It's unnecessary for a jasmine_node_test rule to depend on a TypeScript library. This dependency is already satisfied via the 'data' and also having it in 'deps' causes CI flakiness on Windows
PR Close#30482
Currently in Ivy `NgModule` registration happens when the class is declared, however this is inconsistent with ViewEngine and requires extra generated code. These changes remove the generated code for `registerModuleFactory`, pass the id through to the `ngModuleDef` and do the module registration inside `NgModuleFactory.create`.
This PR resolves FW-1285.
PR Close#30244
This is the final patch to migrate the Angular styling code to have a
smaller instruction set in preparation for the runtime refactor. All
styling-related instructions now work both in template and hostBindings
functions and do not use `element` as a prefix for their names:
BEFORE:
elementStyling()
elementStyleProp()
elementClassProp()
elementStyleMap()
elementClassMap()
elementStylingApply()
AFTER:
styling()
styleProp()
classProp()
styleMap()
classMap()
stylingApply()
PR Close#30318
This patch removes all host-specific styling instructions in favor of
using element-level instructions instead. Because of the previous
patches that made sure `select(n)` worked between styling calls, all
host level instructions are not needed anymore. This patch changes each
of those instruction calls to use any of the `elementStyling*`,
`elementStyle*` and `elementClass*` styling instructions instead.
PR Close#30336
Fixes not being able to bind a `SafeStyle` as a camel cased style property (e.g. `[style.backgroundImage]="someSafeStyle"`). The issue was due to the fact that we only check the dash case property names to determine whether to sanitize a value.
This PR resolves FW-1279.
PR Close#30328
This patch is one commit of many patches that will unify all styling instructions
across both template-level bindings and host-level bindings. This patch in particular
removes the `elementIndex` param because it is already set prior to each styling
instruction via the `select(n)` instruction.
PR Close#30313
Prior to this patch, the `select(n)` instruction would only be generated
when property bindings are encountered which meant that styling-related
bindings were skipped. This patch ensures that all styling-related bindings
(i.e. class and style bindings) are always prepended with a `select()`
instruction prior to being generated in AOT.
PR Close#30311
This patch breaks up the existing `elementStylingMap` into
`elementClassMap` and `elementStyleMap` instructions. It also breaks
apart `hostStlyingMap` into `hostClassMap` and `hostStyleMap`
instructions. This change allows for better tree-shaking and reduces
the complexity of the styling algorithm code for `[style]` and `[class]`
bindings.
PR Close#30293
This commit fixes a regression introduced in PR 29692 where
the interpolate symbol in View Engine was improperly prefixed
with the ɵɵ that signifies private instructions for Ivy. It
resulted in interpolations of 10+ values not working correctly
in AOT mode. This commit removes the prefix.
PR Close#30243
Fixes `HostBinding` and `HostListener` declarations not being inherited from base classes that don't have an Angular decorator.
This PR resolves FW-1275.
PR Close#30158
- Extracts and documents code that will be common to interpolation instructions
- Ensures that binding indices are updated at the proper time during compilation
- Adds additional tests
Related #30011
PR Close#30129
Leading trivia, such as whitespace or comments, is
confusing for developers looking at source-mapped
templates, since they expect the source-map segment
to start after the trivia.
This commit adds skipping trivial characters to the lexer;
and then implements that in the template parser.
PR Close#30095
Fixes view and content queries not being inherited in Ivy, if the base class hasn't been annotated with an Angular decorator (e.g. `Component` or `Directive`).
Also reworks the way the `ngBaseDef` is created so that it is added at the same point as the queries, rather than inside of the `Input` and `Output` decorators.
This PR partially resolves FW-1275. Support for host bindings will be added in a follow-up, because this PR is somewhat large as it is.
PR Close#30015
Previously, a template's context name would only be included in an embedded
template function if the element that the template was declared on has a
tag name. This is generally true for elements, except for `ng-content`
that does not have a tag name. By omitting the context name the compiler
could introduce duplicate template function names, which would fail at runtime.
This commit fixes the behavior by always including the context name in the
template function's name, regardless of tag name.
Resolves FW-1272
PR Close#30025
Fixes Ivy throwing an error because it tries to generate styling instructions for empty `style` and `class` bindings.
This PR resolves FW-1274.
PR Close#30024
Previously, Template.templateAttrs was introduced to capture attribute
bindings which originated from microsyntax (e.g. bindings in *ngFor="...").
This means that a Template node can have two different structures, depending
on whether it originated from microsyntax or from a literal <ng-template>.
In the literal case, the node behaves much like an Element node, it has
attributes, inputs, and outputs which determine which directives apply.
In the microsyntax case, though, only the templateAttrs should be used
to determine which directives apply.
Previously, both the t2_binder and the TemplateDefinitionBuilder were using
the wrong set of attributes to match directives - combining the attributes,
inputs, outputs, and templateAttrs of the Template node regardless of its
origin. In the TDB's case this wasn't a problem, since the TDB collects a
global Set of directives used in the template, so it didn't matter whether
the directive was also recognized on the <ng-template>. t2_binder's API
distinguishes between directives on specific nodes, though, so it's more
sensitive to mismatching.
In particular, this showed up as an assertion failure in template type-
checking in certain cases, when a directive was accidentally matched on
a microsyntax template element and also had a binding which referenced a
variable declared in the microsyntax. This resulted in the type-checker
attempting to generate a reference to a variable that didn't exist in that
scope.
The fix is to distinguish between the two cases and select the appropriate
set of attributes to match on accordingly.
Testing strategy: tested in the t2_binder tests.
PR Close#29698
Previously the template type-checking engine processed templates in a linear
manner, and could not handle '#' references within a template. One reason
for this is that '#' references are non-linear - a reference can be used
before its declaration. Consider the template:
```html
{{ref.value}}
<input #ref>
```
Accommodating this required refactoring the type-checking code generator to
be able to produce Type Check Block (TCB) code non-linearly. Now, each
template is processed and a list of TCB operations (`TcbOp`s) are created.
Non-linearity is modeled via dependencies between operations, with the
appropriate protection in place for circular dependencies.
Testing strategy: TCB tests included.
PR Close#29698
This commit adds registration of AOT compiled NgModules that have 'id'
properties set in their metadata. Such modules have a call to
registerNgModuleType() emitted as part of compilation.
The JIT behavior of this code is already in place.
This is required for module loading systems (such as g3) which rely on
getModuleFactory().
PR Close#29980
The `@angular/compiler` package currently contains the logic for determining whether
given queries are used statically or dynamically. This logic would be necessary in order
to build a schematic that leverages the Angular compiler API's in order to simulate the
query timing based on what ViewEngine computed at compilation-time/runtime.
Exporting the logic that is necessary to detect the timing should not affect the public
API as the `@angular/compiler` package is denoted as private in `PUBLIC_API.md`
PR Close#29815
Prior to this change, element attributes annotated with i18n- prefix were removed from element attribute list and processed separately by i18n-specific logic. This behavior is causing issues with directive matching, since attributes are not present in the list of attrs for matching purposes. This commit updates i18n logic to retain attributes in the main attribute list, thus allowing directive matching logic to work correctly.
PR Close#29856
The `Δ` caused issue with other infrastructure, and we are temporarily
changing it to `ɵɵ`.
This commit also patches ts_api_guardian_test and AIO to understand `ɵɵ`.
PR Close#29850
So far using runtime i18n with ivy meant that you needed to use Closure and `goog.getMsg` (or a polyfill). This PR changes the compiler to output both closure & non-closure code, while the unused option will be tree-shaken by minifiers.
This means that if you use the Angular CLI with ivy and load a translations file, you can use i18n and the application will not throw at runtime.
For now it will not translate your application, but at least you can try ivy without having to remove all of your i18n code and configuration.
PR Close#28689
Currently in Ivy we pass both the raw and parsed selectors to the projectionDef instruction, because the parsed selectors are used to match most nodes, whereas the raw ones are used to match against nodes with the ngProjectAs attribute. The raw selectors add a fair bit of code that won't be used in most cases, because ngProjectAs is somewhat rare.
These changes rework the compiler not to output the raw selectors in the projectionDef, but to parse the selector in ngProjectAs and to store it on the TAttributes. The logic for matching has also been changed so that it matches the pre-parsed ngProjectAs selector against the list of projection selectors.
PR Close#29578
The defineInjector function specifies its providers and imports array to
be optional, so if no providers/imports are present these keys may be
omitted. This commit updates the compiler to only generate the keys when
necessary.
PR Close#29598
Prior to this change, a module's imports and exports would be used verbatim
as an injectors' imports. This is detrimental for tree-shaking, as a
module's exports could reference declarations that would then prevent such
declarations from being eligible for tree-shaking.
Since an injector actually only needs NgModule references as its imports,
we may safely filter out any declarations from the list of module exports.
This makes them eligible for tree-shaking once again.
PR Close#29598
Prior to this change, all module metadata would be included in the
`defineNgModule` call that is set as the `ngModuleDef` field of module
types. Part of the metadata is scope information like declarations,
imports and exports that is used for computing the transitive module
scope in JIT environments, preventing those references from being
tree-shaken for production builds.
This change moves the metadata for scope computations to a pure function
call that patches the scope references onto the module type. Because the
function is marked pure, it may be tree-shaken out during production builds
such that references to declarations and exports are dropped, which in turn
allows for tree-shaken any declaration that is not otherwise referenced.
Fixes#28077, FW-1035
PR Close#29598
In some cases ivy expects projectable nodes to be passed in a different order
to ViewEngine. Specifically, ivy expects the catch-all ("*") to be at index
0, whereas ViewEngine expects it to be at its position at which it was parsed
in the template.
This commit adds one test that breaks under ivy and others that just describe
more accurately what happens in corner cases.
PR Close#27791
Previously, only directives and services with generic type parameters
would emit `any` as generic type when emitting Ivy metadata into .d.ts
files. Pipes can also have generic type parameters but did not emit
`any` for all type parameters, resulting in the omission of those
parameters which causes compilation errors.
This commit adds support for pipes with generic type arguments and emits
`any` as generic type in the Ivy metadata.
Fixes#29400
PR Close#29403
This PR alligns markup language lexer with the previous behaviour in version 7.x:
https://stackblitz.com/edit/angular-iancj2
While this behaviour is not perfect (we should be giving users an error message
here about invalid HTML instead of assuming text node) this is probably best we
can do without more substential re-write of lexing / parsing infrastructure.
This PR just fixes#29231 and restores VE behaviour - a more elaborate fix will
be done in a separate PR as it requries non-trivial rewrites.
PR Close#29328
This patch is the first of a few patches which separates the
styling logic between template bindings (e.g. <div [style])
from host bindings (e.g. @HostBinding('style')). This patch
in particular introduces a series of host-specific styling
instructions and changes the existing set of template styling
instructions not to accept directives. The underyling code (which
communicates with the styling algorithm) still works as it did
before.
This PR also separates the styling instruction code into a separate
file and moves over all other instructions into an dedicated
instructions directory.
PR Close#29292
This PR alligns markup language lexer with the previous behaviour in version 7.x:
https://stackblitz.com/edit/angular-iancj2
While this behaviour is not perfect (we should be giving users an error message
here about invalid HTML instead of assuming text node) this is probably best we
can do without more substential re-write of lexing / parsing infrastructure.
This PR just fixes#29231 and restores VE behaviour - a more elaborate fix will
be done in a separate PR as it requries non-trivial rewrites.
PR Close#29328
BREAKING CHANGE:
Certain elements (like `<tr>` or `<col>`) require parent elements to be of a certain type by the HTML specification
(ex. <tr> can only be inside <tbody> / <thead>). Before this change Angular template parser was auto-correcting
"invalid" HTML using the following rules:
- `<tr>` would be wrapped in `<tbody>` if not inside `<tbody>`, `<tfoot>` or `<thead>`;
- `<col>` would be wrapped in `<colgroup>` if not inside `<colgroup>`.
This meachanism of automatic wrapping / auto-correcting was problematic for several reasons:
- it is non-obvious and arbitrary (ex. there are more HTML elements that has rules for parent type);
- it is incorrect for cases where `<tr>` / `<col>` are at the root of a component's content, ex.:
```html
<projecting-tr-inside-tbody>
<tr>...</tr>
</projecting-tr-inside-tbody>
```
In the above example the `<projecting-tr-inside-tbody>` component culd be "surprised" to see additional
`<tbody>` elements inserted by Angular HTML parser.
PR Close#29219
Previously, ngtsc would resolve forward references while evaluating the
bootstrap, declaration, imports, and exports fields of NgModule types.
However, when generating the resulting ngModuleDef, the forward nature of
these references was not taken into consideration, and so the generated JS
code would incorrectly reference types not yet declared.
This commit fixes this issue by introducing function closures in the
NgModuleDef type, similarly to how NgComponentDef uses them for forward
declarations of its directives and pipes arrays. ngtsc will then generate
closures when required, and the runtime will unwrap them if present.
PR Close#29198
Currently with ViewEngine, if someone runs the platform's
`bootstrapModule` method in order to boostrap a module in
JIT mode, external component resources are properly resolved
*automatically*.
Currently with Ivy, the developer would need to manually call
`resolveComponentResources` in order to asynchronously fetch
the determined external component resources. In order to make
this backwards compatible with ViewEngine, and also since
platforms can already specify a `ResourceLoader` compiler
provider, we need to automatically resolve all external
component resources on module bootstrap.
--
Since the `ResourceLoader` is part of the `@angular/compiler`,
because ViewEngine performed the factory creation in the compiler,
we can't access the `ResourceLoader` token from within core.
In order to workaround this without introducing a breaking change,
we just proxy the `ResourceLoader` token to `core` through the
compiler facade. In the future, we should be able to move the
`ResourceLoader` to core when ViewEngine code no longer exists in
the `@angular/compiler`.
PR Close#29083
At the moment, certain tests relies on resolving the module with an index.d.ts, this root cause might be some implementations are missing from the mocks.
Similar to: 58b4045359
PR Close#28884
Prior to this commit, i18n instructions (i18n, i18nStart) were generated before listener instructions. As a result, event listeners were attached to the wrong element (text node, not the parent element). This change updates the order of instructions and puts i18n ones after listeners, to make sure listeners are attached to the right elements.
PR Close#29173
For the template type checking to work correctly, it needs to know
what attributes are bound to expressions or directives, which may
require expressions in the template to be evaluated in a different
scope.
In inline templates, there are attributes that are now marked as
"Template" attributes. We need to ensure that the template
type checking code looks at these "bound" attributes as well as the
"input" attributes.
PR Close#29041
The content projection mechanism is static, in that it only looks at the static
template nodes before directives are matched and change detection is run.
When you have a selector-based content projection the selection is based
on nodes that are available in the template.
For example:
```
<ng-content selector="[some-attr]"></ng-content>
```
would match
```
<div some-attr="..."></div>
```
If you have an inline-template in your projected nodes. For example:
```
<div *ngIf="..." some-attr="..."></div>
```
This gets pre-parsed and converted to a canonical form.
For example:
```
<ng-template [ngIf]="...">
<div some-attr=".."></div>
</ng-template>
```
Note that only structural attributes (e.g. `*ngIf`) stay with the `<ng-template>`
node. The other attributes move to the contained element inside the template.
When this happens in ivy, the ng-template content is removed
from the component template function and is compiled into its own
template function. But this means that the information about the
attributes that were on the content are lost and the projection
selection mechanism is unable to match the original
`<div *ngIf="..." some-attr>`.
This commit adds support for this in ivy. Attributes are separated into three
groups (Bindings, Templates and "other"). For inline-templates the Bindings
and "other" types are hoisted back from the contained node to the `template()`
instruction, so that they can be used in content projection matching.
PR Close#29041
This commit adds a new `AttributeMarker` type that will be used, in a
future commit, to mark attributes as coming from an inline-template
expansion, rather than the element that is being contained in the template.
PR Close#29041
Prior to this change, the RegExp that was used to check for dashes in field names used "g" (global) flag that retains lastIndex, which might result in skipping some fields that should be wrapped in quotes (since lastIndex advanced beyond the next "-" location). This commit removes this flag and updates the test to make sure there are no regressions.
PR Close#29126
ngtsc occasionally converts a type reference (such as the type of a
parameter in a constructor) to a value reference (argument to a
directiveInject call). TypeScript has a bad habit of sometimes removing
the import statement associated with this type reference, because it's a
type only import when it initially looks at the file.
A solution to this is to always add an import to refer to a type position
value that's imported, and not rely on the existing import.
PR Close#29111
Prior to this change, keys in "inputs" and "outputs" objects generated by compiler were not checked against unsafe characters. As a result, in some cases the generated code was throwing JS error. Now we check whether a given key contains any unsafe chars and wrap it in quotes if needed.
PR Close#28919
ngtsc has cyclic import detection, to determine when adding an import to a
directive or pipe would create a cycle. However, this detection must also
account for already inserted imports, as it's possible for both directions
of a circular import to be inserted by Ivy (as opposed to at least one of
those edges existing in the user's program).
This commit fixes the circular import detection for components to take into
consideration already added edges. This is difficult for one critical
reason: only edges to files which will *actually* be imported should be
considered. However, that depends on which directives & pipes are used in
a given template, which is currently only known by running the
TemplateDefinitionBuilder during the 'compile' phase. This is too late; the
decision whether to use remote scoping (which consults the import graph) is
made during the 'resolve' phase, before any compilation has taken place.
Thus, the only way to correctly consider synthetic edges is for the compiler
to know exactly which directives & pipes are used in a template during
'resolve'. There are two ways to achieve this:
1) refactor `TemplateDefinitionBuilder` to do its work in two phases, with
directive matching occurring as a separate step which can be performed
earlier.
2) use the `R3TargetBinder` in the 'resolve' phase to independently bind the
template and get information about used directives.
Option 1 is ideal, but option 2 is currently used for practical reasons. The
cost of binding the template can be shared with template-typechecking.
PR Close#29040
In the @Component decorator, the 'host' field is an object which represents
host bindings. The type of this field is complex, but is generally of the
form {[key: string]: string}. Several different kinds of bindings can be
specified, depending on the structure of the key.
For example:
```
@Component({
host: {'[prop]': 'someExpr'}
})
```
will bind an expression 'someExpr' to the property 'prop'. This is known to
be a property binding because of the square brackets in the binding key.
If the binding key is a plain string (no brackets or parentheses), then it
is known as an attribute binding. In this case, the right-hand side is not
interpreted as an expression, but is instead a constant string.
There is no actual requirement that at build time, these constant strings
are known to the compiler, but this was previously enforced as a side effect
of requiring the binding expressions for property and event bindings to be
statically known (as they need to be parsed). This commit breaks that
relationship and allows the attribute bindings to be dynamic. In the case
that they are dynamic, the references to the dynamic values are reflected
into the Ivy instructions for attribute bindings.
PR Close#29033
This change helps highlight certain misoptimizations with Closure
compiler. It is also stylistically preferable to consistently use index
access on index sig types.
Roughly, when one sees '.foo' they know it is always checked for typos
in the prop name by the type system (unless 'any'), while "['foo']" is
always not.
Once all angular repos are conforming this will become a tsetse.info
check, enforced by bazel.
PR Close#28937
Previously the start of a character indicated by an escape sequence
was being incorrectly computed by the lexer, which caused tokens
to include the start of the escaped character sequence in the
preceding token. In particular this affected the name extracted
from opening tags if the name was terminated by an escape sequence.
For example, `<t\n>` would have the name `t\` rather than `t`.
This fix refactors the lexer to use a "cursor" object to iterate over
the characters in the template source. There are two cursor implementations,
one expects a simple string, the other expects a string that contains
JavaScript escape sequences that need to be unescaped.
PR Close#28978
The parts of a token are supposed to be an array of not-null strings,
but we were using `null` for tags that had no prefix. This has been
fixed to use the empty string in such cases, which allows the `null !`
hack to be removed.
PR Close#28978
Angular supports using <style> and <link> tags inline in component
templates, but previously such tags were not implemented within the ngtsc
compiler. This commit introduces that support.
FW-1069 #resolve
PR Close#28997
Prior to this change i18n block bindings were converted to Expressions right away (once we first access them), when in non-i18n cases we processed them differently: the actual conversion happens at instructions generation. Because of this discrepancy, the output for bindings in i18n blocks was generated incorrectly (with invalid indicies in pipeBindN fns and invalid references to non-existent local variables). Now the bindings processing is unified and i18nExp instructions should contain right bind expressions.
PR Close#28969
Prior to this change, the logic that outputs i18n consts (like `const MSG_XXX = goog.getMsg(...)`) didn't have a check whether a given const that represent a certain i18n message was already included into the generated output. This commit adds the logic to mark corresponding i18n contexts after translation was generated, to avoid duplicate consts in the output.
PR Close#28967
During build time we remap particular property bindings, because their names don't match their attribute equivalents (e.g. the property for the `for` attribute is called `htmlFor`). This breaks down if the particular element has an input that has the same name, because the property gets mapped to something invalid.
The following changes address the issue by mapping the name during runtime, because that's when directives are resolved and we know all of the inputs that are associated with a particular element.
PR Close#28765
Prior to this change presence of HTML comments inside <ng-content> caused compiler to throw an error that <ng-content> is not empty. Now HTML comments are not considered as a meaningful content, thus no error is thrown. This behavior is now aligned in Ivy/VE.
PR Close#28849
This commit adds support for the `static: true` flag in `ContentChild`
queries. Prior to this commit, all `ContentChild` queries were resolved
after change detection ran. This is a problem for backwards
compatibility because View Engine also supported "static" queries which
would resolve before change detection.
Now if users add a `static: true` option, the query will be resolved in
creation mode (before change detection runs). For example:
```ts
@ContentChild(TemplateRef, {static: true}) template !: TemplateRef;
```
This feature will come in handy for components that need
to create components dynamically.
PR Close#28811
This commit adds support for the `static: true` flag in
`ViewChild` queries. Prior to this commit, all `ViewChild`
queries were resolved after change detection ran. This is
a problem for backwards compatibility because View Engine
also supported "static" queries which would resolve before
change detection.
Now if users add a `static: true` option, the query will be
resolved in creation mode (before change detection runs).
For example:
```ts
@ViewChild(TemplateRef, {static: true}) template !: TemplateRef;
```
This feature will come in handy for components that need
to create components dynamically.
PR Close#28811
Prior to this commit, the timing of `ViewChild`/`ContentChild` query
resolution depended on the results of each query. If any results
for a particular query were nested inside embedded views (e.g.
*ngIfs), that query would be resolved after change detection ran.
Otherwise, the query would be resolved as soon as nodes were created.
This inconsistency in resolution timing had the potential to cause
confusion because query results would sometimes be available in
ngOnInit, but sometimes wouldn't be available until ngAfterContentInit
or ngAfterViewInit. Code depending on a query result could suddenly
stop working as soon as an *ngIf or an *ngFor was added to the template.
With this commit, users can dictate when they want a particular
`ViewChild` or `ContentChild` query to be resolved with the `static`
flag. For example, one can mark a particular query as `static: false`
to ensure change detection always runs before its results are set:
```ts
@ContentChild('foo', {static: false}) foo !: ElementRef;
```
This means that even if there isn't a query result wrapped in an
*ngIf or an *ngFor now, adding one to the template later won't change
the timing of the query resolution and potentially break your component.
Similarly, if you know that your query needs to be resolved earlier
(e.g. you need results in an ngOnInit hook), you can mark it as
`static: true`.
```ts
@ViewChild(TemplateRef, {static: true}) foo !: TemplateRef;
```
Note: this means that your component will not support *ngIf results.
If you do not supply a `static` option when creating your `ViewChild` or
`ContentChild` query, the default query resolution timing will kick in.
Note: This new option only applies to `ViewChild` and `ContentChild`
queries, not `ViewChildren` or `ContentChildren` queries, as those types
already resolve after CD runs.
PR Close#28810
Accounts for schemas in when validating properties in Ivy.
This PR resolves FW-819.
A couple of notes:
* I had to rework the test slightly, in order to have it fail when we expect it to. The one in master is passing since Ivy's validation runs during the update phase, rather than creation.
* I had to deviate from the design in FW-819 and not add an `enableSchema` instruction, because the schema is part of the `NgModule` scope, however the scope is only assigned to a component once all of the module's declarations have been resolved and some of them can be async. Instead, I opted to have the `schemas` on the component definition.
PR Close#28637
Since we build and publish the individual packages
using Bazel and `build.sh` has been removed, we can
safely remove the `rollup.config.js` files which are no
longer needed because the `ng_package` bazel rule
automatically handles the rollup settings and globals.
PR Close#28646
In the past, @Injectable had no side effects and existing Angular code is
therefore littered with @Injectable usage on classes which are not intended
to be injected.
A common example is:
@Injectable()
class Foo {
constructor(private notInjectable: string) {}
}
and somewhere else:
providers: [{provide: Foo, useFactory: ...})
Here, there is no need for Foo to be injectable - indeed, it's impossible
for the DI system to create an instance of it, as it has a non-injectable
constructor. The provider configures a factory for the DI system to be
able to create instances of Foo.
Adding @Injectable in Ivy signifies that the class's own constructor, and
not a provider, determines how the class will be created.
This commit adds logic to compile classes which are marked with @Injectable
but are otherwise not injectable, and create an ngInjectableDef field with
a factory function that throws an error. This way, existing code in the wild
continues to compile, but if someone attempts to use the injectable it will
fail with a useful error message.
In the case where strictInjectionParameters is set to true, a compile-time
error is thrown instead of the runtime error, as ngtsc has enough
information to determine when injection couldn't possibly be valid.
PR Close#28523
Testing of Ivy revealed two bugs in the AstMemoryEfficientTransformer
class, a part of existing View Engine compiler infrastructure that's
reused in Ivy. These bugs cause AST expressions not to be transformed
under certain circumstances.
The fix is simple, and tests are added to ensure the specific expression
forms that trigger the issue compile properly under Ivy.
PR Close#28523
Prior to this update we had separate contentQueries and contentQueriesRefresh functions to handle creation and update phases. This approach was inconsistent with View Queries, Host Bindings and Template functions that we generate for Component/Directive defs. Now the mentioned 2 functions are combines into one (contentQueries), creation and update logic is separated with RenderFlags (similar to what we have in other generated functions).
PR Close#28503
With #28594 we refactored the `@angular/compiler` slightly to
allow opting out from external symbol re-exports which are
enabled by default.
Since symbol re-exports only benefit projects which have a
very strict dependency enforcement, external symbols should
not be re-exported by default as this could grow the size of
factory files and cause unexpected behavior with Angular's
AOT symbol resolving (e.g. see: #25644).
Note that the common strict dependency enforcement for source
files does still work with external symbol re-exports disabled,
but there are also strict dependency checks that enforce strict
module dependencies also for _generated files_ (such as the
ngfactory files). This is how Google3 manages it's dependencies
and therefore external symbol re-exports need to be enabled within
Google3.
Also "ngtsc" also does not provide any way of using external symbol
re-exports, so this means that with this change, NGC can partially
match the behavior of "ngtsc" then (unless explicitly opted-out).
As mentioned before, internally at Google symbol re-exports need to
be still enabled, so the `ng_module` Bazel rule will enable the symbol
re-exports by default when running within Blaze.
Fixes#25644.
PR Close#28633
Previously, using a pipe in an input binding on an ng-template would
evaluate the pipe in the context of node that was processed before the
template. This caused the retrieval of e.g. ChangeDetectorRef to be
incorrect, resulting in one of the following bugs depending on the
template's structure:
1. If the template was at the root of a view, the previously processed
node would be the component's host node outside of the current view.
Accessing that node in the context of the current view results in a crash.
2. For templates not at the root, the ChangeDetectorRef injected into the
pipe would correspond with the previously processed node. If that node
hosts a component, the ChangeDetectorRef would not correspond with the
view that the ng-template is part of.
The solution to the above problem is two-fold:
1. Template compilation is adjusted such that the template instruction
is emitted before any instructions produced by input bindings, such as
pipes. This ensures that pipes are evaluated in the context of the
template's container node.
2. A ChangeDetectorRef can be requested for container nodes.
Fixes#28587
PR Close#27565
During analysis, the `ComponentDecoratorHandler` passes the component
template to the `parseTemplate()` function. Previously, there was little or
no information about the original source file, where the template is found,
passed when calling this function.
Now, we correctly compute the URL of the source of the template, both
for external `templateUrl` and in-line `template` cases. Further in the
in-line template case we compute the character range of the template
in its containing source file; *but only in the case that the template is
a simple string literal*. If the template is actually a dynamic value like
an interpolated string or a function call, then we do not try to add the
originating source file information.
The translator that converts Ivy AST nodes to TypeScript now adds these
template specific source mappings, which account for the file where
the template was found, to the templates to support stepping through the
template creation and update code when debugging an Angular application.
Note that some versions of TypeScript have a bug which means they cannot
support external template source-maps. We check for this via the
`canSourceMapExternalTemplates()` helper function and avoid trying to
add template mappings to external templates if not supported.
PR Close#28055
When template bindings are being parsed the event handlers
were receiving a source span that included the whole attribute.
Now they get a span that is focussed on the handler itself.
PR Close#28055
The `convertActionBinding()` now accepts an optional `baseSourceSpan`,
which is the start point of the action expression being converted in the
original source code. This is used to compute the original position of
the output AST nodes.
PR Close#28055
When tokenizing markup (e.g. HTML) element attributes
can have quoted or unquoted values (e.g. `a=b` or `a="b"`).
The `ATTR_VALUE` tokens were capturing the quotes, which
was inconsistent and also affected source-mapping.
Now the tokenizer captures additional `ATTR_QUOTE` tokens,
which the HTML related parsers understand and factor into their
token parsing.
PR Close#28055
There are some differences in how ivy maps template source
compared to View Engine. In this commit we recreate the View Engine
tests for ivy.
PR Close#28055
Previously the call to `extractSourceMap()` would only work if the
`//#sourceMappingURL ...` was the last line of the file. This doesn't
work if the code is JIT evaluated as the comment is actually the last
line in the body of a function, wrapped by curly-braces.
PR Close#28055
When testing JIT code, it is useful to be able to access the
generated JIT source. Previously this is done by spying on the
global `Function` object, to capture the code when it is being
evaluated. This is problematic because you can only capture
the body of the function, and not the arguments, which messes
up line and column positions for source mapping for instance.
Now the code that generates and then evaluates JIT code is
wrapped in a `JitEvaluator` class, making it possible to provide
a mock implementation that can capture the generated source of
the function passed to `executeFunction(fn: Function, args: any[])`.
PR Close#28055
In order to support source mapping of templates, we need
to be able to tokenize the template in its original context.
When the template is defined inline as a JavaScript string
in a TS/JS source file, the tokenizer must be able to handle
string escape sequences, such as `\n` and `\"` as they
appear in the original source file.
This commit teaches the lexer how to unescape these
sequences, but only when the `escapedString` option is
set to true. Otherwise there is no change to the tokenizing
behaviour.
PR Close#28055
The lexer that does the tokenizing can now process only a part the source
string, by passing a `range` property in the `options` argument. The
locations of the nodes that are tokenized will now take into account the
position of the span in the context of the original source string.
This `range` option is, in turn, exposed from the template parser as well.
Being able to process parts of files helps to enable SourceMap support
when compiling inline component templates.
PR Close#28055
When we added the strict null checks, the lexer had some `!`
operators added to prevent the compilation from failing.
This commit resolves this problem correctly and removes the
hacks.
Also the comment
```
// Note: this is always lowercase!
```
has been removed as it is no longer true.
See #24571
PR Close#28055
This commit consolidates the options that can modify the
parsing of text (e.g. HTML, Angular templates, CSS, i18n)
into an AST for further processing into a single `options`
hash.
This makes the code cleaner and more readable, but also
enables us to support further options to parsing without
triggering wide ranging changes to code that should not
be affected by these new options. Specifically, it will let
us pass information about the placement of a template
that is being parsed in its containing file, which is essential
for accurate SourceMap processing.
PR Close#28055
Up until now, `[style]` and `[class]` bindings (the map-based ones) have only
worked as template bindings and have not been supported at all inside of host
bindings. This patch ensures that multiple host binding sources (components and
directives) all properly assign style values and merge them correctly in terms
of priority.
Jira: FW-882
PR Close#28246
Previously, it wasn't possible to compile template that contains pipe in context of ternary operator `{{ 1 ? 2 : 0 | myPipe }}` due to the error `Error: Illegal state: Pipes should have been converted into functions. Pipe: async`.
This PR fixes a typo in expression parser so that pipes are correctly converted into functions.
PR Close#28635
Prior to this change in Ivy we had strict check that disabled non-unique #localRefs usage within a given template. While this limitation was technically present in View Engine, in many cases View Engine neglected this restriction and as a result, some apps relied on a fact that multiple non-unique #localRefs can be defined and utilized to query elements via @ViewChild(ren) and @ContentChild(ren). In order to provide better compatibility with View Engine, this commit removes existing restriction.
As a part of this commit, are few tests were added to verify VE and Ivy compatibility in most common use-cases where multiple non-unique #localRefs were used.
PR Close#28627
Currently external static symbols which are referenced by AOT
compiler generated code, will be re-exported in the corresponding
`.ngfactory` files.
This way of handling the symbol resolution has been introduced in
favor of avoding dynamically generated module dependencies. This
behavior therefore avoids any strict dependency failures.
Read more about a particular scenario here: https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/25644#issuecomment-458354439
Now with `ngtsc`, this behavior has changed since `ngtsc` just
introduces these module dependencies in order to properly reference
the external symbol from its original location (also eliminating the need
for factories). Similarly we should provide a way to use the same
behavior with `ngc` because the downside of using the re-exported symbol
resolution is that user-code transformations (e.g. the `ngInjectableDef`
metadata which is added to the user source code), can resolve external
symbols to previous factory symbol re-exports. This is a critical issue
because it means that the actual JIT code references factory files in order
to access external symbols. This means that the generated output cannot
shipped to NPM without shipping the referenced factory files.
A specific example has been reported here: https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/25644#issue-353554070
PR Close#28594
Prior to this change there was no i18n id sanitization before we output goog.getMsg calls. Due to the fact that message ids are used as a part of const names, some characters were bcausing issues while executing generated code. This commit adds sanitization to i18n ids used to generate i18n-related consts.
PR Close#28522
Prior to this change, generation of host bindings and host styles was guarded by the "if" statement, which always returned true. Enforcing more strict check for bindings length broke some tests, since host styling instructions generation were inside the same "if" block. This update decouples bindings instruction generation from styling instructions, which makes it less error prone.
PR Close#28379
Prior to this change we may encounter some errors (like pipes being used where they should not be used) while compiling Host Bindings and Listeners. With this update we move validation logic to the analyze phase and throw an error if something is wrong. This also aligns error messages between Ivy and VE.
PR Close#28356
Prior to this change contentQueriesRefresh functions that represent refresh logic for @ContentQuery list were not composable, which caused problems in case one Directive inherits another one and both of them contain Content Queries. Due to the fact that we used indices to reference queries in refresh function, results were placed into wrong Queries. In order to avoid that we no longer use indices to reference queries and instead maintain current content query index while iterating through them. This allows us to compose contentQueriesRefresh functions and make inheritance feature work with Content Queries.
PR Close#28324
Currently `compileNgModule` generates an empty array for optional fields that are omitted from an `NgModule` declaration (e.g. `bootstrap`, `exports`). This isn't necessary, because `defineNgModule` has some code to default these fields to empty arrays at runtime if they aren't defined. The following changes will only output code if there are values for the particular field.
PR Close#28387
By its nature, Ivy alters the import graph of a TS program, adding imports
where template dependencies exist. For example, if ComponentA uses PipeB
in its template, Ivy will insert an import of PipeB into the file in which
ComponentA is declared.
Any insertion of an import into a program has the potential to introduce a
cycle into the import graph. If for some reason the file in which PipeB is
declared imports the file in which ComponentA is declared (maybe it makes
use of a service or utility function that happens to be in the same file as
ComponentA) then this could create an import cycle. This turns out to
happen quite regularly in larger Angular codebases.
TypeScript and the Ivy runtime have no issues with such cycles. However,
other tools are not so accepting. In particular the Closure Compiler is
very anti-cycle.
To mitigate this problem, it's necessary to detect when the insertion of
an import would create a cycle. ngtsc can then use a different strategy,
known as "remote scoping", instead of directly writing a reference from
one component to another. Under remote scoping, a function
'setComponentScope' is called after the declaration of the component's
module, which does not require the addition of new imports.
FW-647 #resolve
PR Close#28169
Prior to this change `viewQuery` functions that represent @ViewQuery list were not composable, which caused problems in case one Component/Directive inherits another one and both of them contain View Queries. Due to the fact that we used indices to reference queries, resulting query set was corrupted (child component queries were overridden by super class ones). In order to avoid that we no longer use indices assigned at compile time and instead maintain current view query index while iterating through them. This allows us to compose `viewQuery` functions and make inheritance feature work with View Queries.
PR Close#28309
- Wraps the NgOnChangesFeature in a factory such that no side effects occur in the module root
- Adds comments to ngInherit property on feature definition interface to help guide others not to make the same mistake
- Updates compiler to generate the feature properly after the change to it being a factory
- Updates appropriate tests
PR Close#28187
Fixes the template generation function generating an incorrect tag name when the element has a namespace (e.g. `:svg:circle` gets generated rather than `circle`).
PR Close#28298
Due to the fact that animations in Angular are defined in the component metadata,
all animation trigger definitions are localized to the component and are
inaccessible outside of it. Animation host listeners in Ivy are
rendered in the context of the parent component, but the VE renders them
differently. This patch ensures that animation host listeners are
always registered in the sub component's renderer
Jira issue: FW-943
Jira issue: FW-958
PR Close#28210
In Ivy when elements are created a series of static attribute names are provided
over to the construction instruction of that element. Static attribute names
include non-binding attribues (like `<div selected>`) as well as animation bindings
that do not have a RHS value (like `<div @foo>`). Because of this distinction,
value-less animation triggers are rendered first before value-full animation
bindings are and this improper ordering has caused various existing tests to fail.
This patch ensures that animation bindings are evaluated in the order that they
exist within the HTML template code (or host binding code).
PR Close#28165
With the refactoring or how styles/classes are implmented in Ivy,
interpolation has caused the binding code to mess up since interpolation
itself takes up its own slot in Ivy's memory management code. This patch
makes sure that interpolation works as expected with class and style
bindings.
Jira issue: FW-944
PR Close#28190
Prior to this change element's i18n attributes like "i18n-title" were processed after "i18n" ones that placed "i18n" and "i18nAttributes" instructions in wrong order, thus "i18nAttributes" failed to target its host element at runtime. This change updates processing order and puts "i18nAttributes" instructions in front of "i18n" ones to resolve the problem.
PR Close#28163
Up until this point, all static attribute values (things like `title` and `id`)
defined within the `host` are of a Component/Directive definition were
generated into a `def.attributes` array and then processed at runtime.
This design decision does not lend itself well to tree-shaking and is
inconsistent with other static values such as styles and classes.
This fix ensures that all static attribute values (attributes, classes,
and styles) that exist within a host definition for components and
directives are all assigned via the `elementHostAttrs` instruction.
```
// before
defineDirective({
...
attributes: ['title', 'my title']
...
})
//now
defineDirective({
...
hostBindings: function() {
if (create) {
elementHostAttrs(..., ['title', 'my-title']);
}
...
}
...
})
```
PR Close#28089
Prior to this change we performed prop and attr name validation at compile time, which failed in case a given prop/attr is an input to a Directive (thus should not be a subject to this check). Since Directive matching in Ivy happens at runtime, the corresponding checks are now moved to runtime as well.
PR Close#28054
This update aligns Ivy behavior with ViewEngine related to empty bindings (for example <div [someProp]></div>): empty bindings are ignored.
PR Close#28059
Libraries that create components dynamically using component factories,
such as `@angular/upgrade` need to pass blocks of projected content
through to the `ComponentFactory.create()` method. These blocks
are extracted from the content by matching CSS selectors defined in
`<ng-content select="..">` tags found in the component's template.
The Angular compiler collects these CSS selectors when compiling a component's
template, and exposes them via the `ComponentFactory.ngContentSelectors`
property.
This change ensures that this property is filled correctly when the
component factory is created by compiling a component with the Ivy engine.
PR Close#27867
exportAs in @Directive metadata supports multiple values, separated by
commas. Previously it was treated as a single value string.
This commit modifies the compiler to understand that exportAs is a
string[]. It stops short of carrying the multiple values through to the
runtime. Instead, it only emits the first one. A future commit will modify
the runtime to accept all the values.
PR Close#28001
This commit adds sanitization for `elementProperty` and `elementAttribute` instructions used in `hostBindings` function, similar to what we already have in the `template` function. Main difference is the fact that for some attributes (like "href" and "src") we can't define which SecurityContext they belong to (URL vs RESOURCE_URL) in Compiler, since information in Directive selector may not be enough to calculate it. In order to resolve the problem, Compiler injects slightly different sanitization function which detects proper Security Context at runtime.
PR Close#27939
This update introduces support for global object (window, document, body) listeners, that can be defined via host listeners on Components and Directives.
PR Close#27772
test.sh is no longer needed... all the tests should now be executed via bazel.
if for whatever reason we need to run the legacy unit test setup, we should should follow the commands that we use to execute those tests in .circle/config.yaml
PR Close#27937
Previously, there could be identical template/listener function names
for a component's template, if it had multiple similarly structured
nested sub-templates or listeners.
This resulted in build errors:
`Identifier '<SOME_IDENTIFIER>' has already been declared`
This commit fixes this by ensuring that the template index is included
in the `contextName` passed to the `TemplateDefinitionBuilder`
responsible for processing nested sub-templates.
Similarly, the template or element index is included in the listener
names.
PR Close#27766
Some of the animation tests have been failing because animation gets
triggered multiple times. The reason for this is that the compiler was
generating static attribute bindings in addition to dynamic bindings.
This created multiple writes to the animation render which failed the
tests.
PR Close#27805
Previously ivy code generation was emmiting the projectionDef instruction in
a template where the <ng-content> tag was found. This code generation logic was
incorrect since the ivy runtime expects the projectionDef instruction to be present
in the main template only.
This PR ammends the code generation logic so that the projectionDef instruction is
emmitedin the main template only.
PR Close#27755
Prior to this change, we were unable to match directives using `ng-template` tags (for example the following selector would not work even though there might be some <ng-template>s in a template: `ng-template[directiveA]`. As a result, that broke some components that relies on such selectors to work. In order to resolve the problem, we now pass tag name to the `template` instruction (where we passed `null` before) and this tag name is used for matching at runtime. This update should also help support projecting containers, because the tag name is required to properly match such elements.
PR Close#27636
Closure Compiler doesn't allow non-goo.getMsg const names to start with `MSG_`, so we should use different prefix for const that references a result of the `i18nPostprocess` fn invocation. With this update we also append file-based prefix to i18n constants (via $$ postfix) to ensure the names are unique across codebase of a project (otherwise it might lead to errors while compiling a project with Closure Compiler).
PR Close#27468
Previously in Ivy, host bindings did not work if they shared a public name
with an Input because they used the `elementProperty` instruction as is.
This instruction was originally built for inside component templates, so it
would either set a directive input OR a native property. This is the
correct behavior for inside a template, but for host bindings, we always
want the native properties to be set regardless of the presence of an Input.
This change adds an extra argument to `elementProperty` so we can tell it to
ignore directive inputs and only set native properties (if it is in the
context of a host binding).
PR Close#27589
Prior to this update, we always returned the number of host vars defined in @Component definition as a value for `allocatePureFunctionsSlot` callback in ValueConverter. As a result, pure function arguments were not accounted for, thus leasing to incorrect slot offsets in `pureFunction` calls. Now we update and return total # of host vars, so the offsets are defined correctly.
PR Close#27587
Prior to this change, animation event names were treated as a regular event names, stripping `@` symbol and event phase. As a result, event listeners were not invoked during animations. Now animation event name is formatted as needed and the necessary callbacks are invoked.
PR Close#27525
While generating attributes for `projection` instruction, we checked whether attribute name is equal to 'select' in lower case. However in other cases we treat 'select' attribute name as case-insensitive. This PR makes 'select' attribute consistently case-insensitive.
PR Close#27500
Prior to this change, animation properties were defined as element attributes, which caused errors at runtime. Now all animation-related attributes are defined as element properties.
Also as a part of this update, we start to account for bindings used in animations, which was previously missing.
PR Close#27496
Analogously to directives, the `ngInjectableDef` field in .d.ts files is
annotated with the type of service that it represents. If the service
contains required generic type arguments, these must be included in
the .d.ts file.
PR Close#27037
The logic that generates first argument for the `elementStyling` instruction was missing the check that directive expression is specified. As a result, in some cases first argument was not added, thus making function invocation incorrect. Now the presence of directive expression is taken into account and the `null` expression is generated as needed.
PR Close#27404
Prior to this change `projectDef` instructions were placed to root templates only, thus the necessary information (selectors) in nested templates was missing. This update adds the logic to insert `projectDef` instructions to all templates where <ng-content> is present.
PR Close#27384
The problem was caused by missing `allocateBindingSlots` that led to incorrect # of vars defined for components and as a result, causing errors at runtime. Now all `bind` operation are accounted for and the number of `vars` is correct.
PR Close#27338
The problem was caused by the self-closing i18n instruction that was generated in case we have styling instructions defined for a component. As a result, that caused problems at runtime. This update adds extra check to avoid creating self-closing i18n instructions (create i18nStart and i18nEnd instructions instead) when styling instructions are present.
PR Close#27330
Previously the concept of multiple directives with the same selector was
not supported by ngtsc. This is due to the treatment of directives for a
component as a Map from selector to the directive, which is an erroneous
representation.
Now the directives for a component are stored as an array which supports
multiple directives with the same selector.
Testing strategy: a new ngtsc_spec test asserts that multiple directives
with the same selector are matched on an element.
PR Close#27298
Most of the specs in these tests are not relevant to Ivy:
//packages/compiler/test:test
//packages/compiler/test:test_web_chromium-local
However, a few test pieces of the compiler infrastructure that are used in
Ivy, and new BUILD.bazel files are created to separate them from the above
disabled targets:
//packages/compiler/test/css_parser:css_parser
//packages/compiler/test/css_parser:css_parser_web
//packages/compiler/test/expression_parser:expression_parser
//packages/compiler/test/expression_parser:expression_parser_web
//packages/compiler/test/ml_parser:ml_parser
//packages/compiler/test/ml_parser:ml_parser_web
//packages/compiler/test/selector:selector
//packages/compiler/test/selector:selector_web
PR Close#27301
This commit introduces the setClassMetadata() private function, which
adds metadata to a type in a way that can be accessed via Angular's
ReflectionCapabilities. Currently, it writes to static fields as if
the metadata being added was downleveled from decorators by tsickle.
The plan is for ngtsc to emit code which calls this function, passing
metadata on to the runtime for testing purposes. Calls to this function
would then be tree-shaken away for production bundles.
Testing strategy: proper operation of this function will be an integral
part of TestBed metadata overriding. Angular core tests will fail if this
is broken.
PR Close#26860
Uglify and other tree-shakers attempt to determine if the invocation
of a function is side-effectful, and remove it if so (and the result
is unused). A /*@__PURE__*/ annotation on the call site can be used
to hint to the optimizer that the invocation has no side effects and
is safe to tree-shake away.
This commit adds a 'pure' flag to the output AST function call node,
which can be used to signal to downstream emitters that a pure
annotation should be added. It also modifies ngtsc's emitter to
emit an Uglify pure annotation when this flag is set.
Testing strategy: this will be tested via its consumers, by asserting
that pure functions are translated with the correct comment.
PR Close#26860
Previously errors in the summary file would include absolute file names.
This is undesirable as the output of a build should not depend on the
current working directory. Doing so causes nondeterminism issues in
builds.
PR Close#26759
We are close enough to blacklist a few test targets, rather than whitelist targets to run...
Because bazel rules can be composed of other rules that don't inherit tags automatically,
I had to explicitly mark all of our ts_library and ng_module targes with "ivy-local" and
"ivy-jit" tags so that we can create a query that excludes all fixme- tagged targets even
if those targets are composed of other targets that don't inherit this tag.
This is the updated overview of ivy related bazel tags:
- ivy-only: target that builds or runs only under ivy
- fixme-ivy-jit: target that doesn't yet build or run under ivy with --compile=jit
- fixme-ivy-local: target that doesn't yet build or run under ivy with --compile=local
- no-ivy-jit: target that is not intended to build or run under ivy with --compile=jit
- no-ivy-local: target that is not intended to build or run under ivy with --compile=local
PR Close#26471
The 'animations' field of @Component metadata should be copied directly
into the ngComponentDef for that component and should not pass through
static resolution.
Previously the animations array was statically resolved and then the
values were translated back when generating ngComponentDef.
PR Close#26322
Previously in Ivy, metadata for directives/components/modules/etc was
carried in .d.ts files inside type information encoded on the
DirectiveDef, ComponentDef, NgModuleDef, etc types of Ivy definition
fields. This works well, but has the side effect of complicating Ivy's
runtime code as these extra generic type parameters had to be specified
as <any> throughout the codebase. *DefInternal types were introduced
previously to mitigate this issue, but that's the wrong way to solve
the problem.
This commit returns *Def types to their original form, with no metadata
attached. Instead, new *DefWithMeta types are introduced that alias the
plain definition types and add extra generic parameters. This way the
only code that needs to deal with the extra metadata parameters is the
compiler code that reads and writes them - the existence of this metadata
is transparent to the runtime, as it should be.
PR Close#26203
This commit introduces the "t2" API, which processes parsed template ASTs
and performs a number of functions such as binding (the process of
semantically interpreting cross-references within the template) and
directive matching. The API is modeled on TypeScript's TypeChecker API,
with oracle methods that give access to collected metadata.
This work is a prerequisite for the upcoming template type-checking
functionality, and will also become the basis for a refactored
TemplateDefinitionBuilder.
PR Close#26203
This commit adds a generic type parameter to the SelectorMatcher
class and its associated response types. This makes the API for
matching selectors and obtaining information about the matched
directives significantly more ergonomic and type-safe.
PR Close#26203
Upcoming implementation work for template type-checking will need to reuse the
code which matches directives inside a template, so this refactor commit moves
the code to a shared location in preparation.
This commit pulls the code needed to match directives against a template node
out of the TemplateDefinitionBuilder into a utility function, in preparation
for template type-checking and other TemplateDefinitionBuilder refactoring.
PR Close#26203
Previously, when you attempted to bootstrap a component that had a
router-outlet using ngsummaries, it would complain that the component
was not provided by any module even if it was. This commit fixes a
mistake (AFAICT) which caused the lookup of the component in the AOT
summaries to fail.
I believe this change is safe. I've run the affected tests within Google
and there were no breakages caused by this change.
PR Close#24892
The bootstrap property of @NgModule was not previously compiled by
the compiler in AOT or JIT modes (in Ivy). This commit adds support
for bootstrap.
PR Close#25775
Closure compiler requires that the i18n message constants of the form
const MSG_XYZ = goog.getMessage('...');
have names that are unique across an entire compilation, even if the
variables themselves are local to a given module. This means that in
practice these names must be unique in a codebase.
The best way to guarantee this requirement is met is to encode the
relative file name of the file into which the constant is being written
into the constant name itself. This commit implements that solution.
PR Close#25689
By pulling in `compiler` into `core` the `compiler` was not
100% tree-shakable and about 8KB of code was retained
when tree-shaken with closure.
PR Close#25531
Workaround was added in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/25335. It was necessary for .ngfactory & .ngsummary files to have proper AMD module names starting with @angular when building angular downstream from source using Bazel. The underlying issue has been resolved in the compiler and these files now get proper AMD module names without the need for this workaround. The workaround had an unexpected consequence https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/11835 which is fixed by its removal.
PR Close#25604
Provides a runtime and compile time switch for ivy including
`ApplicationRef.bootstrapModule`.
This is done by naming the symbols such that `ngcc` (angular
Compatibility compiler) can rename symbols in such a way that running
`ngcc` command will switch the `@angular/core` module from `legacy` to
`ivy` mode.
This is done as follows:
```
const someToken__PRE_NGCC__ = ‘legacy mode’;
const someToken__POST_NGCC__ = ‘ivy mode’;
export someSymbol = someToken__PRE_NGCC__;
```
The `ngcc` will search for any token which ends with `__PRE_NGCC__`
and replace it with `__POST_NGCC__`. This allows the `@angular/core`
package to be rewritten to ivy mode post `ngcc` execution.
PR Close#25238
A small bug caused base factory variable statements for @Component to
not be emitted properly. At the same time as this is fixed, those
statements are now emitted as const.
PR Close#25425
When generating the 'directives:' property of ngComponentDef, ngtsc
needs to be conscious of declaration order. If a directive being
written into the array is declarated after the component currently
being compiled, then the entire directives array needs to be wrapped
in a closure.
This commit fixes ngtsc to pay attention to such ordering issues
within directives arrays.
PR Close#25392
This commit creates an API for factory functions which allows them
to be inherited from one another. To do so, it differentiates between
the factory function as a wrapper for a constructor and the factory
function in ngInjectableDefs which is determined by a default
provider.
The new form is:
factory: (t?) => new (t || SomeType)(inject(Dep1), inject(Dep2))
The 't' parameter allows for constructor inheritance. A subclass with
no declared constructor inherits its constructor from the superclass.
With the 't' parameter, a subclass can call the superclass' factory
function and use it to create an instance of the subclass.
For @Injectables with configured providers, the factory function is
of the form:
factory: (t?) => t ? constructorInject(t) : provider();
where constructorInject(t) creates an instance of 't' using the
naturally declared constructor of the type, and where provider()
creates an instance of the base type using the special declared
provider on @Injectable.
PR Close#25392
Inside of a nested template, an attempt to generate code for a banana-
in-a-box expression would cause a crash in the _AstToIrVisitor, as it
was not handling the case where a write would be generated to a local
variable.
This change supports such a mode of operation.
PR Close#25321
To match the View Engine behavior.
We should make this configurable so that the node injector is tree shaken when
directives do not need to be published.
PR Close#25291
Previously the compiler compliance tests ran and built test code with
real dependencies on @angular/core and @angular/common. This meant that
any changes to the compiler would result in long rebuild processes
for tests to rerun.
This change removes those dependencies and causes test code to be built
against the fake_core stub of @angular/core that the ngtsc tests use.
This change also removes the dependency on @angular/common entirely, as
locality means it's possible to reference *ngIf without needing to link
to an implementation.
PR Close#25248
Before this change bound properties would not be used when matching directives
at runtime.
That is `<ng-template [ngIf]=cond>...</ng-template>` would not trigger the
`ngIf` directive.
PR Close#25272
Update XMB placeholders(<ph>) to include the original value on top of an
example. Placeholders can by definition have one example(<ex>) tag and a
text node. The text node is used by TC as the "original" value from the
placeholder, while the example should represent a dummy value.
For example: <ph name="PET"><ex>Gopher</ex>{{ petName }}</ph>.
This change makes sure that we have the original text, but it *DOES NOT*
make sure that the example is correct. The example has the same wrong
behavior of showing the interpolation text rather than a useful
example.
No breaking changes, but tools that depend on the previous behavior and
don't consider the full XMB definition may fail to parse the XMB.
Fixes b/72565847
PR Close#25079
- `directiveInjector()` is used to inject anything in the directive / component
/ pipe factories so adding `InjectionToken<T>` as a supported token type.
- `getOrCreateInjectable()` should search first in the node injector tree and
then in the module injector tree (was either or before the PR).
PR Close#25166
When ngtsc encounters a reference to a type (for example, a Component
type listed in an NgModule declarations array), it traces the import
of that type and attempts to determine the best way to refer to it.
In the event the type is defined in the same file where a reference
is being generated, the identifier of the type is used. If the type
was imported, ngtsc has a choice. It can use the identifier from the
original import, or it can write a new import to the module where the
type came from.
ngtsc has a bug currently when it elects to rely on the user's import.
When writing a .d.ts file, the user's import may have been elided as
the type was not referred to from the type side of the program. Thus,
in .d.ts files ngtsc must always assume the import may not exist, and
generate a new one.
In .js output the import is guaranteed to still exist, so it's
preferable for ngtsc to continue using the existing import if one is
available.
This commit changes how @angular/compiler writes type definitions, and
allows it to use a different expression to write a type definition than
is used to write the value. This allows ngtsc to specify that types in
type definitions should always be imported. A corresponding change to
the staticallyResolve() Reference system allows the choice of which
type of import to use when generating an Expression from a Reference.
PR Close#25080
Ivy definition types have a generic type which specifies the return
type of the factory function. For example:
static ngDirectiveDef<NgForOf, '[ngFor][ngForOf]'>
However, in this case NgForOf itself has a type parameter <T>. Thus,
writing the above is incorrect.
This commit modifies ngtsc to understand the genericness of NgForOf and
to write the following:
static ngDirectiveDef<NgForOf<any>, '[ngFor][ngForOf]'>
PR Close#24862
Previously ngtsc would use a tuple of class types for listing metadata
in .d.ts files. For example, an @NgModule's declarations might be
represented with the type:
[NgIf, NgForOf, NgClass]
If the module had no declarations, an empty tuple [] would be produced.
This has two problems.
1. If the class type has generic type parameters, TypeScript will
complain that they're not provided.
2. The empty tuple type is not actually legal.
This commit addresses both problems.
1. Class types are now represented using the `typeof` operator, so the
above declarations would be represented as:
[typeof NgIf, typeof NgForOf, typeof NgClass].
Since typeof operates on a value, it doesn't require generic type
arguments.
2. Instead of an empty tuple, `never` is used to indicate no metadata.
PR Close#24862
Previously, some of the *Def symbols were not exported or were exported
as public API. This commit ensures every definition type is in the
private export namespace.
PR Close#24862
This commit moves the compiler compliance tests into compiler-cli,
and uses ngtsc to run them instead of the custom compilation
pipeline used before. Testing against ngtsc allows for validation
of the real compiler output.
This commit also fixes a few small issues that prevented the tests
from passing.
PR Close#24862
Previously ngtsc had a few bugs handling special token types:
* Injector was not properly translated to INJECTOR
* ChangeDetectorRef was not injected via injectChangeDetectorRef()
This commit fixes these two bugs, and also adds a test to ensure
they continue to work correctly.
PR Close#24862
for non-inline templates
- Non-inline templates used to ouput the path to the component TS file
instead of the path to the original HTML file.
- Inline templates keep the same behavior.
Fixes#24884
PR Close#24885
Previously the Ivy template compiler would throw on encountering
an animation binding (e.g. [@anim]). This is unneccessary and
precludes testing existing code. This commit changes the error to a
warning.
PR Close#24738
When writing selectors as string literal types in .d.ts files,
strip newlines to avoid generating invalid code. Newlines carry
no meaning in selectors anyway.
PR Close#24738
On accident a few of the definition types were emitted as public API
symbols. Much of the Ivy API surface is still prefixed with ɵ,
indicating it's a private API. The definition types should be private
for now.
PR Close#24738
InjectorDef is parameterized on the type of the injector
configuration class (e.g. the @NgModule decorated type). Previously
this parameter was not included when generating .d.ts files that
contained InjectorDefs.
PR Close#24738
With these changes, the types are a little stricter now and also not
compatible with Protractor's jasmine-like syntax. So, we have to also
use `@types/jasminewd2` for e2e tests (but not for non-e2e tests).
I also had to "augment" `@types/jasminewd2`, because the latest
typings from [DefinitelyTyped][1] do not reflect the fact that the
`jasminewd2` version (v2.1.0) currently used by Protractor supports
passing a `done` callback to a spec.
[1]: 566e039485/types/jasminewd2/index.d.ts (L9-L15)Fixes#23952Closes#24733
PR Close#19904
This updates the r3_pipe_compiler to not depend on global analysis,
and to produce ngPipeDef instructions in the same way that the other
compilers do. It's a precursor to JIT and AOT implementations of
@Pipe compilation.
PR Close#24703
- Adds InheritanceDefinitionFeature to ivy
- Ensures that lifecycle hooks are inherited from super classes whether they are defined as directives or not
- Directives cannot inherit from Components
- Components can inherit from Directives or Components
- Ensures that Inputs, Outputs, and Host Bindings are inherited
- Ensures that super class Features are run
PR Close#24570
This change makes @angular/compiler more tree-shakeable by changing
an enum to a const enum and by getting rid of a top-level map that
the tree-shaker was seeing as a reference which caused r3_identifiers
to be retained.
This drops a few hundred bytes of JS from tree-shaken ngtsc compiled
apps.
PR Close#24677
This change generates ngInjectorDef as well as ngModuleDef for @NgModule
annotated types, reflecting the dual nature of @NgModules as both compilation
scopes and as DI configuration containers.
This required implementing ngInjectorDef compilation in @angular/compiler as
well as allowing for multiple generated definitions for a single decorator in
the core of ngtsc.
PR Close#24632
All errors for existing fields have been detected and suppressed with a
`!` assertion.
Issue/24571 is tracking proper clean up of those instances.
One-line change required in ivy/compilation.ts, because it appears that
the new syntax causes tsickle emitted node to no longer track their
original sourceFiles.
PR Close#24572
inject() was changed in da31db7 to not take a default value parameter,
so injectable_compiler_2 should not request the use of one when
using inject().
PR Close#24565
ngtsc needs to reflect over code to property compile it. It performs operations
such as enumerating decorators on a type, reading metadata from constructor
parameters, etc.
Depending on the format (ES5, ES6, etc) of the underlying code, the AST
structures over which this reflection takes place can be very different. For
example, in TS/ES6 code `class` declarations are `ts.ClassDeclaration` nodes,
but in ES5 code they've been downleveled to `ts.VariableDeclaration` nodes that
are initialized to IIFEs that build up the classes being defined.
The ReflectionHost abstraction allows ngtsc to perform these operations without
directly querying the AST. Different implementations of ReflectionHost allow
support for different code formats.
PR Close#24541
This change supports compilation of components, directives, and modules
within ngtsc. Support is not complete, but is enough to compile and test
//packages/core/test/bundling/todo in full AOT mode. Code size benefits
are not yet achieved as //packages/core itself does not get compiled, and
some decorators (e.g. @Input) are not stripped, leading to unwanted code
being retained by the tree-shaker. This will be improved in future commits.
PR Close#24427
At runtime in JIT mode, when the compiler writes a reference to a symbol that symbol
is resolved through a symbol table named angularCoreEnv in render3/jit/environment.
Previously, this symbol table was not kept up-to-date with the Ivy instruction set
and the names of symbols the compiler could reference.
This change brings the symbol table in sync, and also adds a test that verifies every
symbol the compiler can reference is available at runtime in the symbol table.
PR Close#24479
NOTE: This does NOT add parsing of namespaced attributes
- Adds AttributeMarker for namespaced attributes
- Adds test for namespaced attributes
- Updates AttributeMarker enum to use CamelCase, and not UPPER_CASE names
PR Close#24386
Two new CircleCI environments are created: test_ivy_jit and test_ivy_aot.
Both run a subset of the tests that have been marked with Bazel tags as
being appropriate for that environment.
Once all the tests pass, builds are published to the *-builds repo both
for the legacy View Engine compiled code as well as for ivy-jit and ivy-aot.
PR Close#24309
This commit builds out enough of the JIT compiler to render
//packages/core/test/bundling/todo, and allows the tests to run in
JIT mode.
To play with the app, run:
bazel run --define=compile=jit //packages/core/test/bundling/todo:prodserver
PR Close#24138
Bazel has a restriction that a single output (eg. a compiled version of
//packages/common) can only be produced by a single rule. This precludes
the Angular repo from having multiple rules that build the same code. And
the complexity of having a single rule produce multiple outputs (eg. an
ngc-compiled version of //packages/common and an Ivy-enabled version) is
too high.
Additionally, the Angular repo has lots of existing tests which could be
executed as-is under Ivy. Such testing is very valuable, and it would be
nice to share not only the code, but the dependency graph / build config
as well.
Thus, this change introduces a --define flag 'compile' with three potential
values. When --define=compile=X is set, the entire build system runs in a
particular mode - the behavior of all existing targets is controlled by
the flag. This allows us to reuse our entire build structure for testing
in a variety of different manners. The flag has three possible settings:
* legacy (the default): the traditional View Engine (ngc) build
* local: runs the prototype ngtsc compiler, which does not rely on global
analysis
* jit: runs ngtsc in a mode which executes tsickle, but excludes the
Angular related transforms, which approximates the behavior of plain
tsc. This allows the main packages such as common to be tested with
the JIT compiler.
Additionally, the ivy_ng_module() rule still exists and runs ngc in a mode
where Ivy-compiled output is produced from global analysis information, as
a stopgap while ngtsc is being developed.
PR Close#24056
Short-circuitable expressions (using ternary & binary operators) could not use
the regular binding mechanism as it relies on the bindings being checked every
single time - the index is incremented as part of checking the bindings.
Then for pure function kind of bindings we use a different mechanism with a
fixed index. As such short circuiting a binding check does not mess with the
expected binding index.
Note that all pure function bindings are handled the same wether or not they
actually are short-circuitable. This allows to keep the compiler and compiled
code simple - and there is no runtime perf cost anyway.
PR Close#24039
This commit adds a mechanism by which the @angular/core annotations
for @Component, @Injectable, and @NgModule become decorators which,
when executed at runtime, trigger just-in-time compilation of their
associated types. The activation of these decorators is configured
by the ivy_switch mechanism, ensuring that the Ivy JIT engine does
not get included in Angular bundles unless specifically requested.
PR Close#23833
Previously, the compileComponent() and compileDirective() APIs still required
the output of global analysis, even though they only read local information
from that output.
With this refactor, compileComponent() and compileDirective() now define
their inputs explicitly, with the new interfaces R3ComponentMetadata and
R3DirectiveMetadata. compileComponentGlobal() and compileDirectiveGlobal()
are introduced and convert from global analysis output into the new metadata
format.
This refactor also splits out the view compiler into separate files as
r3_view_compiler_local.ts was getting unwieldy.
Finally, this refactor also splits out generation of DI factory functions
into a separate r3_factory utility as the logic is utilized between different
compilers.
PR Close#23545
This commit adds a new compiler pipeline that isn't dependent on global
analysis, referred to as 'ngtsc'. This new compiler is accessed by
running ngc with "enableIvy" set to "ngtsc". It reuses the same initialization
logic but creates a new implementation of Program which does not perform the
global-level analysis that AngularCompilerProgram does. It will be the
foundation for the production Ivy compiler.
PR Close#23455
A long time ago Angular used to support both those attribute notations:
- `*attr='binding'`
- `template=`attr: binding`
Because the last notation has been dropped we can refactor the binding parsing.
Source maps will benefit from that as no `attr:` prefix is added artificialy any
more.
PR Close#23460
In certain cases seen in production, simplify() can returned
undefined when simplifying decorator metadata. This has proven tricky
to reproduce in an isolated test, but the fix is simple and low-risk:
don't attempt to spread an undefined set of annotations in the first
place.
PR Close#23349
- Remove default injection value from `inject` / `directiveInject` since
it is not possible to set using annotations.
- Module `Injector` is stored on `LView` instead of `LInjector` data
structure because it can change only at `LView` level. (More efficient)
- Add `ngInjectableDef` to `IterableDiffers` so that existing tests can
pass as well as enable `IterableDiffers` to be injectable without
`Injector`
PR Close#23345
This change changes:
- compiler uses `directiveInject` instead of `inject` for `Directive`s
- unifies the flags in `di` as well as `render3`
- changes the signature of `directiveInject` to match `inject` In prep for #23330
- compiler now generates flags for injection.
Compiler portion of #23342
Prep for #23330
PR Close#23345
The 'stringify' function prints an object as [Object object] which
is not very helpful in many cases, especially in a diagnostics
message. This commit changes the behavior to pretty print an object.
PR Close#22689
When compiling templates the compiler would often bind to
closest context rather than the component context.
The only time one should be binding to the cont component is
in explicit cases where the inner template declares local variable.
PR Close#23168
Given
```
<div *ngFor=”…” (click)=“doSomething()”>
```
Before `doSomething` would execute on the inner template context, which
is incorrect. The correct behavior is to execute on the top level context
of the component.
PR Close#23168
Computing the value of loadChildren does not work externally, as the CLI
needs to be able to detect the paths referenced to properly set up
codesplitting. However, internally, different approaches to codesplitting
require hashed module IDs, and the computation of those hashes involves
something like:
{path: '...', loadChildren: hashFn('module')}
ngc should lower loadChildren into an exported constant in that case.
This will never break externally, because loadChildren is always a
string externally, and a string won't get lowered.
PR Close#23088
Remove `containerRefreshStart` and `containerRefreshEnd` instruction
from the output.
Generate directives as a list in `componentDef` rather than inline into
instructions. This is consistent in making selector resolution runtime
so that translation of templates can follow locality.
PR Close#22921
In Ivy mode we rewrite references to Injector to INJECTOR in ngInjectableDef, to fix tree-shaking.
This changes the rewrite to happen always, even in non-Ivy mode, and makes Angular understand
INJECTOR across the board at runtime.
PR Close#23008
This lets projects like Material change ng_package "bundle index" files to non-conflicting paths
Currently packages like @angular/core ship with the generated metadata
in a path like 'core.js' which overwrites one of the inputs.
Angular material puts the generated file in a path like 'index.js'
Either way these files generated by ng_module rules have the potential
to collide with inputs given by the user, which results in an error.
Instead, give users the freedom to choose a different non-conflicting name.
Also this refactors the ng_package rule, removing the redundant
secondary_entry_points attribute.
Instead, we assume that any ng_module in the deps with a module_name
attribute is a secondary entry point.
PR Close#22814
This adds compilation of @NgModule providers and imports into
ngInjectorDef statements in generated code. All @NgModule annotations
will be compiled and the @NgModule decorators removed from the
resultant js output.
All @Injectables will also be compiled in Ivy mode, and the decorator
removed.
PR Close#22458
This flag is picked up by webpack v4 and used for more agressive optimizations.
Our code is already side-effect free, because that's what we needed for build-optimizer to work.
PR Close#22785
BREAKING CHANGE:
The `<template>` tag was deprecated in Angular v4 to avoid collisions (i.e. when
using Web Components).
This commit removes support for `<template>`. `<ng-template>` should be used
instead.
BEFORE:
<!-- html template -->
<template>some template content</template>
# tsconfig.json
{
# ...
"angularCompilerOptions": {
# ...
# This option is no more supported and will have no effect
"enableLegacyTemplate": [true|false]
}
}
AFTER:
<!-- html template -->
<ng-template>some template content</ng-template>
PR Close#22783
Angular Package Format v6 stops bundling files in the esm5 and esm2015
directories, now that Webpack 4 can tree-shake per-file.
Adds some missing files like package.json to make packages closer to
what we publish today.
Refactor ng_package to be a type of npm_package and re-use the packaging
action from that rule.
PR Close#22782
Rename:
- `elementClass` (short: `k`) => `elementClassNamed` (short: `kn`)
- `elementStyle` (short: `s`) => `elementStyleNamed` (short: `sn`)
Currently `[class.name]` is `elementClass(0, ‘name’, value)`. We would
like to introduce new binding `[class]` which needs a new instruction
ideally `elementClass(0, value)`. Doing the rename creates space
to create such an instruction in subsequent change.
PR Close#22719
Rename @Injectable({scope -> providedIn}).
Instead of {providedIn: APP_ROOT_SCOPE}, accept {providedIn: 'root'}.
Also, {providedIn: null} implies the injectable should not be added
to any scope.
PR Close#22655
We now create npm packages to cover all the public api assertions in tools/public_api_guard.
We no longer depend on ts-api-guardian from npm - it is now stale since the repository was archived.
There is no longer a gulp task to enforce or accept the public API, this is in CircleCI as part of running all bazel test targets.
PR Close#22639
Produces back-patch as described in the #22235 and referenced in #22480.
This just contains the compiler implementations and the corresponding unit
tests. Connecting the dots as described in #22480 will be in a follow on
change.
PR Close#22506
BREAKING CHANGE: after this change, npm and yarn will issue incompatible peerDependencies warning
We don't expect this to actually break an application, but the application/library package.json
will need to be updated to provide tslib 1.9.0 or higher.
PR Close#22667
Previously the injectable compiler assumed all tree-shakeable injectables
would have dependencies that were injectables or InjectionTokens. However
old code still uses string tokens (e.g. NgUpgrade and '$injector'). Using
such tokens would cause the injectable compiler to crash.
Now, the injectable compiler can properly generate a dependency on such a
string token.
PR Close#22376
"ng update" supports having multiple packages as part of a group which should be updated together, meaning that e.g. calling "ng update @angular/core" would be equivalent to updating all packages of the group (that are part of the package.json already).
In order to support the grouping feature, the package.json of the version the user is updating to needs to include an "ng-update" key that points to this metadata.
The entire specification for the update workflow can be found here: 2e8b12a4ef/docs/specifications/update.md
PR Close#22482
InjectionToken can be created with an ngInjectableDef, and previously
this allowed the full expressiveness of @Injectable. However, this
requires a runtime reflection system in order to generate factories
from expressed provider declarations.
Instead, this change requires scoped InjectionTokens to provide the
factory directly (likely using inject() for the arguments), bypassing
the need for a reflection system.
Fixes#22205
PR Close#22207
This commit bundles 3 important changes, with the goal of enabling tree-shaking
of services which are never injected. Ordinarily, this tree-shaking is prevented
by the existence of a hard dependency on the service by the module in which it
is declared.
Firstly, @Injectable() is modified to accept a 'scope' parameter, which points
to an @NgModule(). This reverses the dependency edge, permitting the module to
not depend on the service which it "provides".
Secondly, the runtime is modified to understand the new relationship created
above. When a module receives a request to inject a token, and cannot find that
token in its list of providers, it will then look at the token for a special
ngInjectableDef field which indicates which module the token is scoped to. If
that module happens to be in the injector, it will behave as if the token
itself was in the injector to begin with.
Thirdly, the compiler is modified to read the @Injectable() metadata and to
generate the special ngInjectableDef field as part of TS compilation, using the
PartialModules system.
Additionally, this commit adds several unit and integration tests of various
flavors to test this change.
PR Close#22005
All of the providers in a module get compiled into a module definition in the
factory file. Some of these providers are for the actual module types, as those
are available for injection in Angular. For tree-shakeable tokens, the runtime
needs to be able to distinguish which modules are present in an injector.
This change adds a NodeFlag which tags those module providers for later
identification.
PR Close#22005
Modifies validation syntax to generate back references to ensure
that identifiers are used consistently.
Introduced … to allow validating constant definition and usage.
PR Close#21877
Currently, `shimCssText` only keep `/*# sourceMappingUrl ... */` comments and strip `/*# sourceURL ... */` comments. So, Chrome can't find the source maps for component style(that's created in new `style` tags)
PR Close#16088
Folding errors passed calls prevented the static reflector from
begin able to ignore errors in annotations it doesn't know as
the call to the unknown annotation was elided from the metadata.
Fixes: #21273
PR Close#21708
The "enableIvy" compiler option is the initial implementation
of the Render3 (or Ivy) code generation. This commit enables
generation generating "Hello, World" (example in the test)
but not much else. It is currenly only useful for internal Ivy
testing as Ivy is in development.
PR Close#21427
Cache reference resolution for external references as finding
the declaration of a symbol is expensive and does not change
for a program once created.
This resolves a signficant performance regression in the langauge
service.
PR Close#21359
This helps ensure we use the same tsconfig.json file for all compilations.
Next steps are to make it the same tsconfig.json file used by the editor
PR Close#20964
- Add tests target for `test`, `test_node_only` and `test_web` in `core` package.
- Created a `_testing_init` pseudo package where bootstrap code for tests is kept.
- Moved `source_map_util` from `test` to `testing` so to prevent circular dependency.
- Removed `visibility:public` for testing `BUILD` packages.
PR Close#21053
Allows a directive to use the expression passed directly to a property
as a guard instead of filtering the type through a type expression.
This more accurately matches the intent of the ngIf usage of its template
enabling better type inference.
Moved NgIf to using this type of guard instead of a function guard.
Closes: #20967
Due to an overly agressive assert the compiler would generate
an internal error when referencing an enum declared in
namspace.
Fixes#18170
PR Close#20947
`$any()` can now be used in a binding expression to disable type
checking for the rest of the expression. This similar to `as any` in
TypeScript and allows expression that work at runtime but do not
type-check.
PR Close#20876
Structural directives can now specify a type guard that describes
what types can be inferred for an input expression inside the
directive's template.
NgIf was modified to declare an input guard on ngIf.
After this change, `fullTemplateTypeCheck` will infer that
usage of `ngIf` expression inside it's template is truthy.
For example, if a component has a property `person?: Person`
and a template of `<div *ngIf="person"> {{person.name}} </div>`
the compiler will no longer report that `person` might be null or
undefined.
The template compiler will generate code similar to,
```
if (NgIf.ngIfTypeGuard(instance.person)) {
instance.person.name
}
```
to validate the template's use of the interpolation expression.
Calling the type guard in this fashion allows TypeScript to infer
that `person` is non-null.
Fixes: #19756?
PR Close#20702
Add enough BUILD files to make it possible to
`bazel build packages/core/test`
Also re-format BUILD.bazel files with Buildifier.
Add a CI lint check that they stay formatted.
PR Close#20768
The errors produced when error were encountered while interpreting the
content of a directive was often incomprehencible. With this change
these kind of error messages should be easier to understand and diagnose.
PR Close#20459
The type-check block generated with `"fullTemplateTypeCheck"` was
invalid if the it contained a template ref as would be generated
using the `else` micro-syntax of `NgIf`.
Fixes: #19485
PR Close#20463
`cmp:host {}` and `cmp:host some-other-selector {}` were not handled
consistently.
Note those should not match anything but are made equivalent to respectively
`:host(cmp)` and `:host(cmp) some-other-selector` to avoid breaking legacy apps.
* don't reexport symbols that the user already reexported
* never reexport symbols that are part of arguments of non simple function calls
Fixes#19883
PR Close#19884
This also changes the compiler so that we throw less often
on structural changes and produce a meaningful state
in the `ng.Program` in case of errors.
Related to #19951
PR Close#19953
Previously, `listLazyRoute` would store invalid information in a compiler
internal cache, which lead to incorrect paths that were used during emit.
This commit fixes this.
PR Close#19953
The error collector changes behavior of the metadata resolver
in ways that haven't been fully hardened. This changes limits
its use to the lazy route detection and the language service.
Issue: #19906
PR Close#19912
Usages of `NgTools_InternalApi_NG_2` from `@angular/compiler-cli` will now
throw an error.
Adds `listLazyRoutes` to `@angular/compiler-cli/ngtools2.ts` for getting
the lazy routes of a `ng.Program`.
PR Close#19836
References to resources (such as .css files) that are generated into
the `outDir` directory outside of `rootDir` would cause a spurious
compiler error about not being able to find a files that ends in
'.ngstyle.ts'.
Also fixed a minor issue in compiler error reporting
Fixes: #19765, #19767
PR Close#19770
If no user files changed:
- only type check the changed generated files
Never emit non changed generated files
- we still calculate them, but don’t send them through
TypeScript to emit them but cache the written files instead.
PR Close#19646
This is important to not confuse users nor downstream tools that
consume our source maps. For generated content for which we don’t
have an original source file, we use the generated file now.
Fixes#19538
The current `flattenSummaries` function re-process the same NgModule
summary even if it has been processed before. Certain modules like
CommonModule are repeated multiple times in the module tree and it is
expanded out every time.
This was making unit tests using AOT summaries really slow. This will
also slow down JIT bootstrap applications that load AOT summaries for
component libraries.
The fix is to remember which summaries were seen before and not to
process them again.
Each node now has two index: nodeIndex and checkIndex.
nodeIndex is the index in both the view definition and the view data.
checkIndex is the index in in the update function (update directives and update
renderer).
While nodeIndex and checkIndex have the same value for now, having both of them
will allow changing the structure of view definition after compilation (ie for
runtime translations).
For now, we always create all generated files, but diff them
before we pass them to TypeScript.
For the user files, we compare the programs and only emit changed
TypeScript files.
This also adds more diagnostic messages if the `—diagnostics` flag
is passed to the command line.
Added the compiler options `strictInjectionParameters` that defaults
to `false`. If enabled the compiler will report errors for parameters
of an `@Injectable` that cannot be determined instead of generating a
warning.
This is planned to be switched to default to `true` for Angular 6.0.
Also adds auto upgrade from lower version based
on the .d.ts file (e.g. from version 3 to 4).
This is needed as we are now also capturing type aliases
in metadata files (and we rely on this),
see 6e3498ca8e.
introduce the option `allowEmptyCodegenFiles` to generate all generated files,
even if they are empty.
- also provides the original source files from which the file was generated
in the write file callback
- needed e.g. for G3 when copying over pinto mod names from the original component
to all generated files
use `importAs` from flat modules when writing summaries
- i.e. prevents incorrect entries like @angular/common/common in the .ngsummary.json files.
change interaction between ng and ts to prevent race conditions
- before Angular would rely on TS to first read the file for which we generate files,
and then the generated files. However, this can break easily when we reuse an old program.
don’t generate files for sources that are outside of `rootDir`
(see #19337)
With this commit `ngc` is used instead of `tsc-wrapped` for
collecting metadata and tsickle rewriting and `tsc-wrapped`
is removed from the repository.
`@angular/tsc-wrapped@5` is now deprecated and is no longer
used, updated, or maintained as part as of Angular 5.x.x.
`@angular/tsc-wrapped@4` is still maintained and required by
Angular 4.x.x and will be maintained as long as 4.x.x is in
LTS.
PR Close#19298
We now create 2 programs with exactly the same fileNames and
exactly the same `import` / `export` declarations,
allowing TS to reuse the structure of first program
completely. When passing in an oldProgram and the files didn’t change,
TS can also reuse the old program completely.
This is possible buy adding generated files to TS
in `host.geSourceFile` via `ts.SourceFile.referencedFiles`.
This commit also:
- has a minor side effect on how we generate shared stylesheets:
- previously every import in a stylesheet would generate a new
`.ngstyles.ts` file.
- now, we only generate 1 `.ngstyles.ts` file per entry in `@Component.styleUrls`.
This was required as we need to be able to determine the program files
without loading the resources (which can be async).
- makes all angular related methods in `CompilerHost`
optional, allowing to just use a regular `ts.CompilerHost` as `CompilerHost`.
- simplifies the logic around `Compiler.analyzeNgModules` by introducing `NgAnalyzedFile`.
Perf impact: 1.5s improvement in compiling angular io
PR Close#19275
This speeds up the compilation process significantly.
Also introduces a new option `fullTemplateTypeCheck` to do more checks in templates:
- check expressions inside of templatized content (e.g. inside of `<div *ngIf>`).
- check the arguments of calls to the `transform` function of pipes
- check references to directives that were exposed as variables via `exportAs`
PR Close#19152