Converts the CLDR locale extraction script to a Bazel tool.
This allows us to generate locale files within Bazel, so that
locales don't need to live as sources within the repo. Also
it allows us to get rid of the legacy Gulp tooling.
The migration of the Gulp script to a Bazel tool involved the
following things:
1. Basic conversion of the `extract.js` script to TypeScript.
This mostly was about adding explicit types. e.g. adding `locale:
string` or `localeData: CldrStatic`.
2. Split-up into separate files. Instead of keeping the large
`extract.js` file, the tool has been split into separate files.
The logic remains the same, just that code is more readable and
maintainable.
3. Introduction of a new `index.ts` file that is the entry-point
for the Bazel tool. Previously the Gulp tool just generated
all locale files, the default locale and base currency files
at once. The new entry-point accepts a mode to be passed as
first process argument. based on that argument, either locales
are generated into a specified directory, or the default locale,
base currencies or closure file is generated.
This allows us to generate files with a Bazel genrule where
we simply run the tool and specify the outputs. Note: It's
necessary to have multiple modes because files live in separate
locations. e.g. the default locale in `@angular/core`, but the
rest in `@angular/common`.
4. Removal of the `cldr-data-downloader` and custom CLDR resolution
logic. Within Bazel we cannot run a downloader using network.
We switch this to something more Bazel idiomatic with better
caching. For this a new repository rule is introduced that
downloads the CLDR JSON repository and extracts it. Within
that rule we determine the supported locales so that they
can be used to pre-declare outputs (for the locales) within
Bazel analysis phase. This allows us to add the generated locale
files to a `ts_library` (which we want to have for better testing,
and consistent JS transpilation).
Note that the removal of `cldr-data-downloader` also requires us to
add logic for detecting locales without data. The CLDR data
downloader overwrote the `availableLocales.json` file with a file
that only lists locales that CLDR provides data for. We use the
official `availableLocales` file CLDR provides, but filter out
locales for which no data is available. This is needed until we
update to CLDR 39 where data is available for all such locales
listed in `availableLocales.json`.
PR Close#42230
Converts the CLDR locale extraction script to a Bazel tool.
This allows us to generate locale files within Bazel, so that
locales don't need to live as sources within the repo. Also
it allows us to get rid of the legacy Gulp tooling.
The migration of the Gulp script to a Bazel tool involved the
following things:
1. Basic conversion of the `extract.js` script to TypeScript.
This mostly was about adding explicit types. e.g. adding `locale:
string` or `localeData: CldrStatic`.
2. Split-up into separate files. Instead of keeping the large
`extract.js` file, the tool has been split into separate files.
The logic remains the same, just that code is more readable and
maintainable.
3. Introduction of a new `index.ts` file that is the entry-point
for the Bazel tool. Previously the Gulp tool just generated
all locale files, the default locale and base currency files
at once. The new entry-point accepts a mode to be passed as
first process argument. based on that argument, either locales
are generated into a specified directory, or the default locale,
base currencies or closure file is generated.
This allows us to generate files with a Bazel genrule where
we simply run the tool and specify the outputs. Note: It's
necessary to have multiple modes because files live in separate
locations. e.g. the default locale in `@angular/core`, but the
rest in `@angular/common`.
4. Removal of the `cldr-data-downloader` and custom CLDR resolution
logic. Within Bazel we cannot run a downloader using network.
We switch this to something more Bazel idiomatic with better
caching. For this a new repository rule is introduced that
downloads the CLDR JSON repository and extracts it. Within
that rule we determine the supported locales so that they
can be used to pre-declare outputs (for the locales) within
Bazel analysis phase. This allows us to add the generated locale
files to a `ts_library` (which we want to have for better testing,
and consistent JS transpilation).
Note that the removal of `cldr-data-downloader` also requires us to
add logic for detecting locales without data. The CLDR data
downloader overwrote the `availableLocales.json` file with a file
that only lists locales that CLDR provides data for. We use the
official `availableLocales` file CLDR provides, but filter out
locales for which no data is available. This is needed until we
update to CLDR 39 where data is available for all such locales
listed in `availableLocales.json`.
PR Close#42230
Switches the repository to TypeScript 4.3 and the latest
version of tslib. This involves updating the peer dependency
ranges on `typescript` for the compiler CLI and for the Bazel
package. Tests for new TypeScript features have been added to
ensure compatibility with Angular's ngtsc compiler.
PR Close#42022
`core-js` is a CJS package which cannot be used directly in the browser. `core-js-bundle` is the bundled version of the package which can be used in directly in the browser.
PR Close#41739
Remove the dependency on `entities` in the root package.json as it is unused. `entities` is
used in aio, however the package.json in aio manages these dependencies.
PR Close#41705
Updates to the latest version of `rules_nodejs` that supports
the most recent NodeJS lts version v14.16.1.
Additionally the latest version of `rules_nodejs` provides
[a package for runfile resolution](https://github.com/bazelbuild/rules_nodejs/pull/2568) w/ types that we can leverage.
PR Close#41599
This is a temporary workaround until the CLI version containing a fix for the regression caused by deacc74 is available on NPM.
Without this change CLI builds will fail with;
```
angularCompiler.getNextProgram is not a function
```
PR Close#41434
With this change we update several dependencies to avoid Renovate creating a lot of PRs during onboarding. We also remove yarn workspaces as after further analysis these are not needed.
Certain dependencies such as `@octokit/rest`, `remark` and `@babel/*` have not been updated as they require a decent amount of work to update, and it's best to leave them for a seperate PR.
PR Close#41434