This PR changes the logic for determining when to skip route processing from
using the URL of the last attempted navigation to the actual resulting URL after
that transition.
Because guards may prevent navigation and reset the browser URL, the raw
URL of the previous transition may not match the actual URL of the
browser at the end of the navigation process. For that reason, we need to use
`urlAfterRedirects` instead.
Other notes:
These checks in scheduleNavigation were added in eb2ceff4ba
The test still passes and, more surprisingly, passes if the checks are removed
completely. There have likely been changes to the navigation handling that
handle the test in a different way. That said, it still appears to be important
to keep the checks there in some capacity because it does affect how many
navigation events occur. This addresses an issue that came up in #16710: https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/16710#issuecomment-634869739
This also partially addresses #13586 in fixing history for imperative
navigations that are cancelled by guards.
PR Close#37408
Partial resubmit of #26243
Fixes incorrect url tree generation for empty path components with children.
Adds a test to demonstrate the failure of createUrlTree for those routes.
Fixes#13011Fixes#35687
PR Close#37446
PR #13380 added support for `null` and `undefined` but the type on the parameter was not updated.
This would result in a compilation error if `fullTemplateTypeCheck` is enabled.
Fixes#36544
PR Close#37018
The current code will not work as the `e` will be an event,
If we try to access e.id and e.url it will throw an exception, the correct way is to use map or filter down to specific events
PR Close#37027
This change aligns behavior for resolvers which return EMPTY. Currently EMPTY resolvers have inconsistent behavior:
- One resolver that returns EMPTY => won't navigate and just ends on ResolveStart router event.
- Two resolvers where both return EMPTY => throws "Error: Uncaught (in promise): EmptyError: no elements in sequence"
- Two resolvers where one returns a value and the other one returns EMPTY => Navigates successfully.
With this change any EMPTY resolver will cancel navigation.
BREAKING CHANGE: Any resolver which return EMPTY will cancel navigation.
If you want to allow the navigation to continue, you will need to update the resolvers to emit
some value, (i.e. defaultIfEmpty(...), of(...), etc).
PR Close#24195
PR Close#24621
A CanLoad guard returning UrlTree cancels current navigation and redirects.
This matches the behavior available to `CanActivate` guards added in #26521.
Note that this does not affect preloading. A `CanLoad` guard blocks any
preloading. That is, any route with a `CanLoad` guard is not preloaded
and the guards are not executed as part of preloading.
fixes#28306
PR Close#36610
fixes#34614
There's an edge case where if I use two (or more) sibling <router-outlet>s in two (or more) child routes where their parent route doesn't have a component then preactivation will trigger all canDeactivate checks with the same component because it will use wrong OutletContext.
PR Close#36302
The matcher is allowed to return null per
https://angular.io/api/router/UrlMatcher#usage-notes
And run `yarn gulp format` to pick up recent clang format changes.
Closes#29824
BREAKING CHANGE: UrlMatcher's type now reflects that it could always return
null.
If you implemented your own Router or Recognizer class, please update it to
handle matcher returning null.
PR Close#36402
As a part of the process of setting up Router providers, we use `ApplicationRef` as a dependency while providing `Router` token. The thing is that `ApplicationRef` is actually unused (all referenced were removed in 5a849829c4 (diff-c0baae5e1df628e1a217e8dc38557fcb)), but it's still listed as dependency. This is causing problems in case `Router` is used as a dependency for factory functions provided as `APP_INITIALIZERS` multi-token (causing cyclic dependency). This commit removes unused `ApplicationRef` dependency in `Router`, so it can be used without causing cyclic dependency issue.
PR Close#35642
The url_tree equalQueryParams and containsQueryParam methods did not handle query params that has arrays, which resulted in the routerLinkActive to not behave as expected, change was made to ensure query params with arrays are handled correctly
fixes#22223
PR Close#22666
The url_tree equalQueryParams and containsQueryParam methods did not handle query params that has arrays, which resulted in the routerLinkActive to not behave as expected, change was made to ensure query params with arrays are handled correctly
fixes#22223
PR Close#22666
Resubmit #31168 now that google3 tests can pass. This requires http://cl/272696717 to be patched.
Original description from jasonaden:
Without this change when using UrlTree redirects in urlUpdateStrategy="eager", the URL would get
updated to the target location, then redirected. This resulted in having an additional entry in the
history and thus the back button would be broken (going back would land on the URL causing a new
redirect).
Additionally, there was a bug where the redirect, even without urlUpdateStrategy="eager", could
create a history with too many entries. This was due to kicking off a new navigation within the
navigation cancelling logic. With this PR the new navigation is pushed to the next tick with a
setTimeout, allowing the page being redirected from to be cancelled before starting a new
navigation.
Related to #27148
fix(router): adjust UrlTree redirect to replace URL if in eager update
Fix lint errors
PR Close#32988
There is some confusion around which `NavigationExtras` values are used
by createUrlTree. This specifies that only values that change the URL
are used. This came up during the discussion in #27148.
PR Close#33029
`InitialNavigation` is used in `ExtraOptions`, which is already part of
the public API. Thus, `InitialNavigation` should be too. Not publicly
exporting it from `router/index.ts` seems an omission, since the type is
already annotated with the `@publicApi` JSDoc tag.
By publicly exporting `InitialNavigation`, it will also correctly appear
in the API docs on angular.io.
PR Close#32707
Without this change when using UrlTree redirects in `urlUpdateStrategy="eager"`, the URL would get updated to the target location, then redirected. This resulted in having an additional entry in the `history` and thus the `back` button would be broken (going back would land on the URL causing a new redirect).
Additionally, there was a bug where the redirect, even without `urlUpdateStrategy="eager"`, could create a history with too many entries. This was due to kicking off a new navigation within the navigation cancelling logic. With this PR the new navigation is pushed to the next tick with a `setTimeout`, allowing the page being redirected from to be cancelled before starting a new navigation.
Related to #27148
PR Close#31168
PR #30393 corrected behavior where Object.keys sometimes returns an `undefined` value. However, the types didn't reflect this in the code. That fix actually missed one value that could return `undefined`. This PR corrects this by casting the types to what they can be in IE 11. This ensures the code behaves as it should when this edge case comes up.
PR Close#30464
In some cases where multiple navigations happen to the same URL, the router will not process a given URL. In those cases, we fall into logic that resets state for the next navigation. One piece of this resetting is to set the `browserUrlTree` to the most recent `urlAfterRedirects`i.
However, there was bug in this logic because in some cases the `urlAfterRedirects` is a stale value. This happens any time a URL won't be processed, and the previous URL will also not be processed. This creates unpredictable behavior, not the least of which ends up being a broken `back` button.
This PR kicks off new navigations with the current value the router assumes is in the browser. All the logic around how to handle future navigations is based on this value compared to the current transition, so it's important to kick off all new navigations with the current value so in the edge case described above we don't end up with an old value being set into `browserUrlTree`.
Fixes#30340
Related to #30160
PR Close#30344
This PR fixes an issue where IE 11 can return `undefined` in with an `Object.keys` call. Solution is to add a runtime check on the value. Based on the types being passed, this shouldn't be necessary, but is needed only for IE 11. Unit test doesn't work for this PR because it can't be replicated easily.
PR Close#30393
There was a problem with a combination of the `eager` URL update, browser `back` button, and hybrid applications. Details provided in internal ticket http://b/123667227.
This fix handles the problem by setting `router.browserUrlTree` when all conditions have failed, meaning the browser doesn't do anything with the navigation other than update internal data structures. Without this change, the problem was an old value was stored in `router.broserUrlTree` causing some new navigations to be compared to an old value and breaking future navigations.
PR Close#30160
The proposed ES dynamic import() is now supported by the Angular CLI and the
larger toolchain. This renders the `loadChildren: string` API largely
redundant, as import() is far more natural, is less error-prone, and is
standards compliant. This commit deprecates the `string` form of
`loadChildren` in favor of dynamic import().
DEPRECATION:
When defining lazy-loaded route, Angular previously offered two options for
configuring the module to be loaded, both via the `loadChildren` parameter
of the route. Most Angular developers are familiar withthe `string` form of
this API. For example, the following route definition configures Angular to
load a `LazyModule` NgModule from `lazy-route/lazy.module.ts`:
```
[{
path: 'lazy',
loadChildren: 'lazy-route/lazy.module#LazyModule',
}]
```
This "magic string" configuration was previously necessary as there was
no dynamic module loading standard on the web. This has changed with the
pending standardization of dynamic `import()` expressions, which are now
supported in the Angular CLI and in web tooling in general. `import()`
offers a more natural and robust solution to dynamic module loading. The
above example can be rewritten to use dynamic `import()`:
```
[{
path: 'lazy',
loadChildren: () => import('./lazy-route/lazy.module').then(mod => mod.LazyModule),
}]
```
This form of lazy loading offers significant advantages in terms of:
* type checking via TypeScript
* simplicity of generated code
* future potential to run natively in supporting browsers
(see: [caniuse: dynamic import()](https://caniuse.com/#feat=es6-module-dynamic-import))
As a result, Angular is deprecating the `loadChildren: string` syntax in
favor of ES dynamic `import()`. An automatic migration will run during
`ng upgrade` to convert your existing Angular code to the new syntax.
PR Close#30073
Prior to this change, if a navigation was ongoing and a new one came in, the router could get into a state where `router.currentNavigation` was `null` even though a navigation was executing. This change moves where we set the `currentNavigation` value so it's inside a `switchMap`. This solves the problem because the `finally` on the `switchMap` had been setting `currentNavigation` to `null` but the new `currentNavigation` value would have already been set. Essentially this was a timing problem and is resolved with this change.
Fixes#29389#29590
PR Close#29636
clarify scrollPositionRestoration enabled to fully describe the functionality it provides. refactor app module example to compile and remove dependency on unnecessary framework. Remove component example due to bug on reload.
PR Close#29260
The router loadChildren property already supports a promise that returns a NgModuleFactory, but the typings cause the compilation to fail.
PR Close#29392
This PR also changes the name of `EmptyOutletComponent` to `ɵEmptyOutletComponent`. This is because `ngcc` requires the node to retain the original name while dts bundler will rename the node is it's only exported using the aliases.
Example typings files:
```ts
declare class EmptyOutletComponent {
}
export {EmptyOutletComponent as ɵEmptyOutletComponent}
```
will be emitted as
```ts
export declare class ɵEmptyOutletComponent {
}
```
PR Close#28833
* Use exclusively `TeamComponent` class for examples, as currently there are at least 3 different component classes being used, one of which is actually as a type argument for a `Resolve<T>` implementation.
PR Close#29093
When a UrlTree of root url was returned by a guard as a redirection, the
navigation was not processed. The issue came from the error handler which
incorrectly marked the router as already navigated.
Fixes#27845
PR Close#28271
The value here is unimportant on initialization since it's not looked at until the second navigation. However, sometimes in testing the `Location` service is mocked out, or the Router constructor manually called. Assuming `Location` exists in the constructor leads to test failures in `google3` therefore we initialize to a value that will not cause errors.
PR Close#28376
With #27680, a bug was fixed where multiple redirects using `eager` URL update could cause navigation to fail. However, that fix introduced a problem where with `skipLocationChange` enabled, the URL tree rendered was not properly stored for reference. This specifically caused an issue with named router outlets and subsequent navigations not being recognized.
This PR stores the correct `UrlTree` for reference with later navigations. It fixes the regression introdued with #27680.
Fixes#28200
PR Close#28300
* Interface that a class can implement to be a guard deciding if a children can be loaded.
'...if a children...' changed to '...if children...'
* Interface that a class can implement to be a guard deciding if children can be loaded.
PR Close#27894
Navigating to a route such as `/users`, you may get redirected to `/login`. Previously, if you go then route to `/users` again the URL will end up showing `/users` after the second redirect. This only happened in `UrlUpdateStrategy="eager"`. This is now fixed so after the second redirect, the URL shows the correct page.
Fixes#27116
PR Close#27523
This option means guards and resolvers will ignore changes when a provided predicate function returns `false`. This supports use cases where an application needs to ignore some param updates but not others. For example, changing a sort param in the URL might need to be ignored, whereas changing the a `project` param might require re-run of guards and resolvers.
Related to #26861#18253#27464
PR Close#27682
Navigating to a route such as `/users`, you may get redirected to `/login`. Previously, if you go then route to `/users` again the URL will end up showing `/users` after the second redirect. This only happened in `UrlUpdateStrategy="eager"`. This is now fixed so after the second redirect, the URL shows the correct page.
Fixes#27116
PR Close#27523
This option means guards and resolvers will ignore changes to matrix parameters. Guards and resolvers will be rerun when the path changes, when path parameters change, or when query parameters change.
The primary use case for such a mode is when updating the UI and getting the URL to be in sync with local changes. For example, if displaying a sortable table, changing the sort direction is often handled by the table itself. But you would want to update the URL to be in sync with what's being displayed to the user. As long as the table sort direction is stored as a matrix parameter, you can use this option to update the URL without causing the overhead of re-running guards and resolvers.
Related to #26861#18253
PR Close#27464
This option means guards and resolvers will ignore changes to optional
parameters such as query and matrix params. When the path or any path
params change, guards and resolvers will be run
Related to discussion in #18253
FW-560 #resolve
PR Close#26861
* Removed `andObservable` helper function in favor of inline implementation
* Flow `boolean | UrlTree` through guards check
* Add tests to verify behavior of `checkGuards` function flowing `UrlTree` properly
PR Close#26521