above, emitted TypeScript helpers were not evaluated
in ES5 code.

---
This commit changes the detection of TS helpers to leverage the existing
`KnownFn` feature (previously only used for built-in functions).
`Esm5ReflectionHost` is changed to always return `KnownDeclaration`s for
TS helpers, both imported (`getExportsOfModule()`) as well as emitted
(`getDeclarationOfIdentifier()`).

Similar changes are made to `CommonJsReflectionHost` and
`UmdReflectionHost`.

The `KnownDeclaration`s are then mapped to `KnownFn`s in
`StaticInterpreter`, allowing it to statically evaluate call expressions
involving any kind of TS helpers.

Jira issue: https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1689

PR Close #35191
2020-02-21 09:06:46 -08:00
George Kalpakas b6e8847967 fix(ngcc): handle imports in dts files when processing CommonJS (#35191)
When statically evaluating CommonJS code it is possible to find that we
are looking for the declaration of an identifier that actually came from
a typings file (rather than a CommonJS file).

Previously, the CommonJS reflection host would always try to use a
CommonJS specific algorithm for finding identifier declarations, but
when the id is actually in a typings file this resulted in the returned
declaration being the containing file of the declaration rather than the
declaration itself.

Now the CommonJS reflection host will check to see if the file
containing the identifier is a typings file and use the appropriate
stategy.

(Note: This is the equivalent of #34356 but for CommonJS.)

PR Close #35191
2020-02-21 09:06:46 -08:00
George Kalpakas 3cc812711b fix(ngcc): add default config for `angular2-highcharts` (#35527)
The package is deprecated (and thus not going to have a new release),
but still has ~7000 weekly downloads.

Fixes #35399

PR Close #35527
2020-02-20 15:12:07 -08:00
George Kalpakas fde89156fa fix(ngcc): correctly detect outer aliased class identifiers in ES5 (#35527)
In ES5 and ES2015, class identifiers may have aliases. Previously, the
`NgccReflectionHost`s recognized the following formats:
- ES5:
    ```js
    var MyClass = (function () {
      function InnerClass() {}
      InnerClass_1 = InnerClass;
      ...
    }());
    ```
- ES2015:
    ```js
    let MyClass = MyClass_1 = class MyClass { ... };
    ```

In addition to the above, this commit adds support for recognizing an
alias outside the IIFE in ES5 classes (which was previously not
supported):
```js
var MyClass = MyClass_1 = (function () { ... }());
```

Jira issue: [FW-1869](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1869)

Partially addresses #35399.

PR Close #35527
2020-02-20 15:12:07 -08:00
George Kalpakas 2baf90209b refactor(ngcc): tighten method parameter type to avoid redundant check (#35527)
`Esm5ReflectionHost#getInnerFunctionDeclarationFromClassDeclaration()`
was already called with `ts.Declaration`, not `ts.Node`, so we can
tighten its parameter type and get rid of a redundant check.
`getIifeBody()` (called inside
`getInnerFunctionDeclarationFromClassDeclaration()`) will check whether
the given `ts.Declaration` is a `ts.VariableDeclaration`.

PR Close #35527
2020-02-20 15:12:07 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin eef07539a6 feat(ngcc): pause async ngcc processing if another process has the lockfile (#35131)
ngcc uses a lockfile to prevent two ngcc instances from executing at the
same time. Previously, if a lockfile was found the current process would
error and exit.

Now, when in async mode, the current process is able to wait for the previous
process to release the lockfile before continuing itself.

PR Close #35131
2020-02-18 17:20:41 -08:00
George Kalpakas 5f57376899 test(ngcc): add missing `UmdReflectionHost#getExportsOfModule()` tests (#35312)
Support for re-exports in UMD were added in e9fb5fdb8. This commit adds
some tests for re-exports (similar to the ones used for
`CommonJsReflectionHost`).

PR Close #35312
2020-02-10 16:13:41 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 54c3a5da3f fix(ngcc): ensure that path-mapped secondary entry-points are processed correctly (#35227)
The `TargetedEntryPointFinder` must work out what the
containing package is for each entry-point that it finds.

The logic for doing this was flawed in the case that the
package was in a path-mapped directory and not in a
node_modules folder. This meant that secondary entry-points
were incorrectly setting their own path as the package
path, rather than the primary entry-point path.

Fixes #35188

PR Close #35227
2020-02-07 11:32:05 -08:00
George Kalpakas 9601b5d18a refactor(ngcc): remove unused function (#35122)
Since #35057, the `markNonAngularPackageAsProcessed()` function is no
longer used and can be removed.

PR Close #35122
2020-02-03 14:04:59 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 3d4067a464 fix(ngcc): do not lock if the target is not compiled by Angular (#35057)
To support parallel CLI builds we instruct developers to pre-process
their node_modules via ngcc at the command line.

Despite doing this ngcc was still trying to set a lock when it was being
triggered by the CLI for packages that are not going to be processed,
since they are not compiled by Angular for instance.

This commit checks whether a target package needs to be compiled
at all before attempting to set the lock.

Fixes #35000

PR Close #35057
2020-02-03 08:46:43 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 2bfddcf29f feat(ngcc): automatically clean outdated ngcc artifacts (#35079)
If ngcc gets updated to a new version then the artifacts
left in packages that were processed by the previous
version are possibly invalid.

Previously we just errored if we found packages that
had already been processed by an outdated version.

Now we automatically clean the packages that have
outdated artifacts so that they can be reprocessed
correctly with the current ngcc version.

Fixes #35082

PR Close #35079
2020-01-31 17:02:44 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 16e15f50d2 refactor(ngcc): export magic strings as constants (#35079)
These strings will be used when cleaning up outdated
packages.

PR Close #35079
2020-01-31 17:02:43 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 3cf55c195b refactor(ngcc): add additional build marker helpers (#35079)
PR Close #35079
2020-01-31 17:02:43 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin cc43bfa725 refactor(ngcc): do not crash if package build version is outdated (#35079)
Now `hasBeenProcessed()` will no longer throw if there
is an entry-point that has been built with an outdated
version of ngcc.

Instead it just returns `false`, which will include it in this
processing run.

This is a precursor to adding functionality that will
automatically revert outdate build artifacts.

PR Close #35079
2020-01-31 17:02:43 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 171a79d04f refactor(ngcc): remove unused code (#35079)
PR Close #35079
2020-01-31 17:02:43 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 7f44fa65a7 fix(ngcc): improve lockfile error message (#35001)
The message now gives concrete advice to developers who
experience the error due to running multiple simultaneous builds
via webpack.

Fixes #35000

PR Close #35001
2020-01-28 09:09:00 -08:00
Miško Hevery 69de7680f5 Revert: "feat(ivy): convert [ngStyle] and [ngClass] to use ivy styling bindings" (#34616)
This change reverts https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/28711
NOTE: This change deletes code and creates a BROKEN SHA. If reverting this SHA needs to be reverted with the next SHA to get back into a valid state.

The change removes the fact that `NgStyle`/`NgClass` is special and colaborates with the `[style]`/`[class]` to merge its styles. By reverting to old behavior we have better backwards compatiblity since it is no longer treated special and simply overwrites the styles (same as VE)

PR Close #34616
2020-01-24 12:22:44 -08:00
Miško Hevery 2961bf06c6 refactor(ivy): move `hostVars`/`hostAttrs` from instruction to `DirectiveDef` (#34683)
This change moves information from instructions to declarative position:
- `ɵɵallocHostVars(vars)` => `DirectiveDef.hostVars`
- `ɵɵelementHostAttrs(attrs)` => `DirectiveDef.hostAttrs`

When merging directives it is necessary to know about `hostVars` and `hostAttrs`. Before this change the information was stored in the `hostBindings` function. This was problematic, because in order to get to the information the `hostBindings` would have to be executed. In order for `hostBindings` to be executed the directives would have to be instantiated. This means that the directive instantiation would happen before we had knowledge about the `hostAttrs` and as a result the directive could observe in the constructor that not all of the `hostAttrs` have been applied. This further complicates the runtime as we have to apply `hostAttrs` in parts over many invocations.

`ɵɵallocHostVars` was unnecessarily complicated because it would have to update the `LView` (and Blueprint) while existing directives are already executing. By moving it out of `hostBindings` function we can access it statically and we can create correct `LView` (and Blueprint) in a single pass.

This change only changes how the instructions are generated, but does not change the runtime much. (We cheat by emulating the old behavior by calling `ɵɵallocHostVars` and `ɵɵelementHostAttrs`) Subsequent change will refactor the runtime to take advantage of the static information.

PR Close #34683
2020-01-24 12:22:10 -08:00
JoostK 7659f2e24b fix(ngcc): do not attempt compilation when analysis fails (#34889)
In #34288, ngtsc was refactored to separate the result of the analysis
and resolve phase for more granular incremental rebuilds. In this model,
any errors in one phase transition the trait into an error state, which
prevents it from being ran through subsequent phases. The ngcc compiler
on the other hand did not adopt this strict error model, which would
cause incomplete metadata—due to errors in earlier phases—to be offered
for compilation that could result in a hard crash.

This commit updates ngcc to take advantage of ngtsc's `TraitCompiler`,
that internally manages all Ivy classes that are part of the
compilation. This effectively replaces ngcc's own `AnalyzedFile` and
`AnalyzedClass` types, together with all of the logic to drive the
`DecoratorHandler`s. All of this is now handled in the `TraitCompiler`,
benefiting from its explicit state transitions of `Trait`s so that the
ngcc crash is a thing of the past.

Fixes #34500
Resolves FW-1788

PR Close #34889
2020-01-23 14:47:03 -08:00
JoostK ba82532812 test(ngcc): remove usage of ES2015 syntax in ES5/UMD/CommonJS tests (#34889)
This syntax is invalid in these source files and does result in
compilation errors as the constructor parameters could not be resolved.
This hasn't been an issue until now as those errors were ignored in the
tests, but future work to introduce the Trait system of ngtsc into
ngcc will cause these errors to prevent compilation, resulting in broken
tests.

PR Close #34889
2020-01-23 14:47:03 -08:00
George Kalpakas 5b42084912 fix(ngcc): do not collect private declarations from external packages (#34811)
Previously, while trying to build an `NgccReflectionHost`'s
`privateDtsDeclarationMap`, `computePrivateDtsDeclarationMap()` would
try to collect exported declarations from all source files of the
program (i.e. without checking whether they were within the target
package, as happens for declarations in `.d.ts` files).

Most of the time, that would not be a problem, because external packages
would be represented as `.d.ts` files in the program. But when an
external package had no typings, the JS files would be used instead. As
a result, the `ReflectionHost` would try to (unnecessarilly) parse the
file in order to extract exported declarations, which in turn would be
harmless in most cases.

There are certain cases, though, where the `ReflectionHost` would throw
an error, because it cannot parse the external package's JS file. This
could happen, for example, in `UmdReflectionHost`, which expects the
file to contain exactly one statement. See #34544 for more details on a
real-world failure.

This commit fixes the issue by ensuring that
`computePrivateDtsDeclarationMap()` will only collect exported
declarations from files within the target package.

Jira issue: [FW-1794](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1794)

Fixes #34544

PR Close #34811
2020-01-23 13:58:37 -08:00
Paul Gschwendtner 6b468f9b2e fix(ngcc): libraries using spread in object literals cannot be processed (#34661)
Consider a library that uses a shared constant for host bindings. e.g.

```ts
export const BASE_BINDINGS= {
  '[class.mat-themed]': '_isThemed',
}

----

@Directive({
  host: {...BASE_BINDINGS, '(click)': '...'}
})
export class Dir1 {}

@Directive({
  host: {...BASE_BINDINGS, '(click)': '...'}
})
export class Dir2 {}
```

Previously when these components were shipped as part of the
library to NPM, consumers were able to consume `Dir1` and `Dir2`.
No errors showed up.

Now with Ivy, when ngcc tries to process the library, an error
will be thrown. The error is stating that the host bindings should
be an object (which they obviously are). This happens because
TypeScript transforms the object spread to individual
`Object.assign` calls (for compatibility).

The partial evaluator used by the `@Directive` annotation handler
is unable to process this expression because there is no
integrated support for `Object.assign`. In View Engine, this was
not a problem because the `metadata.json` files from the library
were used to compute the host bindings.

Fixes #34659

PR Close #34661
2020-01-23 10:29:57 -08:00
George Kalpakas 93ffc67bfb fix(ngcc): update `package.json` deterministically (#34870)
Ngcc adds properties to the `package.json` files of the entry-points it
processes to mark them as processed for a format and point to the
created Ivy entry-points (in case of `--create-ivy-entry-points`). When
running ngcc in parallel mode (which is the default for the standalone
ngcc command), multiple formats can be processed simultaneously for the
same entry-point and the order of completion is not deterministic.

Previously, ngcc would append new properties at the end of the target
object in `package.json` as soon as the format processing was completed.
As a result, the order of properties in the resulting `package.json`
(when processing multiple formats for an entry-point in parallel) was
not deterministic. For tools that use file hashes for caching purposes
(such as Bazel), this lead to a high probability of cache misses.

This commit fixes the problem by ensuring that the position of
properties added to `package.json` files is deterministic and
independent of the order in which each format is processed.

Jira issue: [FW-1801](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1801)

Fixes #34635

PR Close #34870
2020-01-23 10:16:35 -08:00
George Kalpakas 43db4ffcd6 test(ngcc): verify that `PackageJsonUpdater` does not write to files from worker processes (#34870)
PR Close #34870
2020-01-23 10:16:35 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 03465b621b fix(ngcc): only lock ngcc after targeted entry-point check (#34722)
The Angular CLI will continue to call ngcc on all possible packages, even if they
have already been processed by ngcc in a postinstall script.

In a parallel build environment, this was causing ngcc to complain that it was
being run in more than one process at the same time.

This commit moves the check for whether the targeted package has been
processed outside the locked code section, since there is no issue with
multiple ngcc processes from doing this check.

PR Close #34722
2020-01-22 15:35:34 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin a107e9edc6 feat(ngcc): lock ngcc when processing (#34722)
Previously, it was possible for multiple instance of ngcc to be running
at the same time, but this is not supported and can cause confusing and
flakey errors at build time.

Now, only one instance of ngcc can run at a time. If a second instance
tries to execute it fails with an appropriate error message.

See https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/32431#issuecomment-571825781

PR Close #34722
2020-01-22 15:35:34 -08:00
Igor Minar 0b1e34de40 fix(common): cleanup the StylingDiffer and related code (#34307)
Since I was learning the codebase and had a hard time understanding what was going on I've done a
bunch of changes in one commit that under normal circumstances should have been split into several
commits. Because this code is likely going to be overwritten with Misko's changes I'm not going to
spend the time with trying to split this up.

Overall I've done the following:
- I processed review feedback from #34307
- I did a bunch of renaming to make the code easier to understand
- I refactored some internal functions that were either inefficient or hard to read
- I also updated lots of type signatures to correct them and to remove many casts in the code

PR Close #34307
2020-01-17 14:07:27 -05:00
Greg Magolan aee67f08d9 test: handle bootstrap templated_args in jasmine_node_test defaults.bzl (#34736)
PR Close #34736
2020-01-15 14:58:07 -05:00
Greg Magolan dcff76e8b9 refactor: handle breaking changes in rules_nodejs 1.0.0 (#34736)
The major one that affects the angular repo is the removal of the bootstrap attribute in nodejs_binary, nodejs_test and jasmine_node_test in favor of using templated_args --node_options=--require=/path/to/script. The side-effect of this is that the bootstrap script does not get the require.resolve patches with explicitly loading the targets _loader.js file.

PR Close #34736
2020-01-15 14:58:07 -05:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 3d5bcd5883 test(ngcc): update dependency host test description (#34695)
The `describe` description did not match the name of the
method.

PR Close #34695
2020-01-15 10:24:50 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 85b5c365fc fix(ngcc): do not add DTS deep imports to missing packages list (#34695)
When searching the typings program for a package for imports a
distinction is drawn between missing entry-points and deep imports.

Previously in the `DtsDependencyHost` these deep imports may be
marked as missing if there was no typings file at the deep import path.
Instead there may be a javascript file instead. In practice this means
the import is "deep" and not "missing".

Now the `DtsDependencyHost` will also consider `.js` files when checking
for deep-imports, and it will also look inside `@types/...` for a suitable
deep-imported typings file.

Fixes #34720

PR Close #34695
2020-01-15 10:24:50 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin da51d884a1 test(ngcc): remove `declare` from JS classes (#34695)
PR Close #34695
2020-01-15 10:24:49 -08:00
George Kalpakas cfbb1a1e77 fix(ngcc): correctly detect dependencies in CommonJS (#34528)
Previously, `CommonJsDependencyHost.collectDependencies()` would only
find dependencies via imports of the form `var foo = require('...');` or
`var foo = require('...'), bar = require('...');` However, CommonJS
files can have imports in many different forms. By failing to recognize
other forms of imports, the associated dependencies were missed, which
in turn resulted in entry-points being compiled out-of-order and failing
due to that.

While we cannot easily capture all different types of imports, this
commit enhances `CommonJsDependencyHost` to recognize the following
common forms of imports:

- Imports in property assignments. E.g.:
  `exports.foo = require('...');` or
  `module.exports = {foo: require('...')};`

- Imports for side-effects only. E.g.:
  `require('...');`

- Star re-exports (with both emitted and imported heleprs). E.g.:
  `__export(require('...'));` or
  `tslib_1.__exportStar(require('...'), exports);`

PR Close #34528
2020-01-13 09:48:20 -08:00
George Kalpakas eb6e1af46d test(ngcc): fix typos in `CommonJsDependencyHost` tests (to avoid confusion) (#34528)
PR Close #34528
2020-01-13 09:48:20 -08:00
crisbeto 6d534f10e6 fix(ivy): don't run decorator handlers against declaration files (#34557)
Currently the decorator handlers are run against all `SourceFile`s in the compilation, but we shouldn't be doing it against declaration files. This initially came up as a CI issue in #33264 where it was worked around only for the `DirectiveDecoratorHandler`. These changes move the logic into the `TraitCompiler` and `DecorationAnalyzer` so that it applies to all of the handlers.

PR Close #34557
2020-01-10 15:54:51 -08:00
atscott 538d0446b5 Revert "refactor: handle breaking changes in rules_nodejs 1.0.0 (#34589)" (#34730)
This reverts commit 9bb349e1c8.

PR Close #34730
2020-01-10 14:12:15 -08:00
atscott 5e60215470 Revert "test: handle bootstrap templated_args in jasmine_node_test defaults.bzl (#34589)" (#34730)
This reverts commit da4782e67f.

PR Close #34730
2020-01-10 14:12:15 -08:00
Greg Magolan da4782e67f test: handle bootstrap templated_args in jasmine_node_test defaults.bzl (#34589)
PR Close #34589
2020-01-10 08:31:59 -08:00
Greg Magolan 9bb349e1c8 refactor: handle breaking changes in rules_nodejs 1.0.0 (#34589)
The major one that affects the angular repo is the removal of the bootstrap attribute in nodejs_binary, nodejs_test and jasmine_node_test in favor of using templated_args --node_options=--require=/path/to/script. The side-effect of this is that the bootstrap script does not get the require.resolve patches with explicitly loading the targets _loader.js file.

PR Close #34589
2020-01-10 08:31:59 -08:00
George Kalpakas c3271ac22a fix(ngcc): recognize re-exports with imported TS helpers in CommonJS and UMD (#34527)
Previously, the `CommonJsReflectionHost` and `UmdReflectionHost` would
only recognize re-exports of the form `__export(...)`. This is what
re-exports look like, when the TypeScript helpers are emitted inline
(i.e. when compiling with the default [TypeScript compiler options][1]
that include `noEmitHelpers: false` and `importHelpers: false`).

However, when compiling with `importHelpers: true` and [tslib][2] (which
is the recommended way for optimized bundles), the re-exports will look
like: `tslib_1.__exportStar(..., exports)`
These types of re-exports were previously not recognized by the
CommonJS/UMD `ReflectionHost`s and thus ignored.

This commit fixes this by ensuring both re-export formats are
recognized.

[1]: https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/compiler-options.html
[2]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/tslib

PR Close #34527
2020-01-10 08:28:50 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 8815ace418 fix(ngcc): insert definitions after statement (#34677)
If a class was defined as a class expression
in a variable declaration, the definitions
were being inserted before the statment's
final semi-colon.

Now the insertion point will be after the
full statement.

Fixes #34648

PR Close #34677
2020-01-08 15:09:24 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 58cdc22791 fix(ngcc): handle UMD factories that do not use all params (#34660)
In some cases, where a module imports a dependency
but does not actually use it, UMD bundlers may remove
the dependency parameter from the UMD factory function
definition.

For example:

```
import * as x from 'x';
import * as z from 'z';
export const y = x;
```

may result in a UMD bundle including:

```
(function (global, factory) {
    typeof exports === 'object' && typeof module !== 'undefined' ?
        factory(exports, require('x'), require('z')) :
    typeof define === 'function' && define.amd ?
        define(['exports', 'x', 'z'], factory) :
    (global = global || self, factory(global.myBundle = {}, global.x));
}(this, (function (exports, x) { 'use strict';
...
})));
```

Note that while the `z` dependency is provide in the call,
the factory itself only accepts `exports` and `x` as parameters.

Previously ngcc appended new dependencies to the end of the factory
function, but this breaks in the above scenario. Now the new
dependencies are prefixed at the front of parameters/arguments
already in place.

Fixes #34653

PR Close #34660
2020-01-08 15:07:36 -08:00
George Kalpakas 07ea6cf582 fix(ngcc): avoid error due to circular dependency in `EsmDependencyHost` (#34512)
Previously, there was circular dependency between `ngcc/src/utils.ts`,
`ngcc/src/dependencies/dependency_host.ts` and
`ngcc/src/dependencies/esm_dependency_host.ts`. More specifically,
`utils.ts` would [import from `esm_dependency_host.ts`][1], which would
[import from `dependency_host.ts`][2], which would in turn
[import from `utils.ts`][3].

This might be fine in some environments/module formats, but it can cause
unclear errors in the transpiled CommonJS/UMD format (given how Node.js
handles [cycles in module resolution][4]).
(An example error can be found [here][5].)

This commit fixes the problem by moving the code that depends on
`EsmDependencyHost` out of `utils.ts` and into a dedicated file under
`dependencies/`. It also converts the `createDtsDependencyHost()`
function to a class for consistency with the rest of the
`DependencyHost`s.

[1]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/18d89c9c8/packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/src/utils.ts#L10
[2]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/18d89c9c8/packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/src/dependencies/esm_dependency_host.ts#L10
[3]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/18d89c9c8/packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/src/dependencies/dependency_host.ts#L9
[4]: https://nodejs.org/api/modules.html#modules_cycles
[5]: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/577581

PR Close #34512
2020-01-08 15:00:50 -08:00
George Kalpakas c38195f59e refactor(ngcc): use a special map for memoizing expensive-to-compute values (#34512)
Previously, in cases were values were expensive to compute and would be
used multiple times, a combination of a regular `Map` and a helper
function (`getOrDefault()`) was used to ensure values were only computed
once.

This commit uses a special `Map`-like structure to compute and memoize
such expensive values without the need to a helper function.

PR Close #34512
2020-01-08 15:00:50 -08:00
George Kalpakas 6606ce69f6 refactor(ngcc): avoid returning the same top-level helper calls multiple times (#34512)
This change should not have any impact on the code's behavior (based on
how the function is currently used), but it will avoid unnecessary work.

PR Close #34512
2020-01-08 15:00:50 -08:00
George Kalpakas 17d5e2bc99 refactor(ngcc): share code between `CommonJsReflectionHost` and `UmdReflectionHost` (#34512)
While different, CommonJS and UMD have a lot in common regarding the
their exports are constructed. Therefore, there was some code
duplication between `CommonJsReflectionHost` and `UmdReflectionHost`.

This commit extracts some of the common bits into a separate file as
helpers to allow reusing the code in both `ReflectionHost`s.

PR Close #34512
2020-01-08 15:00:49 -08:00
George Kalpakas d5fd742763 fix(ngcc): recognize re-exports with `require()` calls in UMD (#34512)
Previously, `UmdReflectionHost` would only recognize re-exports of the
form `__export(someIdentifier)` and not `__export(require('...'))`.
However, it is possible in some UMD variations to have the latter format
as well. See discussion in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/34254/files#r359515373

This commit adds support for re-export of the form
`__export(require('...'))` in UMD.

PR Close #34512
2020-01-08 15:00:49 -08:00
George Kalpakas 6654f82522 fix(ngcc): correctly handle inline exports in UMD (#34512)
This fix was part of a broader `ngtsc`/`ngcc` fix in 02bab8cf9 (see
there for details). In 02bab8cf9, the fix was only applied to
`CommonJsReflectionHost`, but it is equally applicable to
`UmdReflectionHost`. Later in #34254, the fix was partially ported to
`UmdReflectionHost` by fixing the `extractUmdReexports()` method.

This commit fully fixes `ngcc`'s handling of inline exports for code in
UMD format.

PR Close #34512
2020-01-08 15:00:49 -08:00
George Kalpakas 10e29355db fix(ngcc): do not add trailing commas in UMD imports (#34545)
Previously, if `UmdRenderingFormatter#addImports()` was called with an
empty list of imports to add (i.e. no new imports were needed), it would
add trailing commas in several locations (arrays, function arguments,
function parameters), thus making the code imcompatible with legacy
browsers such as IE11.

This commit fixes it by ensuring that no trailing commas are added if
`addImports()` is called with an empty list of imports.
This is a follow-up to #34353.

Fixes #34525

PR Close #34545
2020-01-07 10:42:06 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 4f42de9704 fix(ngcc): capture entry-point dependencies from typings as well as source (#34494)
ngcc computes a dependency graph of entry-points to ensure that
entry-points are processed in the correct order. Previously only the imports
in source files were analysed to determine the dependencies for each
entry-point.

This is not sufficient when an entry-point has a "type-only" dependency
 - for example only importing an interface from another entry-point.
In this case the "type-only" import does not appear in the
source code. It only appears in the typings files. This can cause a
dependency to be missed on the entry-point.

This commit fixes this by additionally processing the imports in the
typings program, as well as the source program.

Note that these missing dependencies could cause unexpected flakes when
running ngcc in async mode on multiple processes due to the way that
ngcc caches files when they are first read from disk.

Fixes #34411

// FW-1781

PR Close #34494
2020-01-07 10:35:03 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 69950e3888 refactor(ngcc): resolve modules based on the provided `moduleResolver` (#34494)
The `DependencyHost` implementations were duplicating the "postfix" strings
which are used to find matching paths when resolving module specifiers.
Now the hosts reuse the postfixes given to the `ModuleResolver` that is
passed to the host.

PR Close #34494
2020-01-07 10:35:03 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin e2b184515b refactor(ngcc): pass dependency info to `collectDependencies()` (#34494)
Rather than return a new object of dependency info from calls to
`collectDependencies()` we now pass in an object that will be updated
with the dependency info. This is in preparation of a change where
we will collect dependency information from more than one
`DependencyHost`.

Also to better fit with this approach the name is changed from
`findDependencies()` to `collectDependencies()`.

PR Close #34494
2020-01-07 10:35:03 -08:00
crisbeto cf37c003ff feat(ivy): error in ivy when inheriting a ctor from an undecorated base (#34460)
Angular View Engine uses global knowledge to compile the following code:

```typescript
export class Base {
  constructor(private vcr: ViewContainerRef) {}
}

@Directive({...})
export class Dir extends Base {
  // constructor inherited from base
}
```

Here, `Dir` extends `Base` and inherits its constructor. To create a `Dir`
the arguments to this inherited constructor must be obtained via dependency
injection. View Engine is able to generate a correct factory for `Dir` to do
this because via metadata it knows the arguments of `Base`'s constructor,
even if `Base` is declared in a different library.

In Ivy, DI is entirely a runtime concept. Currently `Dir` is compiled with
an ngDirectiveDef field that delegates its factory to `getInheritedFactory`.
This looks for some kind of factory function on `Base`, which comes up
empty. This case looks identical to an inheritance chain with no
constructors, which works today in Ivy.

Both of these cases will now become an error in this commit. If a decorated
class inherits from an undecorated base class, a diagnostic is produced
informing the user of the need to either explicitly declare a constructor or
to decorate the base class.

PR Close #34460
2019-12-18 15:04:49 -08:00
crisbeto dcc8ff4ce7 feat(ivy): throw compilation error when providing undecorated classes (#34460)
Adds a compilation error if the consumer tries to pass in an undecorated class into the `providers` of an `NgModule`, or the `providers`/`viewProviders` arrays of a `Directive`/`Component`.

PR Close #34460
2019-12-18 15:04:49 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 9264f43511 refactor(ngcc): remove private declaration aliases (#34254)
Now that the source to typings matching is able to handle
aliasing of exports, there is no need to handle aliases in private
declarations analysis.

These were originally added to cope when the typings files had
to use the name that the original source files used when exporting.

PR Close #34254
2019-12-18 11:25:01 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 918d8c9909 refactor(ngcc): slightly improve the info in error messages (#34254)
PR Close #34254
2019-12-18 11:25:01 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 31be29a9f3 fix(ngcc): use the correct identifiers when updating typings files (#34254)
Previously the identifiers used in the typings files were the same as
those used in the source files.

When the typings files and the source files do not match exactly, e.g.
when one of them is flattened, while the other is a deep tree, it is
possible for identifiers to be renamed.

This commit ensures that the correct identifier is used in typings files
when the typings file does not export the same name as the source file.

Fixes https://github.com/angular/ngcc-validation/pull/608

PR Close #34254
2019-12-18 11:25:01 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin f22a6eb00e fix(ngcc): correctly match aliased classes between src and dts files (#34254)
The naïve matching algorithm we previously used to match declarations in
source files to declarations in typings files was based only on the name
of the thing being declared.  This did not handle cases where the declared
item had been exported via an alias - a common scenario when one of the two
file sets (source or typings) has been flattened, while the other has not.

The new algorithm tries to overcome this by creating two maps of export
name to declaration (i.e. `Map<string, ts.Declaration>`).
One for the source files and one for the typings files.
It then joins these two together by matching export names, resulting in a
new map that maps source declarations to typings declarations directly
(i.e. `Map<ts.Declaration, ts.Declaration>`).

This new map can handle the declaration names being different between the
source and typings as long as they are ultimately both exported with the
same alias name.

Further more, there is one map for "public exports", i.e. exported via the
root of the source tree (the entry-point), and another map for "private
exports", which are exported from individual files in the source tree but
not necessarily from the root. This second map can be used to "guess"
the mapping between exports in a deep (non-flat) file tree, which can be
used by ngcc to add required private exports to the entry-point.

Fixes #33593

PR Close #34254
2019-12-18 11:25:01 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin e9fb5fdb89 fix(ngcc): handle UMD re-exports (#34254)
In TS we can re-export imports using statements of the form:

```
export * from 'some-import';
```

This is downleveled in UMD to:

```
function factory(exports, someImport) {
  function __export(m) {
    for (var p in m) if (!exports.hasOwnProperty(p)) exports[p] = m[p];
  }
  __export(someImport);
}
```

This commit adds support for this.

PR Close #34254
2019-12-18 11:25:01 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 47666f548c fix(ngcc): handle CommonJS re-exports by reference (#34254)
In TS we can re-export imports using statements of the form:

```
export * from 'some-import';
```

This can be downleveled in CommonJS to either:

```
__export(require('some-import'));
```

or

```
var someImport = require('some-import');
__export(someImport);
```

Previously we only supported the first downleveled version.
This commit adds support for the second version.

PR Close #34254
2019-12-18 11:25:01 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 0b837e2f0d refactor(ngcc): use bundle src to create reflection hosts (#34254)
Previously individual properties of the src bundle program were
passed to the reflection host constructors. But going forward,
more properties will be required. To prevent the signature getting
continually larger and more unwieldy, this change just passes the
whole src bundle to the constructor, allowing it to extract what it
needs.

PR Close #34254
2019-12-18 11:25:01 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh 763f8d470a fix(ivy): validate the NgModule declarations field (#34404)
This commit adds three previously missing validations to
NgModule.declarations:

1. It checks that declared classes are actually within the current
   compilation.

2. It checks that declared classes are directives, components, or pipes.

3. It checks that classes are declared in at most one NgModule.

PR Close #34404
2019-12-17 11:39:48 -08:00
George Kalpakas 9cabd6638e refactor(ngcc): un-nest accidentally nested `describe()` blocks (#34437)
PR Close #34437
2019-12-17 11:39:18 -08:00
George Kalpakas cd8a837956 refactor(ngcc): add debug messages to help with debugging in parallel mode (#34437)
PR Close #34437
2019-12-17 11:39:18 -08:00
JoostK 12444a8afc test(ngcc): cleanup entry-point bundle testcases (#34415)
There was an issue with the program under test and two tests with the
same description, this has been fixed.

PR Close #34415
2019-12-16 07:45:36 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh af95dddd7e perf(ivy): eagerly parse the template twice during analysis (#34334)
A quirk of the Angular template parser is that when parsing templates in the
"default" mode, with options specified by the user, the source mapping
information in the template AST may be inaccurate. As a result, the compiler
parses the template twice: once for "emit" and once to produce an AST with
accurate sourcemaps for diagnostic production.

Previously, only the first parse was performed during analysis. The second
parse occurred during the template type-checking phase, just in time to
produce the template type-checking file.

However, with the reuse of analysis results during incremental builds, it
makes more sense to do the diagnostic parse eagerly during analysis so that
the work isn't unnecessarily repeated in subsequent builds. This commit
refactors the `ComponentDecoratorHandler` to do both parses eagerly, which
actually cleans up some complexity around template parsing as well.

PR Close #34334
2019-12-12 14:13:16 -08:00
JoostK 8c2cbdd385 perf(ivy): use module resolution cache (#34332)
During TypeScript module resolution, a lot of filesystem requests are
done. This is quite an expensive operation, so a module resolution cache
can be used to speed up the process significantly.

This commit lets the Ivy compiler perform all module resolution with a
module resolution cache. Note that the module resolution behavior can be
changed with a custom compiler host, in which case that custom host
implementation is responsible for caching. In the case of the Angular
CLI a custom compiler host with proper module resolution caching is
already in place, so the CLI already has this optimization.

PR Close #34332
2019-12-12 14:06:37 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh 74edde0a94 perf(ivy): reuse prior analysis work during incremental builds (#34288)
Previously, the compiler performed an incremental build by analyzing and
resolving all classes in the program (even unchanged ones) and then using
the dependency graph information to determine which .js files were stale and
needed to be re-emitted. This algorithm produced "correct" rebuilds, but the
cost of re-analyzing the entire program turned out to be higher than
anticipated, especially for component-heavy compilations.

To achieve performant rebuilds, it is necessary to reuse previous analysis
results if possible. Doing this safely requires knowing when prior work is
viable and when it is stale and needs to be re-done.

The new algorithm implemented by this commit is such:

1) Each incremental build starts with knowledge of the last known good
   dependency graph and analysis results from the last successful build,
   plus of course information about the set of files changed.

2) The previous dependency graph's information is used to determine the
   set of source files which have "logically" changed. A source file is
   considered logically changed if it or any of its dependencies have
   physically changed (on disk) since the last successful compilation. Any
   logically unchanged dependencies have their dependency information copied
   over to the new dependency graph.

3) During the `TraitCompiler`'s loop to consider all source files in the
   program, if a source file is logically unchanged then its previous
   analyses are "adopted" (and their 'register' steps are run). If the file
   is logically changed, then it is re-analyzed as usual.

4) Then, incremental build proceeds as before, with the new dependency graph
   being used to determine the set of files which require re-emitting.

This analysis reuse avoids template parsing operations in many circumstances
and significantly reduces the time it takes ngtsc to rebuild a large
application.

Future work will increase performance even more, by tackling a variety of
other opportunities to reuse or avoid work.

PR Close #34288
2019-12-12 13:11:45 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh 50cdc0ac1b refactor(ivy): move analysis side effects into a register phase (#34288)
Previously 'analyze' in the various `DecoratorHandler`s not only extracts
information from the decorators on the classes being analyzed, but also has
several side effects within the compiler:

* it can register metadata about the types involved in global metadata
  trackers.
* it can register information about which .ngfactory symbols are actually
  needed.

In this commit, these side-effects are moved into a new 'register' phase,
which runs after the 'analyze' step. Currently this is a no-op refactoring
as 'register' is always called directly after 'analyze'. In the future this
opens the door for re-use of prior analysis work (with only 'register' being
called, to apply the above side effects).

Also as part of this refactoring, the reification of NgModule scope
information into the incremental dependency graph is moved to the
`NgtscProgram` instead of the `TraitCompiler` (which now only manages trait
compilation and does not have other side effects).

PR Close #34288
2019-12-12 13:11:45 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh 252e3e9487 refactor(ivy): formalize the compilation process for matched handlers (#34288)
Prior to this commit, the `IvyCompilation` tracked the state of each matched
`DecoratorHandler` on each class in the `ts.Program`, and how they
progressed through the compilation process. This tracking was originally
simple, but had grown more complicated as the compiler evolved. The state of
each specific "target" of compilation was determined by the nullability of
a number of fields on the object which tracked it.

This commit formalizes the process of compilation of each matched handler
into a new "trait" concept. A trait is some aspect of a class which gets
created when a `DecoratorHandler` matches the class. It represents an Ivy
aspect that needs to go through the compilation process.

Traits begin in a "pending" state and undergo transitions as various steps
of compilation take place. The `IvyCompilation` class is renamed to the
`TraitCompiler`, which manages the state of all of the traits in the active
program.

Making the trait concept explicit will support future work to incrementalize
the expensive analysis process of compilation.

PR Close #34288
2019-12-12 13:11:45 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 05c1398b4d fix(ngcc): render UMD imports even if no prior imports (#34353)
Previously the UMD rendering formatter assumed that
there would already be import (and an export) arguments
to the UMD factory function.

This commit adds support for this corner case.

Fixes #34138

PR Close #34353
2019-12-12 09:09:41 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin c77656e2dd fix(ngcc): handle imports in dts files when processing UMD (#34356)
When statically evalulating UMD code it is possible to find
that we are looking for the declaration of an identifier that
actually came from a typings file (rather than a UMD file).

Previously, the UMD reflection host would always try to use
a UMD specific algorithm for finding identifier declarations,
but when the id is actually in a typings file this resulted in the
returned declaration being the containing file of the declaration
rather than the declaration itself.

Now the UMD reflection host will check to see if the file containing
the identifier is a typings file and use the appropriate stategy.

PR Close #34356
2019-12-11 13:20:49 -08:00
JoostK ead169a402 fix(ngcc): fix undecorated child migration when `exportAs` is present (#34014)
The undecorated child migration creates a synthetic decorator, which
contained `"exportAs": ["exportName"]` as obtained from the metadata of
the parent class. This is a problem, as `exportAs` needs to specified
as a comma-separated string instead of an array. This commit fixes the
bug by transforming the array of export names back to a comma-separated
string.

PR Close #34014
2019-12-09 16:13:09 -08:00
JoostK 95429d55ff fix(ngcc): log Angular error codes correctly (#34014)
Replaces the "TS-99" sequence with just "NG", so that error codes are
logged correctly.

PR Close #34014
2019-12-09 16:13:08 -08:00
JoostK 0f0fd25038 fix(ngcc): report diagnostics from migrations (#34014)
When ngcc is analyzing synthetically inserted decorators from a
migration, it is typically not expected that any diagnostics are
produced. In the situation where a diagnostic is produced, however, the
diagnostic would not be reported at all. This commit ensures that
diagnostics in migrations are reported.

PR Close #34014
2019-12-09 16:13:08 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 61e8ed6623 fix(ngcc): ensure that bundle `rootDir` is the package path (#34212)
Previously the `rootDir` was set to the entry-point path but
this is incorrect if the source files are stored in a directory outside
the entry-point path. This is the case in the latest versions of the
Angular CDK.

Instead the `rootDir` should be the containing package path, which is
guaranteed to include all the source for the entry-point.

---

A symptom of this is an error when ngcc is trying to process the source of
an entry-point format after the entry-point's typings have already been
processed by a previous processing run.

During processing the `_toR3Reference()` function gets called which in turn
makes a call to `ReflectionHost.getDtsDeclaration()`. If the typings files
are also being processed this returns the node from the dts typings files.

But if we have already processed the typings files and are now processing
only an entry-point format without typings, the call to
`ReflectionHost.getDtsDeclaration()` returns `null`.

When this value is `null`, a JS `valueRef` is passed through as the DTS
`typeRef` to the `ReferenceEmitter`. In this case, the `ReferenceEmitter`
fails during `emit()` because no `ReferenceEmitStrategy` is able to provide
an emission:

1) The `LocalIdentifierStrategy` is not able help because in this case
`ImportMode` is `ForceNewImport`.
2) The `LogicalProjectStrategy` cannot find the JS file below the `rootDir`.

The second strategy failure is fixed by this PR.

Fixes https://github.com/angular/ngcc-validation/issues/495

PR Close #34212
2019-12-05 10:13:02 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin f16f6a290b fix(ngcc): render legacy i18n message ids by default (#34135)
By ensuring that legacy i18n message ids are rendered into the templates
of components for packages processed by ngcc, we ensure that these packages
can be used in an application that may provide translations in a legacy
format.

Fixes #34056

PR Close #34135
2019-12-03 10:15:53 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin cebe49d3c9 refactor(ngcc): store whether to render legacy i18n message ids in the bundle (#34135)
Placing this configuration in to the bundle avoids having to pass the
value around through lots of function calls, but also could enable
support for different behaviour per bundle in the future.

PR Close #34135
2019-12-03 10:15:53 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin e12933a3aa test(ngcc): tidy up helper function (#34135)
Thanks to @gkalpakl for the better regular expression approach.

PR Close #34135
2019-12-03 10:15:52 -08:00
Kara Erickson 755d2d572f refactor(ivy): remove unnecessary fac wrapper (#34076)
For injectables, we currently generate a factory function in the
injectable def (prov) that delegates to the factory function in
the factory def (fac). It looks something like this:

```
factory: function(t) { return Svc.fac(t); }
```

The extra wrapper function is unnecessary since the args for
the factory functions are the same. This commit changes the
compiler to generate this instead:

```
factory: Svc.fac
```

Because we are generating less code for each injectable, we
should see some modest code size savings. AIO's main bundle
is about 1 KB smaller.

PR Close #34076
2019-12-02 11:35:24 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 2fb9b7ff1b fix(ngcc): do not output duplicate ɵprov properties (#34085)
Previously, the Angular AOT compiler would always add a
`ɵprov` to injectables. But in ngcc this resulted in duplicate `ɵprov`
properties since published libraries already have this property.

Now in ngtsc, trying to add a duplicate `ɵprov` property is an error,
while in ngcc the additional property is silently not added.

// FW-1750

PR Close #34085
2019-11-27 12:46:37 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 44225e4010 fix(ngcc): render UMD global imports correctly (#34012)
The current UMD rendering formatter did not handle
a number of corner cases, such as imports from namespaced
packages.

PR Close #34012
2019-11-25 11:38:36 -05:00
JoostK 310ce6dcc2 fix(ngcc): do not crash on packages that specify typings as an array (#33973)
In a package.json file, the "typings" or "types" field could be an array
of typings files. ngcc would previously crash unexpectedly for such
packages, as it assumed that the typings field would be a string. This
commit lets ngcc skip over such packages, as having multiple typing
entry-points is not supported for Angular packages so it is safe to
ignore them.

Fixes #33646

PR Close #33973
2019-11-22 12:40:04 -05:00
Pete Bacon Darwin bf1bcd1e08 fix(ngcc): render localized strings when in ES5 format (#33857)
Recently the ngtsc translator was modified to be more `ScriptTarget`
aware, which basically means that it will not generate non-ES5 code
when the output format is ES5 or similar.

This commit enhances that change by also "downleveling" localized
messages. In ES2015 the messages use tagged template literals, which
are not available in ES5.

PR Close #33857
2019-11-21 10:54:59 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 715d02aa14 fix(ngcc): report errors from `analyze` and `resolve` processing (#33964)
Previously, these errors were being swallowed, which made it
hard to debug problems with packages.

See https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/33685#issuecomment-557091719

PR Close #33964
2019-11-21 10:44:24 -08:00
Andrew Kushnir fc2f6b8456 fix(ivy): wrap functions from "providers" in parentheses in Closure mode (#33609)
Due to the fact that Tsickle runs between analyze and transform phases in Angular, Tsickle may transform nodes (add comments with type annotations for Closure) that we captured during the analyze phase. As a result, some patterns where a function is returned from another function may trigger automatic semicolon insertion, which breaks the code (makes functions return `undefined` instead of a function). In order to avoid the problem, this commit updates the code to wrap all functions in some expression ("privders" and "viewProviders") in parentheses. More info can be found in Tsickle source code here: d797426257/src/jsdoc_transformer.ts (L1021)

PR Close #33609
2019-11-20 14:58:35 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh 08a4f10ee7 fix(ivy): move setClassMetadata calls into a pure iife (#33337)
This commit transforms the setClassMetadata calls generated by ngtsc from:

```typescript
/*@__PURE__*/ setClassMetadata(...);
```

to:

```typescript
/*@__PURE__*/ (function() {
  setClassMetadata(...);
})();
```

Without the IIFE, terser won't remove these function calls because the
function calls have arguments that themselves are function calls or other
impure expressions. In order to make the whole block be DCE-ed by terser,
we wrap it into IIFE and mark the IIFE as pure.

It should be noted that this change doesn't have any impact on CLI* with
build-optimizer, which removes the whole setClassMetadata block within
the webpack loader, so terser or webpack itself don't get to see it at
all. This is done to prevent cross-chunk retention issues caused by
webpack's internal module registry.

* actually we do expect a short-term size regression while
https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/pull/16228
is merged and released in the next rc of the CLI. But long term this
change does nothing to CLI + build-optimizer configuration and is done
primarly to correct the seemingly correct but non-function PURE annotation
that builds not using build-optimizer could rely on.

PR Close #33337
2019-11-20 12:55:58 -08:00
Alex Rickabaugh 29b8666b10 fix(ngcc): properly detect origin of constructor param types (#33901)
The ReflectionHost supports enumeration of constructor parameters, and one
piece of information it returns describes the origin of the parameter's
type. Parameter types come in two flavors: local (the type is not imported
from anywhere) or non-local (the type comes via an import).

ngcc incorrectly classified all type parameters as 'local', because in the
source files that ngcc processes the type parameter is a real ts.Identifer.
However, that identifier may still have come from an import and thus might
be non-local.

This commit changes ngcc's ReflectionHost(s) to properly recognize and
report these non-local type references.

Fixes #33677

PR Close #33901
2019-11-19 11:38:33 -08:00
JoostK 7215889b3c fix(ngcc): always add exports for `ModuleWithProviders` references (#33875)
In #32902 a bug was supposedly fixed where internal classes as used
within `ModuleWithProviders` are publicly exported, even when the
typings file already contained the generic type on the
`ModuleWithProviders`. This fix turns out to have been incomplete, as
the `ModuleWithProviders` analysis is not done when not processing the
typings files.

The effect of this bug is that formats that are processed after the
initial format had been processed would not have exports for internal
symbols, resulting in "export '...' was not found in '...'" errors.

This commit fixes the bug by always running the `ModuleWithProviders`
analyzer. An integration test has been added that would fail prior to
this change.

Fixes #33701

PR Close #33875
2019-11-18 09:11:34 -08:00
JoostK 32a4a549fd test(ngcc): expand integration tests with APF like package layouts (#33875)
ngcc has a basic integration test infrastructure that downlevels
TypeScript code into bundle formats that need to be processed by ngcc.
Until now, only ES5 bundles were created with a flat structure, however
more complex scenarios require an APF-like layout containing multiple
bundle formats.

PR Close #33875
2019-11-18 09:11:34 -08:00
JoostK 985cadb73d fix(ngcc): correctly include internal .d.ts files (#33875)
Some declaration files may not be referenced from an entry-point's
main typings file, as it may declare types that are only used internally.
ngcc has logic to include declaration files based on all source files,
to ensure internal declaration files are available.

For packages following APF layout, however, this logic was insufficient.
Consider an entry-point with base path of `/esm2015/testing` and typings
residing in `/testing`, the file
`/esm2015/testing/src/nested/internal.js` has its typings file at
`/testing/src/nested/internal.d.ts`. Previously, the declaration was
assumed to be located at `/esm2015/testing/testing/internal.d.ts` (by
means of `/esm2015/testing/src/nested/../../testing/internal.d.ts`)
which is not where the declaration file can be found. This commit
resolves the issue by looking in the correct directory.

PR Close #33875
2019-11-18 09:11:34 -08:00
JoostK e666d283dd fix(ngcc): correctly associate decorators with aliased classes (#33878)
In flat bundle formats, multiple classes that have the same name can be
suffixed to become unique. In ES5-like bundles this results in the outer
declaration from having a different name from the "implementation"
declaration within the class' IIFE, as the implementation declaration
may not have been suffixed.

As an example, the following code would fail to have a `Directive`
decorator as ngcc would search for `__decorate` calls that refer to
`AliasedDirective$1` by name, whereas the `__decorate` call actually
uses the `AliasedDirective` name.

```javascript
var AliasedDirective$1 = /** @class */ (function () {
    function AliasedDirective() {}
    AliasedDirective = tslib_1.__decorate([
        Directive({ selector: '[someDirective]' }),
    ], AliasedDirective);
    return AliasedDirective;
}());
```

This commit fixes the problem by not relying on comparing names, but
instead finding the declaration and matching it with both the outer
and inner declaration.

PR Close #33878
2019-11-18 09:10:35 -08:00
JoostK 19a6c158d2 test(ngcc): avoid using spy in `Esm2015ReflectionHost` test (#33878)
A testcase that was using a spy has shown itself to be brittle, and its
assertions can easily be moved into a related test.

PR Close #33878
2019-11-18 09:10:35 -08:00
George Kalpakas 033aba9351 fix(ngcc): do not emit ES2015 code in ES5 files (#33514)
Previously, ngcc's `Renderer` would add some constants in the processed
files which were emitted as ES2015 code (e.g. `const` declarations).
This would result in invalid ES5 generated code that would break when
run on browsers that do not support the emitted format.

This commit fixes it by adding a `printStatement()` method to
`RenderingFormatter`, which can convert statements to JavaScript code in
a suitable format for the corresponding `RenderingFormatter`.
Additionally, the `translateExpression()` and `translateStatement()`
ngtsc helper methods are augmented to accept an extra hint to know
whether the code needs to be translated to ES5 format or not.

Fixes #32665

PR Close #33514
2019-11-13 13:49:31 -08:00
George Kalpakas 704775168d fix(ngcc): generate correct metadata for classes with getter/setter properties (#33514)
While processing class metadata, ngtsc generates a `setClassMetadata()`
call which (among other things) contains info about property decorators.
Previously, processing getter/setter pairs with some of ngcc's
`ReflectionHost`s resulted in multiple metadata entries for the same
property, which resulted in duplicate object keys, which in turn causes
an error in ES5 strict mode.

This commit fixes it by ensuring that there are no duplicate property
names in the `setClassMetadata()` calls.

In addition, `generateSetClassMetadataCall()` is updated to treat
`ClassMember#decorators: []` the same as `ClassMember.decorators: null`
(i.e. omitting the `ClassMember` from the generated `setClassMetadata()`
call). Alternatively, ngcc's `ReflectionHost`s could be updated to do
this transformation (`decorators: []` --> `decorators: null`) when
reflecting on class members, but this would require changes in many
places and be less future-proof.

For example, given a class such as:

```ts
class Foo {
  @Input() get bar() { return 'bar'; }
  set bar(value: any) {}
}
```

...previously the generated `setClassMetadata()` call would look like:

```ts
ɵsetClassMetadata(..., {
  bar: [{type: Input}],
  bar: [],
});
```

The same class will now result in a call like:

```ts
ɵsetClassMetadata(..., {
  bar: [{type: Input}],
});
```

Fixes #30569

PR Close #33514
2019-11-13 13:49:31 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 1e1e242570 fix(ngcc): support minified ES5 scenarios (#33777)
The reflection hosts have been updated to support the following
code forms, which were found in some minified library code:

* The class IIFE not being wrapped in parentheses.
* Calls to `__decorate()` being combined with the IIFE return statement.

PR Close #33777
2019-11-13 11:11:48 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin d21471e24e fix(ngcc): remove `__decorator` calls even when part of the IIFE return statement (#33777)
Previously we only removed `__decorate()` calls that looked like:

```
SomeClass = __decorate(...);
```

But in some minified scenarios this call gets wrapped up with the
return statement of the IIFE.

```
return SomeClass = __decorate(...);
```

This is now removed also, leaving just the return statement:

```
return SomeClass;
```

PR Close #33777
2019-11-13 11:11:48 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 9c6ee5fcd0 refactor(ngcc): move `stripParentheses` to `Esm5ReflectionHost` for re-use (#33777)
PR Close #33777
2019-11-13 11:11:48 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 7f24975a60 refactor(ngcc): remove unused function (#33777)
PR Close #33777
2019-11-13 11:11:48 -08:00
George Kalpakas 95715fc71e fix(ngcc): add default config for `ng2-dragula` (#33797)
The `dist/` directory has a duplicate `package.json` pointing to the
same files, which (under certain configurations) can causes ngcc to try
to process the files twice and fail.

This commit adds a default ngcc config for `ng2-dragula` to ignore the
`dist/` entry-point.

Fixes #33718

PR Close #33797
2019-11-13 11:09:59 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin b3c3000004 fix(ngcc): ensure that adjacent statements go after helper calls (#33689)
Previously the renderers were fixed so that they inserted extra
"adjacent" statements after the last static property of classes.

In order to help the build-optimizer (in Angular CLI) to be able to
tree-shake classes effectively, these statements should also appear
after any helper calls, such as `__decorate()`.

This commit moves the computation of this positioning into the
`NgccReflectionHost` via the `getEndOfClass()` method, which
returns the last statement that is related to the class.

FW-1668

PR Close #33689
2019-11-11 13:01:15 -08:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 52d1500155 refactor(ngcc): allow look up of multiple helpers (#33689)
This change is a precursor to finding the end of a
class, which needs to search for helpers of many
different names.

PR Close #33689
2019-11-11 13:01:15 -08:00
JoostK 81828ae7f4 fix(ngcc): add reexports only once (#33658)
When ngcc is configured to generate reexports for a package using the
`generateDeepReexports` configuration option, it could incorrectly
render the reexports as often as the number of compiled classes in the
declaration file. This would cause compilation errors due to duplicated
declarations.

PR Close #33658
2019-11-07 20:29:13 +00:00
Pete Bacon Darwin fe12d0dc78 fix(ngcc): render adjacent statements after static properties (#33630)
See https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/33337#issuecomment-545487737

Fixes FW-1664

PR Close #33630
2019-11-06 19:54:05 +00:00
Alan Agius d749dd3ea1 fix(ngcc): handle new `__spreadArrays` tslib helper (#33617)
We already have special cases for the `__spread` helper function and with this change we handle the new tslib helper introduced in version 1.10 `__spreadArrays`.

For more context see: https://github.com/microsoft/tslib/releases/tag/1.10.0

Fixes: #33614

PR Close #33617
2019-11-06 19:43:07 +00:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 85298e345d fix(ngcc): render new definitions using the inner name of the class (#33533)
When decorating classes with ivy definitions (e.g. `ɵfac` or `ɵdir`)
the inner name of the class declaration must be used.

This is because in ES5 the definitions are inside the class's IIFE
where the outer declaration has not yet been initialized.

PR Close #33533
2019-11-05 17:25:02 +00:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 93a23b9ae0 fix(ngcc): override `getInternalNameOfClass()` and `getAdjacentNameOfClass()` for ES5 (#33533)
In ES5 the class consists of an outer variable declaration that is
initialised by an IIFE. Inside the IIFE the class is implemented by
an inner function declaration that is returned from the IIFE.
This inner declaration may have a different name to the outer
declaration.

This commit overrides `getInternalNameOfClass()` and
`getAdjacentNameOfClass()` in `Esm5ReflectionHost` with methods that
can find the correct inner declaration name identifier.

PR Close #33533
2019-11-05 17:25:01 +00:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 90f33dd11d refactor(ngcc): remove unnecessary ! operator (#33533)
PR Close #33533
2019-11-05 17:25:01 +00:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 1d141a8ab1 fix(compiler-cli): attach the correct `viaModule` to namespace imports (#33495)
Previously declarations that were imported via a namespace import
were given the same `bestGuessOwningModule` as the context
where they were imported to. This causes problems with resolving
`ModuleWithProviders` that have a type that has been imported in
this way, causing errors like:

```
ERROR in Symbol UIRouterModule declared in
.../@uirouter/angular/uiRouterNgModule.d.ts
is not exported from
.../@uirouter/angular/uirouter-angular.d.ts
(import into .../src/app/child.module.ts)
```

This commit modifies the `TypescriptReflectionHost.getDirectImportOfIdentifier()`
method so that it also understands how to attach the correct `viaModule` to
the identifier of the namespace import.

Resolves #32166

PR Close #33495
2019-10-31 22:25:48 +00:00
crisbeto c3e93564d0 perf(ivy): avoid generating selectors array for directives without a selector (#33431)
Now that we've replaced `ngBaseDef` with an abstract directive definition, there are a lot more cases where we generate a directive definition without a selector. These changes make it so that we don't generate the `selectors` array if it's going to be empty.

PR Close #33431
2019-10-29 12:06:15 -07:00
crisbeto 14c4b1b205 refactor(ivy): remove ngBaseDef (#33264)
Removes `ngBaseDef` from the compiler and any runtime code that was still referring to it. In the cases where we'd previously generate a base def we now generate a definition for an abstract directive.

PR Close #33264
2019-10-25 13:11:34 -07:00
Alex Rickabaugh b381497126 feat(ngcc): add a migration for undecorated child classes (#33362)
In Angular View Engine, there are two kinds of decorator inheritance:

1) both the parent and child classes have decorators

This case is supported by InheritDefinitionFeature, which merges some fields
of the definitions (such as the inputs or queries).

2) only the parent class has a decorator

If the child class is missing a decorator, the compiler effectively behaves
as if the parent class' decorator is applied to the child class as well.
This is the "undecorated child" scenario, and this commit adds a migration
to ngcc to support this pattern in Ivy.

This migration has 2 phases. First, the NgModules of the application are
scanned for classes in 'declarations' which are missing decorators, but
whose base classes do have decorators. These classes are the undecorated
children. This scan is performed recursively, so even if a declared class
has a base class that itself inherits a decorator, this case is handled.

Next, a synthetic decorator (either @Component or @Directive) is created
on the child class. This decorator copies some critical information such
as 'selector' and 'exportAs', as well as supports any decorated fields
(@Input, etc). A flag is passed to the decorator compiler which causes a
special feature `CopyDefinitionFeature` to be included on the compiled
definition. This feature copies at runtime the remaining aspects of the
parent definition which `InheritDefinitionFeature` does not handle,
completing the "full" inheritance of the child class' decorator from its
parent class.

PR Close #33362
2019-10-25 09:16:50 -07:00
JoostK 6b267482d7 feat(ngcc): enable migrations to apply schematics to libraries (#33362)
When upgrading an Angular application to a new version using the Angular
CLI, built-in schematics are being run to update user code from
deprecated patterns to the new way of working. For libraries that have
been built for older versions of Angular however, such schematics have
not been executed which means that deprecated code patterns may still be
present, potentially resulting in incorrect behavior.

Some of the logic of schematics has been ported over to ngcc migrations,
which are automatically run on libraries. These migrations achieve the
same goal of the regular schematics, but operating on published library
sources instead of used code.

PR Close #33362
2019-10-25 09:16:50 -07:00
JoostK 2e5e1dd5f5 refactor(ngcc): rework undecorated parent migration (#33362)
Previously, the (currently disabled) undecorated parent migration in
ngcc would produce errors when a base class could not be determined
statically or when a class extends from a class in another package. This
is not ideal, as it would cause the library to fail compilation without
a workaround, whereas those problems are not guaranteed to cause issues.

Additionally, inheritance chains were not handled. This commit reworks
the migration to address these limitations.

PR Close #33362
2019-10-25 09:16:50 -07:00
JoostK 3858b26211 refactor(ivy): mark synthetic decorators explicitly (#33362)
In ngcc's migration system, synthetic decorators can be injected into a
compilation to ensure that certain classes are compiled with Angular
logic, where the original library code did not include the necessary
decorators. Prior to this change, synthesized decorators would have a
fake AST structure as associated node and a made-up identifier. In
theory, this may introduce issues downstream:

1) a decorator's node is used for diagnostics, so it must have position
information. Having fake AST nodes without a position is therefore a
problem. Note that this is currently not a problem in practice, as
injected synthesized decorators would not produce any diagnostics.

2) the decorator's identifier should refer to an imported symbol.
Therefore, it is required that the symbol is actually imported.
Moreover, bundle formats such as UMD and CommonJS use namespaces for
imports, so a bare `ts.Identifier` would not be suitable to use as
identifier. This was also not a problem in practice, as the identifier
is only used in the `setClassMetadata` generated code, which is omitted
for synthetically injected decorators.

To remedy these potential issues, this commit makes a decorator's
identifier optional and switches its node over from a fake AST structure
to the class' name.

PR Close #33362
2019-10-25 09:16:49 -07:00
JoostK 31b9492951 feat(ngcc): migrate services that are missing `@Injectable()` (#33362)
A class that is provided as Angular service is required to have an
`@Injectable()` decorator so that the compiler generates its injectable
definition for the runtime. Applications are automatically migrated
using the "missing-injectable" schematic, however libraries built for
older version of Angular may not yet satisfy this requirement.

This commit ports the "missing-injectable" schematic to a migration that
is ran when ngcc is processing a library. This ensures that any service
that is provided from an NgModule or Directive/Component will have an
`@Injectable()` decorator.

PR Close #33362
2019-10-25 09:16:49 -07:00
JoostK 0de2dbfec1 fix(ngcc): prevent reflected decorators from being clobbered (#33362)
ngcc has an internal cache of computed decorator information for
reflected classes, which could previously be mutated by consumers of the
reflection host. With the ability to inject synthesized decorators, such
decorators would inadvertently be added into the array of decorators
that was owned by the internal cache of the reflection host, incorrectly
resulting in synthesized decorators to be considered real decorators on
a class. This commit fixes the issue by cloning the cached array before
returning it.

PR Close #33362
2019-10-25 09:16:49 -07:00
Alex Rickabaugh e030375d9a feat(ngcc): enable private NgModule re-exports in ngcc on request (#33177)
This commit adapts the private NgModule re-export system (using aliasing) to
ngcc. Not all ngcc compilations are compatible with these re-exports, as
they assume a 1:1 correspondence between .js and .d.ts files. The primary
concern here is supporting them for commonjs-only packages.

PR Close #33177
2019-10-22 13:14:31 -04:00
Pete Bacon Darwin bfd07b3c94 fix(ngcc): Esm5ReflectionHost.getDeclarationOfIdentifier should handle aliased inner declarations (#33252)
In ES5 modules, the class declarations consist of an IIFE with inner
and outer declarations that represent the class. The `EsmReflectionHost`
has logic to ensure that `getDeclarationOfIdentifier()` always returns the
outer declaration.

Before this commit, if an identifier referred to an alias of the inner
declaration, then `getDeclarationOfIdentifier()` was failing to find
the outer declaration - instead returning the inner declaration.

Now the identifier is correctly resolved up to the outer declaration
as expected.

This should fix some of the failing 3rd party packages discussed in
https://github.com/angular/ngcc-validation/issues/57.

PR Close #33252
2019-10-18 14:41:25 -04:00
Igor Minar 86e1e6c082 feat: typescript 3.6 support (#32946)
BREAKING CHANGE: typescript 3.4 and 3.5 are no longer supported, please update to typescript 3.6

Fixes #32380

PR Close #32946
2019-10-18 13:15:16 -04:00
Alex Rickabaugh de445709d4 fix(ivy): use ReflectionHost to check exports when writing an import (#33192)
This commit fixes ngtsc's import generator to use the ReflectionHost when
looking through the exports of an ES module to find the export of a
particular declaration that's being imported. This is necessary because
some module formats like CommonJS have unusual export mechanics, and the
normal TypeScript ts.TypeChecker does not understand them.

This fixes an issue with ngcc + CommonJS where exports were not being
enumerated correctly.

FW-1630 #resolve

PR Close #33192
2019-10-17 19:43:39 -04:00
Alex Rickabaugh 50710838bf fix(ngcc): better detection of end of decorator expression (#33192)
for removal of decorator from __decorate calls.

FW-1629 #resolve

PR Close #33192
2019-10-17 19:43:39 -04:00
Alex Rickabaugh 4da2dda647 feat(ngcc): support ignoreMissingDependencies in ngcc config (#33192)
Normally, when ngcc encounters a package with missing dependencies while
attempting to determine a compilation ordering, it will ignore that package.
This commit adds a configuration for a flag to tell ngcc to compile the
package anyway, regardless of any missing dependencies.

FW-1931 #resolve

PR Close #33192
2019-10-17 19:43:39 -04:00
Alex Rickabaugh afcff73be3 fix(ngcc): report the correct viaModule when reflecting over commonjs (#33192)
In the ReflectionHost API, a 'viaModule' indicates that a particular value
originated in another absolute module. It should always be 'null' for values
originating in relatively-imported modules.

This commit fixes a bug in the CommonJsReflectionHost where viaModule would
be reported even for relatively-imported values, which causes invalid import
statements to be generated during compilation.

A test is added to verify the correct behavior.

FW-1628 #resolve

PR Close #33192
2019-10-17 19:43:39 -04:00
Alex Rickabaugh 2196114501 feat(ngcc): support --async flag (defaults to true) (#33192)
This allows disabling parallelism in ngcc if desired, which is mainly useful
for debugging. The implementation creates the flag and passes its value to
mainNgcc.

No tests are added since the feature mainly exists already - ngcc supports
both parallel and serial execution. This commit only allows switching the
flag via the commandline.

PR Close #33192
2019-10-17 19:43:39 -04:00
George Kalpakas 78214e72ea fix(ngcc): avoid warning when reflecting on index signature member (#33198)
Previously, when `ngcc` was reflecting on class members it did not
account for the fact that a member could be of the kind
`IndexSignature`. This can happen, for example, on abstract classes (as
is the case for [JsonCallbackContext][1]).

Trying to reflect on such members (and failing to recognize their kind),
resulted in warnings, such as:
```
Warning: Unknown member type: "[key: string]: (data: any) => void;
```

While these warnings are harmless, they can be confusing and worrisome
for users.

This commit avoids such warnings by detecting class members of the
`IndexSignature` kind and ignoring them.

[1]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/4659cc26e/packages/common/http/src/jsonp.ts#L39

PR Close #33198
2019-10-17 16:05:48 -04:00
Kara Erickson cda9248b33 refactor(core): rename ngInjectorDef to ɵinj (#33151)
Injector defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.

This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngInjectorDef to inj. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.

PR Close #33151
2019-10-16 16:36:19 -04:00
Gabriel Medeiros Coelho 4659cc26ea style: emove unreachable 'return null' statement (#33174)
There's another return statement before this one, therefore 'return null' will never be reached.

PR Close #33174
2019-10-16 10:58:38 -04:00
Kara Erickson fc93dafab1 refactor(core): rename ngModuleDef to ɵmod (#33142)
Module defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.

This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngModuleDef to mod. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.

PR Close #33142
2019-10-14 23:08:10 +00:00
Kara Erickson 0de2a5e408 refactor(core): rename ngFactoryDef to ɵfac (#33116)
Factory defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.

This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngFactoryDef to fac. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.

Note that the other "defs" (ngPipeDef, etc) will be
prefixed and shortened in follow-up PRs, in an attempt to
limit how large and conflict-y this change is.

PR Close #33116
2019-10-14 20:27:25 +00:00
George Kalpakas 25af147a8c refactor(ngcc): fix formatting of missing dependencies error (#33139)
Previously, the list of missing dependencies was not explicitly joined,
which resulted in the default `,` joiner being used during
stringification.

This commit explicitly joins the missing dependency lines to avoid
unnecessary commas.

Before:
```
The target entry-point "some-entry-point" has missing dependencies:
 - dependency 1
, - dependency 2
, - dependency 3
```

After:
```
The target entry-point "some-entry-point" has missing dependencies:
 - dependency 1
 - dependency 2
 - dependency 3
```

PR Close #33139
2019-10-14 16:30:39 +00:00
George Kalpakas 1a34fbce25 fix(ngcc): rename the executable from `ivy-ngcc` to `ngcc` (#33140)
Previously, the executable for the Angular Compatibility Compiler
(`ngcc`) was called `ivy-ngcc`. This would be confusing for users not
familiar with our internal terminology, especially given that we call it
`ngcc` in all our docs and presentations.

This commit renames the executable to `ngcc` and replaces `ivy-ngcc`
with a script that errors with an informative message (prompting the
user to use `ngcc` instead).

Jira issue: [FW-1624](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1624)

PR Close #33140
2019-10-14 16:29:14 +00:00
Kara Erickson 1a67d70bf8 refactor(core): rename ngDirectiveDef to ɵdir (#33110)
Directive defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.

This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngDirectiveDef to dir. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.

Note that the other "defs" (ngFactoryDef, etc) will be
prefixed and shortened in follow-up PRs, in an attempt to
limit how large and conflict-y this change is.

PR Close #33110
2019-10-14 16:20:11 +00:00
Kara Erickson 64fd0d6db9 refactor(core): rename ngComponentDef to ɵcmp (#33088)
Component defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.

This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
`ngComponentDef` to `cmp`. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.

Note that the other "defs" (ngDirectiveDef, etc) will be
prefixed and shortened in follow-up PRs, in an attempt to
limit how large and conflict-y this change is.

PR Close #33088
2019-10-11 15:45:22 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 90007e97ca feat(ngcc): support version ranges in project/default configurations (#33008)
By appending a version range to the package name, it is now possible to
target configuration to specific versions of a package.

PR Close #33008
2019-10-10 13:59:57 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 916762440c feat(ngcc): support fallback to a default configuration (#33008)
It is now possible to include a set of default ngcc configurations
that ship with ngcc out of the box. This allows ngcc to handle a
set of common packages, which are unlikely to be fixed, without
requiring the application developer to write their own configuration
for them.

Any packages that are configured at the package or project level
will override these default configurations. This allows a reasonable
level of control at the package and user level.

PR Close #33008
2019-10-10 13:59:57 -07:00
crisbeto d5b87d32b0 perf(ivy): move attributes array into component def (#32798)
Currently Ivy stores the element attributes into an array above the component def and passes it into the relevant instructions, however the problem is that upon minification the array will get a unique name which won't compress very well. These changes move the attributes array into the component def and pass in the index into the instructions instead.

Before:
```
const _c0 = ['foo', 'bar'];

SomeComp.ngComponentDef = defineComponent({
  template: function() {
    element(0, 'div', _c0);
  }
});
```

After:
```
SomeComp.ngComponentDef = defineComponent({
  consts: [['foo', 'bar']],
  template: function() {
    element(0, 'div', 0);
  }
});
```

A couple of cases that this PR doesn't handle:
* Template references are still in a separate array.
* i18n attributes are still in a separate array.

PR Close #32798
2019-10-09 13:16:55 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin b2b917d2d8 feat(ngcc): expose `--create-ivy-entry-points` option on ivy-ngcc (#33049)
This allows a postinstall hook to generate the same
output as the CLI integration does.

See https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/32999#issuecomment-539937368

PR Close #33049
2019-10-09 13:16:16 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin bcbf3e4123 feat(ivy): i18n - render legacy message ids in `$localize` if requested (#32937)
The `$localize` library uses a new message digest function for
computing message ids. This means that translations in legacy
translation files will no longer match the message ids in the code
and so will not be translated.

This commit adds the ability to specify the format of your legacy
translation files, so that the appropriate message id can be rendered
in the `$localize` tagged strings. This results in larger code size
and requires that all translations are in the legacy format.

Going forward the developer should migrate their translation files
to use the new message id format.

PR Close #32937
2019-10-03 12:12:55 -07:00
Martin Probst 5332b04f35 build: TypeScript 3.6 compatibility. (#32908)
This PR updates Angular to compile with TypeScript 3.6 while retaining
compatibility with TS3.5. We achieve this by inserting several `as any`
casts for compatiblity around `ts.CompilerHost` APIs.

PR Close #32908
2019-10-03 09:09:11 -07:00
crisbeto 4e35e348af refactor(ivy): generate ngFactoryDef for injectables (#32433)
With #31953 we moved the factories for components, directives and pipes into a new field called `ngFactoryDef`, however I decided not to do it for injectables, because they needed some extra logic. These changes set up the `ngFactoryDef` for injectables as well.

For reference, the extra logic mentioned above is that for injectables we have two code paths:

1. For injectables that don't configure how they should be instantiated, we create a `factory` that proxies to `ngFactoryDef`:

```
// Source
@Injectable()
class Service {}

// Output
class Service {
  static ngInjectableDef = defineInjectable({
    factory: () => Service.ngFactoryFn(),
  });

  static ngFactoryFn: (t) => new (t || Service)();
}
```

2. For injectables that do configure how they're created, we keep the `ngFactoryDef` and generate the factory based on the metadata:

```
// Source
@Injectable({
  useValue: DEFAULT_IMPL,
})
class Service {}

// Output
export class Service {
  static ngInjectableDef = defineInjectable({
    factory: () => DEFAULT_IMPL,
  });

  static ngFactoryFn: (t) => new (t || Service)();
}
```

PR Close #32433
2019-10-02 13:04:26 -07:00
JoostK 747f0cff9e fix(ngcc): handle presence of both `ctorParameters` and `__decorate` (#32901)
Recently ng-packagr was updated to include a transform that used to be
done in tsickle (https://github.com/ng-packagr/ng-packagr/pull/1401),
where only constructor parameter decorators are emitted in tsickle's
format, not any of the other decorators.

ngcc used to extract decorators from only a single format, so once it
saw the `ctorParameters` static property it assumed the library is using
the tsickle format. Therefore, none of the `__decorate` calls were
considered. This resulted in missing decorator information, preventing
proper processing of a package.

This commit changes how decorators are extracted by always looking at
both the static properties and the `__decorate` calls, merging these
sources appropriately.

Resolves FW-1573

PR Close #32901
2019-09-30 14:11:45 -07:00
JoostK 002a97d852 fix(ngcc): ensure private exports are added for `ModuleWithProviders` (#32902)
ngcc may need to insert public exports into the bundle's source as well
as to the entry-point's declaration file, as the Ivy compiler may need
to create import statements to internal library types. The way ngcc
knows which exports to add is through the references registry, to which
references to things that require a public export are added by the
various analysis steps that are executed.

One of these analysis steps is the augmentation of declaration files
where functions that return `ModuleWithProviders` are updated so that a
generic type argument is added that corresponds with the `NgModule` that
is actually imported. This type has to be publicly exported, so the
analyzer step has to add the module type to the references registry.

A problem occurs when `ModuleWithProviders` already has a generic type
argument, in which case no update of the declaration file is necessary.
This may happen when 1) ngcc is processing additional bundle formats, so
that the declaration file has already been updated while processing the
first bundle format, or 2) when a package is processed which already
contains the generic type in its source. In both scenarios it may occur
that the referenced `NgModule` type does not yet have a public export,
so it is crucial that a reference to the type is added to the
references registry, which ngcc failed to do.

This commit fixes the issue by always adding the referenced `NgModule`
type to the references registry, so that a public export will always be
created if necessary.

Resolves FW-1575

PR Close #32902
2019-09-30 14:11:16 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 0ea4875b10 fix(ngcc): make the build-marker error more clear (#32712)
The previous message was confusing as it could be
interpreted as only deleting the package mentioned.

Now we compute and display the actual node_modules
path to remove.

See https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/31354#issuecomment-532080537

PR Close #32712
2019-09-25 11:29:45 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin e5a3de575f fix(ngcc): support UMD global factory in comma lists (#32709)
Previously we were looking for a global factory call that looks like:

```ts
(factory((global.ng = global.ng || {}, global.ng.common = {}), global.ng.core))"
```

but in some cases it looks like:

```ts
(global = global || self, factory((global.ng = global.ng || {}, global.ng.common = {}), global.ng.core))"
```

Note the `global = global || self` at the start of the statement.

This commit makes the test when finding the global factory
function call resilient to being in a comma list.

PR Close #32709
2019-09-17 09:16:08 -07:00
JoostK 3c7da767d8 fix(ngcc): resolve imports in `.d.ts` files for UMD/CommonJS bundles (#32619)
In ngcc's reflection host for UMD and CommonJS bundles, custom logic is
present to resolve import details of an identifier. However, this custom
logic is unable to resolve an import for an identifier inside of
declaration files, as such files use the regular ESM import syntax.

As a consequence of this limitation, ngtsc is unable to resolve
`ModuleWithProviders` imports that are declared in an external library.
In that situation, ngtsc determines the type of the actual `NgModule`
that is imported, by looking in the library's declaration files for the
generic type argument on `ModuleWithProviders`. In this process, ngtsc
resolves the import for the `ModuleWithProviders` identifier to verify
that it is indeed the `ModuleWithProviders` type from `@angular/core`.
So, when the UMD reflection host was in use this resolution would fail,
therefore no `NgModule` type could be detected.

This commit fixes the bug by using the regular import resolution logic
in addition to the custom resolution logic that is required for UMD
and CommonJS bundles.

Fixes #31791

PR Close #32619
2019-09-12 13:18:20 -07:00
JoostK c4e039a43a fix(ngcc): correctly read static properties for aliased classes (#32619)
In ESM2015 bundles, a class with decorators may be emitted as follows:

```javascript
var MyClass_1;
let MyClass = MyClass_1 = class MyClass {};
MyClass.decorators = [/* here be decorators */];
```

Such a class has two declarations: the publicly visible `let MyClass`
and the implementation `class MyClass {}` node. In #32539 a refactoring
took place to handle such classes more consistently, however the logic
to find static properties was mistakenly kept identical to its broken
state before the refactor, by looking for static properties on the
implementation symbol (the one for `class MyClass {}`) whereas the
static properties need to be obtained from the symbol corresponding with
the `let MyClass` declaration, as that is where the `decorators`
property is assigned to in the example above.

This commit fixes the behavior by looking for static properties on the
public declaration symbol. This fixes an issue where decorators were not
found for classes that do in fact have decorators, therefore preventing
the classes from being compiled for Ivy.

Fixes #31791

PR Close #32619
2019-09-12 13:18:20 -07:00
JoostK 373e1337de fix(ngcc): consistently use outer declaration for classes (#32539)
In ngcc's reflection hosts for compiled JS bundles, such as ESM2015,
special care needs to be taken for classes as there may be an outer
declaration (referred to as "declaration") and an inner declaration
(referred to as "implementation") for a given class. Therefore, there
will also be two `ts.Symbol`s bound per class, and ngcc needs to switch
between those declarations and symbols depending on where certain
information can be found.

Prior to this commit, the `NgccReflectionHost` interface had methods
`getClassSymbol` and `findClassSymbols` that would return a `ts.Symbol`.
These class symbols would be used to kick off compilation of components
using ngtsc, so it is important for these symbols to correspond with the
publicly visible outer declaration of the class. However, the ESM2015
reflection host used to return the `ts.Symbol` for the inner
declaration, if the class was declared as follows:

```javascript
var MyClass = class MyClass {};
```

For the above code, `Esm2015ReflectionHost.getClassSymbol` would return
the `ts.Symbol` corresponding with the `class MyClass {}` declaration,
whereas it should have corresponded with the `var MyClass` declaration.
As a consequence, no `NgModule` could be resolved for the component, so
no components/directives would be in scope for the component. This
resulted in errors during runtime.

This commit resolves the issue by introducing a `NgccClassSymbol` that
contains references to both the outer and inner `ts.Symbol`, instead of
just a single `ts.Symbol`. This avoids the unclarity of whether a
`ts.Symbol` corresponds with the outer or inner declaration.

More details can be found here: https://hackmd.io/7nkgWOFWQlSRAuIW_8KPPw

Fixes #32078
Closes FW-1507

PR Close #32539
2019-09-12 11:12:10 -07:00
JoostK 2279cb8dc0 refactor(ngcc): move `ClassSymbol` to become `NgccClassSymbol` (#32539)
PR Close #32539
2019-09-12 11:12:10 -07:00
George Kalpakas c714330856 refactor(ngcc): add debug logging for the duration of different operations (#32427)
This gives an overview of how much time is spent in each operation/phase
and makes it easy to do rough comparisons of how different
configurations or changes affect performance.

PR Close #32427
2019-09-09 15:55:14 -04:00
George Kalpakas e36e6c85ef perf(ngcc): process tasks in parallel in async mode (#32427)
`ngcc` supports both synchronous and asynchronous execution. The default
mode when using `ngcc` programmatically (which is how `@angular/cli` is
using it) is synchronous. When running `ngcc` from the command line
(i.e. via the `ivy-ngcc` script), it runs in async mode.

Previously, the work would be executed in the same way in both modes.

This commit improves the performance of `ngcc` in async mode by
processing tasks in parallel on multiple processes. It uses the Node.js
built-in [`cluster` module](https://nodejs.org/api/cluster.html) to
launch a cluster of Node.js processes and take advantage of multi-core
systems.

Preliminary comparisons indicate a 1.8x to 2.6x speed improvement when
processing the angular.io app (apparently depending on the OS, number of
available cores, system load, etc.). Further investigation is needed to
better understand these numbers and identify potential areas of
improvement.

Inspired by/Based on @alxhub's prototype: alxhub/angular@cb631bdb1
Original design doc: https://hackmd.io/uYG9CJrFQZ-6FtKqpnYJAA?view

Jira issue: [FW-1460](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1460)

PR Close #32427
2019-09-09 15:55:13 -04:00
George Kalpakas f4e4bb2085 refactor(ngcc): implement task selection for parallel task execution (#32427)
This commit adds a new `TaskQueue` implementation that supports
executing multiple tasks in parallel (while respecting interdependencies
between them).

This new implementation is currently not used, thus the behavior of
`ngcc` is not affected by this change. The parallel `TaskQueue` will be
used in a subsequent commit that will introduce parallel task execution.

PR Close #32427
2019-09-09 15:55:13 -04:00
George Kalpakas 2844dd2972 refactor(ngcc): abstract task selection behind an interface (#32427)
This change does not alter the current behavior, but makes it easier to
introduce `TaskQueue`s implementing different task selection algorithms,
for example to support executing multiple tasks in parallel (while
respecting interdependencies between them).

Inspired by/Based on @alxhub's prototype: alxhub/angular@cb631bdb1

PR Close #32427
2019-09-09 15:55:13 -04:00
George Kalpakas 0cf94e3ed5 refactor(ngcc): remove unused `EntryPointProcessingMetadata` data and types (#32427)
Previously, `ngcc` needed to store some metadata related to the
processing of each entry-point. This metadata was stored in a `Map`, in
the form of `EntryPointProcessingMetadata` and passed around as needed.

After some recent refactorings, it turns out that this metadata (with
its only remaining property, `hasProcessedTypings`) was no longer used,
because the relevant information was extracted from other sources (such
as the `processDts` property on `Task`s).

This commit cleans up the code by removing the unused code and types.

PR Close #32427
2019-09-09 15:55:13 -04:00
George Kalpakas 9270d3f279 refactor(ngcc): take advantage of early knowledge about format property processability (#32427)
In the past, a task's processability didn't use to be known in advance.
It was possible that a task would be created and added to the queue
during the analysis phase and then later (during the compilation phase)
it would be found out that the task (i.e. the associated format
property) was not processable.

As a result, certain checks had to be delayed, until a task's processing
had started or even until all tasks had been processed. Examples of
checks that had to be delayed are:
- Whether a task can be skipped due to `compileAllFormats: false`.
- Whether there were entry-points for which no format at all was
  successfully processed.

It turns out that (as made clear by the refactoring in 9537b2ff8), once
a task starts being processed it is expected to either complete
successfully (with the associated format being processed) or throw an
error (in which case the process will exit). In other words, a task's
processability is known in advance.

This commit takes advantage of this fact by moving certain checks
earlier in the process (e.g. in the analysis phase instead of the
compilation phase), which in turn allows avoiding some unnecessary work.
More specifically:

- When `compileAllFormats` is `false`, tasks are created _only_ for the
  first suitable format property for each entry-point, since the rest of
  the tasks would have been skipped during the compilation phase anyway.
  This has the following advantages:
  1. It avoids the slight overhead of generating extraneous tasks and
     then starting to process them (before realizing they should be
     skipped).
  2. In a potential future parallel execution mode, unnecessary tasks
     might start being processed at the same time as the first (useful)
     task, even if their output would be later discarded, wasting
     resources. Alternatively, extra logic would have to be added to
     prevent this from happening. The change in this commit avoids these
     issues.
- When an entry-point is not processable, an error will be thrown
  upfront without having to wait for other tasks to be processed before
  failing.

PR Close #32427
2019-09-09 15:55:13 -04:00
George Kalpakas 3127ba3c35 refactor(ngcc): add support for asynchronous execution (#32427)
Previously, `ngcc`'s programmatic API would run and complete
synchronously. This was necessary for specific usecases (such as how the
`@angular/cli` invokes `ngcc` as part of the TypeScript module
resolution process), but not for others (e.g. running `ivy-ngcc` as a
`postinstall` script).

This commit adds a new option (`async`) that enables turning on
asynchronous execution. I.e. it signals that the caller is OK with the
function call to complete asynchronously, which allows `ngcc` to
potentially run in a more efficient mode.

Currently, there is no difference in the way tasks are executed in sync
vs async mode, but this change sets the ground for adding new execution
options (that require asynchronous operation), such as processing tasks
in parallel on multiple processes.

NOTE:
When using the programmatic API, the default value for `async` is
`false`, thus retaining backwards compatibility.
When running `ngcc` from the command line (i.e. via the `ivy-ngcc`
script), it runs in async mode (to be able to take advantage of future
optimizations), but that is transparent to the caller.

PR Close #32427
2019-09-09 15:55:13 -04:00
George Kalpakas 5c213e5474 refactor(ngcc): abstract work orchestration/execution behind an interface (#32427)
This change does not alter the current behavior, but makes it easier to
introduce new types of `Executors` , for example to do the required work
in parallel (on multiple processes).

Inspired by/Based on @alxhub's prototype: alxhub/angular@cb631bdb1

PR Close #32427
2019-09-09 15:55:13 -04:00
George Kalpakas 3d9dd6df0e refactor(ngcc): abstract updating `package.json` files behind an interface (#32427)
To persist some of its state, `ngcc` needs to update `package.json`
files (both in memory and on disk).

This refactoring abstracts these operations behind the
`PackageJsonUpdater` interface, making it easier to orchestrate them
from different contexts (e.g. when running tasks in parallel on multiple
processes).

Inspired by/Based on @alxhub's prototype: alxhub/angular@cb631bdb1

PR Close #32427
2019-09-09 15:55:13 -04:00
George Kalpakas 38359b166e fix(ngcc): only back up the original `prepublishOnly` script and not the overwritten one (#32427)
In order to prevent `ngcc`'d packages (e.g. libraries) from getting
accidentally published, `ngcc` overwrites the `prepublishOnly` npm
script to log a warning and exit with an error. In case we want to
restore the original script (e.g. "undo" `ngcc` processing), we keep a
backup of the original `prepublishOnly` script.

Previously, running `ngcc` a second time (e.g. for a different format)
would create a backup of the overwritten `prepublishOnly` script (if
there was originally no `prepublishOnly` script). As a result, if we
ever tried to "undo" `ngcc` processing and restore the original
`prepublishOnly` script, the error-throwing script would be restored
instead.

This commit fixes it by ensuring that we only back up a `prepublishOnly`
script, iff it is not the one we created ourselves (i.e. the
error-throwing one).

PR Close #32427
2019-09-09 15:55:13 -04:00
George Kalpakas bd1de32b33 refactor(ngcc): minor code clean-up following #32052 (#32427)
This commit addresses the review feedback from #32052, which was merged
before addressing the feedback there.

PR Close #32427
2019-09-09 15:55:13 -04:00
JoostK f7471eea3c fix(ngcc): handle compilation diagnostics (#31996)
Previously, any diagnostics reported during the compilation of an
entry-point would not be shown to the user, but either be ignored or
cause a hard crash in case of a `FatalDiagnosticError`. This is
unfortunate, as such error instances contain information on which code
was responsible for producing the error, whereas only its error message
would not. Therefore, it was quite hard to determine where the error
originates from.

This commit introduces behavior to deal with error diagnostics in a more
graceful way. Such diagnostics will still cause the compilation to fail,
however the error message now contains formatted diagnostics.

Closes #31977
Resolves FW-1374

PR Close #31996
2019-08-29 12:38:02 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin d5101dff3b fix(ivy): ngcc - improve the "ngcc version changed" error message (#32396)
If a project has nested projects that contain node_modules folders
that get processed by ngcc, it can be confusing when the ngcc
version changes since the error message is very generic:

```
The ngcc compiler has changed since the last ngcc build.
Please completely remove `node_modules` and try again.
```

This commit augments the error message with the path of
the entry-point that failed so that it is more obvious which
node_modules folder to remove.

BREAKING CHANGE:

This commit removes the public export of `hasBeenProcessed()`.

This was exported to be availble to the CLI integration but was never
used. The change to the function signature is a breaking change in itself
so we remove the function altogether to simplify and lower the public
API surface going forward.

PR Close #32396
2019-08-29 12:32:54 -07:00
Kristiyan Kostadinov c885178d5f refactor(ivy): move directive, component and pipe factories to ngFactoryFn (#31953)
Reworks the compiler to output the factories for directives, components and pipes under a new static field called `ngFactoryFn`, instead of the usual `factory` property in their respective defs. This should eventually allow us to inject any kind of decorated class (e.g. a pipe).

**Note:** these changes are the first part of the refactor and they don't include injectables. I decided to leave injectables for a follow-up PR, because there's some more cases we need to handle when it comes to their factories. Furthermore, directives, components and pipes make up most of the compiler output tests that need to be refactored and it'll make follow-up PRs easier to review if the tests are cleaned up now.

This is part of the larger refactor for FW-1468.

PR Close #31953
2019-08-27 13:57:00 -07:00
JoostK e563d77128 fix(ngcc): do not analyze dependencies for non Angular entry-points (#32303)
When ngcc is called for a specific entry-point, it has to determine
which dependencies to transitively process. To accomplish this, ngcc
traverses the full import graph of the entry-points it encounters, for
which it uses a dependency host to find all module imports. Since
imports look different in the various bundle formats ngcc supports, a
specific dependency host is used depending on the information provided
in an entry-points `package.json` file. If there's not enough
information in the `package.json` file for ngcc to be able to determine
which dependency host to use, ngcc would fail with an error.

If, however, the entry-point is not compiled by Angular, it is not
necessary to process any of its dependencies. None of them can have
been compiled by Angular so ngcc does not need to know about them.
Therefore, this commit changes the behavior to avoid recursing into
dependencies of entry-points that are not compiled by Angular.

In particular, this fixes an issue for packages that have dependencies
on the `date-fns` package. This package has various secondary
entry-points that have a `package.json` file only containing a `typings`
field, without providing additional fields for ngcc to know which
dependency host to use. By not needing a dependency host at all, the
error is avoided.

Fixes #32302

PR Close #32303
2019-08-26 10:08:44 -07:00
atscott cfed0c0cf1 fix(ivy): Support selector-less directive as base classes (#32125)
Following #31379, this adds support for directives without a selector to
Ivy.

PR Close #32125
2019-08-20 09:56:54 -07:00
Elvis Begovic f8b995dbf9 fix(ngcc): ignore format properties that exist but are undefined (#32205)
Previously, `ngcc` assumed that if a format property was defined in
`package.json` it would point to a valid format-path (i.e. a file that
is an entry-point for a specific format). This is generally the case,
except if a format property is set to a non-string value (such as
`package.json`) - either directly in the `package.json` (which is unusual)
or in ngcc.config.js (which is a valid usecase, when one wants a
format property to be ignored by `ngcc`).

For example, the following config file would cause `ngcc` to throw:

```
module.exports = {
  packages: {
    'test-package': {
      entryPoints: {
        '.': {
          override: {
            fesm2015: undefined,
          },
        },
      },
    },
  },
};
```

This commit fixes it by ensuring that only format properties whose value
is a string are considered by `ngcc`.

For reference, this regression was introduced in #32052.

Fixes #32188

PR Close #32205
2019-08-20 09:55:25 -07:00
JoostK 4bbf16e654 fix(ngcc): handle deep imports that already have an extension (#32181)
During the dependency analysis phase of ngcc, imports are resolved to
files on disk according to certain module resolution rules. Since module
specifiers are typically missing extensions, or can refer to index.js
barrel files within a directory, the module resolver attempts several
postfixes when searching for a module import on disk. Module  specifiers
that already include an extension, however, would fail to be resolved as
ngcc's module resolver failed to check the location on disk without
adding any postfixes.

Closes #32097

PR Close #32181
2019-08-19 10:12:03 -07:00
JoostK ae142a6827 refactor(ngcc): avoid repeated file resolution during dependency scan (#32181)
During the recursive processing of dependencies, ngcc resolves the
requested file to an actual location on disk, by testing various
extensions. For recursive calls however, the path is known to have been
resolved in the module resolver. Therefore, it is safe to move the path
resolution to the initial caller into the recursive process.

Note that this is not expected to improve the performance of ngcc, as
the call to `resolveFileWithPostfixes` is known to succeed immediately,
as the provided path is known to exist without needing to add any
postfixes. Furthermore, the FileSystem caches whether files exist, so
the additional check that we used to do was cheap.

PR Close #32181
2019-08-19 10:12:03 -07:00
Alex Rickabaugh 964d72610f fix(ivy): ngcc should only index .d.ts exports within the package (#32129)
ngcc needs to solve a unique problem when compiling typings for an
entrypoint: it must resolve a declaration within a .js file to its
representation in a .d.ts file. Since such .d.ts files can be used in deep
imports without ever being referenced from the "root" .d.ts, it's not enough
to simply match exported types to the root .d.ts. ngcc must build an index
of all .d.ts files.

Previously, this operation had a bug: it scanned all .d.ts files in the
.d.ts program, not only those within the package. Thus, if a class in the
program happened to share a name with a class exported from a dependency's
.d.ts, ngcc might accidentally modify the wrong .d.ts file, causing a
variety of issues downstream.

To fix this issue, ngcc's .d.ts scanner now limits the .d.ts files it
indexes to only those declared in the current package.

PR Close #32129
2019-08-15 14:46:00 -07:00
Alex Rickabaugh 02bab8cf90 fix(ivy): in ngcc, handle inline exports in commonjs code (#32129)
One of the compiler's tasks is to enumerate the exports of a given ES
module. This can happen for example to resolve `foo.bar` where `foo` is a
namespace import:

```typescript
import * as foo from './foo';

@NgModule({
  directives: [foo.DIRECTIVES],
})
```

In this case, the compiler must enumerate the exports of `foo.ts` in order
to evaluate the expression `foo.DIRECTIVES`.

When this operation occurs under ngcc, it must deal with the different
module formats and types of exports that occur. In commonjs code, a problem
arises when certain exports are downleveled.

```typescript
export const DIRECTIVES = [
  FooDir,
  BarDir,
];
```

can be downleveled to:

```javascript
exports.DIRECTIVES = [
  FooDir,
  BarDir,
```

Previously, ngtsc and ngcc expected that any export would have an associated
`ts.Declaration` node. `export class`, `export function`, etc. all retain
`ts.Declaration`s even when downleveled. But the `export const` construct
above does not. Therefore, ngcc would not detect `DIRECTIVES` as an export
of `foo.ts`, and the evaluation of `foo.DIRECTIVES` would therefore fail.

To solve this problem, the core concept of an exported `Declaration`
according to the `ReflectionHost` API is split into a `ConcreteDeclaration`
which has a `ts.Declaration`, and an `InlineDeclaration` which instead has
a `ts.Expression`. Differentiating between these allows ngcc to return an
`InlineDeclaration` for `DIRECTIVES` and correctly keep track of this
export.

PR Close #32129
2019-08-15 14:45:59 -07:00
Kristiyan Kostadinov 4ea3e7e000 refactor(ivy): combine query load instructions (#32100)
Combines the `loadViewQuery` and `loadContentQuery` instructions since they have the exact same internal logic. Based on a discussion here: https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/32067#pullrequestreview-273001730

PR Close #32100
2019-08-12 10:32:08 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin eb5412d76f fix(ivy): reuse compilation scope for incremental template changes. (#31932)
Previously if only a component template changed then we would know to
rebuild its component source file. But the compilation was incorrect if the
component was part of an NgModule, since we were not capturing the
compilation scope information that had a been acquired from the NgModule
and was not being regenerated since we were not needing to recompile
the NgModule.

Now we register compilation scope information for each component, via the
`ComponentScopeRegistry` interface, so that it is available for incremental
compilation.

The `ComponentDecoratorHandler` now reads the compilation scope from a
`ComponentScopeReader` interface which is implemented as a compound
reader composed of the original `LocalModuleScopeRegistry` and the
`IncrementalState`.

Fixes #31654

PR Close #31932
2019-08-09 10:50:40 -07:00
Alan Agius 46304a4f83 feat(ivy): show error when trying to publish NGCC'd packages (#32031)
Publishing of NGCC packages should not be allowed. It is easy for a user to publish an NGCC'd version of a library they have workspace libraries which are being used in a workspace application.

If a users builds a library and afterwards the application, the library will be transformed with NGCC and since NGCC taints the distributed files that should be published.

With this change we use the npm/yarn `prepublishOnly` hook to display and error and abort the process with a non zero error code when a user tries to publish an NGCC version of the package.

More info: https://docs.npmjs.com/misc/scripts

PR Close #32031
2019-08-08 11:17:38 -07:00
George Kalpakas 29d3b68554 fix(ivy): ngcc - correctly update `package.json` when `createNewEntryPointFormats` is true (#32052)
Previously, when run with `createNewEntryPointFormats: true`, `ngcc`
would only update `package.json` with the new entry-point for the first
format property that mapped to a format-path. Subsequent properties
mapping to the same format-path would be detected as processed and not
have their new entry-point format recorded in `package.json`.

This commit fixes this by ensuring `package.json` is updated for all
matching format properties, when writing an `EntryPointBundle`.

PR Close #32052
2019-08-08 11:14:38 -07:00
George Kalpakas 93d27eefd5 refactor(ivy): ngcc - remove redundant `entryPoint` argument from `writeBundle()` (#32052)
The entry-point is already available through the `bundle` argument, so
passing it separately is redundant.

PR Close #32052
2019-08-08 11:14:38 -07:00
George Kalpakas ed70f73794 refactor(ivy): ngcc - remove `formatProperty` from `EntryPointBundle` (#32052)
Remove the `formatProperty` property from the `EntryPointBundle`
interface, because the property is not directly related to that type.

It was only used in one place, when calling `fileWriter.writeBundle()`,
but we can pass `formatProperty` directrly to `writeBundle()`.

PR Close #32052
2019-08-08 11:14:38 -07:00
George Kalpakas ef12e10e59 refactor(ivy): ngcc - split work into distinct analyze/compile/execute phases (#32052)
This refactoring more clearly separates the different phases of the work
performed by `ngcc`, setting the ground for being able to run each phase
independently in the future and improve performance via parallelization.

Inspired by/Based on @alxhub's prototype: alxhub/angular@cb631bdb1

PR Close #32052
2019-08-08 11:14:38 -07:00
George Kalpakas 2954d1b5ca refactor(ivy): ngcc - only try to process the necessary properties (#32052)
This change basically moves some checks to happen up front and ensures
we don't try to process any more properties than we absolutely need.
(The properties would not be processed before either, but we would
consider them, before finding out that they have already been processed
or that they do not exist in the entry-point's `package.json`.)

This change should make no difference in the work done by `ngcc`, but it
transforms the code in a way that makes the actual work known earlier,
thus making it easier to parallelize the processing of each property in
the future.

PR Close #32052
2019-08-08 11:14:38 -07:00
George Kalpakas 3077c9a1f8 refactor(ivy): ngcc - make `EntryPointJsonProperty`-related types and checks a little more strict (#32052)
PR Close #32052
2019-08-08 11:14:38 -07:00
George Kalpakas 9537b2ff84 refactor(ivy): ngcc - fix return type on `makeEntryPointBundle()` (#32052)
In commit 7b55ba58b (part of PR #29092), the implementation of
`makeEntryPointBundle()` was changed such that it now always return
`EntryPointBundle` (and not `null`).
However, the return type was not updated and as result we continued to
unnecessarily handle `null` as a potential return value in some places.

This commit fixes the return type to reflect the implementation and
removes the redundant code that was dealing with `null`.

PR Close #32052
2019-08-08 11:14:37 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 961d663fbe fix(ivy): ngcc - report an error if a target has missing dependencies (#31872)
Previously, we either crashed with an obscure error or silently did
nothing. Now we throw an exception but with a helpful message.

PR Close #31872
2019-08-05 13:06:49 -07:00
JoostK 57e15fc08b fix(ivy): ngcc - do not consider builtin NodeJS modules as missing (#31872)
ngcc analyzes the dependency structure of the entrypoints it needs to
process, as the compilation of entrypoints is ordering sensitive: any
dependent upon entrypoint must be compiled before its dependees. As part
of the analysis of the dependency graph, it is detected when a
dependency of entrypoint is not installed, in which case that entrypoint
will be marked as ignored.

For libraries that work with Angular Universal to run in NodeJS, imports
into builtin NodeJS modules can be present. ngcc's dependency analyzer
can only resolve imports within the TypeScript compilation, which
builtin modules are not part of. Therefore, such imports would
erroneously cause the entrypoint to become ignored.

This commit fixes the problem by taking the NodeJS builtins into account
when dealing with missing imports.

Fixes #31522

PR Close #31872
2019-08-05 13:06:49 -07:00
JoostK b70746a113 fix(ivy): ngcc - prevent crash when analyzed target is ignored (#31872)
ngcc analyzes the dependency structure of the entrypoints it needs to
process, as the compilation of entrypoints is ordering sensitive: any
dependent upon entrypoint must be compiled before its dependees. As part
of the analysis of the dependency graph, it is detected when a
dependency of entrypoint is not installed, in which case that entrypoint
will be marked as ignored.

When a target entrypoint to compile is provided, it could occur that
given target is considered ignored because one of its dependencies might
be missing. This situation was not dealt with currently, instead
resulting in a crash of ngcc.

This commit prevents the crash by taking the above scenario into account.

PR Close #31872
2019-08-05 13:06:49 -07:00
George Kalpakas 7db269ba6a fix(ivy): ngcc - correctly detect formats processed in previous runs (#32003)
Previously, `ngcc` would avoid processing a `formatPath` that a property
in `package.json` mapped to, if either the _property_ was marked as
processed or the `formatPath` (i.e. the file(s)) was processed in the
same `ngcc` run (since the `compiledFormats` set was not persisted
across runs).
This could lead in a situation where a `formatPath` would be compiled
twice (if for example properties `a` and `b` both mapped to the same
`formatPath` and one would run `ngcc` for property `a` and then `b`).

This commit fixes it by ensuring that as soon as a `formatPath` has been
processed all corresponding properties are marked as processed (which
persists across `ngcc` runs).

PR Close #32003
2019-08-05 12:54:17 -07:00
George Kalpakas 8e5567d964 perf(ivy): ngcc - avoid unnecessary operations when we only need one format processed (#32003)
Previously, when `ngcc` was called with `compileAllFormats === false`
(i.e. how `@angular/cli` calls it), it would not attempt to process
more properties, once the first was successfully processed. However, it
_would_ continue looping over them and perform some unnecessary
operations, such as:
- Determining the format each property maps to (which can be an
  expensive operation for some properties mapping to either UMD or
  CommonJS).
- Checking whether each property has been processed (which involves
  checking whether any property has been processed with a different
  version of `ngcc` each time).
- Potentially marking properties as processed (which involves a
  file-write operation).

This commit avoids the unnecessary operations by entirely skipping
subsequent properties, once the first one has been successfully
processed. While this theoretically improves performance, it is not
expected to have any noticeable impact in practice, since the list of
`propertiesToConsider` is typically small and the most expensive
operation (marking a property as processed) has low likelihood of
happening (plus these operations are a tiny fraction of `ngcc`'s work).

PR Close #32003
2019-08-05 12:54:17 -07:00
George Kalpakas 541ce98432 perf(ivy): ngcc - avoid unnecessary file-write operations when marking properties as processed (#32003)
Previously, when `ngcc` needed to mark multiple properties as processed
(e.g. a processed format property and `typings` or all supported
properties for a non-Angular entry-point), it would update each one
separately and write the file to disk multiple times.

This commit changes this, so that multiple properties can be updated at
once with one file-write operation. While this theoretically improves
performance (reducing the I/O operations), it is not expected to have
any noticeable impact in practice, since these operations are a tiny
fraction of `ngcc`'s work.

This change will be useful for a subsequent change to mark all
properties that map to the same `formatPath` as processed, once it is
processed the first time.

PR Close #32003
2019-08-05 12:54:17 -07:00
George Kalpakas e7e3f5d952 refactor(ivy): ngcc - remove unused check for format support (#32003)
Now that `ngcc` supports all `EntryPointFormat`s, there is no need to
check if a format is supported, so this operation was a no-op.

PR Close #32003
2019-08-05 12:54:17 -07:00
Alex Rickabaugh f2d47c96c4 fix(ivy): ngcc emits static fields before extra statements (#31933)
This commit changes the emit order of ngcc when a class has multiple static
fields being assigned. Previously, ngcc would emit each static field
followed immediately by any extra statements specified for that field. This
causes issues with downstream tooling such as build optimizer, which expects
all of the static fields for a class to be grouped together. ngtsc already
groups static fields and additional statements. This commit changes ngcc's
ordering to match.

PR Close #31933
2019-08-01 10:45:36 -07:00
JoostK fc6f48185c fix(ivy): ngcc - render decorators in UMD and CommonJS bundles correctly (#31614)
In #31426 a fix was implemented to render namespaced decorator imports
correctly, however it turns out that the fix only worked when decorator
information was extracted from static properties, not when using
`__decorate` calls.

This commit fixes the issue by creating the decorator metadata with the
full decorator expression, instead of only its name.

Closes #31394

PR Close #31614
2019-07-29 16:10:58 -07:00
JoostK 80f290e301 fix(ivy): ngcc - recognize suffixed tslib helpers (#31614)
An identifier may become repeated when bundling multiple source files
into a single bundle, so bundlers have a strategy of suffixing non-unique
identifiers with a suffix like $2. Since ngcc operates on such bundles,
it needs to process potentially suffixed identifiers in their canonical
form without the suffix. The "ngx-pagination" package was previously not
compiled fully, as most decorators were not recognized.

This commit ensures that identifiers are first canonicalized by removing
the suffix, such that they are properly recognized and processed by ngcc.

Fixes #31540

PR Close #31614
2019-07-29 16:10:58 -07:00
JoostK 5e5be43acd refactor(ivy): ngcc - categorize the various decorate calls upfront (#31614)
Any decorator information present in TypeScript is emitted into the
generated JavaScript sources by means of `__decorate` call. This call
contains both the decorators as they existed in the original source
code, together with calls to `tslib` helpers that convey additional
information on e.g. type information and parameter decorators. These
different kinds of decorator calls were not previously distinguished on
their own, but instead all treated as `Decorator` by themselves. The
"decorators" that were actually `tslib` helper calls were conveniently
filtered out because they were not imported from `@angular/core`, a
characteristic that ngcc uses to drop certain decorators.

Note that this posed an inconsistency in ngcc when it processes
`@angular/core`'s UMD bundle, as the `tslib` helper functions have been
inlined in said bundle. Because of the inlining, the `tslib` helpers
appear to be from `@angular/core`, so ngcc would fail to drop those
apparent "decorators". This inconsistency does not currently cause any
issues, as ngtsc is specifically looking for decorators based on  their
name and any remaining decorators are simply ignored.

This commit rewrites the decorator analysis of a class to occur all in a
single phase, instead of all throughout the `ReflectionHost`. This
allows to categorize the various decorate calls in a single sweep,
instead of constantly needing to filter out undesired decorate calls on
the go. As an added benefit, the computed decorator information is now
cached per class, such that subsequent reflection queries that need
decorator information can reuse the cached info.

PR Close #31614
2019-07-29 16:10:57 -07:00
crisbeto 3d7303efc0 perf(ivy): avoid extra parameter in query instructions (#31667)
Currently we always generate the `read` parameter for the view and content query instructions, however since most of the time the `read` parameter won't be set, we'll end up generating `null` which adds 5 bytes for each query when minified. These changes make it so that the `read` parameter only gets generated if it has a value.

PR Close #31667
2019-07-24 14:37:51 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 59c3700c8c feat(ivy): ngcc - implement `UndecoratedParentMigration` (#31544)
Implementing the "undecorated parent" migration described in
https://hackmd.io/sfb3Ju2MTmKHSUiX_dLWGg#Design

PR Close #31544
2019-07-23 21:11:40 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 4d93d2406f feat(ivy): ngcc - support ngcc "migrations" (#31544)
This commit implements support for the ngcc migrations
as designed in https://hackmd.io/KhyrFV1VQHmeQsgfJq6AyQ

PR Close #31544
2019-07-23 21:11:40 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin d39a2beae1 refactor(ivy): ngcc - move decorator analysis types into their own file (#31544)
PR Close #31544
2019-07-23 21:11:39 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 8a470b9af9 feat(ivy): add `getBaseClassIdentifier()` to `ReflectionHost` (#31544)
This method will be useful for writing ngcc `Migrations` that
need to be able to find base classes.

PR Close #31544
2019-07-23 21:11:39 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin dd664f694c fix(ivy): ngcc - render namespaced imported decorators correctly (#31426)
The support for decorators that were imported via a namespace,
e.g. `import * as core from `@angular/core` was implemented
piecemeal. This meant that it was easy to miss situations where
a decorator identifier needed to be handled as a namepsaced
import rather than a direct import.

One such issue was that UMD processing of decorators was not
correct: the namespace was being omitted from references to
decorators.

Now the types have been modified to make it clear that a
`Decorator.identifier` could hold a namespaced identifier,
and the corresponding code that uses these types has been
fixed.

Fixes #31394

PR Close #31426
2019-07-18 10:17:50 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin fac20bd8d1 fix(ivy): ngcc - resolve `main` property paths correctly (#31509)
There are two places in the ngcc processing where it needs to load the
content of a file given by a general path:

* when determining the format of an entry-point.
 To do this ngcc uses the value of the relevant property in package.json.
 But in the case of `main` it must parse the contents of the entry-point
 file to decide whether the format is UMD or CommonJS.

* when parsing the source files for dependencies to determine the order in
which compilation must occur. The relative imports in each file are parsed
and followed recursively, looking for external imports.

Previously, we naively assumed that the path would match the file name exactly.
But actually we must consider the standard module resolution conventions.
E.g. the extension (.js) may be missing, or the path may refer to a directory
containing an index.js file.

This commit fixes both places.

This commit now requires the `DependencyHost` instances to check
the existence of more files than before (at worst all the different possible
post-fixes). This should not create a significant performance reduction for
ngcc. Since the results of the checks will be cached, and similar work is
done inside the TS compiler, so what we lose in doing it here, is saved later
in the processing. The main performance loss would be where there are lots
of files that need to be parsed for dependencies that do not end up being
processed by TS. But compared to the main ngcc processing this dependency
parsing is a small proportion of the work done and so should not impact
much on the overall performance of ngcc.

// FW-1444

PR Close #31509
2019-07-12 11:37:35 -04:00
George Kalpakas 4bb283cbb2 build: remove redundant `@types/source-map` dependency (#31468)
In version 0.6.1 that we are using, `source-map` ships with
[its own typings][1], so there is no need to use `@types/source-map`.
The types were even removed from `DefinitelyTyped` in
DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped@1792bfaa2.

[1]: https://github.com/mozilla/source-map/blob/0.6.1/package.json#L72

PR Close #31468
2019-07-11 17:18:12 -04:00
Matias Niemelä db557221bc revert: fix(ivy): ngcc - resolve `main` property paths correctly (#31509)
This reverts commit 103a5b42ec.
2019-07-11 11:51:13 -04:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 103a5b42ec fix(ivy): ngcc - resolve `main` property paths correctly (#31509)
When determining if a `main` path points to a UMD or CommonJS
format, the contents of the file need to be loaded and parsed.

Previously, it was assumed that the path referred to the exact filename,
but did not account for normal module resolution semantics, where the
path may be missing an extension or refer to a directory containing an
`index.js` file.

// FW-1444

PR Close #31509
2019-07-11 11:41:11 -04:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 207f9b6017 fix(ivy): ngcc - handle pathMappings to files rather then directories (#30525)
Paths can be mapped directly to files, which was not being taken
into account when computing `basePaths` for the `EntryPointFinder`s.

Now if a `pathMapping` pattern does not exist or is a file, then we try
the containing folder instead.

Fixes #31424

PR Close #30525
2019-07-09 09:40:46 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin a581773887 perf(ivy): ngcc - only find dependencies when targeting a single entry-point (#30525)
Previously, ngcc had to walk the entire `node_modules` tree looking for
entry-points, even if it only needed to process a single target entry-point
and its dependencies.

This added up to a few seconds to each execution of ngcc, which is noticeable
when being run via the CLI integration.

Now, if an entry-point target is provided, only that target and its entry-points
are considered rather than the whole folder tree.

PR Close #30525
2019-07-09 09:40:46 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 7f2330a968 perf(ivy): ngcc - add a cache to the FileSystem (#30525)
When profiling ngcc it is notable that a large amount of time
is spent dealing with an exception that is thrown (and handled
internally by fs) when checking the existence of a file.

We check file existence a lot in both finding entry-points
and when TS is compiling code. This commit adds a simple
cached `FileSystem`, which wraps a real `FileSystem` delegate.
This will reduce the number of calls through to `fs.exists()` and
`fs.readFile()` on the delegate.

Initial benchmarks indicate that the cache is miss to hit ratio
for `exists()` is about 2:1, which means that we save about 1/3
of the calls to `fs.existsSync()`.

Note that this implements a "non-expiring" cache, so it is not suitable
for a long lived `FileSystem`, where files may be modified externally.
The cache will be updated if a file is changed or moved via
calls to `FileSystem` methods but it will not be aware of changes
to the files system from outside the `FileSystem` service.

For ngcc we must create a new `FileSystem` service
for each run of `mainNgcc` and ensure that all file operations
(including TS compilation) use the `FileSystem` service.
This ensures that it is very unlikely that a file will change
externally during `mainNgcc` processing.

PR Close #30525
2019-07-09 09:40:46 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin aaaeb924ac fix(ivy): ngcc - remove unwanted logging message (#30525)
This message gets called if a format has already been
compiled and we only want the first. So the message itself
is wrong but it is also not very useful anyway.

PR Close #30525
2019-07-09 09:40:46 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 98a68ad3e7 fix(ivy): handle namespaced imports correctly (#31367)
The ngcc tool adds namespaced imports to files when compiling. The ngtsc
tooling was not processing types correctly when they were imported via
such namespaces. For example:

```
export declare class SomeModule {
    static withOptions(...): ModuleWithProviders<ɵngcc1.BaseModule>;
```

In this case the `BaseModule` was being incorrectly attributed to coming
from the current module rather than the imported module, represented by
`ɵngcc1`.

Fixes #31342

PR Close #31367
2019-07-09 09:40:30 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 83b19bf1a2 fix(ivy): ngcc - compute potential d.ts files from .js files (#31411)
If a package delcares a class internally on an NgModule, ngcc
needs to be able to add a public export to this class's type.

Previously, if the typing file for the declared is not imported
from the typings entry-point file, then ngcc cannot find it.
Now we try to guess the .d.ts files from the equivalent .js
files.

PR Close #31411
2019-07-09 09:35:26 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 50c4ec6687 fix(ivy): ngcc - resolve path-mapped modules correctly (#31450)
Non-wild-card path-mappings were not being matched correctly.

Further path-mapped secondary entry-points that
were imported from the associated primary entry-point were not
being martched correctly.

Fixes #31274

PR Close #31450
2019-07-08 10:28:13 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin dd36f3ac99 feat(ivy): ngcc - handle top-level helper calls in CommonJS (#31335)
Some formats of CommonJS put the decorator helper calls
outside the class IIFE as statements on the top level of the
source file.

This commit adds support to the `CommonJSReflectionHost`
for this format.

PR Close #31335
2019-07-01 10:09:41 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 3788ebb714 fix(ivy): ngcc - don't crash if entry-points have multiple invalid dependencies (#31276)
If an entry-point has missing dependencies then it cannot be
processed and is marked as invalid. Similarly, if an entry-point
has dependencies that have been marked as invalid then that
entry-point too is invalid. In all these cases, ngcc should quietly
ignore these entry-points and continue processing what it can.

Previously, if an entry-point had more than one entry-point that
was transitively invalid then ngcc was crashing rather than
ignoring the entry-point.

PR Close #31276
2019-06-26 08:01:43 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin f690a4e0af fix(ivy): ngcc - do not analyze files outside the current package (#30591)
Our module resolution prefers `.js` files over `.d.ts` files because
occasionally libraries publish their typings in the same directory
structure as the compiled JS files, i.e. adjacent to each other.

The standard TS module resolution would pick up the typings
file and add that to the `ts.Program` and so they would be
ignored by our analyzers. But we need those JS files, if they
are part of the current package.

But this meant that we also bring in JS files from external
imports from outside the package, which is not desired.
This was happening for the `@fire/storage` enty-point
that was importing the `firebase/storage` path.

In this commit we solve this problem, for the case of imports
coming from a completely different package, by saying that any
file that is outside the package root directory must be an external
import and so we do not analyze those files.

This does not solve the potential problem of imports between
secondary entry-points within a package but so far that does
not appear to be a problem.

PR Close #30591
2019-06-26 08:00:03 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 42036f4b79 refactor(ivy): ngcc - pass `bundle` to `DecorationAnalyzer` (#30591)
Rather than passing a number of individual arguments, we can
just pass an `EntryPointBundle`, which already contains them.

This is also a precursor to using more of the properties in the bundle.

PR Close #30591
2019-06-26 08:00:03 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 74f637f98d refactor(ivy): ngcc - no need to pass `isCore` explicitly (#30591)
It is part of `EntryPointBundle` so we can just use that, which
is generally already passed around.

PR Close #30591
2019-06-26 08:00:03 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin e943859843 refactor(ivy): ngcc - expose the `entryPoint` from the `EntryPointBundle` interface (#30591)
This will allow users of the `EntryPointBundle` to use some of the `EntryPoint`
properties without us having to pass them around one by one.

PR Close #30591
2019-06-26 08:00:03 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin a94bdc6793 refactor(ivy): ngcc - pass whole entry-point object to `makeEntryPointBundle()` (#30591)
This simplifies the interface somewhat but also allows us to make use of
other properties of the EntryPoint object in the future.

PR Close #30591
2019-06-26 08:00:03 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 2dfd97d8f0 fix(ivy): ngcc - support bare array constructor param decorators (#30591)
Previously we expected the constructor parameter `decorators`
property to be an array wrapped in a function. Now we also support
an array not wrapped in a function.

PR Close #30591
2019-06-26 08:00:03 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 869e3e8edc fix(ivy): ngcc - infer entry-point typings from format paths (#30591)
Some packages do not actually provide a `typings` field in their
package.json. But TypeScript naturally infers the typings file from
the location of the JavaScript source file.

This commit modifies ngcc to do a similar inference when finding
entry-points to process.

Fixes #28603 (FW-1299)

PR Close #30591
2019-06-26 08:00:02 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 7c4c676413 feat(ivy): customize ngcc via configuration files (#30591)
There are scenarios where it is not possible for ngcc to guess the format
or configuration of an entry-point just from the files on disk.

Such scenarios include:

1) Unwanted entry-points: A spurious package.json makes ngcc think
there is an entry-point when there should not be one.

2) Deep-import entry-points: some packages allow deep-imports but do not
provide package.json files to indicate to ngcc that the imported path is
actually an entry-point to be processed.

3) Invalid/missing package.json properties: For example, an entry-point
that does not provide a valid property to a required format.

The configuration is provided by one or more `ngcc.config.js` files:

* If placed at the root of the project, this file can provide configuration
for named packages (and their entry-points) that have been npm installed
into the project.

* If published as part of a package, the file can provide configuration
for entry-points of the package.

The configured of a package at the project level will override any
configuration provided by the package itself.

PR Close #30591
2019-06-26 08:00:02 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 4004d15ba5 test(ivy): ngcc refactor mock file-systems to make each spec independent (#30591)
Previously each test relied on large shared mock file-systems, which
makes it difficult to reason about what is actually being tested.

This commit breaks up these big mock file-systems into smaller more
focused chunks.

PR Close #30591
2019-06-26 08:00:02 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin abbbc69e64 test(ivy): ngcc - remove use of mock-fs in tests (#30591)
Now that ngcc uses a `FileSystem` throughout we no longer need
to rely upon mocking out the real file-system with mock-fs.

PR Close #30591
2019-06-26 08:00:02 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 7186f9c016 refactor(ivy): implement a virtual file-system layer in ngtsc + ngcc (#30921)
To improve cross platform support, all file access (and path manipulation)
is now done through a well known interface (`FileSystem`).

For testing a number of `MockFileSystem` implementations are provided.
These provide an in-memory file-system which emulates operating systems
like OS/X, Unix and Windows.

The current file system is always available via the static method,
`FileSystem.getFileSystem()`. This is also used by a number of static
methods on `AbsoluteFsPath` and `PathSegment`, to avoid having to pass
`FileSystem` objects around all the time. The result of this is that one
must be careful to ensure that the file-system has been initialized before
using any of these static methods. To prevent this happening accidentally
the current file system always starts out as an instance of `InvalidFileSystem`,
which will throw an error if any of its methods are called.

You can set the current file-system by calling `FileSystem.setFileSystem()`.
During testing you can call the helper function `initMockFileSystem(os)`
which takes a string name of the OS to emulate, and will also monkey-patch
aspects of the TypeScript library to ensure that TS is also using the
current file-system.

Finally there is the `NgtscCompilerHost` to be used for any TypeScript
compilation, which uses a given file-system.

All tests that interact with the file-system should be tested against each
of the mock file-systems. A series of helpers have been provided to support
such tests:

* `runInEachFileSystem()` - wrap your tests in this helper to run all the
wrapped tests in each of the mock file-systems.
* `addTestFilesToFileSystem()` - use this to add files and their contents
to the mock file system for testing.
* `loadTestFilesFromDisk()` - use this to load a mirror image of files on
disk into the in-memory mock file-system.
* `loadFakeCore()` - use this to load a fake version of `@angular/core`
into the mock file-system.

All ngcc and ngtsc source and tests now use this virtual file-system setup.

PR Close #30921
2019-06-25 16:25:24 -07:00
JoostK 6fbfb5a159 feat(ivy): ngcc - recognize static properties on the outer symbol in ES5 (#30795)
Packages that have been compiled using an older version of TypeScript
can have their decorators at the top-level of the ES5 bundles, instead
of inside the IIFE that is emitted for the class. Before this change,
ngcc only took static property assignments inside the IIFE into account,
therefore missing the decorators that were assigned at the top-level.

This commit extends the ES5 host to look for static properties in two
places. Testcases for all bundle formats that contain ES5 have been added
to ensure that this works in the various flavours.

A patch is included to support UMD bundles. The UMD factory affects how
TypeScripts binds the static properties to symbols, see the docblock of
the patch function for more details.

PR Close #30795
2019-06-14 13:09:56 -07:00
Pete Bacon Darwin 0c3bb6a731 fix(ivy): ngcc - capture entry-points in top-level path-mapped folders (#31027)
The `EntryPointFinder` computes the base paths to consider
when searching for entry-points. When there are `pathMappings`
provided it works out the best top level base-paths that cover all
the potential mappings.

If this computed basePath happens to coincide with an entry-point
path itself then we were missing it.

Now we check for an entry-point even at the base-path itself.

Related to https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/pull/14755

PR Close #31027
2019-06-14 10:43:59 -07:00