With this change we add the `assert` polyfill which is required because `timezone-mock` is a Node.JS library which is being used in Browser.
PR Close#41764
Previously, the `components-repo-unit-tests` CI job was temporarily
disabled due to a version mismatch between the `rules_nodejs`
dependency version on the two repos (angular/angular and
angular/components).
Now that both repos have been updated to a `rules_nodejs` version
>=2.0.0, we can re-enable the job and have `@angular/components` unit
tests run on every build.
PR Close#41816
This commit uses the correct property name (`prettier` vs `pretter`) to
check whether prettier is enabled via the config.
(It also fixes some typos in `dev-infra`.)
PR Close#41860
In #41788, logic was added to disambiguate case-insensitively equal docs
paths/URLs. This process includes appending a `-\d+` suffix to some
paths/URLs (for example, `/.../inject-1`). Unfortunately, some of the
Firebase redirects configured in `firebase.json` would match these URLs
and redirect them to non-existing paths.
Example failures: [stable][1], [next][2]
NOTE:
This was not picked up in the regular CI tests run for PRs, because the
local devserver and the preview server used to test PRs do not support
Firebase-like redirects.
This commit fixes this by ensuring these disambiguated paths/URLs are
not matched by the redirect rules by checking whether the part of the
suffix after the `-` contains any numeric digits. While this check is
not ideal, it should be good enough for our purpose, since the legacy
URLs that we do want to redirect contain suffixes such as `-class`,
`-function` and thus no numeric digits.
[1]: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/974345
[2]: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/974346
PR Close#41842
In ##41788, the `disambiguateDocsPathsProcessor` was introduced to fix
an issue with case-insensitively equal paths. This processor may alter
the paths of some docs and thus their final URL in the app.
Previously, both the `disambiguateDocPathsProcessor` and the
`createSitemap` processor (which relies on the docs' computed paths to
generate the sitemap file) were configured to run before the
"rendering-docs" phase. However, this resulted in the
`disambiguateDocPathsProcessor`'s running after `createSitemap`, which
meant that the sitemap did not include the updated doc paths.
This commit fixes it by ensuring that the
`disambiguateDocPathsProcessor` is explicitly run before the
`createSitemap` processor, so that the latter will be able to take into
account any changes made by the former.
PR Close#41842
This commit includes the URL under test in the test description in
`testFirebaseRedirection.spec.ts` to make it easier to identify the
affected URL when a test fails.
It also avoids unnecessarily creating multiple `FirebaseRedirector`
instances by sharing instances between tests.
PR Close#41842
This commit updates the utilities in `firebase-test-utils/` to also
support testing Firebase redirects that are configured using regular
expressions (via the `regex` property).
See the [Firebase docs][1] for more details.
[1]: https://firebase.google.com/docs/hosting/full-config#redirects
PR Close#41842
Currently, the utilities for testing Firebase redirects assume that the
redirects are configured using the glob-based `source` property.
However, Firebase also supports configuring redirects using regular
expressions (via the `regex` property).
See the [Firebase docs][1] for more details.
This commit refactors the utilities in `firebase-test-utils/` to make it
easy to add support for such regex-based redirect configurations.
[1]: https://firebase.google.com/docs/hosting/full-config#redirects
PR Close#41842
Previously, the tests in `create-example.spec.ts` made assertions using
some hard-coded absolute paths (something like `/foo/bar`). This caused
the tests to fail on Windows, where the absolute paths are prefixed with
the drive letter (something like `C:/foo/bar`).
This commit uses `path.resolve()` to ensure paths are converted to the
format used on the current OS.
PR Close#41842
- Since the PRs needs to get reviewed we replace label `action: merge` with `action: review`.
- Add `remark` and `remark-html` to `ignoreDeps` since they require some work to bump.
- Remove `commitMessage`, Renovate now creates better commit messages.
- Group all non-major dependencies into a single group and schedule the updates for every Thursday
PR Close#41834
This section states that "Importing a module with services means that you will have a new instance of that service". This is only true for lazy-loaded `NgModules`. For non-lazy-loaded modules, my understanding is that the providers arrays are flattened into the root injector meaning that importing a module with a service doesn't create a new instance of that service.
PR Close#41835
`@font-face` rules cannot contain nested selectors. Nor can they be
nested under a selector. Normally this would be a syntax error by the
author of the styles. But in some rare cases, such as importing styles
from a library, and applying `:host ::ng-deep` to the imported styles,
we can end up with broken css if the imported styles happen to contain
`@font-face` rules.
This commit works around this problem by sanitizing such cases (erasing
any scoping selectors) during emulated ShadowDOM encapsulation style
processing.
Fixes#41751
PR Close#41815
These docs were linking directly to docs that have ambiguous paths.
These changes ensure that these links are not affected by the
disambiguation processing of those docs.
PR Close#41788
When two documents have the same `outputPath`, only differing by
letter casing, there can be problems on case-insensitive file-systems:
Only one of each of the docs would end up being written.
Moreover, the Webpack 5 bundler will error if it comes across files
that have this kind of ambiguous paths.
This commit adds a new docType: `disambiguator`, which will display
a list of the docs that match an ambiguous path. Each of the ambiguous
docs is then given a unique path and outputPath to ensure there are no
collisions.
PR Close#41788
Previously, the fallback key used for the CircleCI cache could match a
cache indefinitely (as long as `.bazelversion` didn't change). This
would allow the cache to grow quite large, which in turn would lead to
slow-down in CI jobs. See, also, angular/angular-cli#17533 for more
details of the impact of a growing CircleCI cache.
Unfortunately, using something like the lockfile checksum in the
fallback cache key would cause too many cache misses (esp. with
automatic updates via Renovate), again slowing CI down.
(The problem was originally discussed [here][2].)
This commit uses the technique described in [this blogpost][1] to
invalidate the cache monthly. This keeps the extra cache misses low
(essentially once per month per fork), while also preventing the cache
from growing indefinitely.
[1]: https://support.circleci.com/hc/en-us/articles/360012618473-Creating-a-daily-cache
[2]: https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/41467#discussion_r607818494
PR Close#41814