Moves the public api .d.ts files from tools/public_api_guard to
goldens/public-api.
Additionally, provides a README in the goldens directory and a script
assist in testing the current state of the repo against the goldens as
well as a command for accepting all changes to the goldens in a single
command.
PR Close#35768
This commit adds support in the Angular monorepo and in the Angular
compiler(s) for TypeScript 3.8. All packages can now compile with
TS 3.8.
For most of the repo, only a handful few typings adjustments were needed:
* TS 3.8 has a new `CustomElementConstructor` DOM type, which enforces a
zero-argument constructor. The `NgElementConstructor` type previously
declared a required `injector` argument despite the fact that its
implementation allowed `injector` to be optional. The interface type was
updated to reflect the optionality of the argument.
* Certain error messages were changed, and expectations in tests were
updated as a result.
* tsserver (part of language server) now returns performance information in
responses, so test expectations were changed to only assert on the actual
body content of responses.
For compiler-cli and schematics (which use the TypeScript AST) a major
breaking change was the introduction of the export form:
```typescript
export * as foo from 'bar';
```
This is a `ts.NamespaceExport`, and the `exportClause` of a
`ts.ExportDeclaration` can now take this type as well as `ts.NamedExports`.
This broke a lot of places where `exportClause` was assumed to be
`ts.NamedExports`.
For the most part these breakages were in cases where it is not necessary
to handle the new `ts.NamedExports` anyway. ngtsc's design uses the
`ts.TypeChecker` APIs to understand syntax and so automatically supports the
new form of exports.
The View Engine compiler on the other hand extracts TS structures into
metadata.json files, and that format was not designed for namespaced
exports. As a result it will take a nontrivial amount of work if we want to
support such exports in View Engine. For now, these new exports are not
accounted for in metadata.json, and so using them in "folded" Angular
expressions will result in errors (probably claiming that the referenced
exported namespace doesn't exist).
Care was taken to only use TS APIs which are present in 3.7/3.6, as Angular
needs to remain compatible with these for the time being.
This commit does not update angular.io.
PR Close#35864
Prior to this commit, while calculating the scope for a module, Ivy compiler processed `declarations` field first and `imports` after that. That results in a couple issues:
* for Pipes with the same `name` and present in `declarations` and in an imported module, Pipe from imported module was selected. In View Engine the logic is opposite: Pipes from `declarations` field receive higher priority.
* for Directives with the same selector and present in `declarations` and in an imported module, we first invoked the logic of a Directive from `declarations` field and after that - imported Directive logic. In View Engine, it was the opposite and the logic of a Directive from the `declarations` field was invoked last.
In order to align Ivy and View Engine behavior, this commit updates the logic in which we populate module scope: we first process all imports and after that handle `declarations` field. As a result, in Ivy both use-cases listed above work similar to View Engine.
Resolves#35502.
PR Close#35850
This commit splits the ngtsc `core` package's api entrypoint, which
previously was a single `api.ts` file, into an api/ directory with multiple
files. This is done to isolate the parts of the API definitions pertaining
to the public-facing `angularCompilerOptions` field in tsconfig.json into a
single file, which will enable a public API guard test to be added in a
future commit.
PR Close#35885
Currently, when Angular code is built with Bazel and with Ivy, generated
factory shims (.ngfactory files) are not processed via the majority of
tsickle's transforms. This is a subtle effect of the build infrastructure,
but it boils down to a TsickleHost method `shouldSkipTsickleProcessing`.
For ngc_wrapped builds (Bazel + Angular), this method is defined in the
`@bazel/typescript` (aka bazel rules_typescript) implementation of
`CompilerHost`. The default behavior is to skip tsickle processing for files
which are not present in the original `srcs[]` of the build rule. In
Angular's case, this includes all generated shim files.
For View Engine factories this is probably desirable as they're quite
complex and they've never been tested with tsickle. Ivy factories however
are smaller and very straightforward, and it makes sense to treat them like
any other output.
This commit adjusts two independent implementations of
`shouldSkipTsickleProcessing` to enable transformation of Ivy shims:
* in `@angular/bazel` aka ngc_wrapped, the upstream `@bazel/typescript`
`CompilerHost` is patched to treat .ngfactory files the same as their
original source file, with respect to tsickle processing.
It is currently not possible to test this change as we don't have any test
that inspects tsickle output with bazel. It will be extensively tested in
g3.
* in `ngc`, Angular's own implementation is adjusted to allow for the
processing of shims when compiling with Ivy. This enables a unit test to
be written to validate the correct behavior of tsickle when given a host
that's appropriately configured to process factory shims.
For ngtsc-as-a-plugin, a similar fix will need to be submitted upstream in
tsc_wrapped.
PR Close#35848
This version of `LockFile` creates an "unlocker" child-process that monitors
the main ngcc process and deletes the lock file if it exits unexpectedly.
This resolves the issue where the main process could not be killed by pressing
Ctrl-C at the terminal.
Fixes#35761
PR Close#35861
The previous implementation mixed up the management
of locking a piece of code (both sync and async) with the
management of writing and removing the lockFile that is
used as the flag for which process has locked the code.
This change splits these two concepts up. Apart from
avoiding the awkward base class it allows the `LockFile`
implementation to be replaced cleanly.
PR Close#35861
This reduces the time that `findEntryPoints` takes from 9701.143ms to 4177.278ms, by reducing the file operations done.
Reference: #35717
PR Close#35756
It's an error to declare a variable twice on a specific template:
```html
<div *ngFor="let i of items; let i = index">
</div>
```
This commit introduces a template type-checking error which helps to detect
and diagnose this problem.
Fixes#35186
PR Close#35674
`ɵɵNgOnChangesFeature()` would set `ngInherit`, which is a side effect and also not necessary. This was pulled out to module scope so the function itself can be pure. Since it only curries another function, the call is entirely unnecessary. Updated the compiler to only generate a reference to this function, rather than a call to it, and removed the extra curry indirection.
PR Close#35769
Prior to this commit, i18n attributes defined on `<ng-template>` tags were not processed by the compiler. This commit adds the necessary logic to handle i18n attributes in the same way how these attrs are processed for regular elements.
PR Close#35681
With this change we spawn workers lazily based on the amount of work that needs to be done.
Before this change we spawned the maximum of workers possible. However, in some cases there are less tasks than the max number of workers which resulted in created unnecessary workers
Reference: #35717
PR Close#35719
When the `NgIf` directive is used in a template, its context variables
can be used to capture the bound value. This is typically used together
with a pipe or function call, where the resulting value is captured in a
context variable. There's two syntax forms available:
1. Binding to `NgIfContext.ngIf` using the `as` syntax:
```html
<span *ngIf="(user$ | async) as user">{{user.name}}</span>
```
2. Binding to `NgIfContext.$implicit` using the `let` syntax:
```html
<span *ngIf="user$ | async; let user">{{user.name}}</span>
```
Because of the semantics of `ngIf`, it is known that the captured
context variable is non-nullable, however the template type checker
would not consider them as such and still report errors when
`strictNullTypes` is enabled.
This commit updates `NgIf`'s context guard to make the types of the
context variables non-nullable, avoiding the issue.
Fixes#34572
PR Close#35125
For view and content queries, the Ivy compiler attempts to statically
evaluate the predicate token so that string predicates containing
comma-separated reference names can be split into an array of strings
during compilation. When the predicate is a dynamic value that cannot be
statically interpreted at compile time, the compiler would previously
produce an error. This behavior breaks a use-case where an `InjectionToken`
is being used as query predicate, as the usage of the `new` keyword
prevents such predicates from being statically evaluated.
This commit changes the behavior to no longer produce an error for
dynamic values. Instead, the expression is emitted as is into the
generated code, postponing the evaluation to happen at runtime.
Fixes#34267
Resolves FW-1828
PR Close#35307
Source-maps in the wild could be badly formatted,
causing the source-map flattening processing to fail
unexpectedly. Rather than causing the whole of ngcc
to crash, we gracefully fallback to just returning the
generated source-map instead.
PR Close#35718
Previously when rendering flattened source-maps, it was assumed that no
mapping would come from a line that is outside the lines of the actual
source content. It turns out this is not a valid assumption.
Now the code that renders flattened source-maps will handle such
mappings, with the additional benefit that the rendered source-map
will only contain mapping lines up to the last mapping, rather than a
mapping line for every content line.
Fixes#35709
PR Close#35718
If a package has a source-map but it does not provide
the actual content of the sources, then the source-map
flattening was crashing.
Now we ignore such mappings that have no source
since we are not able to compute the merged
mapping if there is no source file.
Fixes#35709
PR Close#35718
This commit adds a new ngcc configuration, `ignorableDeepImportMatchers`
for packages. This is a list of regular expressions matching deep imports
that can be safely ignored from that package. Deep imports that are not
ignored cause a warning to be logged.
// FW-1892
Fixes#35615
PR Close#35683
It's possible to pass a directive as an input to itself. Consider:
```html
<some-cmp #ref [value]="ref">
```
Since the template type-checker attempts to infer a type for `<some-cmp>`
using the values of its inputs, this creates a circular reference where the
type of the `value` input is used in its own inference:
```typescript
var _t0 = SomeCmp.ngTypeCtor({value: _t0});
```
Obviously, this doesn't work. To resolve this, the template type-checker
used to generate a `null!` expression when a reference would otherwise be
circular:
```typescript
var _t0 = SomeCmp.ngTypeCtor({value: null!});
```
This effectively asks TypeScript to infer a value for this context, and
works well to resolve this simple cycle. However, if the template
instead tries to use the circular value in a larger expression:
```html
<some-cmp #ref [value]="ref.prop">
```
The checker would generate:
```typescript
var _t0 = SomeCmp.ngTypeCtor({value: (null!).prop});
```
In this case, TypeScript can't figure out any way `null!` could have a
`prop` key, and so it infers `never` as the type. `(never).prop` is thus a
type error.
This commit implements a better fallback pattern for circular references to
directive types like this. Instead of generating a `null!` in place for the
reference, a type is inferred by calling the type constructor again with
`null!` as its input. This infers the widest possible type for the directive
which is then used to break the cycle:
```typescript
var _t0 = SomeCmp.ngTypeCtor(null!);
var _t1 = SomeCmp.ngTypeCtor({value: _t0.prop});
```
This has the desired effect of validating that `.prop` is legal for the
directive type (the type of `#ref`) while also avoiding a cycle.
Fixes#35372Fixes#35603Fixes#35522
PR Close#35622
NG6002/NG6003 are errors produced when an NgModule being compiled has an
imported or exported type which does not have the proper metadata (that is,
it doesn't appear to be an @NgModule, or @Directive, etc. depending on
context).
Previously this error message was a bit sparse. However, Github issues show
that this is the most common error users receive when for whatever reason
ngcc wasn't able to handle one of their libraries, or they just didn't run
it. So this commit changes the error message to offer a bit more useful
context, instructing users differently depending on whether the class in
question is from their own project, from NPM, or from a monorepo-style local
dependency.
PR Close#35620
The library used by ngcc to update the source files (MagicString) is able
to generate a source-map but it is not able to account for any previous
source-map that the input text is already associated with.
There have been various attempts to fix this but none have been very
successful, since it is not a trivial problem to solve.
This commit contains a novel approach that is able to load up a tree of
source-files connected by source-maps and flatten them down into a single
source-map that maps directly from the final generated file to the original
sources referenced by the intermediate source-maps.
PR Close#35132
Previously if there were two path-mapped libraries that are in
different directories but the path of one started with same string
as the path of the other, we would incorrectly return the shorter
path - e.g. `dist/my-lib` and `dist/my-lib-second`. This was because
the list of `basePaths` was searched in ascending alphabetic order and
we were using `startsWith()` to match the path.
Now the `basePaths` are searched in reverse alphabetic order so the
longer path will be matched correctly.
// FW-1873
Fixes#35536
PR Close#35592
* it's tricky to get out of the runfiles tree with `bazel test` as `BUILD_WORKSPACE_DIRECTORY` is not set but I employed a trick to read the `DO_NOT_BUILD_HERE` file that is one level up from `execroot` and that contains the workspace directory. This is experimental and if `bazel test //:test.debug` fails than `bazel run` is still guaranteed to work as `BUILD_WORKSPACE_DIRECTORY` will be set in that context
* test //integration:bazel_test and //integration:bazel-schematics_test exclusively
* run "exclusive" and "manual" bazel-in-bazel integration tests in their own CI job as they take 8m+ to execute
```
//integration:bazel-schematics_test PASSED in 317.2s
//integration:bazel_test PASSED in 167.8s
```
* Skip all integration tests that are now handled by angular_integration_test except the tests that are tracked for payload size; these are:
- cli-hello-world*
- hello_world__closure
* add & pin @babel deps as newer versions of babel break //packages/localize/src/tools/test:test
@babel/core dep had to be pinned to 7.6.4 or else //packages/localize/src/tools/test:test failed. Also //packages/localize uses @babel/generator, @babel/template, @babel/traverse & @babel/types so these deps were added to package.json as they were not being hoisted anymore from @babel/core transitive.
NB: integration/hello_world__systemjs_umd test must run with systemjs 0.20.0
NB: systemjs must be at 0.18.10 for legacy saucelabs job to pass
NB: With Bazel 2.0, the glob for the files to test `"integration/bazel/**"` is empty if integation/bazel is in .bazelignore. This glob worked under these conditions with 1.1.0. I did not bother testing with 1.2.x as not having integration/bazel in .bazelignore is correct.
PR Close#33927
Under View Engine's default (non-fullTemplateTypeCheck) checking, object and
array literals which appear in templates are treated as having type `any`.
This allows a number of patterns which would not otherwise compile, such as
indexing an object literal by a string:
```html
{{ {'a': 1, 'b': 2}[value] }}
```
(where `value` is `string`)
Ivy, meanwhile, has always inferred strong types for object literals, even
in its compatibility mode. This commit fixes the bug, and adds the
`strictLiteralTypes` flag to specifically control this inference. When the
flag is `false` (in compatibility mode), object and array literals receive
the `any` type.
PR Close#35462
In its default compatibility mode, the Ivy template type-checker attempts to
emulate the View Engine default mode as accurately as is possible. This
commit addresses a gap in this compatibility that stems from a View Engine
type-checking bug.
Consider two template expressions:
```html
{{ obj?.field }}
{{ fn()?.field }}
```
and suppose that the type of `obj` and `fn()` are the same - both return
either `null` or an object with a `field` property.
Under View Engine, these type-check differently. The `obj` case will catch
if the object type (when not null) does not have a `field` property, while
the `fn()` case will not. This is due to how View Engine represents safe
navigations:
```typescript
// for the 'obj' case
(obj == null ? null as any : obj.field)
// for the 'fn()' case
let tmp: any;
((tmp = fn()) == null ? null as any : tmp.field)
```
Because View Engine uses the same code generation backend as it does to
produce the runtime code for this expression, it uses a ternary for safe
navigation, with a temporary variable to avoid invoking 'fn()' twice. The
type of this temporary variable is 'any', however, which causes the
`tmp.field` check to be meaningless.
Previously, the Ivy template type-checker in compatibility mode assumed that
`fn()?.field` would always check for the presence of 'field' on the non-null
result of `fn()`. This commit emulates the View Engine bug in Ivy's
compatibility mode, so an 'any' type will be inferred under the same
conditions.
As part of this fix, a new format for safe navigation operations in template
type-checking code is introduced. This is based on the realization that
ternary based narrowing is unnecessary.
For the `fn()` case in strict mode, Ivy now generates:
```typescript
(null as any ? fn()!.field : undefined)
```
This effectively uses the ternary operator as a type "or" operation. The
resulting type will be a union of the type of `fn()!.field` with
`undefined`.
For the `fn()` case in compatibility mode, Ivy now emulates the bug with:
```typescript
(fn() as any).field
```
The cast expression includes the call to `fn()` and allows it to be checked
while still returning a type of `any` from the expression.
For the `obj` case in compatibility mode, Ivy now generates:
```typescript
(obj!.field as any)
```
This cast expression still returns `any` for its type, but will check for
the existence of `field` on the type of `obj!`.
PR Close#35462
In ES5 code, TypeScript requires certain helpers (such as
`__spreadArrays()`) to be able to support ES2015+ features. These
helpers can be either imported from `tslib` (by setting the
`importHelpers` TS compiler option to `true`) or emitted inline (by
setting the `importHelpers` and `noEmitHelpers` TS compiler options to
`false`, which is the default value for both).
Ngtsc's `StaticInterpreter` (which is also used during ngcc processing)
is able to statically evaluate some of these helpers (currently
`__assign()`, `__spread()` and `__spreadArrays()`), as long as
`ReflectionHost#getDefinitionOfFunction()` correctly detects the
declaration of the helper. For this to happen, the left-hand side of the
corresponding call expression (i.e. `__spread(...)` or
`tslib.__spread(...)`) must be evaluated as a function declaration for
`getDefinitionOfFunction()` to be called with.
In the case of imported helpers, the `tslib.__someHelper` expression was
resolved to a function declaration of the form
`export declare function __someHelper(...args: any[][]): any[];`, which
allows `getDefinitionOfFunction()` to correctly map it to a TS helper.
In contrast, in the case of emitted helpers (and regardless of the
module format: `CommonJS`, `ESNext`, `UMD`, etc.)), the `__someHelper`
identifier was resolved to a variable declaration of the form
`var __someHelper = (this && this.__someHelper) || function () { ... }`,
which upon further evaluation was categorized as a `DynamicValue`
(prohibiting further evaluation by the `getDefinitionOfFunction()`).
As a result of the above, emitted TypeScript helpers were not evaluated
in ES5 code.
---
This commit changes the detection of TS helpers to leverage the existing
`KnownFn` feature (previously only used for built-in functions).
`Esm5ReflectionHost` is changed to always return `KnownDeclaration`s for
TS helpers, both imported (`getExportsOfModule()`) as well as emitted
(`getDeclarationOfIdentifier()`).
Similar changes are made to `CommonJsReflectionHost` and
`UmdReflectionHost`.
The `KnownDeclaration`s are then mapped to `KnownFn`s in
`StaticInterpreter`, allowing it to statically evaluate call expressions
involving any kind of TS helpers.
Jira issue: https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1689
PR Close#35191
This is in preparation of using the `KnownFn` type for known TypeScript
helpers (in addition to built-in functions/methods). This will in turn
allow simplifying the detection of both imported and emitted TypeScript
helpers.
PR Close#35191
When statically evaluating CommonJS code it is possible to find that we
are looking for the declaration of an identifier that actually came from
a typings file (rather than a CommonJS file).
Previously, the CommonJS reflection host would always try to use a
CommonJS specific algorithm for finding identifier declarations, but
when the id is actually in a typings file this resulted in the returned
declaration being the containing file of the declaration rather than the
declaration itself.
Now the CommonJS reflection host will check to see if the file
containing the identifier is a typings file and use the appropriate
stategy.
(Note: This is the equivalent of #34356 but for CommonJS.)
PR Close#35191
In #33705 we made it so that we generate pure functions for object/array literals in order to avoid having them be shared across elements/views. The problem this introduced is that further down the line the `ContantPool` uses the generated literal in order to figure out whether to share an existing factory or to create a new one. `ConstantPool` determines whether to share a factory by creating a key from the AST node and using it to look it up in the factory cache, however the key generation function didn't handle function invocations and replaced them with `null`. This means that the key for `{foo: pureFunction0(...)}` and `{foo: null}` are the same.
These changes rework the logic so that instead of generating a `null` key
for function invocations, we generate a variable called `<unknown>` which
shouldn't be able to collide with anything.
Fixes#35298.
PR Close#35481
Currently Ivy always generates the `$event` function argument, even if it isn't being used by the listener expressions. This can lead to unnecessary bytes being generated, because optimizers won't remove unused arguments by default. These changes add some logic to avoid adding the argument when it isn't required.
PR Close#35097
In ES5 and ES2015, class identifiers may have aliases. Previously, the
`NgccReflectionHost`s recognized the following formats:
- ES5:
```js
var MyClass = (function () {
function InnerClass() {}
InnerClass_1 = InnerClass;
...
}());
```
- ES2015:
```js
let MyClass = MyClass_1 = class MyClass { ... };
```
In addition to the above, this commit adds support for recognizing an
alias outside the IIFE in ES5 classes (which was previously not
supported):
```js
var MyClass = MyClass_1 = (function () { ... }());
```
Jira issue: [FW-1869](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1869)
Partially addresses #35399.
PR Close#35527
`Esm5ReflectionHost#getInnerFunctionDeclarationFromClassDeclaration()`
was already called with `ts.Declaration`, not `ts.Node`, so we can
tighten its parameter type and get rid of a redundant check.
`getIifeBody()` (called inside
`getInnerFunctionDeclarationFromClassDeclaration()`) will check whether
the given `ts.Declaration` is a `ts.VariableDeclaration`.
PR Close#35527
Prior to this commit, decorator handling logic in Ngtsc used `Error` to throw errors. This commit replaces most of these instances with `FatalDiagnosticError` class, which provider a better diagnostics error (including location of the problematic code).
PR Close#35244
We recently updated chokidar to `3.0.0`. The latest version of
chokidar provides TypeScript types on its own and makes the extra
dependency on the `@types` unnecessary.
This seems to have caused the `build-packages-dist` script to fail with
an error like:
```
[strictDeps] transitive dependency on external/npm/node_modules/chokidar/types/index.d.ts
not allowed. Please add the BUILD target to your rule's deps.
```
It's unclear why that happens, but a reasonable theory would be that
the TS compilation accidentally picked up the types from `chokidar`
instead of `@types/chokidar`, and the strict deps `@bazel/typescript`
check reported this as issue because it's not an explicit target dependency.
PR Close#35371
ngcc uses a lockfile to prevent two ngcc instances from executing at the
same time. Previously, if a lockfile was found the current process would
error and exit.
Now, when in async mode, the current process is able to wait for the previous
process to release the lockfile before continuing itself.
PR Close#35131
Support for re-exports in UMD were added in e9fb5fdb8. This commit adds
some tests for re-exports (similar to the ones used for
`CommonJsReflectionHost`).
PR Close#35312
In Ivy's template type checker, event bindings are checked in a closure
to allow for accurate type inference of the `$event` parameter. Because
of the closure, any narrowing effects of template guards will no longer
be in effect when checking the event binding, as TypeScript assumes that
the guard outside of the closure may no longer be true once the closure
is invoked. For more information on TypeScript's Control Flow Analysis,
please refer to https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/9998.
In Angular templates, it is known that an event binding can only be
executed when the view it occurs in is currently rendered, hence the
corresponding template guard is known to hold during the invocation of
an event handler closure. As such, it is desirable that any narrowing
effects from template guards are still in effect within the event
handler closure.
This commit tweaks the generated Type-Check Block (TCB) to repeat all
template guards within an event handler closure. This achieves the
narrowing effect of the guards even within the closure.
Fixes#35073
PR Close#35193
The `TargetedEntryPointFinder` must work out what the
containing package is for each entry-point that it finds.
The logic for doing this was flawed in the case that the
package was in a path-mapped directory and not in a
node_modules folder. This meant that secondary entry-points
were incorrectly setting their own path as the package
path, rather than the primary entry-point path.
Fixes#35188
PR Close#35227
This commit implements an experimental integration with tsc_wrapped, where
it can load the Angular compiler as a plugin and perform Angular
transpilation at a user's request.
This is an alternative to the current ngc_wrapped mechanism, which is a fork
of tsc_wrapped from several years ago. tsc_wrapped has improved
significantly since then, and this feature will allow Angular to benefit
from those improvements.
Currently the plugin API between tsc_wrapped and the Angular compiler is a
work in progress, so NgTscPlugin does not yet implement any interfaces from
@bazel/typescript (the home of tsc_wrapped). Instead, an interface is
defined locally to guide this standardization.
PR Close#34792
This commit moves the calculation of `ignoreFiles` - the set of files to be
ignored by a consumer of the `NgCompiler` API - from its `prepareEmit`
operation to its initialization. It's now available as a field on
`NgCompiler`.
This will allow a consumer to skip gathering diagnostics for `ignoreFiles`
as well as skip emit.
PR Close#34792
A bug previously caused the template type-checking diagnostics produced by
TypeScript for template expressions to use -99-prefixed error codes. These
codes are converted to "NG" errors instead of "TS" errors during diagnostic
printing. This commit fixes the issue.
PR Close#35146
In #34021 the ngtsc compiler gained the ability to emit type parameter
constraints, which would generate imports for any type reference that
is used within the constraint. However, the `AbsoluteModuleStrategy`
reference emitter strategy did not consider interface declarations as a
valid declaration it can generate an import for, throwing an error
instead.
This commit fixes the issue by including interface declarations in the
logic that determines whether something is a declaration.
Fixes#34837
PR Close#34849
In #33551, a bug in `ngc --watch` mode was fixed so that a component is
recompiled when its template file is changed. Due to insufficient
normalization of files paths, this fix did not have the desired effect
on Windows.
Fixes#32869
PR Close#34015
To support parallel CLI builds we instruct developers to pre-process
their node_modules via ngcc at the command line.
Despite doing this ngcc was still trying to set a lock when it was being
triggered by the CLI for packages that are not going to be processed,
since they are not compiled by Angular for instance.
This commit checks whether a target package needs to be compiled
at all before attempting to set the lock.
Fixes#35000
PR Close#35057
If ngcc gets updated to a new version then the artifacts
left in packages that were processed by the previous
version are possibly invalid.
Previously we just errored if we found packages that
had already been processed by an outdated version.
Now we automatically clean the packages that have
outdated artifacts so that they can be reprocessed
correctly with the current ngcc version.
Fixes#35082
PR Close#35079
Now `hasBeenProcessed()` will no longer throw if there
is an entry-point that has been built with an outdated
version of ngcc.
Instead it just returns `false`, which will include it in this
processing run.
This is a precursor to adding functionality that will
automatically revert outdate build artifacts.
PR Close#35079
Update from chokidar 2.x to 3.x in ngc/ngtsc, to eliminate any possibility
of a security issue with a downstream dependency of the package.
FW-1809 #resolve
PR Close#35047
The message now gives concrete advice to developers who
experience the error due to running multiple simultaneous builds
via webpack.
Fixes#35000
PR Close#35001
We had some logic for generating and passing in the `elIndex` parameter into the `hostBindings` function, but it wasn't actually being used for anything. The only place left that had a reference to it was the `StylingBuilder` and it only stored it without referencing it again.
PR Close#34969
Component's decorator handler exposes `preanalyze` method to preload async resources (templates, stylesheets). The logic in preanalysis phase may throw `FatalDiagnosticError` errors that contain useful information regarding the origin of the problem. However these errors from preanalysis phase were not intercepted in TraitCompiler, resulting in just error message text be displayed. This commit updates the logic to handle FatalDiagnosticError and transform it before throwing, so that the result diagnostic errors contain the necessary info.
PR Close#34801
NOTE: This change must be reverted with previous deletes so that it code remains in build-able state.
This change deletes old styling code and replaces it with a simplified styling algorithm.
The mental model for the new algorithm is:
- Create a linked list of styling bindings in the order of priority. All styling bindings ere executed in compiled order and than a linked list of bindings is created in priority order.
- Flush the style bindings at the end of `advance()` instruction. This implies that there are two flush events. One at the end of template `advance` instruction in the template. Second one at the end of `hostBindings` `advance` instruction when processing host bindings (if any).
- Each binding instructions effectively updates the string to represent the string at that location. Because most of the bindings are additive, this is a cheap strategy in most cases. In rare cases the strategy requires removing tokens from the styling up to this point. (We expect that to be rare case)S Because, the bindings are presorted in the order of priority, it is safe to resume the processing of the concatenated string from the last change binding.
PR Close#34616
This change reverts https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/28711
NOTE: This change deletes code and creates a BROKEN SHA. If reverting this SHA needs to be reverted with the next SHA to get back into a valid state.
The change removes the fact that `NgStyle`/`NgClass` is special and colaborates with the `[style]`/`[class]` to merge its styles. By reverting to old behavior we have better backwards compatiblity since it is no longer treated special and simply overwrites the styles (same as VE)
PR Close#34616
Compiler keeps track of number of slots (`vars`) which are needed for binding instructions. Normally each binding instructions allocates a single slot in the `LView` but styling instructions need to allocate two slots.
PR Close#34616
This change moves information from instructions to declarative position:
- `ɵɵallocHostVars(vars)` => `DirectiveDef.hostVars`
- `ɵɵelementHostAttrs(attrs)` => `DirectiveDef.hostAttrs`
When merging directives it is necessary to know about `hostVars` and `hostAttrs`. Before this change the information was stored in the `hostBindings` function. This was problematic, because in order to get to the information the `hostBindings` would have to be executed. In order for `hostBindings` to be executed the directives would have to be instantiated. This means that the directive instantiation would happen before we had knowledge about the `hostAttrs` and as a result the directive could observe in the constructor that not all of the `hostAttrs` have been applied. This further complicates the runtime as we have to apply `hostAttrs` in parts over many invocations.
`ɵɵallocHostVars` was unnecessarily complicated because it would have to update the `LView` (and Blueprint) while existing directives are already executing. By moving it out of `hostBindings` function we can access it statically and we can create correct `LView` (and Blueprint) in a single pass.
This change only changes how the instructions are generated, but does not change the runtime much. (We cheat by emulating the old behavior by calling `ɵɵallocHostVars` and `ɵɵelementHostAttrs`) Subsequent change will refactor the runtime to take advantage of the static information.
PR Close#34683
Previously, NgtscProgram lived in the main @angular/compiler-cli package
alongside the legacy View Engine compiler. As a result, the main package
depended on all of the ngtsc internal packages, and a significant portion of
ngtsc logic lived in NgtscProgram.
This commit refactors NgtscProgram and moves the main logic of compilation
into a new 'core' package. The new package defines a new API which enables
implementers of TypeScript compilers (compilers built using the TS API) to
support Angular transpilation as well. It involves a new NgCompiler type
which takes a ts.Program and performs Angular analysis and transformations,
as well as an NgCompilerHost which wraps an input ts.CompilerHost and adds
any extra Angular files.
Together, these two classes are used to implement a new NgtscProgram which
adapts the legacy api.Program interface used by the View Engine compiler
onto operations on the new types. The new NgtscProgram implementation is
significantly smaller and easier to reason about.
The new NgCompilerHost replaces the previous GeneratedShimsHostWrapper which
lived in the 'shims' package.
A new 'resource' package is added to support the HostResourceLoader which
previously lived in the outer compiler package.
As a result of the refactoring, the dependencies of the outer
@angular/compiler-cli package on ngtsc internal packages are significantly
trimmed.
This refactoring was driven by the desire to build a plugin interface to the
compiler so that tsc_wrapped (another consumer of the TS compiler APIs) can
perform Angular transpilation on user request.
PR Close#34887
In #34288, ngtsc was refactored to separate the result of the analysis
and resolve phase for more granular incremental rebuilds. In this model,
any errors in one phase transition the trait into an error state, which
prevents it from being ran through subsequent phases. The ngcc compiler
on the other hand did not adopt this strict error model, which would
cause incomplete metadata—due to errors in earlier phases—to be offered
for compilation that could result in a hard crash.
This commit updates ngcc to take advantage of ngtsc's `TraitCompiler`,
that internally manages all Ivy classes that are part of the
compilation. This effectively replaces ngcc's own `AnalyzedFile` and
`AnalyzedClass` types, together with all of the logic to drive the
`DecoratorHandler`s. All of this is now handled in the `TraitCompiler`,
benefiting from its explicit state transitions of `Trait`s so that the
ngcc crash is a thing of the past.
Fixes#34500
Resolves FW-1788
PR Close#34889
This syntax is invalid in these source files and does result in
compilation errors as the constructor parameters could not be resolved.
This hasn't been an issue until now as those errors were ignored in the
tests, but future work to introduce the Trait system of ngtsc into
ngcc will cause these errors to prevent compilation, resulting in broken
tests.
PR Close#34889
Previously, while trying to build an `NgccReflectionHost`'s
`privateDtsDeclarationMap`, `computePrivateDtsDeclarationMap()` would
try to collect exported declarations from all source files of the
program (i.e. without checking whether they were within the target
package, as happens for declarations in `.d.ts` files).
Most of the time, that would not be a problem, because external packages
would be represented as `.d.ts` files in the program. But when an
external package had no typings, the JS files would be used instead. As
a result, the `ReflectionHost` would try to (unnecessarilly) parse the
file in order to extract exported declarations, which in turn would be
harmless in most cases.
There are certain cases, though, where the `ReflectionHost` would throw
an error, because it cannot parse the external package's JS file. This
could happen, for example, in `UmdReflectionHost`, which expects the
file to contain exactly one statement. See #34544 for more details on a
real-world failure.
This commit fixes the issue by ensuring that
`computePrivateDtsDeclarationMap()` will only collect exported
declarations from files within the target package.
Jira issue: [FW-1794](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1794)
Fixes#34544
PR Close#34811
This commit fixes a bug in the incremental rebuild engine of ngtsc, where if
a component was removed from its NgModule, it would not be properly
re-emitted.
The bug stemmed from the fact that whether to emit a file was a decision
based purely on the updated dependency graph, which captures the dependency
structure of the rebuild program. This graph has no edge from the component
to its former module (as it was removed, of course), so the compiler
erroneously decides not to emit the component.
The bug here is that the compiler does know, from the previous dependency
graph, that the component file has logically changed, since its previous
dependency (the module file) has changed. This information was not carried
forward into the set of files which need to be emitted, because it was
assumed that the updated dependency graph was a more accurate source of that
information.
With this commit, the set of files which need emit is pre-populated with the
set of logically changed files, to cover edge cases like this.
Fixes#34813
PR Close#34912
Previously, the template type-checker would always construct a generic
template context type with correct bounds, even when strictTemplates was
disabled. This meant that type-checking of expressions involving that type
was stricter than View Engine.
This commit introduces a 'strictContextGenerics' flag which behaves
similarly to other 'strictTemplates' flags, and switches the inference of
generic type parameters on the component context based on the value of this
flag.
PR Close#34649
FileToModuleHost aliasing supports compilation within environments that have
two properties:
1. A `FileToModuleHost` exists which defines canonical module names for any
given TS file.
2. Dependency restrictions exist which prevent the import of arbitrary files
even if such files are within the .d.ts transitive closure of a
compilation ("strictdeps").
In such an environment, generated imports can only go through import paths
which are already present in the user program. The aliasing system supports
the generation and consumption of such imports at runtime.
`FileToModuleHost` aliasing does not emit re-exports in .d.ts files. This
means that it's safe to rely on alias re-exports in generated .js code (they
are guaranteed to exist at runtime) but not in template type-checking code
(since TS will not be able to follow such imports). Therefore, non-aliased
imports should be used in template type-checking code.
This commit adds a `NoAliasing` flag to `ImportFlags` and sets it when
generating imports in template type-checking code. The testing environment
is also patched to support resolution of FileToModuleHost canonical paths
within the template type-checking program, enabling testing of this change.
PR Close#34649
Previously, `ReferenceEmitter.emit()` took an `ImportMode` enum value, where
one value of the enum allowed forcing new imports to be generated when
emitting a reference to some value or type.
This commit refactors `ImportMode` to be an `ImportFlags` value instead.
Using a bit field of flags will allow future customization of reference
emitting.
PR Close#34649
Previously, when generating template type-checking code, casts to 'any' were
produced as `expr as any`, regardless of the expression. However, for
certain expression types, this led to precedence issues with the cast. For
example, `a !== b` is a `ts.BinaryExpression`, and wrapping it directly in
the cast yields `a !== b as any`, which is semantically equivalent to
`a !== (b as any)`. This is obviously not what is intended.
Instead, this commit adds a list of expression types for which a "bare"
wrapping is permitted. For other expressions, parentheses are added to
ensure correct precedence: `(a !== b) as any`
PR Close#34649
Currently, the template type-checker gives an error if there are multiple
bindings to the same input. This commit aligns the behavior of the template
type-checker with the View Engine runtime: only the first binding to a field
has any effect. The rest are ignored.
PR Close#34649
It's possible to declare multiple inputs for a directive/component which all
map to the same property name. This is usually done in error, as only one of
any bindings to the property will "win".
In the template type-checker, an error was previously being raised as a
result of this ambiguity. Specifically, a type constructor was produced
which required a binding for each field, but only one of the fields had
a value via the binding. TypeScript would (rightfully) error on missing
values for the remaining fields. This ultimately was happening when the
code which generated the default values for "unset" inputs belonging to
directives or pipes used the final mapping from properties to fields as
a source for field names.
Instead, this commit uses the original list of fields to generate unset
input values, which correctly provides values for fields which shared a
property name but didn't receive the final binding.
PR Close#34649
Consider a library that uses a shared constant for host bindings. e.g.
```ts
export const BASE_BINDINGS= {
'[class.mat-themed]': '_isThemed',
}
----
@Directive({
host: {...BASE_BINDINGS, '(click)': '...'}
})
export class Dir1 {}
@Directive({
host: {...BASE_BINDINGS, '(click)': '...'}
})
export class Dir2 {}
```
Previously when these components were shipped as part of the
library to NPM, consumers were able to consume `Dir1` and `Dir2`.
No errors showed up.
Now with Ivy, when ngcc tries to process the library, an error
will be thrown. The error is stating that the host bindings should
be an object (which they obviously are). This happens because
TypeScript transforms the object spread to individual
`Object.assign` calls (for compatibility).
The partial evaluator used by the `@Directive` annotation handler
is unable to process this expression because there is no
integrated support for `Object.assign`. In View Engine, this was
not a problem because the `metadata.json` files from the library
were used to compute the host bindings.
Fixes#34659
PR Close#34661
Ngcc adds properties to the `package.json` files of the entry-points it
processes to mark them as processed for a format and point to the
created Ivy entry-points (in case of `--create-ivy-entry-points`). When
running ngcc in parallel mode (which is the default for the standalone
ngcc command), multiple formats can be processed simultaneously for the
same entry-point and the order of completion is not deterministic.
Previously, ngcc would append new properties at the end of the target
object in `package.json` as soon as the format processing was completed.
As a result, the order of properties in the resulting `package.json`
(when processing multiple formats for an entry-point in parallel) was
not deterministic. For tools that use file hashes for caching purposes
(such as Bazel), this lead to a high probability of cache misses.
This commit fixes the problem by ensuring that the position of
properties added to `package.json` files is deterministic and
independent of the order in which each format is processed.
Jira issue: [FW-1801](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1801)
Fixes#34635
PR Close#34870
The Angular CLI will continue to call ngcc on all possible packages, even if they
have already been processed by ngcc in a postinstall script.
In a parallel build environment, this was causing ngcc to complain that it was
being run in more than one process at the same time.
This commit moves the check for whether the targeted package has been
processed outside the locked code section, since there is no issue with
multiple ngcc processes from doing this check.
PR Close#34722
Previously, it was possible for multiple instance of ngcc to be running
at the same time, but this is not supported and can cause confusing and
flakey errors at build time.
Now, only one instance of ngcc can run at a time. If a second instance
tries to execute it fails with an appropriate error message.
See https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/32431#issuecomment-571825781
PR Close#34722
This commit adds an `exclusive` parameter to the
`FileSystem.writeFile()` method. When this parameter is
true, the method will fail with an `EEXIST` error if the
file already exists on disk.
PR Close#34722
This patch removes the need for the styleSanitizer() instruction in
favor of passing the sanitizer into directly into the styleProp
instruction.
This patch also increases the binding index size for all style/class bindings in preparation for #34418
PR Close#34480
Pipes in host binding expressions are not supported in View Engine and Ivy, but in some more complex cases (like `(value | pipe) === true`) compiler was not reporting errors. This commit extends Ivy logic to detect pipes in host binding expressions and throw in cases bindings are present. View Engine behavior remains the same.
PR Close#34655
Since I was learning the codebase and had a hard time understanding what was going on I've done a
bunch of changes in one commit that under normal circumstances should have been split into several
commits. Because this code is likely going to be overwritten with Misko's changes I'm not going to
spend the time with trying to split this up.
Overall I've done the following:
- I processed review feedback from #34307
- I did a bunch of renaming to make the code easier to understand
- I refactored some internal functions that were either inefficient or hard to read
- I also updated lots of type signatures to correct them and to remove many casts in the code
PR Close#34307
The major one that affects the angular repo is the removal of the bootstrap attribute in nodejs_binary, nodejs_test and jasmine_node_test in favor of using templated_args --node_options=--require=/path/to/script. The side-effect of this is that the bootstrap script does not get the require.resolve patches with explicitly loading the targets _loader.js file.
PR Close#34736
When searching the typings program for a package for imports a
distinction is drawn between missing entry-points and deep imports.
Previously in the `DtsDependencyHost` these deep imports may be
marked as missing if there was no typings file at the deep import path.
Instead there may be a javascript file instead. In practice this means
the import is "deep" and not "missing".
Now the `DtsDependencyHost` will also consider `.js` files when checking
for deep-imports, and it will also look inside `@types/...` for a suitable
deep-imported typings file.
Fixes#34720
PR Close#34695
Currently ngtsc looks for the first `ConstructorDeclaration` when figuring out what the parameters are so that it can generate the DI instructions. The problem is that if a constructor has overloads, it'll have several `ConstructorDeclaration` members with a different number of parameters. These changes tweak the logic so it looks for the constructor implementation.
PR Close#34590
Previously, `CommonJsDependencyHost.collectDependencies()` would only
find dependencies via imports of the form `var foo = require('...');` or
`var foo = require('...'), bar = require('...');` However, CommonJS
files can have imports in many different forms. By failing to recognize
other forms of imports, the associated dependencies were missed, which
in turn resulted in entry-points being compiled out-of-order and failing
due to that.
While we cannot easily capture all different types of imports, this
commit enhances `CommonJsDependencyHost` to recognize the following
common forms of imports:
- Imports in property assignments. E.g.:
`exports.foo = require('...');` or
`module.exports = {foo: require('...')};`
- Imports for side-effects only. E.g.:
`require('...');`
- Star re-exports (with both emitted and imported heleprs). E.g.:
`__export(require('...'));` or
`tslib_1.__exportStar(require('...'), exports);`
PR Close#34528
Currently the decorator handlers are run against all `SourceFile`s in the compilation, but we shouldn't be doing it against declaration files. This initially came up as a CI issue in #33264 where it was worked around only for the `DirectiveDecoratorHandler`. These changes move the logic into the `TraitCompiler` and `DecorationAnalyzer` so that it applies to all of the handlers.
PR Close#34557
The major one that affects the angular repo is the removal of the bootstrap attribute in nodejs_binary, nodejs_test and jasmine_node_test in favor of using templated_args --node_options=--require=/path/to/script. The side-effect of this is that the bootstrap script does not get the require.resolve patches with explicitly loading the targets _loader.js file.
PR Close#34589
Previously, the `CommonJsReflectionHost` and `UmdReflectionHost` would
only recognize re-exports of the form `__export(...)`. This is what
re-exports look like, when the TypeScript helpers are emitted inline
(i.e. when compiling with the default [TypeScript compiler options][1]
that include `noEmitHelpers: false` and `importHelpers: false`).
However, when compiling with `importHelpers: true` and [tslib][2] (which
is the recommended way for optimized bundles), the re-exports will look
like: `tslib_1.__exportStar(..., exports)`
These types of re-exports were previously not recognized by the
CommonJS/UMD `ReflectionHost`s and thus ignored.
This commit fixes this by ensuring both re-export formats are
recognized.
[1]: https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/compiler-options.html
[2]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/tslib
PR Close#34527
If a class was defined as a class expression
in a variable declaration, the definitions
were being inserted before the statment's
final semi-colon.
Now the insertion point will be after the
full statement.
Fixes#34648
PR Close#34677
In some cases, where a module imports a dependency
but does not actually use it, UMD bundlers may remove
the dependency parameter from the UMD factory function
definition.
For example:
```
import * as x from 'x';
import * as z from 'z';
export const y = x;
```
may result in a UMD bundle including:
```
(function (global, factory) {
typeof exports === 'object' && typeof module !== 'undefined' ?
factory(exports, require('x'), require('z')) :
typeof define === 'function' && define.amd ?
define(['exports', 'x', 'z'], factory) :
(global = global || self, factory(global.myBundle = {}, global.x));
}(this, (function (exports, x) { 'use strict';
...
})));
```
Note that while the `z` dependency is provide in the call,
the factory itself only accepts `exports` and `x` as parameters.
Previously ngcc appended new dependencies to the end of the factory
function, but this breaks in the above scenario. Now the new
dependencies are prefixed at the front of parameters/arguments
already in place.
Fixes#34653
PR Close#34660
In some cases TypeScript is unable to identify a valid
symbol for an export. In this case it returns an "unknown"
symbol, which does not reference any declarations.
This fix ensures that ngcc does not crash if such a symbol
is encountered by checking whether `symbol.declarations`
exists before accessing it.
The commit does not contain a unit test as it was not possible
to recreate a scenario that had such an "unknown" symbol in
the unit test environment. The fix has been manually checked
against that original issue; and also this check is equivalent to
similar checks elsewhere in the code, e.g.
https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/8d0de89e/packages/compiler-cli/src/ngtsc/reflection/src/typescript.ts#L309Fixes#34560
PR Close#34658
Previously, in cases were values were expensive to compute and would be
used multiple times, a combination of a regular `Map` and a helper
function (`getOrDefault()`) was used to ensure values were only computed
once.
This commit uses a special `Map`-like structure to compute and memoize
such expensive values without the need to a helper function.
PR Close#34512
This change should not have any impact on the code's behavior (based on
how the function is currently used), but it will avoid unnecessary work.
PR Close#34512
While different, CommonJS and UMD have a lot in common regarding the
their exports are constructed. Therefore, there was some code
duplication between `CommonJsReflectionHost` and `UmdReflectionHost`.
This commit extracts some of the common bits into a separate file as
helpers to allow reusing the code in both `ReflectionHost`s.
PR Close#34512
Previously, `UmdReflectionHost` would only recognize re-exports of the
form `__export(someIdentifier)` and not `__export(require('...'))`.
However, it is possible in some UMD variations to have the latter format
as well. See discussion in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/34254/files#r359515373
This commit adds support for re-export of the form
`__export(require('...'))` in UMD.
PR Close#34512
This fix was part of a broader `ngtsc`/`ngcc` fix in 02bab8cf9 (see
there for details). In 02bab8cf9, the fix was only applied to
`CommonJsReflectionHost`, but it is equally applicable to
`UmdReflectionHost`. Later in #34254, the fix was partially ported to
`UmdReflectionHost` by fixing the `extractUmdReexports()` method.
This commit fully fixes `ngcc`'s handling of inline exports for code in
UMD format.
PR Close#34512
The `getProjectAsAttrValue` in `node_selector_matcher` finds the
ProjectAs marker and then additionally checks that the marker appears in
an even index of the node attributes because "attribute names are stored
at even indexes". This is true for "regular" attribute bindings but
classes, styles, bindings, templates, and i18n do not necessarily follow
this rule because there can be an uneven number of them, causing the
next "special" attribute "name" to appear at an odd index. To address
this issue, ensure ngProjectAs is placed right after "regular"
attributes.
PR Close#34617
Previously, if `UmdRenderingFormatter#addImports()` was called with an
empty list of imports to add (i.e. no new imports were needed), it would
add trailing commas in several locations (arrays, function arguments,
function parameters), thus making the code imcompatible with legacy
browsers such as IE11.
This commit fixes it by ensuring that no trailing commas are added if
`addImports()` is called with an empty list of imports.
This is a follow-up to #34353.
Fixes#34525
PR Close#34545
ngcc computes a dependency graph of entry-points to ensure that
entry-points are processed in the correct order. Previously only the imports
in source files were analysed to determine the dependencies for each
entry-point.
This is not sufficient when an entry-point has a "type-only" dependency
- for example only importing an interface from another entry-point.
In this case the "type-only" import does not appear in the
source code. It only appears in the typings files. This can cause a
dependency to be missed on the entry-point.
This commit fixes this by additionally processing the imports in the
typings program, as well as the source program.
Note that these missing dependencies could cause unexpected flakes when
running ngcc in async mode on multiple processes due to the way that
ngcc caches files when they are first read from disk.
Fixes#34411
// FW-1781
PR Close#34494
The `DependencyHost` implementations were duplicating the "postfix" strings
which are used to find matching paths when resolving module specifiers.
Now the hosts reuse the postfixes given to the `ModuleResolver` that is
passed to the host.
PR Close#34494
Rather than return a new object of dependency info from calls to
`collectDependencies()` we now pass in an object that will be updated
with the dependency info. This is in preparation of a change where
we will collect dependency information from more than one
`DependencyHost`.
Also to better fit with this approach the name is changed from
`findDependencies()` to `collectDependencies()`.
PR Close#34494
Prior to this commit, there were no `advance` instructions generated before `i18nExp` instructions and as a result, lifecycle hooks for components used inside i18n blocks were flushed too late. This commit adds the logic to generate `advance` instructions in front of `i18nExp` ones (similar to what we have in other places like interpolations, property bindings, etc), so that the necessary lifecycle hooks are flushed before expression value is captured.
PR Close#34436
Previously, it was required that both `fullTemplateTypeCheck` and
`strictTemplates` had to be enabled for strict mode to be enabled. This
is strange, as `strictTemplates` implies `fullTemplateTypeCheck`. This
commit makes setting the `fullTemplateTypeCheck` flag optional so that
strict mode can be enabled by just setting `strictTemplates`.
PR Close#34195
It is now an error if '"fullTemplateTypeCheck"' is disabled while
`"strictTemplates"` is enabled, as enabling the latter implies that the
former is also enabled.
PR Close#34195
The compiler has a translation mechanism to convert from an Angular
`Type` to a `ts.TypeNode`, as appropriate. Prior to this change, it
would translate certain Angular expressions into their value equivalent
in TypeScript, instead of the correct type equivalent. This was possible
as the `ExpressionVisitor` interface is not strictly typed, with `any`s
being used for return values.
For example, a literal object was translated into a
`ts.ObjectLiteralExpression`, containing `ts.PropertyAssignment` nodes
as its entries. This has worked without issues as their printed
representation is identical, however it was incorrect from a semantic
point of view. Instead, a `ts.TypeLiteralNode` is created with
`ts.PropertySignature` as its members, which corresponds with the type
declaration of an object literal.
PR Close#34021
In Ivy's template type checker, type constructors are created for all
directive types to allow for accurate type inference to work. The type
checker has two strategies for dealing with such type constructors:
1. They can be emitted local to the type check block/type check file.
2. They can be emitted as static `ngTypeCtor` field into the directive
itself.
The first strategy is preferred, as it avoids having to update the
directive type which would cause a more expensive rebuild. However, this
strategy is not suitable for directives that have constrained generic
types, as those constraints would need to be present on the local type
constructor declaration. This is not trivial, as it requires that any
type references within a type parameter's constraint are imported into
the local context of the type check block.
For example, lets consider the `NgForOf` directive from '@angular/core'
looks as follows:
```typescript
import {NgIterable} from '@angular/core';
export class NgForOf<T, U extends NgIterable<T>> {}
```
The type constructor will then have the signature:
`(o: Pick<i1.NgForOf<T, U>, 'ngForOf'>) => i1.NgForOf<T, U>`
Notice how this refers to the type parameters `T` and `U`, so the type
constructor needs to be emitted into a scope where those types are
available, _and_ have the correct constraints.
Previously, the template type checker would detect the situation where a
type parameter is constrained, and would emit the type constructor
using strategy 2; within the directive type itself. This approach makes
any type references within the generic type constraints lexically
available:
```typescript
export class NgForOf<T, U extends NgIterable<T>> {
static ngTypeCtor<T = any, U extends NgIterable<T> = any>
(o: Pick<NgForOf<T, U>, 'ngForOf'>): NgForOf<T, U> { return null!; }
}
```
This commit introduces the ability to emit a type parameter with
constraints into a different context, under the condition that it can
be imported from an absolute module. This allows a generic type
constructor to be emitted into a type check block or type check file
according to strategy 1, as imports have been generated for all type
references within generic type constraints. For example:
```typescript
import * as i0 from '@angular/core';
import * as i1 from '@angular/common';
const _ctor1: <T = any, U extends i0.NgIterable<T> = any>
(o: Pick<i1.NgForOf<T, U>, 'ngForOf'>) => i1.NgForOf<T, U> = null!;
```
Notice how the generic type constraint of `U` has resulted in an import
of `@angular/core`, and the `NgIterable` is transformed into a qualified
name during the emitting process.
Resolves FW-1739
PR Close#34021
Angular View Engine uses global knowledge to compile the following code:
```typescript
export class Base {
constructor(private vcr: ViewContainerRef) {}
}
@Directive({...})
export class Dir extends Base {
// constructor inherited from base
}
```
Here, `Dir` extends `Base` and inherits its constructor. To create a `Dir`
the arguments to this inherited constructor must be obtained via dependency
injection. View Engine is able to generate a correct factory for `Dir` to do
this because via metadata it knows the arguments of `Base`'s constructor,
even if `Base` is declared in a different library.
In Ivy, DI is entirely a runtime concept. Currently `Dir` is compiled with
an ngDirectiveDef field that delegates its factory to `getInheritedFactory`.
This looks for some kind of factory function on `Base`, which comes up
empty. This case looks identical to an inheritance chain with no
constructors, which works today in Ivy.
Both of these cases will now become an error in this commit. If a decorated
class inherits from an undecorated base class, a diagnostic is produced
informing the user of the need to either explicitly declare a constructor or
to decorate the base class.
PR Close#34460
Adds a compilation error if the consumer tries to pass in an undecorated class into the `providers` of an `NgModule`, or the `providers`/`viewProviders` arrays of a `Directive`/`Component`.
PR Close#34460
The function `makeTemplateDiagnostic` was accepting an error code of type
`number`, making it easy to accidentally pass an `ErrorCode` directly and
not convert it to an Angular diagnostic code first.
This commit refactors `makeTemplateDiagnostic` to accept `ErrorCode` up
front, and convert it internally. This is less error-prone.
PR Close#34460
Previously, ngtsc would perform scope analysis (which directives/pipes are
available inside a component's template) and template type-checking of that
template as separate steps. If a component's scope was somehow invalid (e.g.
its NgModule imported something which wasn't another NgModule), the
component was treated as not having a scope. This meant that during template
type-checking, errors would be produced for any invalid expressions/usage of
other components that should have been in the scope.
This commit changes ngtsc to skip template type-checking of a component if
its scope is erroneous (as opposed to not present in the first place). Thus,
users aren't overwhelmed with diagnostic errors for the template and are
only informed of the root cause of the problem: an invalid NgModule scope.
Fixes#33849
PR Close#34460
Previously each NgModule trait checked its own scope for valid declarations
during 'resolve'. This worked, but caused the LocalModuleScopeRegistry to
declare that NgModule scopes were valid even if they contained invalid
declarations.
This commit moves the generation of diagnostic errors to the
LocalModuleScopeRegistry where it belongs. Now the registry can consider an
NgModule's scope to be invalid if it contains invalid declarations.
PR Close#34460
The template type checker generates TypeScript expressions for any
expression that occurs in a template, so that TypeScript can check it
and produce errors. Some expressions as they occur in a template may be
translated into TypeScript code multiple times, for instance a binding
to a directive input that has a template guard.
One example would be the `NgIf` directive, which has a template guard to
narrow the type in the template as appropriate. Given the following
template:
```typescript
@Component({
template: '<div *ngIf="person">{{ person.name }}</div>'
})
class AppComponent {
person?: { name: string };
}
```
A type check block (TCB) with roughly the following structure is
created:
```typescript
function tcb(ctx: AppComponent) {
const t1 = NgIf.ngTypeCtor({ ngIf: ctx.person });
if (ctx.person) {
"" + ctx.person.name;
}
}
```
Notice how the `*ngIf="person"` binding is present twice: once in the
type constructor call and once in the `if` guard. As such, TypeScript
will check both instances and would produce duplicate errors, if any
were found.
Another instance is when the safe navigation operator is used, where an
expression such as `person?.name` is emitted into the TCB as
`person != null ? person!.name : undefined`. As can be seen, the
left-hand side expression `person` occurs twice in the TCB.
This commit adds the ability to insert markers into the TCB that
indicate that any errors within the expression should be ignored. This
is similar to `@ts-ignore`, however it can be applied more granularly.
PR Close#34417
Previously, the type checker would compute an absolute source span by
combining an expression AST node's `ParseSpan` (relative to the start of
the expression) together with the absolute offset of the expression as
represented in a `ParseSourceSpan`, to arrive at a span relative to the
start of the file. This information is now directly available on an
expression AST node in the `AST.sourceSpan` property, which can be used
instead.
PR Close#34417
Now that the source to typings matching is able to handle
aliasing of exports, there is no need to handle aliases in private
declarations analysis.
These were originally added to cope when the typings files had
to use the name that the original source files used when exporting.
PR Close#34254
Previously the identifiers used in the typings files were the same as
those used in the source files.
When the typings files and the source files do not match exactly, e.g.
when one of them is flattened, while the other is a deep tree, it is
possible for identifiers to be renamed.
This commit ensures that the correct identifier is used in typings files
when the typings file does not export the same name as the source file.
Fixes https://github.com/angular/ngcc-validation/pull/608
PR Close#34254
The naïve matching algorithm we previously used to match declarations in
source files to declarations in typings files was based only on the name
of the thing being declared. This did not handle cases where the declared
item had been exported via an alias - a common scenario when one of the two
file sets (source or typings) has been flattened, while the other has not.
The new algorithm tries to overcome this by creating two maps of export
name to declaration (i.e. `Map<string, ts.Declaration>`).
One for the source files and one for the typings files.
It then joins these two together by matching export names, resulting in a
new map that maps source declarations to typings declarations directly
(i.e. `Map<ts.Declaration, ts.Declaration>`).
This new map can handle the declaration names being different between the
source and typings as long as they are ultimately both exported with the
same alias name.
Further more, there is one map for "public exports", i.e. exported via the
root of the source tree (the entry-point), and another map for "private
exports", which are exported from individual files in the source tree but
not necessarily from the root. This second map can be used to "guess"
the mapping between exports in a deep (non-flat) file tree, which can be
used by ngcc to add required private exports to the entry-point.
Fixes#33593
PR Close#34254
In TS we can re-export imports using statements of the form:
```
export * from 'some-import';
```
This is downleveled in UMD to:
```
function factory(exports, someImport) {
function __export(m) {
for (var p in m) if (!exports.hasOwnProperty(p)) exports[p] = m[p];
}
__export(someImport);
}
```
This commit adds support for this.
PR Close#34254
In TS we can re-export imports using statements of the form:
```
export * from 'some-import';
```
This can be downleveled in CommonJS to either:
```
__export(require('some-import'));
```
or
```
var someImport = require('some-import');
__export(someImport);
```
Previously we only supported the first downleveled version.
This commit adds support for the second version.
PR Close#34254
Previously individual properties of the src bundle program were
passed to the reflection host constructors. But going forward,
more properties will be required. To prevent the signature getting
continually larger and more unwieldy, this change just passes the
whole src bundle to the constructor, allowing it to extract what it
needs.
PR Close#34254
This is not expected to have any noticeable perf impact, but it wasteful
nonetheless (and annoying when stepping through the code while debugging
`ngtsc`/`ngcc`).
PR Close#34441
This commit adds three previously missing validations to
NgModule.declarations:
1. It checks that declared classes are actually within the current
compilation.
2. It checks that declared classes are directives, components, or pipes.
3. It checks that classes are declared in at most one NgModule.
PR Close#34404
A quirk of the Angular template parser is that when parsing templates in the
"default" mode, with options specified by the user, the source mapping
information in the template AST may be inaccurate. As a result, the compiler
parses the template twice: once for "emit" and once to produce an AST with
accurate sourcemaps for diagnostic production.
Previously, only the first parse was performed during analysis. The second
parse occurred during the template type-checking phase, just in time to
produce the template type-checking file.
However, with the reuse of analysis results during incremental builds, it
makes more sense to do the diagnostic parse eagerly during analysis so that
the work isn't unnecessarily repeated in subsequent builds. This commit
refactors the `ComponentDecoratorHandler` to do both parses eagerly, which
actually cleans up some complexity around template parsing as well.
PR Close#34334
During TypeScript module resolution, a lot of filesystem requests are
done. This is quite an expensive operation, so a module resolution cache
can be used to speed up the process significantly.
This commit lets the Ivy compiler perform all module resolution with a
module resolution cache. Note that the module resolution behavior can be
changed with a custom compiler host, in which case that custom host
implementation is responsible for caching. In the case of the Angular
CLI a custom compiler host with proper module resolution caching is
already in place, so the CLI already has this optimization.
PR Close#34332
The export scope of NgModules from external compilations units, as
present in .d.ts declarations, does not change during a compilation so
can be easily shared. There was already a cache but the computed export
scope was not actually stored there. This commit fixes that.
PR Close#34332
In Ivy it's illegal for a template to write to a template variable. So the
template:
```html
<ng-template let-somevar>
<button (click)="somevar = 3">Set var to 3</button>
</ng-template>
```
is erroneous and previously would fail to compile with an assertion error
from the `TemplateDefinitionBuilder`. This error wasn't particularly user-
friendly, though, as it lacked the context of which template or where the
error occurred.
In this commit, a new check in template type-checking is added which detects
such erroneous writes and produces a true diagnostic with the appropriate
context information.
Closes#33674
PR Close#34339
Previously, the compiler performed an incremental build by analyzing and
resolving all classes in the program (even unchanged ones) and then using
the dependency graph information to determine which .js files were stale and
needed to be re-emitted. This algorithm produced "correct" rebuilds, but the
cost of re-analyzing the entire program turned out to be higher than
anticipated, especially for component-heavy compilations.
To achieve performant rebuilds, it is necessary to reuse previous analysis
results if possible. Doing this safely requires knowing when prior work is
viable and when it is stale and needs to be re-done.
The new algorithm implemented by this commit is such:
1) Each incremental build starts with knowledge of the last known good
dependency graph and analysis results from the last successful build,
plus of course information about the set of files changed.
2) The previous dependency graph's information is used to determine the
set of source files which have "logically" changed. A source file is
considered logically changed if it or any of its dependencies have
physically changed (on disk) since the last successful compilation. Any
logically unchanged dependencies have their dependency information copied
over to the new dependency graph.
3) During the `TraitCompiler`'s loop to consider all source files in the
program, if a source file is logically unchanged then its previous
analyses are "adopted" (and their 'register' steps are run). If the file
is logically changed, then it is re-analyzed as usual.
4) Then, incremental build proceeds as before, with the new dependency graph
being used to determine the set of files which require re-emitting.
This analysis reuse avoids template parsing operations in many circumstances
and significantly reduces the time it takes ngtsc to rebuild a large
application.
Future work will increase performance even more, by tackling a variety of
other opportunities to reuse or avoid work.
PR Close#34288
Previously 'analyze' in the various `DecoratorHandler`s not only extracts
information from the decorators on the classes being analyzed, but also has
several side effects within the compiler:
* it can register metadata about the types involved in global metadata
trackers.
* it can register information about which .ngfactory symbols are actually
needed.
In this commit, these side-effects are moved into a new 'register' phase,
which runs after the 'analyze' step. Currently this is a no-op refactoring
as 'register' is always called directly after 'analyze'. In the future this
opens the door for re-use of prior analysis work (with only 'register' being
called, to apply the above side effects).
Also as part of this refactoring, the reification of NgModule scope
information into the incremental dependency graph is moved to the
`NgtscProgram` instead of the `TraitCompiler` (which now only manages trait
compilation and does not have other side effects).
PR Close#34288
Prior to this commit, the `IvyCompilation` tracked the state of each matched
`DecoratorHandler` on each class in the `ts.Program`, and how they
progressed through the compilation process. This tracking was originally
simple, but had grown more complicated as the compiler evolved. The state of
each specific "target" of compilation was determined by the nullability of
a number of fields on the object which tracked it.
This commit formalizes the process of compilation of each matched handler
into a new "trait" concept. A trait is some aspect of a class which gets
created when a `DecoratorHandler` matches the class. It represents an Ivy
aspect that needs to go through the compilation process.
Traits begin in a "pending" state and undergo transitions as various steps
of compilation take place. The `IvyCompilation` class is renamed to the
`TraitCompiler`, which manages the state of all of the traits in the active
program.
Making the trait concept explicit will support future work to incrementalize
the expensive analysis process of compilation.
PR Close#34288
Previously the UMD rendering formatter assumed that
there would already be import (and an export) arguments
to the UMD factory function.
This commit adds support for this corner case.
Fixes#34138
PR Close#34353
When statically evalulating UMD code it is possible to find
that we are looking for the declaration of an identifier that
actually came from a typings file (rather than a UMD file).
Previously, the UMD reflection host would always try to use
a UMD specific algorithm for finding identifier declarations,
but when the id is actually in a typings file this resulted in the
returned declaration being the containing file of the declaration
rather than the declaration itself.
Now the UMD reflection host will check to see if the file containing
the identifier is a typings file and use the appropriate stategy.
PR Close#34356
The `ModuleWithProviders` type has an optional type parameter that
should be specified to indicate what NgModule class will be provided.
This enables the Ivy compiler to statically determine the NgModule type
from the declaration files. This type parameter will become required in
the future, however to aid in the migration the compiler will detect
code patterns where using `ModuleWithProviders` as return type is
appropriate, in which case it transforms the emitted .d.ts files to
include the generic type argument.
This should reduce the number of occurrences where `ModuleWithProviders`
is referenced without its generic type argument.
Resolves FW-389
PR Close#34235
This commit refactors the way the compiler transforms .d.ts files during
ngtsc builds. Previously the `IvyCompilation` kept track of a
`DtsFileTransformer` for each input file. Now, any number of
`DtsTransform` operations that need to be applied to a .d.ts file are
collected in the `DtsTransformRegistry`. These are then ran using a
single `DtsTransformer` so that multiple transforms can be applied
efficiently.
PR Close#34235
The metadata collector for View Engine compilations emits error symbols
for static class members that have not been initialized, which prevents
a library from building successfully when `strictMetadataEmit` is
enabled, which is recommended for libraries to avoid issues in library
consumers. This is troublesome for libraries that are adopting static
members for the Ivy template type checker: these members don't need a
value assignment as only their type is of importance, however this
causes metadata errors. As such, a library used to be required to
initialize the special static members to workaround this error,
undesirably introducing a code-size overhead in terms of emitted
JavaScript code.
This commit modifies the collector logic to specifically ignore
the special static members for Ivy's template type checker, preventing
any errors from being recorded during the metadata collection.
PR Close#34296
For Ivy's template type checker it is possible to let a directive
specify static members to allow a wider type for some input:
```typescript
export class MatSelect {
@Input() disabled: boolean;
static ngAcceptInputType_disabled: boolean | string;
}
```
This allows a binding to the `MatSelect.disabled` input to be of type
boolean or string, whereas the `disabled` property itself is only of
type boolean.
Up until now, any static `ngAcceptInputType_*` property was not
inherited for subclasses of a directive class. This is cumbersome, as
the directive's inputs are inherited, so any acceptance member should as
well. To resolve this limitation, this commit extends the flattening of
directive metadata to include the acceptance members.
Fixes#33830
Resolves FW-1759
PR Close#34296
The undecorated child migration creates a synthetic decorator, which
contained `"exportAs": ["exportName"]` as obtained from the metadata of
the parent class. This is a problem, as `exportAs` needs to specified
as a comma-separated string instead of an array. This commit fixes the
bug by transforming the array of export names back to a comma-separated
string.
PR Close#34014
When ngcc is analyzing synthetically inserted decorators from a
migration, it is typically not expected that any diagnostics are
produced. In the situation where a diagnostic is produced, however, the
diagnostic would not be reported at all. This commit ensures that
diagnostics in migrations are reported.
PR Close#34014
The compiler exports a `formatDiagnostics` function which consumers can use
to print both ts and ng diagnostics. However, this function was previously
using the "old" style TypeScript diagnostics, as opposed to the modern
diagnostic printer which uses terminal colors and prints additional context
information.
This commit updates `formatDiagnostics` to use the modern formatter, plus to
update Ivy's negative error codes to Angular 'NG' errors.
The Angular CLI needs a little more work to use this function for printing
TS diagnostics, but this commit alone should fix Bazel builds as ngc-wrapped
goes through `formatDiagnostics`.
PR Close#34234
Previously, ternary expressions were emitted as:
condExpr ? trueCase : falseCase
However, this causes problems when ternary operations are nested. In
particular, a template expression of the form:
a?.b ? c : d
would have compiled to:
a == null ? null : a.b ? c : d
The ternary operator is right-associative, so that expression is interpreted
as:
a == null ? null : (a.b ? c : d)
when in reality left-associativity is desired in this particular instance:
(a == null ? null : a.b) ? c : d
This commit adds a check in the expression translator to detect such
left-associative usages of ternaries and to enforce such associativity with
parentheses when necessary.
A test is also added for the template type-checking expression translator,
to ensure it correctly produces right-associative expressions for ternaries
in the user's template.
Fixes#34087
PR Close#34221
Previously the `rootDir` was set to the entry-point path but
this is incorrect if the source files are stored in a directory outside
the entry-point path. This is the case in the latest versions of the
Angular CDK.
Instead the `rootDir` should be the containing package path, which is
guaranteed to include all the source for the entry-point.
---
A symptom of this is an error when ngcc is trying to process the source of
an entry-point format after the entry-point's typings have already been
processed by a previous processing run.
During processing the `_toR3Reference()` function gets called which in turn
makes a call to `ReflectionHost.getDtsDeclaration()`. If the typings files
are also being processed this returns the node from the dts typings files.
But if we have already processed the typings files and are now processing
only an entry-point format without typings, the call to
`ReflectionHost.getDtsDeclaration()` returns `null`.
When this value is `null`, a JS `valueRef` is passed through as the DTS
`typeRef` to the `ReferenceEmitter`. In this case, the `ReferenceEmitter`
fails during `emit()` because no `ReferenceEmitStrategy` is able to provide
an emission:
1) The `LocalIdentifierStrategy` is not able help because in this case
`ImportMode` is `ForceNewImport`.
2) The `LogicalProjectStrategy` cannot find the JS file below the `rootDir`.
The second strategy failure is fixed by this PR.
Fixes https://github.com/angular/ngcc-validation/issues/495
PR Close#34212
Commit that updated i18n message ids rendering (e524322c43) also introduced a couple tests that relied on a previous version of `ngI18nClosureMode` flag format. The `ngI18nClosureMode` usage format was changed in the followup commit (c4ce24647b) and triggered a problem with the mentioned tests. This commit updates the tests to a new `ngI18nClosureMode` flag usage format.
PR Close#34224
If the `ngI18nClosureMode` global check actually makes it
through to the runtime, then checks for its existence should
be guarded to prevent `Reference undefined` errors in strict
mode.
(Normally, it is stripped out by dead code elimination during
build optimization.)
This comment ensures that generated template code guards
this global check.
PR Close#34211
This is a follow-up to #33997 where some new generic parameters were added without defaults which is technically a breaking change. These changes add the defaults.
PR Close#34206
Prior to this commit, if a template (for example, generated using structural directive such as *ngIf) contains `ngProjectAs` attribute, it was not included into attributes array in generated code and as a result, these templates were not matched at runtime during content projection. This commit adds the logic to append `ngProjectAs` values into corresponding element's attribute arrays, so content projection works as expected.
PR Close#34200
Fixes ngtsc incorrectly logging an unknown element diagnostic for HTML elements that are inside an SVG `foreignObject` with the `xhtml` namespace.
Fixes#34171.
PR Close#34178
By ensuring that legacy i18n message ids are rendered into the templates
of components for packages processed by ngcc, we ensure that these packages
can be used in an application that may provide translations in a legacy
format.
Fixes#34056
PR Close#34135
Placing this configuration in to the bundle avoids having to pass the
value around through lots of function calls, but also could enable
support for different behaviour per bundle in the future.
PR Close#34135
Now that `@angular/localize` can interpret multiple legacy message ids in the
metablock of a `$localize` tagged template string, this commit adds those
ids to each i18n message extracted from component templates, but only if
the `enableI18nLegacyMessageIdFormat` is not `false`.
PR Close#34135
We should only generate the `providedIn` property in injectable
defs if it has a non-null value. `null` does not communicate
any information to the runtime that isn't communicated already
by the absence of the property.
This should give us some modest code size savings.
PR Close#34116
For injectables, we currently generate a factory function in the
injectable def (prov) that delegates to the factory function in
the factory def (fac). It looks something like this:
```
factory: function(t) { return Svc.fac(t); }
```
The extra wrapper function is unnecessary since the args for
the factory functions are the same. This commit changes the
compiler to generate this instead:
```
factory: Svc.fac
```
Because we are generating less code for each injectable, we
should see some modest code size savings. AIO's main bundle
is about 1 KB smaller.
PR Close#34076
Previously, the Angular AOT compiler would always add a
`ɵprov` to injectables. But in ngcc this resulted in duplicate `ɵprov`
properties since published libraries already have this property.
Now in ngtsc, trying to add a duplicate `ɵprov` property is an error,
while in ngcc the additional property is silently not added.
// FW-1750
PR Close#34085
Prior to this commit, the unknown element can happen twice for AOT-compiled components: once during compilation and once again at runtime. Due to the fact that `schemas` information is not present on Component and NgModule defs after AOT compilation, the second check (at runtime) may fail, even though the same check was successful at compile time. This commit updates the code to avoid the second check for AOT-compiled components by checking whether `schemas` information is present in a logic that executes the unknown element check.
PR Close#34024
When creating synthesized tagged template literals, one must provide both
the "cooked" text and the "raw" (unparsed) text. Previously there were no
good APIs for creating the AST nodes with raw text for such literals.
Recently the APIs were improved to support this, and they do an extra
check to ensure that the raw text parses to be equal to the cooked text.
It turns out there is a bug in this check -
see https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/35374.
This commit works around the bug by synthesizing a "head" node and morphing
it by changing its `kind` into the required node type.
// FW-1747
PR Close#34065
Since config=ivy now sets the define=compile flag and the define=angular_ivy_enabled
flag to cause usage of Ivy, we can update all of the documentation and scripts that
reference compile=aot to use config=ivy.
PR Close#33983
Prior to this commit, all styles extracted from Component's template (defined using <style> tags) were ignored by JIT compiler, so only `styles` array values defined in @Component decorator were used. This change updates JIT compiler to take styles extracted from the template into account. It also ensures correct order where `styles` array values are applied first and template styles are applied second.
PR Close#34017
In ViewEngine we were only generating code for exported classes, however with Ivy we do it no matter whether the class has been exported or not. These changes add an extra flag that allows consumers to opt into the ViewEngine behavior. The flag works by treating non-exported classes as if they're set to `jit: true`.
Fixes#33724.
PR Close#33921
Previously, our incremental build system kept track of the changes between
the current compilation and the previous one, and used its knowledge of
inter-file dependencies to evaluate the impact of each change and emit the
right set of output files.
However, a problem arose if the compiler was not able to extract a
dependency graph successfully. This typically happens if the input program
contains errors. In this case the Angular analysis part of compilation is
never executed.
If a file changed in one of these failed builds, in the next build it
appears unchanged. This means that the compiler "forgets" to emit it!
To fix this problem, the compiler needs to know the set of changes made
_since the last successful build_, not simply since the last invocation.
This commit changes the incremental state system to much more explicitly
pass information from the previous to the next compilation, and in the
process to keep track of changes across multiple failed builds, until the
program can be analyzed successfully and the results of those changes
incorporated into the emit plan.
Fixes#32214
PR Close#33971
Under bazel and Ivy we don't need the shim files to be emmited by default.
We still need to the shims for blaze however because google3 code imports them.
This improves build latency by 1-2 seconds per ng_module target.
PR Close#33765
In a package.json file, the "typings" or "types" field could be an array
of typings files. ngcc would previously crash unexpectedly for such
packages, as it assumed that the typings field would be a string. This
commit lets ngcc skip over such packages, as having multiple typing
entry-points is not supported for Angular packages so it is safe to
ignore them.
Fixes#33646
PR Close#33973
Recently the ngtsc translator was modified to be more `ScriptTarget`
aware, which basically means that it will not generate non-ES5 code
when the output format is ES5 or similar.
This commit enhances that change by also "downleveling" localized
messages. In ES2015 the messages use tagged template literals, which
are not available in ES5.
PR Close#33857
Due to the fact that Tsickle runs between analyze and transform phases in Angular, Tsickle may transform nodes (add comments with type annotations for Closure) that we captured during the analyze phase. As a result, some patterns where a function is returned from another function may trigger automatic semicolon insertion, which breaks the code (makes functions return `undefined` instead of a function). In order to avoid the problem, this commit updates the code to wrap all functions in some expression ("privders" and "viewProviders") in parentheses. More info can be found in Tsickle source code here: d797426257/src/jsdoc_transformer.ts (L1021)
PR Close#33609
When ngtsc comes across a source file during partial evaluation, it
would determine all exported symbols from that module and evaluate their
values greedily. This greedy evaluation strategy introduces unnecessary
work and can fall into infinite recursion when the evaluation result of
an exported expression would circularly depend on the source file. This
would primarily occur in CommonJS code, where the `exports` variable can
be used to refer to an exported variable. This variable would be
resolved to the source file itself, thereby greedily evaluating all
exported symbols and thus ending up evaluating the `exports` variable
again. This variable would be resolved to the source file itself,
thereby greedily evaluating all exported symbols and thus ending u
evaluating the `exports` variable again. This variable would be
resolved to the source file itself, thereby greedily evaluating all
exported symbols and thus ending up evaluating the `exports` variable
again. This variable would be resolved to the source file itself,
thereby greedily evaluating all exported symbols and thus ending up
evaluating the `exports` variable again. This went on for some time
until all stack frames were exhausted.
This commit introduces a `ResolvedModule` that delays the evaluation of
its exports until they are actually requested. This avoids the circular
dependency when evaluating `exports`, thereby fixing the issue.
Fix#33734
PR Close#33772
The template type checker generates code to check directive inputs and
outputs, whose name may contain characters that can not be used as
identifier in TypeScript. Prior to this change, such names would be
emitted into the generated code as is, resulting in invalid code and
unexpected template type check errors.
This commit fixes the bug by representing the potentially invalid names
as string literal instead of raw identifier.
Fixes#33590
PR Close#33741
This commit transforms the setClassMetadata calls generated by ngtsc from:
```typescript
/*@__PURE__*/ setClassMetadata(...);
```
to:
```typescript
/*@__PURE__*/ (function() {
setClassMetadata(...);
})();
```
Without the IIFE, terser won't remove these function calls because the
function calls have arguments that themselves are function calls or other
impure expressions. In order to make the whole block be DCE-ed by terser,
we wrap it into IIFE and mark the IIFE as pure.
It should be noted that this change doesn't have any impact on CLI* with
build-optimizer, which removes the whole setClassMetadata block within
the webpack loader, so terser or webpack itself don't get to see it at
all. This is done to prevent cross-chunk retention issues caused by
webpack's internal module registry.
* actually we do expect a short-term size regression while
https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/pull/16228
is merged and released in the next rc of the CLI. But long term this
change does nothing to CLI + build-optimizer configuration and is done
primarly to correct the seemingly correct but non-function PURE annotation
that builds not using build-optimizer could rely on.
PR Close#33337
NgModules in Ivy have a definition which contains various different bits
of metadata about the module. In particular, this metadata falls into two
categories:
* metadata required to use the module at runtime (for bootstrapping, etc)
in AOT-only applications.
* metadata required to depend on the module from a JIT-compiled app.
The latter metadata consists of the module's declarations, imports, and
exports. To support JIT usage, this metadata must be included in the
generated code, especially if that code is shipped to NPM. However, because
this metadata preserves the entire NgModule graph (references to all
directives and components in the app), it needs to be removed during
optimization for AOT-only builds.
Previously, this was done with a clever design:
1. The extra metadata was added by a function called `setNgModuleScope`.
A call to this function was generated after each NgModule.
2. This function call was marked as "pure" with a comment and used
`noSideEffects` internally, which causes optimizers to remove it.
The effect was that in dev mode or test mode (which use JIT), no optimizer
runs and the full NgModule metadata was available at runtime. But in
production (presumably AOT) builds, the optimizer runs and removes the JIT-
specific metadata.
However, there are cases where apps that want to use JIT in production, and
still make an optimized build. In this case, the JIT-specific metadata would
be erroneously removed. This commit solves that problem by adding an
`ngJitMode` global variable which guards all `setNgModuleScope` calls. An
optimizer can be configured to statically define this global to be `false`
for AOT-only builds, causing the extra metadata to be stripped.
A configuration for Terser used by the CLI is provided in `tooling.ts` which
sets `ngJitMode` to `false` when building AOT apps.
PR Close#33671
The Ivy template type-checker is capable of inferring the type of a
structural directive (such as NgForOf<T>). Previously, this was done with
fullTemplateTypeCheck: true, even if strictTemplates was false. View Engine
previously did not do this inference, and so this causes breakages if the
type of the template context is not what the user expected.
In particular, consider the template:
```html
<div *ngFor="let user of users as all">
{{user.index}} out of {{all.length}}
</div>
```
As long as `users` is an array, this seems reasonable, because it appears
that `all` is an alias for the `users` array. However, this is misleading.
In reality, `NgForOf` is rendered with a template context that contains
both a `$implicit` value (for the loop variable `user`) as well as a
`ngForOf` value, which is the actual value assigned to `all`. The type of
`NgForOf`'s template context is `NgForContext<T>`, which declares `ngForOf`'s
type to be `NgIterable<T>`, which does not have a `length` property (due to
its incorporation of the `Iterable` type).
This commit stops the template type-checker from inferring template context
types unless strictTemplates is set (and strictInputTypes is not disabled).
Fixes#33527.
PR Close#33537
This commit changes the reporting of watch mode diagnostics for ngtsc to use
the same formatting as non-watch mode diagnostics. This prints rich and
contextual errors even in watch mode, which previously was not the case.
Fixes#32213
PR Close#33862
Previously, the ngtsc compiler attempted to reuse analysis work from the
previous program during an incremental build. To do this, it had to prove
that the work was safe to reuse - that no changes made to the new program
would invalidate the previous analysis.
The implementation of this had a significant design flaw: if the previous
program had errors, the previous analysis would be missing significant
information, and the dependency graph extracted from it would not be
sufficient to determine which files should be re-analyzed to fill in the
gaps. This often meant that the build output after an error was resolved
would be wholly incorrect.
This commit switches ngtsc to take a simpler approach to incremental
rebuilds. Instead of attempting to reuse prior analysis work, the entire
program is re-analyzed with each compilation. This is actually not as
expensive as one might imagine - analysis is a fairly small part of overall
compilation time.
Based on the dependency graph extracted during this analysis, the compiler
then can make accurate decisions on whether to emit specific files. A new
suite of tests is added to validate behavior in the presence of source code
level errors.
This new approach is dramatically simpler than the previous algorithm, and
should always produce correct results for a semantically correct program.s
Fixes#32388Fixes#32214
PR Close#33862
Originally, QueryList implemented Iterable and provided a Symbol.iterator
on its prototype. This caused issues with tree-shaking, so QueryList was
refactored and the Symbol.iterator added in its constructor instead. As
part of this change, QueryList no longer implemented Iterable directly.
Unfortunately, this meant that QueryList was no longer assignable to
Iterable or, consequently, NgIterable. NgIterable is used for NgFor's input,
so this meant that QueryList was not usable (in a type sense) for NgFor
iteration. View Engine's template type checking would not catch this, but
Ivy's did.
As a fix, this commit adds the declaration (but not the implementation) of
the Symbol.iterator function back to QueryList. This has no runtime effect,
so it doesn't affect tree-shaking of QueryList, but it ensures that
QueryList is assignable to NgIterable and thus usable with NgFor.
Fixes#29842
PR Close#33536
Previously, the compiler assumed that all TS files logically within a
project existed under one or more "root directories". If the TS compiler
option `rootDir` or `rootDirs` was set, they would dictate the root
directories in use, otherwise the current directory was used.
Unfortunately this assumption was unfounded - it's common for projects
without explicit `rootDirs` to import from files outside the current
working directory. In such cases the `LogicalProjectStrategy` would attempt
to generate imports into those files, and fail. This would lead to no
`ReferenceEmitStrategy` being able to generate an import, and end in a
compiler assertion failure.
This commit introduces a new strategy to use when there are no `rootDirs`
explicitly present, the `RelativePathStrategy`. It uses simpler, filesystem-
relative paths to generate imports, even to files above the current working
directory.
Fixes#33659Fixes#33562
PR Close#33828
This commit adds the ability to change directories using the compiler's
internal filesystem abstraction. This is a prerequisite for writing tests
which are sensitive to the current working directory.
In addition to supporting the `chdir()` operation, this commit also fixes
`getDefaultLibLocation()` for mock filesystems to not assume `node_modules`
is in the current directory, but to resolve it similarly to how Node does
by progressively looking higher in the directory tree.
PR Close#33828
Adds support for chaining of `styleProp`, `classProp` and `stylePropInterpolateX` instructions whenever possible which should help generate less code. Note that one complication here is for `stylePropInterpolateX` instructions where we have to break into multiple chains if there are other styling instructions inbetween the interpolations which helps maintain the execution order.
PR Close#33837
The ReflectionHost supports enumeration of constructor parameters, and one
piece of information it returns describes the origin of the parameter's
type. Parameter types come in two flavors: local (the type is not imported
from anywhere) or non-local (the type comes via an import).
ngcc incorrectly classified all type parameters as 'local', because in the
source files that ngcc processes the type parameter is a real ts.Identifer.
However, that identifier may still have come from an import and thus might
be non-local.
This commit changes ngcc's ReflectionHost(s) to properly recognize and
report these non-local type references.
Fixes#33677
PR Close#33901
Since i18n messages are mapped to `$localize` tagged template strings,
the "raw" version must be properly escaped. Otherwise TS will throw an
error such as:
```
Error: Debug Failure. False expression: Expected argument 'text' to be the normalized (i.e. 'cooked') version of argument 'rawText'.
```
This commit ensures that we properly escape these raw strings before creating
TS AST nodes from them.
PR Close#33820
The `:` char is used as a metadata marker in `$localize` messages.
If this char appears in the metadata it must be escaped, as `\:`.
Previously, although the `:` char was being escaped, the TS AST
being generated was not correct and so it was being output double
escaped, which meant that it appeared in the rendered message.
As of TS 3.6.2 the "raw" string can be specified when creating tagged
template AST nodes, so it is possible to correct this.
PR Close#33820
In View Engine, providers which neither used `useValue`, `useClass`,
`useFactory` or `useExisting`, were interpreted differently.
e.g.
```
{provide: X} -> {provide: X, useValue: undefined}, // this is how it works in View Engine
{provide: X} -> {provide: X, useClass: X}, // this is how it works in Ivy
```
The missing-injectable migration should migrate such providers to the
explicit `useValue` provider. This ensures that there is no unexpected
behavioral change when updating to v9.
PR Close#33709
In #32902 a bug was supposedly fixed where internal classes as used
within `ModuleWithProviders` are publicly exported, even when the
typings file already contained the generic type on the
`ModuleWithProviders`. This fix turns out to have been incomplete, as
the `ModuleWithProviders` analysis is not done when not processing the
typings files.
The effect of this bug is that formats that are processed after the
initial format had been processed would not have exports for internal
symbols, resulting in "export '...' was not found in '...'" errors.
This commit fixes the bug by always running the `ModuleWithProviders`
analyzer. An integration test has been added that would fail prior to
this change.
Fixes#33701
PR Close#33875
ngcc has a basic integration test infrastructure that downlevels
TypeScript code into bundle formats that need to be processed by ngcc.
Until now, only ES5 bundles were created with a flat structure, however
more complex scenarios require an APF-like layout containing multiple
bundle formats.
PR Close#33875
Some declaration files may not be referenced from an entry-point's
main typings file, as it may declare types that are only used internally.
ngcc has logic to include declaration files based on all source files,
to ensure internal declaration files are available.
For packages following APF layout, however, this logic was insufficient.
Consider an entry-point with base path of `/esm2015/testing` and typings
residing in `/testing`, the file
`/esm2015/testing/src/nested/internal.js` has its typings file at
`/testing/src/nested/internal.d.ts`. Previously, the declaration was
assumed to be located at `/esm2015/testing/testing/internal.d.ts` (by
means of `/esm2015/testing/src/nested/../../testing/internal.d.ts`)
which is not where the declaration file can be found. This commit
resolves the issue by looking in the correct directory.
PR Close#33875
In flat bundle formats, multiple classes that have the same name can be
suffixed to become unique. In ES5-like bundles this results in the outer
declaration from having a different name from the "implementation"
declaration within the class' IIFE, as the implementation declaration
may not have been suffixed.
As an example, the following code would fail to have a `Directive`
decorator as ngcc would search for `__decorate` calls that refer to
`AliasedDirective$1` by name, whereas the `__decorate` call actually
uses the `AliasedDirective` name.
```javascript
var AliasedDirective$1 = /** @class */ (function () {
function AliasedDirective() {}
AliasedDirective = tslib_1.__decorate([
Directive({ selector: '[someDirective]' }),
], AliasedDirective);
return AliasedDirective;
}());
```
This commit fixes the problem by not relying on comparing names, but
instead finding the declaration and matching it with both the outer
and inner declaration.
PR Close#33878
The earlier update to nodejs rules 0.40.0 fixes the cross-platform RBE issues with nodejs_binary. This commit adds a work-around for rules_webtesting cross-platform RBE issues.
PR Close#33708
The following files are consumed only by the language service and do not
have to be in compiler-cli:
1. expression_diagnostics.ts
2. expression_type.ts
3. typescript_symbols.ts
4. symbols.ts
PR Close#33809
Previously, ngcc's `Renderer` would add some constants in the processed
files which were emitted as ES2015 code (e.g. `const` declarations).
This would result in invalid ES5 generated code that would break when
run on browsers that do not support the emitted format.
This commit fixes it by adding a `printStatement()` method to
`RenderingFormatter`, which can convert statements to JavaScript code in
a suitable format for the corresponding `RenderingFormatter`.
Additionally, the `translateExpression()` and `translateStatement()`
ngtsc helper methods are augmented to accept an extra hint to know
whether the code needs to be translated to ES5 format or not.
Fixes#32665
PR Close#33514
While processing class metadata, ngtsc generates a `setClassMetadata()`
call which (among other things) contains info about property decorators.
Previously, processing getter/setter pairs with some of ngcc's
`ReflectionHost`s resulted in multiple metadata entries for the same
property, which resulted in duplicate object keys, which in turn causes
an error in ES5 strict mode.
This commit fixes it by ensuring that there are no duplicate property
names in the `setClassMetadata()` calls.
In addition, `generateSetClassMetadataCall()` is updated to treat
`ClassMember#decorators: []` the same as `ClassMember.decorators: null`
(i.e. omitting the `ClassMember` from the generated `setClassMetadata()`
call). Alternatively, ngcc's `ReflectionHost`s could be updated to do
this transformation (`decorators: []` --> `decorators: null`) when
reflecting on class members, but this would require changes in many
places and be less future-proof.
For example, given a class such as:
```ts
class Foo {
@Input() get bar() { return 'bar'; }
set bar(value: any) {}
}
```
...previously the generated `setClassMetadata()` call would look like:
```ts
ɵsetClassMetadata(..., {
bar: [{type: Input}],
bar: [],
});
```
The same class will now result in a call like:
```ts
ɵsetClassMetadata(..., {
bar: [{type: Input}],
});
```
Fixes#30569
PR Close#33514
Previously, due to a bug a `Context` with `isStatement: false` could be
returned in places where a `Context` with `isStatement: true` was
requested. As a result, some statements would be unnecessarily wrapped
in parenthesis.
This commit fixes the bug in `Context#withStatementMode` to always
return a `Context` with the correct `isStatement` value. Note that this
does not have any impact on the generated code other than avoiding some
superfluous parenthesis on certain statements.
PR Close#33514
Currently if a consumer does something like the following, the object literal will be shared across the two elements and any instances of the component template. The same applies to array literals:
```
<div [someDirective]="{}"></div>
<div [someDirective]="{}"></div>
```
These changes make it so that we generate a pure function even if an object is constant so that each instance gets its own object.
Note that the original design for this fix included moving the pure function factories into the `consts` array. In the process of doing so I realized that pure function are also used inside of directive host bindings which means that we don't have access to the `consts`.
These changes also:
* Fix an issue that meant that the `pureFunction0` instruction could only be run during creation mode.
* Make the `getConstant` utility slightly more convenient to use. This isn't strictly required for these changes to work, but I had made it as a part of a larger refactor that I ended up reverting.
PR Close#33705
The reflection hosts have been updated to support the following
code forms, which were found in some minified library code:
* The class IIFE not being wrapped in parentheses.
* Calls to `__decorate()` being combined with the IIFE return statement.
PR Close#33777
Previously we only removed `__decorate()` calls that looked like:
```
SomeClass = __decorate(...);
```
But in some minified scenarios this call gets wrapped up with the
return statement of the IIFE.
```
return SomeClass = __decorate(...);
```
This is now removed also, leaving just the return statement:
```
return SomeClass;
```
PR Close#33777
The `dist/` directory has a duplicate `package.json` pointing to the
same files, which (under certain configurations) can causes ngcc to try
to process the files twice and fail.
This commit adds a default ngcc config for `ng2-dragula` to ignore the
`dist/` entry-point.
Fixes#33718
PR Close#33797
During incremental compilations, ngtsc needs to know which metadata
from a previous compilation can be reused, versus which metadata has to
be recomputed as some dependency was updated. Changes to
directives/components should cause the NgModule in which they are
declared to be recompiled, as the NgModule's compilation is dependent
on its directives/components.
When a dependent source file of a directive/component is updated,
however, a more subtle dependency should also cause to NgModule's source
file to be invalidated. During the reconciliation of state from a
previous compilation into the new program, the component's source file
is invalidated because one of its dependency has changed, ergo the
NgModule needs to be invalidated as well. Up until now, this implicit
dependency was not imposed on the NgModule. Additionally, any change to
a dependent file may influence the module scope to change, so all
components within the module must be invalidated as well.
This commit fixes the bug by introducing additional file dependencies,
as to ensure a proper rebuild of the module scope and its components.
Fixes#32416
PR Close#33522
When the Angular compiler is operated through the ngc binary in watch
mode, changing a template in an external file would not cause the
component to be recompiled if Ivy is enabled.
There was a problem with how a cached compiler host was present that was
unaware of the changed resources, therefore failing to trigger a
recompilation of a component whenever its template changes. This commit
fixes the issue by ensuring that information about modified resources is
correctly available to the cached compiler host.
Fixes#32869
PR Close#33551
The `ngInjectableDef` property was renamed to `ɵprov`, but core must
still support both because there are published libraries that use the
older term.
We are only interested in such properties that are defined directly on
the type being injected, not on base classes. So there is a check that
the defintion is specifically for the given type.
Previously if you tried to inject a class that had `ngInjectableDef` but
also inherited `ɵprov` then the check would fail on the `ɵprov` property
and never even try the `ngInjectableDef` property resulting in a failed
injection.
This commit fixes this by attempting to find each of the properties
independently.
Fixes https://github.com/angular/ngcc-validation/pull/526
PR Close#33732
Chains multiple listener instructions on a particular element into a single call which results in less generated code. Also handles listeners on templates, host listeners and synthetic host listeners.
PR Close#33720
Previously the renderers were fixed so that they inserted extra
"adjacent" statements after the last static property of classes.
In order to help the build-optimizer (in Angular CLI) to be able to
tree-shake classes effectively, these statements should also appear
after any helper calls, such as `__decorate()`.
This commit moves the computation of this positioning into the
`NgccReflectionHost` via the `getEndOfClass()` method, which
returns the last statement that is related to the class.
FW-1668
PR Close#33689
Similar to https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/33633, this commit is
needed to fix an outage with the Angular Kythe indexer.
Crash logs:
```
TypeError: Cannot read property 'text' of undefined
at NodeObject.getFullText (typescript/stable/lib/typescript.js:121443:57)
at FactoryGenerator.generate (angular2/rc/packages/compiler-cli/src/ngtsc/shims/src/factory_generator.ts:67:34)
at GeneratedShimsHostWrapper.getSourceFile (angular2/rc/packages/compiler-cli/src/ngtsc/shims/src/host.ts:88:26)
at findSourceFile (typescript/stable/lib/typescript.js:90654:29)
at typescript/stable/lib/typescript.js:90553:85
at getSourceFileFromReferenceWorker (typescript/stable/lib/typescript.js:90520:34)
at processSourceFile (typescript/stable/lib/typescript.js:90553:13)
at processRootFile (typescript/stable/lib/typescript.js:90383:13)
at typescript/stable/lib/typescript.js:89399:60
at Object.forEach (typescript/stable/lib/typescript.js:280:30)
```
PR Close#33660
When ngcc is configured to generate reexports for a package using the
`generateDeepReexports` configuration option, it could incorrectly
render the reexports as often as the number of compiled classes in the
declaration file. This would cause compilation errors due to duplicated
declarations.
PR Close#33658
When the Angular compiler is operated through the ngc binary in watch
mode, changing a template in an external file would not cause the
component to be recompiled if Ivy is enabled.
There was a problem with how a cached compiler host was present that was
unaware of the changed resources, therefore failing to trigger a
recompilation of a component whenever its template changes. This commit
fixes the issue by ensuring that information about modified resources is
correctly available to the cached compiler host.
Fixes#32869
PR Close#33551
When template type checking is configured with `strictDomEventTypes` or
`strictOutputEventTypes` disabled, in compilation units that have
`noImplicitAny` enabled but `strictNullChecks` disabled, a template type
checking error could be produced for certain event handlers.
The error is avoided by letting an event handler in the generated TCB
always have an explicit `any` return type.
Fixes#33528
PR Close#33550
We already have special cases for the `__spread` helper function and with this change we handle the new tslib helper introduced in version 1.10 `__spreadArrays`.
For more context see: https://github.com/microsoft/tslib/releases/tag/1.10.0Fixes: #33614
PR Close#33617
This commit fixes a crash in the Angular Kythe indexer caused by failure
to retrieve `SourceFile` in a `Statement`.
Crash logs:
TypeError: Cannot read property 'text' of undefined
at Object.getTokenPosOfNode (typescript/stable/lib/typescript.js:8957:72)
at NodeObject.getStart (typescript/stable/lib/typescript.js:121419:23)
at NodeObject.getLeadingTriviaWidth (typescript/stable/lib/typescript.js:121439:25)
at FactoryGenerator.generate (angular2/rc/packages/compiler-cli/src/ngtsc/shims/src/factory_generator.ts:64:49)
at GeneratedShimsHostWrapper.getSourceFile (angular2/rc/packages/compiler-cli/src/ngtsc/shims/src/host.ts:88:26)
at findSourceFile (typescript/stable/lib/typescript.js:90654:29)
at typescript/stable/lib/typescript.js:90553:85
at getSourceFileFromReferenceWorker (typescript/stable/lib/typescript.js:90520:34)
at processSourceFile (typescript/stable/lib/typescript.js:90553:13)
at processRootFile (typescript/stable/lib/typescript.js:90383:13)
PR Close#33588
When decorating classes with ivy definitions (e.g. `ɵfac` or `ɵdir`)
the inner name of the class declaration must be used.
This is because in ES5 the definitions are inside the class's IIFE
where the outer declaration has not yet been initialized.
PR Close#33533
In ES5 the class consists of an outer variable declaration that is
initialised by an IIFE. Inside the IIFE the class is implemented by
an inner function declaration that is returned from the IIFE.
This inner declaration may have a different name to the outer
declaration.
This commit overrides `getInternalNameOfClass()` and
`getAdjacentNameOfClass()` in `Esm5ReflectionHost` with methods that
can find the correct inner declaration name identifier.
PR Close#33533
When compiling an Angular decorator (e.g. Directive), @angular/compiler
generates an 'expression' to be added as a static definition field
on the class, a 'type' which will be added for that field to the .d.ts
file, and a statement adjacent to the class that calls `setClassMetadata()`.
Previously, the same WrappedNodeExpr of the class' ts.Identifier was used
within each of this situations.
In the ngtsc case, this is proper. In the ngcc case, if the class being
compiled is within an ES5 IIFE, the outer name of the class may have
changed. Thus, the class has both an inner and outer name. The outer name
should continue to be used elsewhere in the compiler and in 'type'.
The 'expression' will live within the IIFE, the `internalType` should be used.
The adjacent statement will also live within the IIFE, the `adjacentType` should be used.
This commit introduces `ReflectionHost.getInternalNameOfClass()` and
`ReflectionHost.getAdjacentNameOfClass()`, which the compiler can use to
query for the correct name to use.
PR Close#33533
This commit moves nested i18n section detection to an earlier stage where we convert HTML AST to Ivy AST. This also gives a chance to produce better diagnistic message for nested i18n sections, that also includes a file name and location.
PR Close#33583
These exports are no longer used by the CLI since 7.1.0. Since major versions of the CLI are now locked to major versions of the framework, a CLI user will not be able to use FW 9.0+ on an outdated version (<7.1.0) of the CLI that uses these old APIs.
PR Close#33242
During static evaluation of expressions within ngtsc, it may occur that
certain expressions or just parts thereof cannot be statically
interpreted for some reason. The static interpreter keeps track of the
failure reason and the code path that was evaluated by means of
`DynamicValue`, which will allow descriptive errors. In some situations
however, the static interpreter would throw an exception instead,
resulting in a crash of the compilation. Not only does this cause
non-descriptive errors, more importantly does it prevent the evaluated
result from being partial, i.e. parts of the result can be dynamic if
their value does not have to be statically available to the compiler.
This commit refactors the static interpreter to never throw errors for
certain expressions that it cannot evaluate.
Resolves FW-1582
PR Close#33453
Previously the compiler would crash if a pipe was encountered which did not
match any pipe in the scope of a template.
This commit introduces a new diagnostic error for unknown pipes instead.
PR Close#33454
Previously the template binder would crash when encountering an unknown
localref (# reference) such as `<div #ref="foo">` when no directive has
`exportAs: "foo"`.
With this commit, the compiler instead generates a template diagnostic error
informing the user about the invalid reference.
PR Close#33454
Previously declarations that were imported via a namespace import
were given the same `bestGuessOwningModule` as the context
where they were imported to. This causes problems with resolving
`ModuleWithProviders` that have a type that has been imported in
this way, causing errors like:
```
ERROR in Symbol UIRouterModule declared in
.../@uirouter/angular/uiRouterNgModule.d.ts
is not exported from
.../@uirouter/angular/uirouter-angular.d.ts
(import into .../src/app/child.module.ts)
```
This commit modifies the `TypescriptReflectionHost.getDirectImportOfIdentifier()`
method so that it also understands how to attach the correct `viaModule` to
the identifier of the namespace import.
Resolves#32166
PR Close#33495
Now that we've replaced `ngBaseDef` with an abstract directive definition, there are a lot more cases where we generate a directive definition without a selector. These changes make it so that we don't generate the `selectors` array if it's going to be empty.
PR Close#33431
Removes `ngBaseDef` from the compiler and any runtime code that was still referring to it. In the cases where we'd previously generate a base def we now generate a definition for an abstract directive.
PR Close#33264
For abstract directives, i.e. directives without a selector, it may
happen that their constructor is called explicitly from a subclass,
hence its parameters are not required to be valid for Angular's DI
purposes. Prior to this commit however, having an abstract directive
with a constructor that has parameters that are not eligible for
Angular's DI would produce a compilation error.
A similar scenario may occur for `@Injectable`s, where an explicit
`use*` definition allows for the constructor to be irrelevant. For
example, the situation where `useFactory` is specified allows for the
constructor to be called explicitly with any value, so its constructor
parameters are not required to be valid. For `@Injectable`s this is
handled by generating a DI factory function that throws.
This commit implements the same solution for abstract directives, such
that a compilation error is avoided while still producing an error at
runtime if the type is instantiated implicitly by Angular's DI
mechanism.
Fixes#32981
PR Close#32987
In Angular View Engine, there are two kinds of decorator inheritance:
1) both the parent and child classes have decorators
This case is supported by InheritDefinitionFeature, which merges some fields
of the definitions (such as the inputs or queries).
2) only the parent class has a decorator
If the child class is missing a decorator, the compiler effectively behaves
as if the parent class' decorator is applied to the child class as well.
This is the "undecorated child" scenario, and this commit adds a migration
to ngcc to support this pattern in Ivy.
This migration has 2 phases. First, the NgModules of the application are
scanned for classes in 'declarations' which are missing decorators, but
whose base classes do have decorators. These classes are the undecorated
children. This scan is performed recursively, so even if a declared class
has a base class that itself inherits a decorator, this case is handled.
Next, a synthetic decorator (either @Component or @Directive) is created
on the child class. This decorator copies some critical information such
as 'selector' and 'exportAs', as well as supports any decorated fields
(@Input, etc). A flag is passed to the decorator compiler which causes a
special feature `CopyDefinitionFeature` to be included on the compiled
definition. This feature copies at runtime the remaining aspects of the
parent definition which `InheritDefinitionFeature` does not handle,
completing the "full" inheritance of the child class' decorator from its
parent class.
PR Close#33362
When upgrading an Angular application to a new version using the Angular
CLI, built-in schematics are being run to update user code from
deprecated patterns to the new way of working. For libraries that have
been built for older versions of Angular however, such schematics have
not been executed which means that deprecated code patterns may still be
present, potentially resulting in incorrect behavior.
Some of the logic of schematics has been ported over to ngcc migrations,
which are automatically run on libraries. These migrations achieve the
same goal of the regular schematics, but operating on published library
sources instead of used code.
PR Close#33362
Previously, the (currently disabled) undecorated parent migration in
ngcc would produce errors when a base class could not be determined
statically or when a class extends from a class in another package. This
is not ideal, as it would cause the library to fail compilation without
a workaround, whereas those problems are not guaranteed to cause issues.
Additionally, inheritance chains were not handled. This commit reworks
the migration to address these limitations.
PR Close#33362
In ngcc's migration system, synthetic decorators can be injected into a
compilation to ensure that certain classes are compiled with Angular
logic, where the original library code did not include the necessary
decorators. Prior to this change, synthesized decorators would have a
fake AST structure as associated node and a made-up identifier. In
theory, this may introduce issues downstream:
1) a decorator's node is used for diagnostics, so it must have position
information. Having fake AST nodes without a position is therefore a
problem. Note that this is currently not a problem in practice, as
injected synthesized decorators would not produce any diagnostics.
2) the decorator's identifier should refer to an imported symbol.
Therefore, it is required that the symbol is actually imported.
Moreover, bundle formats such as UMD and CommonJS use namespaces for
imports, so a bare `ts.Identifier` would not be suitable to use as
identifier. This was also not a problem in practice, as the identifier
is only used in the `setClassMetadata` generated code, which is omitted
for synthetically injected decorators.
To remedy these potential issues, this commit makes a decorator's
identifier optional and switches its node over from a fake AST structure
to the class' name.
PR Close#33362
A class that is provided as Angular service is required to have an
`@Injectable()` decorator so that the compiler generates its injectable
definition for the runtime. Applications are automatically migrated
using the "missing-injectable" schematic, however libraries built for
older version of Angular may not yet satisfy this requirement.
This commit ports the "missing-injectable" schematic to a migration that
is ran when ngcc is processing a library. This ensures that any service
that is provided from an NgModule or Directive/Component will have an
`@Injectable()` decorator.
PR Close#33362
ngcc has an internal cache of computed decorator information for
reflected classes, which could previously be mutated by consumers of the
reflection host. With the ability to inject synthesized decorators, such
decorators would inadvertently be added into the array of decorators
that was owned by the internal cache of the reflection host, incorrectly
resulting in synthesized decorators to be considered real decorators on
a class. This commit fixes the issue by cloning the cached array before
returning it.
PR Close#33362
This patch ensures that the `[style]` and `[class]` based bindings
are directly applied to an element's style and className attributes.
This patch optimizes the algorithm so that it...
- Doesn't construct an update an instance of `StylingMapArray` for
`[style]` and `[class]` bindings
- Doesn't apply `[style]` and `[class]` based entries using
`classList` and `style` (direct attributes are used instead)
- Doesn't split or iterate over all string-based tokens in a
string value obtained from a `[class]` binding.
This patch speeds up the following cases:
- `<div [class]>` and `<div class="..." [class]>`
- `<div [style]>` and `<div style="..." [style]>`
The overall speec increase is by over 5x.
PR Close#33336
The template type checking abilities of the Ivy compiler are far more
advanced than the level of template type checking that was previously
done for Angular templates. Up until now, a single compiler option
called "fullTemplateTypeCheck" was available to configure the level
of template type checking. However, now that more advanced type checking
is being done, new errors may surface that were previously not reported,
in which case it may not be feasible to fix all new errors at once.
Having only a single option to disable a large number of template type
checking capabilities does not allow for incrementally addressing newly
reported types of errors. As a solution, this commit introduces some new
compiler options to be able to enable/disable certain kinds of template
type checks on a fine-grained basis.
PR Close#33365
View Engine correctly infers the type of local refs to directives or to
<ng-template>s, just not to DOM nodes. This commit splits the
checkTypeOfReferences flag into two separate halves, allowing the compiler
to align with this behavior.
PR Close#33365
For elements that have a text attribute, it may happen that the element
is matched by a directive that consumes the attribute as an input. In
that case, the template type checker will validate the correctness of
the attribute with respect to the directive's declared type of the
input, which would typically be `boolean` for the `disabled` input.
Since empty attributes are assigned the empty string at runtime, the
template type checker would report an error for this template.
This commit introduces a strictness flag to help alleviate this
particular situation, effectively ignoring text attributes that happen
to be consumed by a directive.
PR Close#33365
During the creation of an Angular program in the compiler, a check is
done to verify whether the version of TypeScript is considered
supported, producing an error if it is not. This check was missing in
the Ivy compiler, so users may have ended up running an unsupported
TypeScript version inadvertently.
Resolves FW-1643
PR Close#33377
Recently it was made possible to have a directive without selector,
which are referred to as abstract directives. Such directives should not
be registered in an NgModule, but can still contain decorators for
inputs, outputs, queries, etc. The information from these decorators and
the `@Directive()` decorator itself needs to be registered with the
central `MetadataRegistry` so that other areas of the compiler can
request information about a given directive, an example of which is the
template type checker that needs to know about the inputs and outputs of
directives.
Prior to this change, however, abstract directives would only register
themselves with the `MetadataRegistry` as being an abstract directive,
without all of its other metadata like inputs and outputs. This meant
that the template type checker was unable to resolve the inputs and
outputs of these abstract directives, therefore failing to check them
correctly. The typical error would be that some property does not exist
on a DOM element, whereas said property should have been bound to the
abstract directive's input.
This commit fixes the problem by always registering the metadata of a
directive or component with the `MetadataRegistry`. Tests have been
added to ensure abstract directives are handled correctly in the
template type checker, together with tests to verify the form of
abstract directives in declaration files.
Fixes#30080
PR Close#33131
Often the types of an `@Input`'s field don't fully reflect the types of
assignable values. This can happen when an input has a getter/setter pair
where the getter always returns a narrow type, and the setter coerces a
wider value down to the narrow type.
For example, you could imagine an input of the form:
```typescript
@Input() get value(): string {
return this._value;
}
set value(v: {toString(): string}) {
this._value = v.toString();
}
```
Here, the getter always returns a `string`, but the setter accepts any value
that can be `toString()`'d, and coerces it to a string.
Unfortunately TypeScript does not actually support this syntax, and so
Angular users are forced to type their setters as narrowly as the getters,
even though at runtime the coercion works just fine.
To support these kinds of patterns (e.g. as used by Material), this commit
adds a compiler feature called "input coercion". When a binding is made to
the 'value' input of a directive like MatInput, the compiler will look for a
static field with the name ngAcceptInputType_value. If such a field is found
the type-checking expression for the input will use the static field's type
instead of the type for the @Input field,allowing for the expression of a
type conversion between the binding expression and the value being written
to the input's field.
To solve the case above, for example, MatInput might write:
```typescript
class MatInput {
// rest of the directive...
static ngAcceptInputType_value: {toString(): string};
}
```
FW-1475 #resolve
PR Close#33243
Prior to this change, a method call of a local template variable would
incorrectly be considered a call to a method on the component class.
For example, this pattern would produce an error:
```
<ng-template let-method>{{ method(1) }}</ng-template>
```
Here, the method call should be targeting the `$implicit` variable on
the template context, not the component class. This commit corrects the
behavior by first resolving methods in the template before falling back
on the component class.
Fixes#32900
PR Close#33132
In View Engine, with fullTemplateTypeCheck mode disabled, the type of any
inferred based on the entity being referenced. This is a bug, since the
goal with fullTemplateTypeCheck: false is for Ivy and VE to be aligned in
terms of type inference.
This commit adds a 'checkTypeOfReference' flag in the TypeCheckingConfig
to control this inference, and sets it to false when fullTemplateTypeCheck
is disabled.
PR Close#33261
Libraries can expose directive/component base classes that will be
used by consumer applications. Using such a base class from another
compilation unit works fine with "ngtsc", but when using "ngc", the
compiler will thrown an error saying that the base class is not
part of a NgModule. e.g.
```
Cannot determine the module for class X in Y! Add X to the NgModule to fix it.
```
This seems to be because the logic for distinguishing directives from
abstract directives is scoped to the current compilation unit within
ngc. This causes abstract directives from other compilation units to
be considered as actual directives (causing the exception).
PR Close#33347
When computing i18n messages for templates there are two passes.
This is because messages must be computed before any whitespace
is removed. Then on a second pass, the messages must be recreated
but reusing the message ids from the first pass.
Previously ICUs were losing their legacy ids that had been computed
via the first pass. This commit fixes that by keeping track of the
message from the first pass (`previousMessage`) for ICU placeholder
nodes.
// FW-1637
PR Close#33318
This commit adapts the private NgModule re-export system (using aliasing) to
ngcc. Not all ngcc compilations are compatible with these re-exports, as
they assume a 1:1 correspondence between .js and .d.ts files. The primary
concern here is supporting them for commonjs-only packages.
PR Close#33177
This commit refactors the aliasing system to support multiple different
AliasingHost implementations, which control specific aliasing behavior
in ngtsc (see the README.md).
A new host is introduced, the `PrivateExportAliasingHost`. This solves a
longstanding problem in ngtsc regarding support for "monorepo" style private
libraries. These are libraries which are compiled separately from the main
application, and depended upon through TypeScript path mappings. Such
libraries are frequently not in the Angular Package Format and do not have
entrypoints, but rather make use of deep import style module specifiers.
This can cause issues with ngtsc's ability to import a directive given the
module specifier of its NgModule.
For example, if the application uses a directive `Foo` from such a library
`foo`, the user might write:
```typescript
import {FooModule} from 'foo/module';
```
In this case, foo/module.d.ts is path-mapped into the program. Ordinarily
the compiler would see this as an absolute module specifier, and assume that
the `Foo` directive can be imported from the same specifier. For such non-
APF libraries, this assumption fails. Really `Foo` should be imported from
the file which declares it, but there are two problems with this:
1. The compiler would have to reverse the path mapping in order to determine
a path-mapped path to the file (maybe foo/dir.d.ts).
2. There is no guarantee that the file containing the directive is path-
mapped in the program at all.
The compiler would effectively have to "guess" 'foo/dir' as a module
specifier, which may or may not be accurate depending on how the library and
path mapping are set up.
It's strongly desirable that the compiler not break its current invariant
that the module specifier given by the user for the NgModule is always the
module specifier from which directives/pipes are imported. Thus, for any
given NgModule from a particular module specifier, it must always be
possible to import any directives/pipes from the same specifier, no matter
how it's packaged.
To make this possible, when compiling a file containing an NgModule, ngtsc
will automatically add re-exports for any directives/pipes not yet exported
by the user, with a name of the form: ɵngExportɵModuleNameɵDirectiveName
This has several effects:
1. It guarantees anyone depending on the NgModule will be able to import its
directives/pipes from the same specifier.
2. It maintains a stable name for the exported symbol that is safe to depend
on from code on NPM. Effectively, this private exported name will be a
part of the package's .d.ts API, and cannot be changed in a non-breaking
fashion.
Fixes#29361
FW-1610 #resolve
PR Close#33177
Previously, the `FileSystem` abstraction featured a `mkdir()` method. In
`NodeJSFileSystem` (the default `FileSystem` implementation used in
actual code), the method behaved similar to Node.js' `fs.mkdirSync()`
(i.e. failing if any parent directory is missing or the directory exists
already). In contrast, `MockFileSystem` (which is the basis or mock
`FileSystem` implementations used in tests) implemented `mkdir()` as an
alias to `ensureDir()`, which behaved more like Node.js'
`fs.mkdirSync()` with the `recursive` option set to `true` (i.e.
creating any missing parent directories and succeeding if the directory
exists already).
This commit fixes this inconsistency by removing the `mkdir()` method,
which was not used anyway and only keeping `ensureDir()` (which is
consistent across our different `FileSystem` implementations).
PR Close#33237
When `ngcc` is running in parallel mode (usually when run from the
command line) and the `createNewEntryPointFormats` option is set to true
(e.g. via the `--create-ivy-entry-points` command line option), it can
happen that two workers end up trying to create the same directory at
the same time. This can lead to a race condition, where both check for
the directory existence, see that the directory does not exist and both
try to create it, with the second failing due the directory's having
already been created by the first one. Note that this only affects
directories and not files, because `ngcc` tasks operate on different
sets of files.
This commit avoids this race condition by allowing `FileSystem`'s
`ensureDir()` method to not fail if one of the directories it is trying
to create already exists (and is indeed a directory). This is fine for
the `ensureDir()` method, since it's purpose is to ensure that the
specified directory exists. So, even if the `mkdir()` call failed
(because the directory exists), `ensureDir()` has still completed its
mission.
Related discussion: https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/33049#issuecomment-540485703
FW-1635 #resolve
PR Close#33237
Often the types of an `@Input`'s field don't fully reflect the types of
assignable values. This can happen when an input has a getter/setter pair
where the getter always returns a narrow type, and the setter coerces a
wider value down to the narrow type.
For example, you could imagine an input of the form:
```typescript
@Input() get value(): string {
return this._value;
}
set value(v: {toString(): string}) {
this._value = v.toString();
}
```
Here, the getter always returns a `string`, but the setter accepts any value
that can be `toString()`'d, and coerces it to a string.
Unfortunately TypeScript does not actually support this syntax, and so
Angular users are forced to type their setters as narrowly as the getters,
even though at runtime the coercion works just fine.
To support these kinds of patterns (e.g. as used by Material), this commit
adds a compiler feature called "input coercion". When a binding is made to
the 'value' input of a directive like MatInput, the compiler will look for a
static function with the name ngCoerceInput_value. If such a function is
found, the type-checking expression for the input will be wrapped in a call
to the function, allowing for the expression of a type conversion between
the binding expression and the value being written to the input's field.
To solve the case above, for example, MatInput might write:
```typescript
class MatInput {
// rest of the directive...
static ngCoerceInput_value(value: {toString(): string}): string {
return null!;
}
}
```
FW-1475 #resolve
PR Close#33243
As a hack to get the Ivy compiler ngtsc off the ground, the existing
'allowEmptyCodegenFiles' option was used to control generation of ngfactory
and ngsummary shims during compilation. This option was selected since it's
enabled in google3 but never enabled in external projects.
As ngtsc is now mature and the role shims play in compilation is now better
understood across the ecosystem, this commit introduces two new compiler
options to control shim generation:
* generateNgFactoryShims controls the generation of .ngfactory shims.
* generateNgSummaryShims controls the generation of .ngsummary shims.
The 'allowEmptyCodegenFiles' option is still honored if either of the above
flags are not set explicitly.
PR Close#33256
Currently if a `ModuleWithProviders` is missng its generic type, we throw a cryptic error like:
```
error TS-991010: Value at position 3 in the NgModule.imports of TodosModule is not a reference: [object Object]
```
These changes add a better error to make it easier to debug.
PR Close#33187
Until now, the template type checker has not checked any of the event
bindings that could be present on an element, for example
```
<my-cmp
(changed)="handleChange($event)"
(click)="handleClick($event)"></my-cmp>
```
has two event bindings: the `change` event corresponding with an
`@Output()` on the `my-cmp` component and the `click` DOM event.
This commit adds functionality to the template type checker in order to
type check both kind of event bindings. This means that the correctness
of the bindings expressions, as well as the type of the `$event`
variable will now be taken into account during template type checking.
Resolves FW-1598
PR Close#33125
In ES5 modules, the class declarations consist of an IIFE with inner
and outer declarations that represent the class. The `EsmReflectionHost`
has logic to ensure that `getDeclarationOfIdentifier()` always returns the
outer declaration.
Before this commit, if an identifier referred to an alias of the inner
declaration, then `getDeclarationOfIdentifier()` was failing to find
the outer declaration - instead returning the inner declaration.
Now the identifier is correctly resolved up to the outer declaration
as expected.
This should fix some of the failing 3rd party packages discussed in
https://github.com/angular/ngcc-validation/issues/57.
PR Close#33252
This commit fixes ngtsc's import generator to use the ReflectionHost when
looking through the exports of an ES module to find the export of a
particular declaration that's being imported. This is necessary because
some module formats like CommonJS have unusual export mechanics, and the
normal TypeScript ts.TypeChecker does not understand them.
This fixes an issue with ngcc + CommonJS where exports were not being
enumerated correctly.
FW-1630 #resolve
PR Close#33192
Normally, when ngcc encounters a package with missing dependencies while
attempting to determine a compilation ordering, it will ignore that package.
This commit adds a configuration for a flag to tell ngcc to compile the
package anyway, regardless of any missing dependencies.
FW-1931 #resolve
PR Close#33192
In the ReflectionHost API, a 'viaModule' indicates that a particular value
originated in another absolute module. It should always be 'null' for values
originating in relatively-imported modules.
This commit fixes a bug in the CommonJsReflectionHost where viaModule would
be reported even for relatively-imported values, which causes invalid import
statements to be generated during compilation.
A test is added to verify the correct behavior.
FW-1628 #resolve
PR Close#33192
This allows disabling parallelism in ngcc if desired, which is mainly useful
for debugging. The implementation creates the flag and passes its value to
mainNgcc.
No tests are added since the feature mainly exists already - ngcc supports
both parallel and serial execution. This commit only allows switching the
flag via the commandline.
PR Close#33192
These were getting included in the @angular/localize package.
Instead, patch the upstream files to work with TS typeRoots option
See bazelbuild/rules_nodejs#1033
PR Close#33226
Prior to this commit, metadata defined on ICU container element was not inherited by the ICU if the whole message is a single ICU (for example: `<ng-container i18n="meaning|description@@id">{count, select, ...}</ng-container>). This commit updates the logic to use parent container i18n meta information for the cases when a message consists of a single ICU.
Fixes#33171
PR Close#33191
LocaleID defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.
This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngLocaleIdDef to loc. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.
PR Close#33212
Previously, when `ngcc` was reflecting on class members it did not
account for the fact that a member could be of the kind
`IndexSignature`. This can happen, for example, on abstract classes (as
is the case for [JsonCallbackContext][1]).
Trying to reflect on such members (and failing to recognize their kind),
resulted in warnings, such as:
```
Warning: Unknown member type: "[key: string]: (data: any) => void;
```
While these warnings are harmless, they can be confusing and worrisome
for users.
This commit avoids such warnings by detecting class members of the
`IndexSignature` kind and ignoring them.
[1]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/4659cc26e/packages/common/http/src/jsonp.ts#L39
PR Close#33198
Prior to this change, the template type checker would incorrectly bind
non-property bindings such as `[class.strong]`, `[style.color]` and
`[attr.enabled]` to directive inputs of the same name. This is
undesirable, as those bindings are never actually bound to the inputs at
runtime.
Fixes#32099Fixes#32496
Resolves FW-1596
PR Close#33130
Injectable defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.
This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngInjectableDef to "prov" (for "provider", since injector defs
are known as "inj"). This is because property names cannot
be minified by Uglify without turning on property mangling
(which most apps have turned off) and are thus size-sensitive.
PR Close#33151
Injector defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.
This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngInjectorDef to inj. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.
PR Close#33151
The `legacyMessageIdFormat` is taken from the `i18nInFormat` property but we were only considering
`xmb`, `xlf` and `xlf2` values.
The CLI also supports `xliff` and `xliff2` values for the
`i18nInFormat`.
This commit adds support for those aliases.
PR Close#33160
Module defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.
This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngModuleDef to mod. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.
PR Close#33142
Pipe defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.
This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngPipeDef to pipe. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.
PR Close#33142
Factory defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.
This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngFactoryDef to fac. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.
Note that the other "defs" (ngPipeDef, etc) will be
prefixed and shortened in follow-up PRs, in an attempt to
limit how large and conflict-y this change is.
PR Close#33116
Prior to this change, a static attribute that corresponds with a
directive's input would not be type-checked against the type of the
input. This is unfortunate, as a static value always has type `string`,
whereas the directive's input type might be something different. This
typically occurs when a developer forgets to enclose the attribute name
in brackets to make it a property binding.
This commit lets static attributes be considered as bindings with string
values, so that they will be properly type-checked.
PR Close#33066
This commit introduces an internal config option of the template type
checker that allows to disable strict null checks of input bindings to
directives. This may be particularly useful when a directive is from a
library that is not compiled with `strictNullChecks` enabled.
Right now, strict null checks are enabled when `fullTemplateTypeCheck`
is turned on, and disabled when it's off. In the near future, several of
the internal configuration options will be added as public Angular
compiler options so that users can have fine-grained control over which
areas of the template type checker to enable, allowing for a more
incremental migration strategy.
PR Close#33066
Prior to this change, the template type checker would always allow a
value of type `undefined` to be passed into a directive's inputs, even
if the input's type did not allow for it. This was due to how the type
constructor for a directive was generated, where a `Partial` mapped
type was used to allow for inputs to be unset. This essentially
introduces the `undefined` type as acceptable type for all inputs.
This commit removes the `Partial` type from the type constructor, which
means that we can no longer omit any properties that were unset.
Instead, any properties that are not set will still be included in the
type constructor call, having their value assigned to `any`.
Before:
```typescript
class NgForOf<T> {
static ngTypeCtor<T>(init: Partial<Pick<NgForOf<T>,
'ngForOf'|'ngForTrackBy'|'ngForTemplate'>>): NgForOf<T>;
}
NgForOf.ngTypeCtor(init: {ngForOf: ['foo', 'bar']});
```
After:
```typescript
class NgForOf<T> {
static ngTypeCtor<T>(init: Pick<NgForOf<T>,
'ngForOf'|'ngForTrackBy'|'ngForTemplate'>): NgForOf<T>;
}
NgForOf.ngTypeCtor(init: {
ngForOf: ['foo', 'bar'],
ngForTrackBy: null as any,
ngForTemplate: null as any,
});
```
This change only affects generated type check code, the generated
runtime code is not affected.
Fixes#32690
Resolves FW-1606
PR Close#33066
Currently, method `getVarDeclarations()` does not try to resolve the type of
exported variable from *ngIf directive. It always returns `any` type.
By resolving the real type of exported variable, it is now possible to use this
type information in language service and provide completions, go to definition
and quick info functionality in expressions that use exported variable.
Also language service will provide more accurate diagnostic errors during
development.
PR Close#33016
Currently, the spans of expressions are recorded only relative to the
template node that they reside in, not their source file.
Introduce a `sourceSpan` property on expression ASTs that records the
location of an expression relative to the entire source code file that
it is in. This may allow for reducing duplication of effort in
ngtsc/typecheck/src/diagnostics later on as well.
Child of #31898
PR Close#31897
BREAKING CHANGE:
We no longer directly have a direct depedency on `tslib`. Instead it is now listed a `peerDependency`.
Users not using the CLI will need to manually install `tslib` via;
```
yarn add tslib
```
or
```
npm install tslib --save
```
PR Close#32167
Previously, the list of missing dependencies was not explicitly joined,
which resulted in the default `,` joiner being used during
stringification.
This commit explicitly joins the missing dependency lines to avoid
unnecessary commas.
Before:
```
The target entry-point "some-entry-point" has missing dependencies:
- dependency 1
, - dependency 2
, - dependency 3
```
After:
```
The target entry-point "some-entry-point" has missing dependencies:
- dependency 1
- dependency 2
- dependency 3
```
PR Close#33139
Previously, the executable for the Angular Compatibility Compiler
(`ngcc`) was called `ivy-ngcc`. This would be confusing for users not
familiar with our internal terminology, especially given that we call it
`ngcc` in all our docs and presentations.
This commit renames the executable to `ngcc` and replaces `ivy-ngcc`
with a script that errors with an informative message (prompting the
user to use `ngcc` instead).
Jira issue: [FW-1624](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1624)
PR Close#33140
Directive defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.
This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
ngDirectiveDef to dir. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.
Note that the other "defs" (ngFactoryDef, etc) will be
prefixed and shortened in follow-up PRs, in an attempt to
limit how large and conflict-y this change is.
PR Close#33110
For elements in a template that look like custom elements, i.e.
containing a dash in their name, the template type checker will now
issue an error with instructions on how the resolve the issue.
Additionally, a property binding to a non-existent property will also
produce a more descriptive error message.
Resolves FW-1597
PR Close#33064
Component defs are not considered public API, so the property
that contains them should be prefixed with Angular's marker
for "private" ('ɵ') to discourage apps from relying on def
APIs directly.
This commit adds the prefix and shortens the name from
`ngComponentDef` to `cmp`. This is because property names
cannot be minified by Uglify without turning on property
mangling (which most apps have turned off) and are thus
size-sensitive.
Note that the other "defs" (ngDirectiveDef, etc) will be
prefixed and shortened in follow-up PRs, in an attempt to
limit how large and conflict-y this change is.
PR Close#33088
It is now possible to include a set of default ngcc configurations
that ship with ngcc out of the box. This allows ngcc to handle a
set of common packages, which are unlikely to be fixed, without
requiring the application developer to write their own configuration
for them.
Any packages that are configured at the package or project level
will override these default configurations. This allows a reasonable
level of control at the package and user level.
PR Close#33008
For v9 we want the migration to the new i18n to be as
simple as possible.
Previously the developer had to positively choose to use
legacy messsage id support in the case that their translation
files had not been migrated to the new format by setting the
`legacyMessageIdFormat` option in tsconfig.json to the format
of their translation files.
Now this setting has been changed to `enableI18nLegacyMessageFormat`
as is a boolean that defaults to `true`. The format is then read from
the `i18nInFormat` option, which was previously used to trigger translations
in the pre-ivy angular compiler.
PR Close#33053
Currently Ivy stores the element attributes into an array above the component def and passes it into the relevant instructions, however the problem is that upon minification the array will get a unique name which won't compress very well. These changes move the attributes array into the component def and pass in the index into the instructions instead.
Before:
```
const _c0 = ['foo', 'bar'];
SomeComp.ngComponentDef = defineComponent({
template: function() {
element(0, 'div', _c0);
}
});
```
After:
```
SomeComp.ngComponentDef = defineComponent({
consts: [['foo', 'bar']],
template: function() {
element(0, 'div', 0);
}
});
```
A couple of cases that this PR doesn't handle:
* Template references are still in a separate array.
* i18n attributes are still in a separate array.
PR Close#32798
The `$localize` library uses a new message digest function for
computing message ids. This means that translations in legacy
translation files will no longer match the message ids in the code
and so will not be translated.
This commit adds the ability to specify the format of your legacy
translation files, so that the appropriate message id can be rendered
in the `$localize` tagged strings. This results in larger code size
and requires that all translations are in the legacy format.
Going forward the developer should migrate their translation files
to use the new message id format.
PR Close#32937
This PR updates Angular to compile with TypeScript 3.6 while retaining
compatibility with TS3.5. We achieve this by inserting several `as any`
casts for compatiblity around `ts.CompilerHost` APIs.
PR Close#32908
In an attempt to be compatible with previous translation files
the Angular compiler was generating instructions that always
included the message id. This was because it was not possible
to accurately re-generate the id from the calls to `$localize()` alone.
In line with https://hackmd.io/EQF4_-atSXK4XWg8eAha2g this
commit changes the compiler so that it only renders ids if they are
"custom" ones provided by the template author.
NOTE:
When translating messages generated by the Angular compiler
from i18n tags in templates, the `$localize.translate()` function
will compute message ids, if no custom id is provided, using a
common digest function that only relies upon the information
available in the `$localize()` calls.
This computed message id will not be the same as the message
ids stored in legacy translation files. Such files will need to be
migrated to use the new common digest function.
This only affects developers who have been trialling `$localize`, have
been calling `loadTranslations()`, and are not exclusively using custom
ids in their templates.
PR Close#32867
Metadata blocks are delimited by colons. Previously the code naively just
looked for the next colon in the string as the end marker.
This commit supports escaping colons within the metadata content.
The Angular compiler has been updated to add escaping as required.
PR Close#32867
Previously the metadata and placeholder blocks were serialized in
a variety of places. Moreover the code for creating the `LocalizedString`
AST node was doing serialization, which break the separation of concerns.
Now this is all done by the code that renders the AST and is refactored into
helper functions to avoid repeating the behaviour.
PR Close#32867
With #31953 we moved the factories for components, directives and pipes into a new field called `ngFactoryDef`, however I decided not to do it for injectables, because they needed some extra logic. These changes set up the `ngFactoryDef` for injectables as well.
For reference, the extra logic mentioned above is that for injectables we have two code paths:
1. For injectables that don't configure how they should be instantiated, we create a `factory` that proxies to `ngFactoryDef`:
```
// Source
@Injectable()
class Service {}
// Output
class Service {
static ngInjectableDef = defineInjectable({
factory: () => Service.ngFactoryFn(),
});
static ngFactoryFn: (t) => new (t || Service)();
}
```
2. For injectables that do configure how they're created, we keep the `ngFactoryDef` and generate the factory based on the metadata:
```
// Source
@Injectable({
useValue: DEFAULT_IMPL,
})
class Service {}
// Output
export class Service {
static ngInjectableDef = defineInjectable({
factory: () => DEFAULT_IMPL,
});
static ngFactoryFn: (t) => new (t || Service)();
}
```
PR Close#32433
Recently ng-packagr was updated to include a transform that used to be
done in tsickle (https://github.com/ng-packagr/ng-packagr/pull/1401),
where only constructor parameter decorators are emitted in tsickle's
format, not any of the other decorators.
ngcc used to extract decorators from only a single format, so once it
saw the `ctorParameters` static property it assumed the library is using
the tsickle format. Therefore, none of the `__decorate` calls were
considered. This resulted in missing decorator information, preventing
proper processing of a package.
This commit changes how decorators are extracted by always looking at
both the static properties and the `__decorate` calls, merging these
sources appropriately.
Resolves FW-1573
PR Close#32901
ngcc may need to insert public exports into the bundle's source as well
as to the entry-point's declaration file, as the Ivy compiler may need
to create import statements to internal library types. The way ngcc
knows which exports to add is through the references registry, to which
references to things that require a public export are added by the
various analysis steps that are executed.
One of these analysis steps is the augmentation of declaration files
where functions that return `ModuleWithProviders` are updated so that a
generic type argument is added that corresponds with the `NgModule` that
is actually imported. This type has to be publicly exported, so the
analyzer step has to add the module type to the references registry.
A problem occurs when `ModuleWithProviders` already has a generic type
argument, in which case no update of the declaration file is necessary.
This may happen when 1) ngcc is processing additional bundle formats, so
that the declaration file has already been updated while processing the
first bundle format, or 2) when a package is processed which already
contains the generic type in its source. In both scenarios it may occur
that the referenced `NgModule` type does not yet have a public export,
so it is crucial that a reference to the type is added to the
references registry, which ngcc failed to do.
This commit fixes the issue by always adding the referenced `NgModule`
type to the references registry, so that a public export will always be
created if necessary.
Resolves FW-1575
PR Close#32902
Prior to this commit, the `ngProjectAs` attribute was only included with a special flag and in a parsed format. As a result, projected node was missing `ngProjectAs` attribute as well as other attributes added after `ngProjectAs` one. This is problematic since app code might rely on the presence of `ngProjectAs` attribute (for example in CSS). This commit fixes the problem by including `ngProjectAs` into attributes array as a regular attribute and also makes sure that the parsed version of the `ngProjectAs` attribute with a special marker is added after regular attributes (thus we set them correctly at runtime). This change also aligns View Engine and Ivy behavior.
PR Close#32784
This release includes a ts_config runfiles fix so also cleaning up the one line work-around from #31943.
This also updates to upstream rules_webtesting browser repositories load("@io_bazel_rules_webtesting//web/versioned:browsers-0.3.2.bzl", "browser_repositories") to fix a breaking change in the chromedriver distro. This bumps up the version of chromium to the version here: https://github.com/bazelbuild/rules_webtesting/blob/master/web/versioned/browsers-0.3.2.bzl
PR Close#32151