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
Inside `*ngFor` the second run of the styling instructions can get into situation where it tries to read a value from a binding which has not yet executed. As a result the read is `NO_CHANGE` value and subsequent property read cause an exception as it is of wrong type.
Fix#35118
PR Close#35133
This commit cleans up `expression_type.ts` by
1. Removing the unnecessary `TypeDiagnostic` class. It's replaced by
`ng.Diagnostic`.
2. Consolidating `reportError()` and `reportWarning()` to
`reportDiagnostic()`.
This is prep work so that we could make some of the type diagnostics a
suggestion in later PRs.
PR Close#35085
`TNode.directives` was introduced in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/34938. Turns out that it is unnecessary because the information is already present it `TData` when combining with `TNode.directiveStart` and `TNode.directiveEnd`
Mainly this is true (conceptually):
```
expect(tNode.directives).toEqual(
tData.slice(
tNode.directivesStart,
tNode.directivesEnd - tNode.DirectivesStart -1
)
);
```
The refactoring removes `TNode.directives` and adds `TNode.directiveStyling` as we still need to keep location in the directive in `TNode`
PR Close#35050
These tests are used for perf testing and don't run as part of CI, as a result they bit-rotted. This fixes that. Long term these tests should be run as part of CI.
PR Close#35071
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
Fixes issue with yarn_install not following yarn-path in .yarnrc when bazel run from yarn with `yarn bazel ...` (rules_nodejs: fix: unset YARN_IGNORE_PATH in yarn_install before calling yarn #1588)
PR Close#34961
Fixes#18013
Previously it was hard to debug an `expectOne` if the request had no match, as the error message was:
Expected one matching request for criteria "Match URL: /some-url?query=hello", found none.
This commit adds a bit more info to the error, by listing the actual requests received:
Expected one matching request for criteria "Match URL: /some-url?query=hello", found none. Requests received are: POST /some-url?query=world.
PR Close#27005
Previous to this commit, HTTP params like `{ a: '1', b: [], c: '3' }` resulted in a request like `a=1&&c=3` (note the double &&).
The ideal fix would probably be to stringify these params to `a=1&b=&c=3` like we do for empty string values. But that might be breaking as some APIs may rely on the absence of the parameter.
This fixes the issue in a compatible way by just removing the extra and unnecessary `&`, resulting in `a=1&c=3`.
PR Close#34896
This reverts commit cb142b6df9.
The intention of this commit was for a consumer of the `compile` function to
pass the `bazelHost` it returns into future invocations, reusing the
`FileCache` between them. However, first-party ngc_wrapped does not do this,
which caused a performance regression as the `FileCache` was no longer
shared between compilations.
PR Close#35063
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
This change changes the priority order of static styling.
Current priority:
```
(least priority)
- Static
- Component
- Directives
- Template
- Dynamic Binding
- Component
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
- Directives
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
- Template
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
(highest priority)
```
The issue with the above priority is this use case:
```
<div style="color: red;" directive-which-sets-color-blue>
```
In the above case the directive will win and the resulting color will be `blue`. However a small change of adding interpolation to the example like so. (Style interpolation is coming in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/34202)
```
<div style="color: red; width: {{exp}}px" directive-which-sets-color-blue>
```
Changes the priority from static binding to interpolated binding which means now the resulting color is `red`. It is very surprising that adding an unrelated interpolation and style can change the `color` which was not changed. To fix that we need to make sure that the static values are associated with priority of the source (directive or template) where they were declared. The new resulting priority is:
```
(least priority)
- Component
- Static
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
- Directives
- Static
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
- Template
- Static
- Map/Interpolation
- Property
(highest priority)
```
PR Close#34938
The current logic pulls multiproviders up to the parent module's
provider list. The result is that the multi provider being defined both in
the imported ModuleWithProviders and the parent and getting an extra
item in the multi provided array of values. This PR fixes that problem
by not pulling providers in ModuleWithProviders up to the parent module.
PR Close#34914
The language service reports an error when a directive's template
context is missing a member that is being used in a template (e.g. if
`$implicit` is being used with a template context typed as `any`).
While this diagnostic message is valuable, typing template contexts
loosely as `any` or `object` is very widespread in community packages,
and often still compiles correctly, so reporting the diagnostic as an
error may be misleading to users.
This commit changes the diagnostic to be a warning, and adds additional
information about how the user can eliminate the warning entirely -- by
refining the template context type.
Closes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/572
PR Close#35036
Sometimes, a request for definitions will return multiple of the same
definition. This can happen in at least the cases of
- two-way bindings (one of the same definition for the property and
event binding)
- multiple template binding expressions in the same attribute
- something like "*ngFor="let i of items; trackBy: test" has two
template bindings, resulting in two template binding ASTs at the
same location (the attribute span). The language service then parses
both of these bindings individually, resulting in two independent
but identical definitions. For more context, see https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/34847#discussion_r371006680.
This commit prunes duplicate definitions by signing definitions with
their location, and checking if that location signature has been seen in
a previous definition returned to the client.
PR Close#34995
In #34974 the top level dependency on `@babel/core` was bumped to
7.8.3. This commit ensures that the package.json that gets included
in the `@angular/localize` distributable is at the same version.
PR Close#35008
There are different `DebugNode`/`DebugElement` implementations (and
associated helper functions) for ViewEngine and Ivy. Additionally, these
classes/functions, which are defined inside the `core` package, are
imported by the `platform-browser` package.
Previously, this code was not tree-shaken as expected in Ivy. #30130
partially addressed the issue, but only for the case where `core` and
`platform-browser` end up in the same closure after webpack's scope
hoisting. In cases where this is not the case, our webpack/terser based
tooling is not capable of tree-shaking it.
This commit fixes the problem, by ensuring that the code retained in Ivy
mode (due to the cross-package import) does not unnecessarily reference
`DebugNode`/`DebugElement`, allowing the code to be tree-shaken away.
This results in a 7.6KB reduction in the size of the main angular.io
bundle.
Jira issue: [FW-1802](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-1802)
PR Close#35003
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
This commit adds support for completions of properties on `$event`
variables in bound outputs.
This is the second major PR to support completions for `$event`
variables (https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/531).
The final completion support that must be provided is for `$event`
variables in bindings targeting DOM events, like `(click)`.
PR Close#34570
This commit makes `findOutputBinding` a utility function for the
language service, which will be used by the `expression_diagnostics`
module in #34570. Keeping the function in `locate_symbol` results in a
circular dependency between `expression_diagnostics` and
`locate_symbol`.
PR Close#34997
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
For the structural directive, the 'path' will contain multiple `BoundDirectivePropertyAst` which depends on the number of directive property in the attribute value(e.g. '*ngFor="let item of []; trackBy: test;"', it has 2 `BoundDirectivePropertyAst`, 'ngForOf' and 'ngForTrackBy').
PR Close#34847
the test failures most likely result from the babel updates in the previous commit.
it does look like we lost the file path from the error message, which is something that we
should follow up no in a separate change.
PR Close#34974
Previously we relied on this package being hoisted and available, which is error prone and it would
be just a matter of time before the build would break due rehoisting of deps upon future npm package.json
changes.
PR Close#34974
It's not clear how this ever worked (npm hoisting is a suspect though), but this dep is required because
one of the tests imports @babel/generator in the ts sources.
The lack of this dep is breaking builds on the master branch.
More discussion about this issue on Slack: https://angular-team.slack.com/archives/C07DT5M6V/p1579934766007500
PR Close#34974
As part of the effort to tighten the API surface of
`TypeScriptServiceHost` in preparation for the migration to Ivy, I realized
some recently added APIs are not strictly needed.
They can be safely removed without sacrificing functionality.
This allows us to clean up the code, especially in the implementation of
QuickInfo, where the `TypeScriptServiceHost` is leaked outside of the
`LanguageService` class.
This refactoring also cleans up some duplicate code where the QuickInfo
object is generated. The logic is now consolidated into a simple
`createQuickInfo` method shared across two different implementations.
PR Close#34941
Previously we would write to class/style as strings `element.className` and `element.style.cssText`. Turns out that approach is good for initial render but not good for updates. Updates using this approach are problematic because we have to check to see if there was an out of bound write to style and than perform reconciliation. This also requires the browser to bring up CSS parser which is expensive.
Another problem with old approach is that we had to queue the DOM writes and flush them twice. Once on element advance instruction and once in `hostBindings`. The double flushing is expensive but it also means that a directive can observe that styles are not yet written (they are written after directive executes.)
The new approach uses `element.classList.add/remove` and `element.style.setProperty/removeProperty` API for updates only (it continues to use `element.className` and `element.style.cssText` for initial render as it is cheaper.) The other change is that the styling changes are applied immediately (no queueing). This means that it is the instruction which computes priority. In some circumstances it may result in intermediate writes which are than overwritten with new value. (This should be rare)
Overall this change deletes most of the previous code and replaces it with new simplified implement. The simplification results in code savings.
PR Close#34804
This change introduces several functions for manipulating items in an array in an efficient (binary search) way.
- `arraySplice` a faster version of `Array.splice()`.
- `arrayInsert` a faster version of `Array.splice(index, 0, value)`.
- `arrayInsert2` a faster version of `Array.splice(index, 0, value1, value2)`.
- `arrayInsertSorted` a way to insert a value into sorted list.
- `arrayRemoveSorted` a way to remove a value from a sorted list.
- `arrayIndexOfSorted` a way to find a value in a sorted list.
- `ArrayMap` Efficient implementation of `Map` as an `Array`.
- `arrayMapSet`, `arrayMapGet`, `arrayMapIndexOf`, and `arrayMapDelete` for manipulating `ArrayMap`s.
PR Close#34804
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
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.
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
The `computeStaticStyling` will be used for computing static styling value during `firstCreatePass`.
The function takes into account static styling from the template as well as from the host bindings. The host bindings need to be merged in front of the template so that they have the correct priority.
PR Closes#34418
Parsing styling is now simplified to be used like so:
```
for (let i = parseStyle(text); i <= 0; i = parseStyleNext(text, i)) {
const key = getLastParsedKey();
const value = getLastParsedValue();
...
}
```
This change makes it easier to invoke the parser from other locations in the system without paying the cost of creating and iterating over `Map` of styles.
PR Closes#34418
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
This adds `insertTStyleValue` but does not hook it up to anything yet.
The purpose of this function is to create a linked-list of styling
related bindings. The bindings can be traversed during flush.
The linked list also keeps track of duplicates. This is important
for binding to know if it needs to check other styles for reconciliation.
PR Close#34004
This change introduces class/style reconciliation algorithm for DOM elements.
NOTE: The code is not yet hooked up, it will be used by future style algorithm.
Background:
Styling algorithm currently has [two paths](https://hackmd.io/@5zDGNGArSxiHhgvxRGrg-g/rycZk3N5S)
when computing how the style should be rendered.
1. A direct path which concatenates styling and uses `elemnent.className`/`element.style.cssText` and
2. A merge path which uses internal data structures and uses `element.classList.add/remove`/`element.style[property]`.
The situation is confusing and hard to follow/maintain. So a future PR will remove the merge-path and do everything with
direct-path. This however breaks when some other code adds class or style to the element without Angular's knowledge.
If this happens instead of switching from direct-path to merge-path algorithm, this change provides a different mental model
whereby we always do `direct-path` but the code which writes to the DOM detects the situation and reconciles the out of bound write.
The reconciliation process is as follows:
1. Detect that no one has modified `className`/`cssText` and if so just write directly (fast path).
2. If out of bounds write did occur, switch from writing using `className`/`cssText` to `element.classList.add/remove`/`element.style[property]`.
This does require that the write function computes the difference between the previous Angular expected state and current Angular state.
(This requires a parser. The advantage of having a parser is that we can support `style="width: {{exp}}px" kind of bindings.`)
Compute the diff and apply it in non destructive way using `element.classList.add/remove`/`element.style[property]`
Properties of approach:
- If no out of bounds style modification:
- Very fast code path: Just concatenate string in right order and write them to DOM.
- Class list order is preserved
- If out of bounds style modification detected:
- Penalty for parsing
- Switch to non destructive modification: `element.classList.add/remove`/`element.style[property]`
- Switch to alphabetical way of setting classes.
PR Close#34004
Fixes Ivy detecting changes inside child embedded views, even though they're detached.
Note that there's on subtlety here: I made the changes inside `refreshDynamicEmbeddedViews` rather than `refreshView`, because we support detecting changes on a detached view (evidenced by a couple of unit tests), but only if it's triggered directly from the view's `ChangeDetectorRef`, however we shouldn't be detecting changes in the detached child view when something happens in the parent.
Fixes#34816.
PR Close#34846
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
Right now, if an Angular diagnostic is generated for a TypeScript node,
the span points to the decorator Identifier, i.e. the Identifier node
like `@NgModule`, `@Component`, etc.
This is weird. It should point to the class name instead.
Note, we do not have a more fine-grained breakdown of the span when
diagnostics are emitted, this work remains to be done.
PR Close#34932
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
The value changes emitted additionally when enable disable were called
documented the above behaviour in AbstractControl class documentaion
Fixes#34407
PR Close#34497
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
It was previously defined in core without being exposed publicly, whereas `getLocaleCurrencyName` and `getLocaleCurrencySymbol` were defined in common, and publicly exposed.
This commit now privately exposes `ɵgetLocaleCurrencyCode` from core, and reexports it publicly from common.
PR Close#34810
This commit elaborates diagnostics produced for invalid template
contexts by including the name of the embedded template type using the
template context, and in the common case that the implicity property is
being referenced (e.g. in a `for .. of ..` expression), suggesting to
refine the type of the context. This suggestion is provided because
users will sometimes use a base class as the type of the context in the
embedded view, and a more specific context later on (e.g. in an
`ngOnChanges` method).
Closes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/251
PR Close#34751
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
This commit adds a regression test to check that the language service
recognizes inputs and outputs declared in a directive decorator.
See #34874.
PR Close#34875
In Angular, symbol can have multiple definitions (e.g. a two-way
binding). This commit adds support for for multiple definitions for a
queried location in a template.
PR Close#34782
by DebugElement.triggerEventHandler. ZoneJS tracks the eventListeners on
a node but we need to be able to differentiate between those added by
Angular and those that were added outside the Angular context. This fix
aligns with the behavior that was present in View Engine (not calling
those listeners). If we decide later that we want to call those
listeners, we still need a way to differentiate between those that
we have wrapped in dom_renderer and those that were not (because they
were added outside the Angular context).
PR Close#34514
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
Fixes Ivy throwing an error when trying to access the `DebugNode.classes` of an SVG element. The problem is that the `className` of an SVG element is an `SVGAnimatedString`, rather than a plain string.
Fixes#34868.
PR Close#34872
This commit makes the Angular Language Service interface a strict subset
of TypeScript's Language Service by renaming all methods to be
consistent with TypeScript's.
The custom Angular `LanguageService` interface was needed before the
inception of TypeScript tsserver plugin, but is now obsolete since
Angular LS is a proper tsserver plugin.
This allows us to easily adapt to upstream TS changes in the future, and
also allows us to reuse all data types defined in TypeScript.
PR Close#34888
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
In #28162 we introduced an extra `removeNode` call for host elements which can cause the parent element to be removed before all child animations have finished. The issue is only in Ivy, because that the only place where we pass in the `isHostElement` flag. These changes fix the issue by not re-triggering the removal logic if the element has in-progress animations.
Fixes#33597.
PR Close#34702
Before ivy it was possible to configure a mutable service value
in an application initializer (by providing an `APP_INITIALIZER`)
that could be read in the provider of `LOCALE_ID`. This is a common
scenario if you wanted to load the locale id asynchronously from
an HTTP request for instance.
When using the ivy, the runtime needs to be told what the current
locale is, which is done by calling the `setLocaleId()` function with
the value injected by the `LOCALE_ID` token. Previously this was
being done before the application initializers were run, which meant
that the `LOCALE_ID` provider was being executed before the
app initializers had a chance to get a new value for it.
Now this initalization of the locale for the ivy runtime is done after the
application initializers have been run.
Closes#34701
PR Close#34830
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
Prior to this change, in Ivy mode ngStyle/ngClass would accidentally emit value changes for static
(string-based) values even if the value itself had not changed. This patch ensures that
the style/class diffing code is more strict and when it signals ngClass/ngStyle that there has been
a value change.
Fixes#34336, #34444
PR Close#34307
remove unnecessary underscore suffix and the corresponding TODO comments,
because the rollup bug was fixed: github.com/rollup/rollup/issues/2047
PR Close#34757
Typescript 3.7 now emits d.ts files for getters differently than prior versions,
and there seems to be a bug in how it strips private types without replacing them
with explicit 'any' type. This then leads to compilation failures in projects compiled
against our packages that don't have skipLibCheck turned on but do have strict or
noImplicitAny check on.
I'm working around this by marking the affected getters as @internal and
adding a test to prevent future regressions.
I believe this is a TypeScript bug, and I filed a bug report:
https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/36216
PR Close#34798
This release resolves the bootstrap require patching issue with jasmine_node_test. Require patches are now included before any bootstrap scripts.
PR Close#34736
This is recommended in the Bazel docs as $(location) is ambiguous and can mean either $(execpath) or $(rootpath) depending on the context.
PR Close#34736
This brings in a few minor fixes including a better way to patch require for bootstrap scripts
Also remove install_source_map_support attribute from nodejs_binary targets This attribute will be removed from nodejs_binary in the future
PR Close#34736
For the purposes of the integration test the zone.js script & bundle script tags can just go into the source index.html itself. The purpose of the integration test is is to test @angular/bazel & ng_module & ng_package so there is no need to exercise html_insert_assets in integration/bazel.
PR Close#34736
The major one that affects the angular repo is the removal of the bootstrap attribute in nodejs_binary, nodejs_test and jasmine_node_test in favor of using templated_args --node_options=--require=/path/to/script. The side-effect of this is that the bootstrap script does not get the require.resolve patches with explicitly loading the targets _loader.js file.
PR Close#34736
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
Refactored Bazel host creation to export some of the relevant utility functions. google3 needs to make some modifications to the Bazel host to enable the Ivy migration. The functionality exported here is still needed in g3, but it allows g3 code to create the Bazel host, make necessary modifications, and then provide it to the external codebase here while everything is still compatible. For external users, this is a no-op.
PR Close#34686
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
Both `MinLengthValidator` and `MaxLengthValidator` accepted only string inputs for the length required, which throws with Ivy and `fullTemplateTypeCheck` enabled:
<!-- min = 2 in the component -->
<input [minlength]="min">
with:
Type 'number' is not assignable to type 'string | undefined'
This relaxes the accepted type to `string | number` to avoid breakage when developers switch to Ivy and fTTC.
PR Close#32057
The Template AST that corresponds to a given HTML AST is not always
complete, and often has to be reconstructed. This commit refactors the
code to make it easier to adapt to multiple cases.
PR Close#34764
Adds a `typeArguments` method to the `Symbol` interface, cleaning up how
type parameters of a TypeScript type are currently found. This will be
necessary for providing completions for `$event` variables' properties
(#34570).
This commit also performs some fly-by cleanups seen while implementing
the `typeArguments` methods. There is more clean up to do in the
`typescript_symbols` file, but the scope of this commit didn't need to
get larger.
PR Close#34571
Currently the language service constructs an `AttrAst` anytime it is
missing from a `TemplateAst` path. However, this should only be done
when the path does not contain an "attribute-like" AST, which can
includes bound properties or bound events.
This commit also refactors `visitAttr` to parse bindings only for
microsyntax expressions and does some other minor cleanup to make
linters happy.
This is some cleanup to help the language service eventually use
`BoundDirectivePropertyAst`s for providing completions for template
bindings rather than performing the manual parsing currently done.
PR Close#34743
DebugElement.query also matches elements that may have been created
outside of Angular (ex: with `document.appendChild`). If those matched
DebugElements are in turn used to query for more elements, an error
occurs because the first step in queryAll is to load the LContext.
PR Close#34687
The locale data extraction has been modified to include the default
currency code in the generated locale data. This commit updates these
generated files accordingly.
PR Close#32584
Default currency code in CurrencyPipe is currently hardcoded to USD
and is not configurable. This commit allows the default currency code
to be configurable by adding a DEFAULT_CURRENCY_CODE injection token.
Example:
```
providers: [{ provide: DEFAULT_CURRENCY_CODE, useValue: "GBP" }]
...
{{ 123.45 | currency }} // outputs £123.45 as opposed to always $123.45 before
```
Closes: #25461
PR Close#32584
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
Unlike in View Engine, we currently reset the dirty state of
components in the check no changes change detection cycle.
This means that components cannot be marked as dirty from
view lifecycle hooks because the dirty state is reset and
the lifecycle hooks do not run in the check no changes CD cycle.
PR Close#34495
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
This commit removes some test scenarios from `parsing-cases.ts` and
colocate them with the test code instead. This makes the tests easier to
read and understand.
PR Close#34716
This is recommended in the Bazel docs as $(location) is ambiguous and can mean either $(execpath) or $(rootpath) depending on the context.
PR Close#34589
For the purposes of the integration test the zone.js script & bundle script tags can just go into the source index.html itself. The purpose of the integration test is is to test @angular/bazel & ng_module & ng_package so there is no need to exercise html_insert_assets in integration/bazel.
PR Close#34589
The major one that affects the angular repo is the removal of the bootstrap attribute in nodejs_binary, nodejs_test and jasmine_node_test in favor of using templated_args --node_options=--require=/path/to/script. The side-effect of this is that the bootstrap script does not get the require.resolve patches with explicitly loading the targets _loader.js file.
PR Close#34589
This commit renames `addAttributeValuesToCompletions`, which generates
expression completions and is not exclusive to processing attributes, to
`processExpressionCompletions`. Also removes the expression completion
logic in `visitBoundText` for a call to `processExpressionCompletions`.
The conditional branch in `visitBoundText` is also removed. This branch
was added in one of the first commits to the language service
(519a324454) and appears to be
unnecessary, as the expression AST is constructed from the template
position anyway.
PR Close#34518
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
A while ago we made a pass through all instructions to make sure that none of them call directly into other instructions, however it seems like missed the `pipeBind*` since they still call into the pure functions. The result is that we have some unnecessary duplicated accesses of global state like `getLView` which are called twice in a row with nothing changing.
These changes move the common functionality into a shared file and make the pipe instructions call into them with the global state instead.
PR Close#33714
The compiler's `I18NHtmlParser` may expand template nodes that have
internationalization metadata attached to them; for instance,
```html
<div i18n="@@i18n-el">{{}}</div>
```
gets expanded to an AST with the i18n metadata extracted and text filled
in as necessary; to the language service, the template above, as read in
the AST, now looks something like
```html
<div>{{$implicit}}</div>
```
This is undesirable for the language service because we want to preserve
the original form of the source template source code, and have
information about the original values of the template. The language
service also does not need to use an i18n parser -- we don't generate
any template output.
To fix this turns out to be as easy as moving to using a raw
`HtmlParser`.
---
A note on the testing strategy: as mentioned above, we don't need to use
an i18n parser, but we don't **not** need to use one if the parser
does not heavily modify the template AST. For this reason, the tests
target the functionality of not modifying a template with i18n metadata
rather than testing that the language service does not use an i18n parser.
---
Closes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/272
PR Close#34531
With 5cecd97493 we intended to expand
the input type of the `disabled` input of the `NgModel` directive.
Read more about the reason for this in the actual commit message.
Currently though, the acceptance coercion member does not have any
effect. This is because the acceptance member needs to refer to the
actual input property name, and not to the public input name.
`disabled` corresponds to the `isDisabled` property.
PR Close#34502
This commit improves `ExpressionChangedAfterChecked` error message for attributes by including attribute name and the content of the entire expression that contains interpolation(s). In order to achieve that, metadata is now stored in `TData` array when `attribute` and `attributeInterpolate` instructions are being called (similar to `property` and `propertyInterpolate` instructions).
PR Close#34505
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
This was already the default. I'm working on a change in the underlying TS rules where this parameter will be replaced, so ng_module needs to change first
PR Close#34665
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
Fixes classes with trailing or leading space that are passed to `ngClass` (e.g. `{'foo ': bar}`) not being applied in Ivy. The issue comes from the fact that when the styling differ builds up the style map it uses the trimmed key to look up the value in the map that uses non-trimmed keys.
Fixes#34476.
PR Close#34539
Follow-up from [this discussion](https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/33419#discussion_r339296216). In Ivy we don't use the schema to validate tag names, but instead we use feature detection to figure out whether an element is supported. While this should generally be more accurate, it'll also end up throwing for some more innocent cases. E.g. now Ivy throws an error for `main` elements in IE which is accurate since IE doesn't support the element, but is annoying since there is no functionality attached.
These changes switch to logging a warning instead, similarly to what we're doing for unknown properties.
PR Close#34524
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
The main logic of the `InheritDefinitionFeature` is to go through the prototype chain of a given Component and merge all Angular-specific information onto that Component def. The problem happens in case there is a Component in a hierarchy that also contains the `InheritDefinitionFeature` (i.e. it extends some other Component), so it inherits all Angular-specific information from its super class. As a result, the root Component may end up having duplicate information inherited from different Components in hierarchy.
Let's consider the following structure: `GrandChild` extends `Child` that extends `Base` and the `Base` class has a `HostListener`. In this scenario `GrandChild` and `Child` will have `InheritDefinitionFeature` included into the `features` list. The processing will happend in the following order:
- `Child` inherits `HostListener` from the `Base` class
- `GrandChild` inherits `HostListener` from the `Child` class
- since `Child` has a parent, `GrandChild` also inherits from the `Base` class
The result is that the `GrandChild` def has duplicated host listener, which is not correct.
This commit introduces additional logic that checks whether we came across a def that has `InheritDefinitionFeature` feature (which means that this def already inherited information from its super classes). If that's the case, we skip further fields-related inheritance logic, but keep going though the prototype chain to look for super classes that contain other features (like NgOnChanges), that we need to invoke for a given Component def.
PR Close#34244
Fixes an error that is thrown when a provider is overridden in `TestBed`, if the module definition of one of the imported modules uses a function for the `imports` that is set via `setNgModuleScope`. The problem was that we have a `for...of` loop that assumes that the imports are an array, but they can also be a function. This was handled correctly in other places, but this one was missed.
Note that the above-mentioned error is only thrown at runtime when the code is transpiled to es6. In es5 TS generates a call to a helper that handles the error silently so the attached unit test only fails in es6.
Fixes#34623.
PR Close#34629
Currently, the language service provides completions in a template node
attribute by first checking if the attribute contains template bindings
to provide completions for, and then providing completions for the
expression in the attribute.
In the latter case, the expression AST was being constructed
"synthetically" inside the language service, in particular declaring the
expression to be a `PropertyRead` with an implicit receiver.
Unfortunately, this AST can be incorrect if the expression is actually a
property read on a component property receiver (e.g. when reading
`key` in the expression `obj.key`, `obj` is the receiver).
The fix is pretty simple - rather than a synthetic construction of the
AST, ask the expression parser to parse the expression in the attribute.
Fixes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/523
PR Close#34517
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
In the past, only the starting index of an expression Token has been
recorded, so a parser could demarkate the span of a token only by the
start locations of two tokens. This may lead to trailing whitespace
being included in the token span:
```html
{{ token1 + token2 }}
^^^^^^^^^ recorded span of `token1`
```
It's also not enough for a parser to determine the end of a token by
adding the length of the token value to the token's start location,
because lexed expression values may not exactly reflect the source code.
For example, `"d\\"e"` is lexed as a string token whose value is `d"e`.
Instead, this commit adds a `end` field to expression tokens. `end`
is one past the last index of the token source code. This will enable a
parser to determine the span of a token just by looking at that token.
This is a breaking change because the contructor interface of `Token`
has changed.
Part of #33477.
PR Close#33549
This commit fixes a bug in which we do testing for completions.
Subsequently, this exposes another bug in our implementation whereby
suggestions are not provided in "ngFor" where there should have been.
Currently, multiple test cases are grouped together in a single
template. This requires the template to be somewhat complete so that
test cases that depend on variables declared earlier would pass.
Consider the following example:
```
template: `
<div *ngFor="let ~{for-person}person of ~{for-people}people">
<span>Name: {{~{for-interp-person}person.~{for-interp-name}name}}</span>
<span>Age: {{person.~{for-interp-age}age}}</span>
</div>`,
```
In order to test `~{for-interp-person}`, `people` has to be included after
`~{for-people}`. This means the test case for `~{for-people}` is not
reflective of the actual use case because the variable is already there!
In real case, the expression would be incomplete, and our implementation
failed to take that into account.
This commit breaks such test into individual tests, and fix the bugs in
the underlying implementation.
PR Close#34473
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
When a HTML Ast containing an Attribute node is converted to a Template Ast,
the attribute node might get dropped from the Template Ast path.
This is because the AttrNode is not even in the Template Ast to begin with.
In this case, we manually fix the path by converting the Attribute node
to a AttrAst node and appending it to the path.
This allows the `ExpressionVisitor` to properly visit the leaf node in the
TemplateAst path. We no longer need to visit the `Element` and look for
attributes.
PR Close#34459
Prior to this change, the ExpressionChangedAfterChecked error thrown in Ivy was missing useful information that was available in View Engine, specifically: missing property name for proprty bindings and also the content of the entire property interpolation (only a changed value was displayed) if one of expressions was changed unexpectedly. This commit improves the error message by including the mentioned information into the error text.
PR Close#34381
Previously, bound events were incorrectly bound to directives with
inputs matching the bound event attribute. This fixes that so bound
events can only be bound to directives with matching outputs.
Adds tests for all kinds of directive matching on bound attributes.
PR Close#31938
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
NgModel internally coerces any arbitrary value that will assigned
to the `disabled` `@Input` to a boolean. This has been done to
support the common case where developers set the disabled attribute
without a value. For example:
```html
<input type="checkbox" [(ngModel)]="value" disabled>
```
This worked in View Engine without any errors because inputs were
not strictly checked. In Ivy though, developers can opt-in into
strict template type checking where the attribute would be flagged.
This is because the `NgModel#isDisabled` property type-wise only
accepts a `boolean`. To ensure that the common pattern described
above can still be used, and to reflect the actual runtime behavior,
we should add an acceptance member that makes it work without type
checking errors.
Using a coercion member means that this is not a breaking change.
PR Close#34438