When an `ng-template` element has a variable declaration without a value,
it is assigned the value of the `$implicit` property in the embedded view's
context. The template compiler inserts a property access to `$implicit` for
template variables without a value, however the type-check code generation
logic did not. This resulted in incorrect type-checking code being generated.
Fixes FW-1326
PR Close#30675
Some HTML attributes don't correspond to their DOM property name, in which
case the runtime will apply the appropriate transformation when assigning
a property using its attribute name. One example of this is the `for`
attribute, for which the DOM property is named `htmlFor`.
The type-checking machinery in ngtsc must also take this mapping into
account, as it generates type-check code in which unclaimed property bindings
are assigned to properties of (subtypes of) `HTMLElement`.
Fixes#30607
Fixes FW-1327
PR Close#30675
Before this change we would systematically call LQueries.clone() when executting
elementStart / elementContainerStart instructions. This was often unnecessary as
LQueries can be mutated under 2 conditions only:
- we are crossing an element that has directives with content queries
(new queries must be added);
- we are descending into element hierarchy (creating a child element of an existing element)
and the current LQueries object is tracking shallow queries (shallow queries are removed).
With this PR LQueires.clone() is only done when needed and this gratelly reduces number
of LQueries object created: in the "expanding rows" benchmark number of allocated
(and often GCed just after!) LQueries is reduced from ~100k -> ~35k. This represents
over 1MB of memory that is not allocated.
PR Close#30664
Projecting bare ICU expressions failed because we would assume that component's content nodes would be projected later and doing so at that point would be wasteful. But ICU nodes are handled independently and should be inserted immediately because they will be ignored by projections.
FW-1348 #resolve
PR Close#30696
Inside of `DebugNode.queryAll` we walk through all of the descendants of the node that we're querying against, however the logic that walks sideways through a node siblings also applies to the root node. This means that eventually we'll match against its nodes as well which will give us invalid results. These changes add an extra check to ensure that we aren't matching against the siblings of the root node.
This PR resolves FW-1353.
PR Close#30788
With View engine it was possible to declare multiple projection
definitions and to programmatically project nodes into the slots.
e.g.
```html
<ng-content></ng-content>
<ng-content></ng-content>
```
Using `ViewContainerRef#createComponent` allowed projecting
nodes into one of the projection defs (through index)
This no longer works with Ivy as the `projectionDef` instruction only
retrieves a list of selectors instead of also retrieving entries for
reserved projection slots which appear when using the default
selector multiple times (as seen above).
In order to fix this issue, the Ivy compiler now passes all
projection slots to the `projectionDef` instruction. Meaning that
there can be multiple projection slots with the same wildcard
selector. This allows multi-slot projection as seen in the
example above, and it also allows us to match the multi-slot node
projection order from View Engine (to avoid breaking changes).
It basically ensures that Ivy fully matches the View Engine behavior
except of a very small edge case that has already been discussed
in FW-886 (with the conclusion of working as intended).
Read more here: https://hackmd.io/s/Sy2kQlgTE
PR Close#30561
Currently with Ivy, `ModuleWithProvider` providers are processed in order
of declaration in the `NgModule` imports. This technically makes makes
sense but is a potential breaking change as `ModuleWithProvider` providers
are processed after all imported modules in View Engine.
In order to keep the behavior of View Engine, the `r3_injector` is updated
to no longer process `ModuleWithProvider` providers egarly.
Resolves FW-1349
PR Close#30688
The "async" around a couple tests was removed because of the merge conflict in one of the previous commits (80394ce08b). This change restores missing "async"s.
PR Close#30762
fix(@schematics/angular): TypeScript related migrations should cater for BOM
In the CLI `UpdateRecorder` methods such as `insertLeft`, `remove` etc.. accepts positions which are not offset by a BOM. This is because when a file has a BOM a different recorder will be used https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/blob/master/packages/angular_devkit/schematics/src/tree/recorder.ts#L72 which caters for an addition offset/delta.
The main reason for this is that when a developer is writing a schematic they shouldn't need to compute the offset based if a file has a BOM or not and is handled out of the box.
Example
```ts
recorder.insertLeft(5, 'true');
```
However this is unfortunate in the case if a ts SourceFile is used and one uses `getWidth` and `getStart` method they will already be offset by 1, which at the end it results in a double offset and hence the problem.
Fixes#30713
PR Close#30719
Two issues with DebugNode/DebugElement in Ivy were causing problems in user
tests.
1. The DebugNodes returned by Ivy were not actually instances of DebugNode.
This was due to an issue with the Ivy switch logic in debug_node.ts.
The declaration of the exported DebugNode reference was set to
`DebugNode__PRE_R3__ as any`. The cast prevented the Ivy switch transform
from detecting this as a switchable declaration. The transform cannot handle
arbitrary syntax, and exports *must* be of the form "const x = y__PRE_R3__;"
or they will not work. The cast to any in this case was not needed, so this
commit removes it.
2. DebugNodes returned by Ivy multiple times for the same element were not
reference-identical. This was previously considered a minor breaking change
in Ivy, but testing has shown that users depend on referential equality of
DebugNodes. This commit caches a DebugNode on a DOM node when first creating
it, to allow returning the same instance in subsequent operations.
PR Close#30756
Due to sanitization being stored as a temp/global value between
instructions, unit tests randomly failed because one test failed
to clean up its temporary value. This patch fixes this issue.
`i18nAttributes` instructions always occur after the element instruction. This means that we need to treat `i18n-` attributes differently.
By defining a specific `AttributeMarker` we can ensure that we won't trigger directive inputs with untranslated attribute values.
FW-1332 #resolve
PR Close#30402
Changed runtime i18n to define attributes with bindings, or matching directive inputs/outputs as element properties as we are supposed to do in Angular.
This PR fixes the issue where directive inputs wouldn't be trigged.
FW-1315 #resolve
PR Close#30402
The R3TargetBinder "binds" an Angular template AST, computing semantic
information regarding the template and making it accessible.
One of the binding passes previously had a bug, where for the following
template:
<div *ngIf="foo as foo"></div>
which desugars to:
<ng-template ngIf [ngIf]="foo" let-foo="ngIf">
<div></div>
</ng-template>
would have the `[ngIf]` binding processed twice - in both the scope which
contains the `<ng-template>` and the scope inside the template. The bug
arises because during the latter, `foo` is a variable defined by `let-foo`,
and so the R3TargetBinder would incorrectly learn that `foo` inside `[ngIf]`
maps to that variable.
This commit fixes the bug by only processing inputs, outputs, and
templateAttrs from `Template`s in the outer scope.
PR Close#30669
Commit 0df719a46 introduced registration of NgModules with ids when compiled
with AOT, and f74373f2d corrected the timing to avoid issues with tree
shaking. Neither of these approaches were correct.
This commit fixes the timing to match View Engine and avoid tree shaking
issues, as well as fixes a bug with the registration of imported module ids.
A new Ivy-only test is added which verifies that modules get registered
correctly under real-world conditions.
PR Close#30706
Prior to this commit there were no explicit types setup for NgModuleFactory calls in ngfactories, so TypeScript inferred the type based on a given call. In some cases (when generic types were used for Components/Directives) that turned out to be problematic, so we add explicit typing for NgModuleFactory calls.
PR Close#30708
Plural ICU expressions depend on the locale (different languages have different plural forms). Until now the locale was hard coded as `en-US`.
For compatibility reasons, if you use ivy with AOT and bootstrap your app with `bootstrapModule` then the `LOCALE_ID` token will be set automatically for ivy, which is then used to get the correct plural form.
If you use JIT, you need to define the `LOCALE_ID` provider on the module that you bootstrap.
For `TestBed` you can use either `configureTestingModule` or `overrideProvider` to define that provider.
If you don't use the compat mode and start your app with `renderComponent` you need to call `ɵsetLocaleId` manually to define the `LOCALE_ID` before bootstrap. We expect this to change once we start adding the new i18n APIs, so don't rely on this function (there's a reason why it's a private export).
PR Close#29249
This patch is one of the final patches to refactor the styling algorithm
to be more efficient, performant and less complex.
This patch enables sanitization support for map-based and prop-based
style bindings.
PR Close#30667
Instead of linking to a markdown file explaining what the migration warnings
are about, we should link to the deprecation guide which now also contains
an entry for that schematic. This makes the deprecation explanations
consistent and more centralized.
PR Close#30702
With this change we reduce the amount of IO operations. This is especially a huge factor in windows since IO ops are slower.
With this change mainly we cache `existsSync` and `readFileSync` calls
Here's the results
Before
```
//packages/language-service/test:test
INFO: Elapsed time: 258.755s, Critical Path: 253.91s
```
After
```
//packages/language-service/test:test
INFO: Elapsed time: 66.403s, Critical Path: 63.13s
```
PR Close#30585
This fixes a collision between #30639 and #30543 where the latter added
usages of @ViewChild without the static flag present, but the former
made the flag required.
PR Close#30666
This commit makes the static flag on @ViewChild and @ContentChild required.
BREAKING CHANGE:
In Angular version 8, it's required that all @ViewChild and @ContentChild
queries have a 'static' flag specifying whether the query is 'static' or
'dynamic'. The compiler previously sorted queries automatically, but in
8.0 developers are required to explicitly specify which behavior is wanted.
This is a temporary requirement as part of a migration; see
https://angular.io/guide/static-query-migration for more details.
@ViewChildren and @ContentChildren queries are always dynamic, and so are
unaffected.
PR Close#30639
This patch in the second runtime change which refactors how styling
bindings work in Angular. This patch refactors how map-based
`[style]` and `[class]` bindings work using a new algorithm which
is faster and less complex than the former one.
This patch is a follow-up to an earlier refactor which enabled
support for prop-based `[style.name]` and `[class.name]`
bindings (see f03475cac8).
PR Close#30543
This is a new feature of the Ivy TestBed.
A common user pattern is to test one component with another. This is
commonly done by creating a `TestFixture` component which exercises the
main component under test.
This pattern is more difficult if the component under test is declared in an
NgModule but not exported. In this case, overriding the module is necessary.
In g3 (and View Engine), it's possible to use an NgSummary to override the
recompilation of a component, and depend on its AOT compiled factory. The
way this is implemented, however, specifying a summary for a module
effectively overrides much of the TestBed's other behavior. For example, the
following is legal:
```typescript
TestBed.configureTestingModule({
declarations: [FooCmp, TestFixture],
imports: [FooModule],
aotSummaries: [FooModuleNgSummary],
});
```
Here, `FooCmp` is declared in both the testing module and in the imported
`FooModule`. However, because the summary is provided, `FooCmp` is not
compiled within the context of the testing module, but _is_ made available
for `TestFixture` to use, even if it wasn't originally exported from
`FooModule`.
This pattern breaks in Ivy - because summaries are a no-op, this amounts
to a true double declaration of `FooCmp` which raises an error.
Fixing this in user code is possible, but is difficult to do in an
automated or backwards compatible way. An alternative solution is
implemented in this PR.
This PR attempts to capture the user intent of the following previously
unsupported configuration:
```typescript
TestBed.configureTestingModule({
declarations: [FooCmp, TestFixture],
imports: [FooModule],
});
```
Note that this is the same as the configuration above in Ivy, as the
`aotSummaries` value provided has no effect.
The user intent here is interpreted as follows:
1) `FooCmp` is a pre-existing component that's being used in the test
(via import of `FooModule`). It may or may not be exported by this
module.
2) `FooCmp` should be part of the testing module's scope. That is, it
should be visible to `TestFixture`. This is because it's listed in
`declarations`.
This feature effectively makes the `TestBed` testing module special. It's
able to declare components without compiling them, if they're already
compiled (or configured to be compiled) in the imports. And crucially, the
behavior matches the first example with the summary, making Ivy backwards
compatible with View Engine for tests that use summaries.
PR Close#30578
Depending on which placeholders the translation uses, there are some legitimate cases where we might not use all placeholder replacements in `i18nPostprocess`. For example if some of the placeholders of the original messages have been removed in the translation.
FW-1312 #resolve
PR Close#30632
8479cb4233 updated the static-query migration
to refer to the new guide on AIO. Unfortunately these URLs are currently not
valid as the guide is only available on `next.angular.io` right now. In order to
make the link work permanently (e.g. if we eventually remove the guide in future
major versions), we use the permalink from the `v8` subdomain.
PR Close#30649
DEPRECATION:
platform-webworker has been around since the initial release of Angular
version 2. It began as an experiment to leverage Angular's rendering
architecture and try something different: to run an entire web application
in a web worker.
We've learned a lot from this experiment, and have come to the conclusion
that pushing entire applications to run in a web worker is not a recipe for
success for most applications. This is due to a number of unresolved issues,
including:
* Poor or non-existent support for web worker APIs in web crawlers/indexers.
* Poor support in build and bundling tooling.
As a result, as of Angular version 8, we are deprecating the
`platform-webworker` APIs in Angular. This consists of both NPM packages,
`@angular/platform-webworker` and `@angular/platform-webworker-dynamic`.
Going forward, we will focus our efforts related to web workers around their
primary use case of offloading CPU-intensive but not critical work.
FW-1339 #resolve
PR Close#30642
DEPRECATION:
Angular previously has supported an integration with the Web Tracing
Framework (WTF) for performance testing of Angular applications. This
integration has not been maintained and likely does not work for the
majority of Angular applications today. As a result, we are deprecating
the integration in Angular version 8.
This deprecation covers the following public APIs:
* `WtfScopeFn`
* `wtfCreateScope`
* `wtfStartTimeRange`
* `wtfEndTimeRange`
* `wtfLeave`
FW-1338 #resolve
PR Close#30642
Currently if a project has source-files with syntax failures and the migration
has been started on a broken project, we silently migrate *as much as possible*,
but never notify the developer that the project was in a broken state and that
he can re-run the migration after the failures are fixed.
Additionally the template strategy does not need to exit gracefully if it detects
Angular semantic diagnostics on generated files (template type checking). These
diagnostics are not relevant for the query timing analysis.
PR Close#30628
We are removing the prompt for the `static-query` migration and make the
template strategy the migration strategy for the migration. The usage
strategy is good for best-practices, but for now we want to ensure that
the migration is a seamless as possible and that is only achievable my
re-using the same logic that View Engine uses for determining the
timing of a query.
PR Close#30628
Prior to this change a component was considered unresolved (i.e. having dynamic resources that should be loaded, like external template or stylesheets) even if template override was provided as an empty string (for example, via TestBed.overrideTemplateUsingTestingModule call). This commit fixes the condition that previously treated empty string as an absent template value.
PR Close#30602
With Ivy, injecting a `ViewContainerRef` for a `<ng-container>` element
results in two comments generated in the DOM. One comment as host
element for the `ElementContainer` and one for the generated `LContainer`
which is needed for the created `ViewContainerRef`.
This is problematic as developers expect the same anchor element for
the `LContainer` and the `ElementContainer` in order to be able to move
the host element of `<ng-container>` without leaving the actual
`LContainer` anchor element at the original location.
This worked differently in View Engine and various applications might
depend on the behavior where the `ViewContainerRef` shares the anchor
comment node with the host comment node of the `<ng-container>`. For
example `CdkTable` from `@angular/cdk` moves around the host element of
a `<ng-container>` and also expects embedded views to be inserted next
to the moved `<ng-container>` host element.
See: f8be5329f8/src/cdk/table/table.ts (L999-L1016)
Resolves FW-1341
PR Close#30611
The AbsoluteModuleStrategy in ngtsc assumed that the source code is
formatted as TypeScript with regards to module exports.
In ngcc this is not always the case, so this commit changes
`AbsoluteModuleStrategy` so that it relies upon a `ReflectionHost` to
compute the exports of a module.
PR Close#30200
Prior to this change we processed binding expression (including bindings with pipes) in i18n attributes before we generate update instruction. As a result, slot offsets for pipeBind instructions were calculated incorrectly. Now we perform binding expression processing when we generate "update block" instructions, so offsets are calculated correctly.
PR Close#30573
Currently the `@angular/compiler-cli` compliance tests sometimes do
not throw an exception if the expected output does not match the
generated JavaScript output. This can happen for the following cases:
1. Expected code includes character that is not part of known alphabet
(e.g. `Δ` is still used in a new compliance test after rebasing a PR)
2. Expected code asserts that a string literal matches a string with
escaped quotes. e.g. expects `const $var$ = "\"quoted\"";`)
PR Close#30597
_compile_action should take a list since we compute it within one node in the build graph
This needs to be cleaned up since Bazel is getting stricter with
disallowing iteration over depsets
PR Close#30600
Currently we try to parse CLI workspace configurations gracefully by
using the native `JSON.parse()` method. This means that the CLI workspace
configuration needs to follow the strict JSON specification because otherwise
the migrations would not be able to find TypeScript configurations in the CLI
project where JSON5 workspace configurations are supported.
In order to handle such workspace configurations, we leverage the JSON
parsing logicfrom the `@angular-devkit/core` which is also used by the CLI.
PR Close#30582
PR #29290 introduced a new `TestBed.get` signature and deprecated the existing one.
This raises a lot of TSLint deprecation warnings in projects using a strict TS config (see #29905 for context), so we are temporarily removing the `@deprecated` annotation in favor of a plain text warning until we properly fix it.
Refs #29905
Fixes FW-1336
PR Close#30514
The `flatten` function used `concat` and `slice` which created a lot of intermediary
object allocations. Because `flatten` is used from query any benchmark which
used query would exhibit high minor GC counts.
PR Close#30468
BREAKING CHANGE
In PR #19558, we fixed a bug in `TestBed.overrideProvider` where
eager providers were not being instantiated correctly. However,
it turned out that since this bug had been around for quite a bit,
many apps were relying on the broken behavior where the providers
would not be instantiated. To assist in the transition, the
`TestBed.deprecatedOverrideProvider` method was temporarily
introduced to mimic the old behavior so that apps would have a
longer time period to migrate their code.
2 years and 3 versions later, it is time to remove the temporary
method. This commit removes `TestBed.deprecatedOverrideProvider`
altogether. Any usages of `TestBed.deprecatedOverrideProvider`
should be replaced with `TestBed.overrideProvider`. This may mean
that providers that were not created before will now be instantiated,
which could mean that your tests need to provide more mocks or stubs
for the dependencies of the newly instantiated providers.
PR Close#30576
There is an encoding issue with using delta `Δ`, where the browser will attempt to detect the file encoding if the character set is not explicitly declared on a `<script/>` tag, and Chrome will find the `Δ` character and decide it is window-1252 encoding, which misinterprets the `Δ` character to be some other character that is not a valid JS identifier character
So back to the frog eyes we go.
```
__
/ɵɵ\
( -- ) - I am ineffable. I am forever.
_/ \_
/ \ / \
== == ==
```
PR Close#30546
Adds overloads to the `transform` methods of `SlicePipe`,
to have better types than `any` for `value` and `any` as a return.
With this commit, using `slice` in an `ngFor` still allow to type-check the content of the `ngFor`
with `fullTemplateTypeCheck` enabled in Ivy:
<div *ngFor="let user of users | slice:0:2">{{ user.typo }}</div>
|
`typo` does not exist on type `UserModel`
whereas it is currently not catched (as the return of `slice` is `any`) neither in VE nor in Ivy.
BREAKING CHANGE
`SlicePipe` now only accepts an array of values, a string, null or undefined.
This was already the case in practice, and it still throws at runtime if another type is given.
But it is now a compilation error to try to call it with an unsupported type.
PR Close#30156
Moves all manual render3 view_container_ref tests that use property
bindings to acceptance tests with TestBed.
Two issues surfaced and refer to a difference between Ivy and View
engine:
* Multi-slot projection is not working with Ivy: FW-1331
* ViewContainerRef throws if index is invalid while View Engine clamped index: FW-1330
PR Close#30488
Previously we defensively wrapped expressions in case they ran afoul of
precedence rules. For example, it would be easy to create the TS AST structure
Call(Ternary(a, b, c)), but might result in printed code of:
```
a ? b : c()
```
Whereas the actual structure we meant to generate is:
```
(a ? b : c)()
```
However the TypeScript renderer appears to be clever enough to provide
parenthesis as necessary.
This commit removes these defensive paraenthesis in the cases of binary
and ternary operations.
FW-1273
PR Close#30349
Previously, interpolations were generated into TCBs as a comma-separated
list of expressions, letting TypeScript infer the type of the expression
as the type of the last expression in the chain. This is undesirable, as
interpolations always result in a string type at runtime. Therefore,
type-checking of bindings such as `<img src="{{ link }}"/>` where `link`
is an object would incorrectly report a type-error.
This commit adjusts the emitted TCB code for interpolations, where a
chain of string concatenations is emitted, starting with the empty string.
This ensures that the inferred type of the interpolation is of type string.
PR Close#30177
This is the first refactor PR designed to change how styling bindings
(i.e. `[style]` and `[class]`) behave in Ivy. Instead of having a heavy
element-by-element context be generated for each element, this new
refactor aims to use a single context for each `tNode` element that is
examined and iterated over when styling values are to be applied to the
element.
This patch brings this new functionality to prop-based bindings such as
`[style.prop]` and `[class.name]`.
PR Close#30469
Previously, in order to assert that the promise was not resolved, an
error was thrown when the promise was resolved successfully. At the
same, `.catch()` was used to silence the (expected) promise rejection.
However, the chained `.catch()` handler would also catch (and swallow)
the error thrown on resolving the promise, making the test pass, even if
the promise was not rejected.
This commit fixes it by ensuring that the error thrown on resolving the
promise is not caught by the rejection handler.
PR Close#30515
Previously, [this test][1] would occasionally fail (e.g. on CI) with
"Template cache was not found in $templateCache". This was due to a
combination of:
1. [That test][2] (which removes the cache) being run right before the
failing test.
2. The async `TestBed.compileComponents()` operation run in the
`beforeEach()` block (which sets the cache) not having completed
before the `it()` block.
This commit fixes the issue by ensuring the cache is always set, before
instantiating `CachedResourceLoader`.
This commit also moves some operations that are only needed in one test
from the `beforeEach()` block to that test's `it()` block.
[1]: 79903b1842/packages/platform-browser-dynamic/test/resource_loader/resource_loader_cache_spec.ts (L50)
[2]: 79903b1842/packages/platform-browser-dynamic/test/resource_loader/resource_loader_cache_spec.ts (L37)Fixes#30499
PR Close#30515
Moves most of the tests from `render3/integration_spec` into `acceptance`. Note that there are still a handful of tests left in render3, because we don't have a way of moving all of them to go through `TestBed` since they either have r3-specific assertions or we don't have access to the same APIs as the raw instructions.
PR Close#30461
Ports render3 onDestroy tests over to be acceptance tests. Removes old render3 tests if possible.
Note the onlyInIvy test for one area where Ivy has a different behavior than ViewEngine
PR Close#30445
Previously we were relying upon the `.get()` method to return `undefined`
but it is clearer and safer to always check with `.has()` first.
PR Close#25445
Previously the same `Renderer` was used to render typings (.d.ts)
files. But the new `UmdRenderer` is not able to render typings files
correctly.
This commit splits out the typings rendering from the src rendering.
To achieve this the previous renderers have been refactored from
sub-classes of the abstract `Renderer` class to classes that implement
the `RenderingFormatter` interface, which are then passed to the
`Renderer` and `DtsRenderer` to modify its rendering behaviour.
Along the way a few utility interfaces and classes have been moved
around and renamed for clarity.
PR Close#25445
In some cases the `forwardRef` helper has been imported via a namespace,
e.g. `core.forwardRef(...)`.
This commit adds support for unwrapping such namespaced imports when
ngtsc is statically evaluating code.
PR Close#25445
Previously these fake files were full TypeScript source
files (`.ts`) but this is not necessary as we only need the
typings not the implementation.
PR Close#25445
Previously we were using an anonymous type `{specifier: string; qualifier: string;}`
throughout the code base. This commit gives this type a name and ensures it
is only defined in one place.
PR Close#25445
Previously, ngtsc would fail to evaluate expressions that access properties
from e.g. the `window` object. This resulted in hard to debug error messages
as no indication on where the problem originated was present in the output.
This commit cleans up the handling of unknown property accesses, such that
evaluating such expressions no longer fail but instead result in a `DynamicValue`.
Fixes#30226
PR Close#30247
- Adds inheritance tests for many combinations of directive, component and bare class inheritance
- Adds tests that are failing in ivy, but should work, marks them with `xit` and a TODO.
- Removes render3 unit tests that cover the same things.
PR Close#30442
A structural directive can specify a template guard for an input, such that
the type of that input's binding can be narrowed based on the guard's return
type. Previously, such template guards could only be methods, of which an
invocation would be inserted into the type-check block (TCB). For `NgIf`,
the template guard narrowed the type of its expression to be `NonNullable`
using the following declaration:
```typescript
export declare class NgIf {
static ngTemplateGuard_ngIf<E>(dir: NgIf, expr: E): expr is NonNullable<E>
}
```
This works fine for usages such as `*ngIf="person"` but starts to introduce
false-positives when e.g. an explicit non-null check like
`*ngIf="person !== null"` is used, as the method invocation in the TCB
would not have the desired effect of narrowing `person` to become
non-nullable:
```typescript
if (NgIf.ngTemplateGuard_ngIf(directive, ctx.person !== null)) {
// Usages of `ctx.person` within this block would
// not have been narrowed to be non-nullable.
}
```
This commit introduces a new strategy for template guards to allow for the
binding expression itself to be used as template guard in the TCB. Now,
the TCB generated for `*ngIf="person !== null"` would look as follows:
```typescript
if (ctx.person !== null) {
// This time `ctx.person` will successfully have
// been narrowed to be non-nullable.
}
```
This strategy can be activated by declaring the template guard as a
property declaration with `'binding'` as literal return type.
See #30235 for an example where this led to a false positive.
PR Close#30248
Removing the sandbox improves build time by almost 40%.
For a hello world (ng new) application:
ng build with sandbox: 22.0 seconds
ng build without sandbox: 13.3 seconds
PR Close#30460
The LocationShim (replacement for `$location`) was added to centralize dealing with the browser URL. Additionally, an `onUrlChange` method was added to Angular's Location service. This PR adds a corresponding method to the LocationShim so updates from AngularJS can be tracked in Angular.
PR Close#30466
This is a tentative fix for the error `Cannot write file '/node_modules/@angular/core/core.ngfactory.d.ts' because it would overwrite input file.` that is showing in codefresh windows ci.
PR Close#30482
It's unnecessary for a jasmine_node_test rule to depend on a TypeScript library. This dependency is already satisfied via the 'data' and also having it in 'deps' causes CI flakiness on Windows
PR Close#30482
In View Engine, we would simply ignore host style bindings on template nodes. In Ivy,
we are throwing a "Cannot read length of undefined" error instead. For backwards
compatibility, we should also ignore these bindings rather than blowing up.
PR Close#30498
In View engine it is possible to instantiate a service that that has no
`@Injectable` decorator as long as it satisfies one of:
1) It has no dependencies and so a constructor with no parameters.
This is already supported in Ivy.
2) It has no constructor of its own and sub-classes a service which has
dependencies but has its own `@Injectable` decorator. This second
scenario was broken in Ivy.
In Ivy, previous to this commit, if a class to be instantiated did not have
its own `@Injectable` decorator and did not provide a constructor of
its own, then it would be created using `new` with no arguments -
i.e. falling back to the first scenario.
After this commit Ivy correctly uses the `ngInjectableDef` inherited
from the super-class to provide the `factory` for instantiating the
sub-class.
FW-1314
PR Close#30388
- Moves template ref tests from render3 unit tests to acceptance tests.
- Marks tests testing ivy specific changes as `onlyInIvy`.
- Deletes old render3 unit tests that are no longer necessary
PR Close#30443
PR #30393 corrected behavior where Object.keys sometimes returns an `undefined` value. However, the types didn't reflect this in the code. That fix actually missed one value that could return `undefined`. This PR corrects this by casting the types to what they can be in IE 11. This ensures the code behaves as it should when this edge case comes up.
PR Close#30464
In some cases where multiple navigations happen to the same URL, the router will not process a given URL. In those cases, we fall into logic that resets state for the next navigation. One piece of this resetting is to set the `browserUrlTree` to the most recent `urlAfterRedirects`i.
However, there was bug in this logic because in some cases the `urlAfterRedirects` is a stale value. This happens any time a URL won't be processed, and the previous URL will also not be processed. This creates unpredictable behavior, not the least of which ends up being a broken `back` button.
This PR kicks off new navigations with the current value the router assumes is in the browser. All the logic around how to handle future navigations is based on this value compared to the current transition, so it's important to kick off all new navigations with the current value so in the edge case described above we don't end up with an old value being set into `browserUrlTree`.
Fixes#30340
Related to #30160
PR Close#30344
Slightly improves the messages for the static-query migration in order
to make the terminal output less verbose but more helpful. Unfortunately
we are limited in what we can print due to the devkit not providing much
utilities for printing good messages from a migration schematic.
PR Close#30458
Currently if something fails in the selected strategy (e.g. AOT failures),
the migration currently accidentally falls back to the test strategy. This
is not helpful as we want to give developers the possibility to re-run
the migration after fixing potential AOT failures.
PR Close#30458
Apparently the devkit logger is not able to properly print
out error objects, so we need to convert them to a string
before in order to make the error visible to the user.
This is not testable without an e2e test that validates the CLI
terminal output.
PR Close#30458
Preserve compatibility with rollup_bundle rule.
Add missing npm dependencies, which are now enforced by the strict_deps plugin in tsc_wrapped
PR Close#30370
Moves most of the r3 change detection tests into `acceptance`. Notes:
* A handful of tests weren't migrated, because they were testing an API that isn't exposed publicly yet.
* The `should throw if bindings in children of current view have changed` and `should NOT throw if bindings in ancestors of current view have changed` tests were removed, because there's not nice way of hitting the same code path with `TestBed` and doing the same assertion as with the raw instructions. I'm open to ideas on how we could do them.
* There were a few tests that assert that the `innerHTML` looks in a particular way. I've switched them to use `textContent`, because Ivy and ViewEngine produce slightly different DOM. The tests were only checking whether the text has changed anyway.
PR Close#30425
Moves all manual render3 property binding tests to
TestBed acceptance tests. Unfortunately three property
binding tests could not be migrated as these rely on
manual Ivy template code that is not supported within
TestBed. These can be revisited as discussed in the
framework team meeting.
PR Close#30426
Moves all manual render3 tests which are located within the
`renderer_factory_spec.ts` file to acceptance tests. A few tests
that use Ivy-specific logic which is not replicable with `TestBed`
remain in the render3 folder (e.g. using `renderTemplate`)
Additionally migrated tests that assert the lifecycles of the
renderer_factory are set to *ivy only* as the lifecycle seems
to be different in Ivy. Tracked with: FW-1320
PR Close#30435
This PR fixes an issue where IE 11 can return `undefined` in with an `Object.keys` call. Solution is to add a runtime check on the value. Based on the types being passed, this shouldn't be necessary, but is needed only for IE 11. Unit test doesn't work for this PR because it can't be replicated easily.
PR Close#30393
At the moment the module resolver will end up in an infinite loop in Windows because we are assuming that the root directory is always `/` however in windows this can be any drive letter example `c:/` or `d:/` etc...
With this change we also resolve the drive letter in windows, when using `AbsoluteFsPath.from` for consistence so under `/foo` will be converted to `c:/foo` this is also needed because of relative paths with different drive letters.
PR Close#30297
Currently in Ivy `NgModule` registration happens when the class is declared, however this is inconsistent with ViewEngine and requires extra generated code. These changes remove the generated code for `registerModuleFactory`, pass the id through to the `ngModuleDef` and do the module registration inside `NgModuleFactory.create`.
This PR resolves FW-1285.
PR Close#30244
```
//packages/compiler-cli/test:ngc
//packages/compiler/test:test
```
This also address `node_modules` to the ignored paths for ngc compiler as otherwise the `ready` is never fired
Partially addresses #29785
PR Close#30146
- Moves tests related to the pureFunction instructions from render3 to acceptance tests
- Leaves behind one test for in-template javascript that is not supported syntax yet
PR Close#30406
Moves over the tests from `pipe_spec` into `acceptance`. Note that the two `WrappedValue` tests haven't been moved over, because impure pipes always throw "changed after checked" errors in `TestBed`. This seems to be consistent with ViewEngine.
PR Close#30389
Now that the dependent files and compilation scopes are being tracked in
the incremental state, we can skip analysing and emitting source files if
none of their dependent files have changed since the last compile.
The computation of what files (and their dependencies) are unchanged is
computed during reconciliation.
This commit also removes the previous emission skipping logic, since this
approach covers those cases already.
PR Close#30238
To support skipping analysis of a file containing a component
we need to know that none of the declarations that might affect
its ngtsc compilation have not changed. The files that we need to
check are those that contain classes from the `CompilationScope`
of the component. These classes are already tracked in the
`LocalModuleScopeRegistry`.
This commit modifies the `IvyCompilation` class to record the
files that are in each declared class's `CompilationScope` via
a new method, `recordNgModuleScopeDependencies()`, that is called
after all the handlers have been "resolved".
Further, if analysis is skipped for a declared class, then we need
to recover the analysis from the previous compilation run. To
support this, the `IncrementalState` class has been updated to
expose the `MetadataReader` and `MetadataRegistry` interfaces.
This is included in the `metaRegistry` object to capture these analyses,
and also in the `localMetaReader` as a fallback to use if the
current compilation analysis was skipped.
PR Close#30238
As part of incremental compilation performance improvements, we need
to track the dependencies of files due to expressions being evaluated by
the `PartialEvaluator`.
The `PartialEvaluator` now accepts a `DependencyTracker` object, which is
used to track which files are visited when evaluating an expression.
The interpreter computes this `originatingFile` and stores it in the evaluation
`Context` so it can pass this to the `DependencyTracker.
The `IncrementalState` object implements this interface, which allows it to be
passed to the `PartialEvaluator` and so capture the file dependencies.
PR Close#30238
Moves most of the tests in `output_spec` into `acceptance`. Note that one test is left in `render3`, because it's testing mixing in custom logic with instructions which we can't replicate using `TestBed`.
PR Close#30372
Moves all manual `render3` content projection tests that use
the `ɵɵelementProperty` to acceptance tests. Additionally a
few other content projection tests were moved over to
acceptance. Eventually we'll be able to move all remaining
content projection tests to acceptance.
PR Close#30357
This commit moves the delegated constructor detection to a helper
function and also adds more test coverage.
The original code for this came from https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/24156
thanks to @ts2do.
Closes#24156Closes#27267
// FW-1310
PR Close#30368
After this PR is merged, maintainers no longer need to update .bazelrc
file, toolchain and platform related flags for RBE builds and tests
(unless there is a breaking change in Bazel related to those flags).
Maintainers just need to update the pin of @bazel-toolchains repo
regularly in the packages/bazel/package.bzl file according to
https://releases.bazel.build/bazel-toolchains.html to include the
latest checked-in toolchain configs. If rbe_autoconfig() cannot find
appropriate toolchain configs for the version of Bazel in the version of
@bazel_toolchains repo that is currently used by this project, it will pull
down the container and generate the configs on the fly as the beginning
of the build/test.
PR Close#29336
Currently we always just set the timing to `false` if we aren't
able to analyze a given call expression or new expression. e.g.
```ts
ngOnInit() {
thirdPartyCallSync(() => this.query.doSomething())
}
```
In that case the `thirdPartyCallSync` function comes from the `node_modules`
and is only defined through types while there is no code for the
actual function logic that can be analyzed. This makes it impossible
to tell whether the given call expression actually causes the specified
arrow function to be executed synchronously or not. In order to be able
to make this better, we now peek into the passed arrow function and
check for a synchronous query usage. If so, we set the query timing to
static and mark it as ambiguous. This ensures that the usage strategy is
less "magical" and more correct with third-party code.
Additionally since functions like `setTimeout` are not analyzable but known
to be asynchronous, there is a hard-coded list of known functions which
shouldn't be marked as ambiguous.
Resolves FW-1214. As planned within https://hackmd.io/hPiLWpPlQ4uynC1luIBdfQ
PR Close#30215
Even though we don't run the size-tracking test on CI
right now, we update the golden size map as part of
the size-tracking tool update. The size-map difference
should generally be kept up-to-date to be able to
determine which PRs contribute size to a given file.
PR Close#30257
Based on discussion that happened on the PR that introduced
the size-tracking tool, we want to have another threshold for
the raw byte difference. This allows us to better control for
which changes the size-tracking tool should report a difference.
See: https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/30070#discussion_r278332315
PR Close#30257
- splits existing property acceptance tests into property_binding and property_interpolation
- ports tests from render3 instructions tests to acceptance tests
- removes redundant or unnecessary tests that are covered by existing acceptance tests
:)
PR Close#30321
Currently the static-query migration ignores queries declared on getters
or setters as these are not part of a `PropertyDeclaration`. We need to
handle these queries in order to cover all queries within a given project.
The usage strategy is not able to detect timing for queries on accessors,
so we add a TODO and print a message. The template strategy is able
to detect the proper timing for such queries because it's not dependent
on detecting the usage of the query.
Resolves FW-1215
PR Close#30327
We have an issue where we would like to be able to test perf counter metrics in acceptance tests, but we are unable to do so, because it will break when those same tests are run with ViewEngine. This PR adds a testing utility to `onlyInIvy` that allows for testing of performance counters, and even gives readable errors for what value on `ngDevMode` is incorrect. Has typings for decent autocompletion as well.
PR Close#30339
This is the final patch to migrate the Angular styling code to have a
smaller instruction set in preparation for the runtime refactor. All
styling-related instructions now work both in template and hostBindings
functions and do not use `element` as a prefix for their names:
BEFORE:
elementStyling()
elementStyleProp()
elementClassProp()
elementStyleMap()
elementClassMap()
elementStylingApply()
AFTER:
styling()
styleProp()
classProp()
styleMap()
classMap()
stylingApply()
PR Close#30318
This patch removes all host-specific styling instructions in favor of
using element-level instructions instead. Because of the previous
patches that made sure `select(n)` worked between styling calls, all
host level instructions are not needed anymore. This patch changes each
of those instruction calls to use any of the `elementStyling*`,
`elementStyle*` and `elementClass*` styling instructions instead.
PR Close#30336
The static-query template strategy leverages the AOT compiler
in order to determine the query timing. Unfortunately the AOT
compiler has open bugs that can cause unexpected failures which
make the template strategy unusable in rare cases. These rare
exceptions need to be handled gracefully in order to avoid confusion
and to provide a more smooth migration.
Additionally migration strategy setup failures are now reported with
stack traces as the `ng update` command does not print stack traces.
This makes it easier to reproduce and report migration issues.
PR Close#30269
In an Angular CLI project scenario where projects only reference
top-level source-files through the `tsconfig` `files` option, we currently
do not migrate referenced source-files. This can be fixed checking all
referenced source-files which aren't coming from an external library.
This is similar to how `tslint` determines project source-files.
PR Close#30269
Currently when someone has a call expression within the `ngOnInit` call
and we try to peek into that function with respect to the current function
context, the schematic errors because a call expression argument is
undefined. This is valid because the target function declaration defines
that parameter with a default value. In order to fix this, we need to
respect parameter default values.
PR Close#30269
Fixes not being able to bind a `SafeStyle` as a camel cased style property (e.g. `[style.backgroundImage]="someSafeStyle"`). The issue was due to the fact that we only check the dash case property names to determine whether to sanitize a value.
This PR resolves FW-1279.
PR Close#30328
572b54967c changed how the schematic
tests are executed. Tests no longer use the schematic collection
that is also used by the CLI `ng update` command and therefore
the migration collection could technically be invalid.
In order to ensure that the public migration collection is guaranteed
to work and to avoid duplication within two schematic collections, the
changes are partially reverted and only the disabled `injectable-pipe`
schematic has its own collection.
PR Close#30198
Currently we always prompt when the static-query migration runs. This is not
always needed because some applications do not even use `ViewChild` or
`ContentChild` queries and it just causes confusion if developers need to
decide on a migration strategy while there is nothing to migrate.
In order to avoid this confusion, we no longer prompt for a strategy
if there are no queries declared within the project.
PR Close#30254
This patch is one commit of many patches that will unify all styling instructions
across both template-level bindings and host-level bindings. This patch in particular
removes the `elementIndex` param because it is already set prior to each styling
instruction via the `select(n)` instruction.
PR Close#30313
Instead of launching a Node.js process that in turn spawns Bazel binary,
the Builder could now directly spawn the native binary. This makes the
bootup process slightly more efficient, and allows the Builder to
control spawn options. This works with both Bazel and iBazel.
PR Close#30306
Currently, in jit mode, `ngInjectableDef`, `ngDirectiveDef`, `ngPipeDef` and `ngModuleDef` use `ng://`,
which display them in the top domain in Chrome Dev Tools, whereas `ngComponentDef` uses `ng:///` which display components in a separate domain.
You can currently see:
```
AppModule
UserService
ng://
|_ AppComponent
|_ template.html
|_ AppComponent.js
...
```
This commits replaces all `ng://` with `ng:///` to display every Angular entity in the `ng://` domain.
```
ng://
|_ AppModule
|_ UserService
|_ AppComponent
...
```
PR Close#29826
Prior to this patch, the `select(n)` instruction would only be generated
when property bindings are encountered which meant that styling-related
bindings were skipped. This patch ensures that all styling-related bindings
(i.e. class and style bindings) are always prepended with a `select()`
instruction prior to being generated in AOT.
PR Close#30311
This patch breaks up the existing `elementStylingMap` into
`elementClassMap` and `elementStyleMap` instructions. It also breaks
apart `hostStlyingMap` into `hostClassMap` and `hostStyleMap`
instructions. This change allows for better tree-shaking and reduces
the complexity of the styling algorithm code for `[style]` and `[class]`
bindings.
PR Close#30293
If an entry-point has a missing dependency then all the entry-points
that would have pointed to that dependency are also removed from
the dependency graph.
Previously we were still processing the dependencies of an entry-point
even if it had already been removed from the graph because it depended
upon a missing dependency that had previously been removed due to another
entry-point depending upon it.
This caused the dependency processing to crash rather than gracefully
logging and handling the missing invalid entry-point.
Fixes#29624
PR Close#30270
There was a problem with a combination of the `eager` URL update, browser `back` button, and hybrid applications. Details provided in internal ticket http://b/123667227.
This fix handles the problem by setting `router.browserUrlTree` when all conditions have failed, meaning the browser doesn't do anything with the navigation other than update internal data structures. Without this change, the problem was an old value was stored in `router.broserUrlTree` causing some new navigations to be compared to an old value and breaking future navigations.
PR Close#30160
In the existing implementation the `elementPropertyInternal` function (meant to
set element properties) was executed even if a bound value didn't change. The
`elementPropertyInternal` was inspecting the incoming value and after comparing it
to `NO_CHANGE` - exiting early. All in all it meant that we were unnecessarily
invoking the `elementPropertyInternal` function for cases where bound value didn't
change.
Based on my bencharks (running change detection without any model update in a tight
loop) this unnecessary function call was causing ~5% slowdown in the change detection
process.
PR Close#30255
This commit fixes a regression introduced in PR 29692 where
the interpolate symbol in View Engine was improperly prefixed
with the ɵɵ that signifies private instructions for Ivy. It
resulted in interpolations of 10+ values not working correctly
in AOT mode. This commit removes the prefix.
PR Close#30243
Previously, `R3TestBedCompiler` was dynamically defining an
`@NgModule`-decorated `CompilerModule` class inside a method call.
Since ngcc only processes top-level classes, this class was not
transformed causing failures in unit tests (see #30121 for details).
This commit fixes it by using `compileNgModuleDefs()` directly (similar
to the fix in #30037).
Fixes#30121
PR Close#28530
Sometimes we need to override module resolution behaviour.
We do this by implementing the optional method `resolveModuleNames()`
on `CompilerHost`.
This commit ensures that we always try this method first before falling
back to the standard `ts.resolveModuleName`
PR Close#30017
Packages that do not follow APF may have the declaration files in the same
directory as one source format, typically ES5. This is problematic for ngcc,
as it needs to create a TypeScript program with all JavaScript sources of
an entry-point, whereas TypeScript's module resolution mechanism would have
resolved an internal module import to the external facing .d.ts declaration
file, instead of the JavaScript source file. This behavior results in the
program to be analysed being incomplete.
This commit introduces a custom compiler host that recognizes the above
scenario and rewires the resolution of a .d.ts declaration file to its
JavaScript counterpart, if applicable.
Fixes#29939
PR Close#30017
Ivy uses R3Injector, but we are currently pulling in both the StaticInjector
(View Engine injector) and the R3Injector when running with Ivy. This commit
adds an ivy switch so calling Injector.create() pulls in the correct
implementation of the injector depending on whether you are using VE or Ivy.
This saves us about 3KB in the bundle.
PR Close#30219
Previously, we were supporting injection flags for provider deps, but only
if they fit the format `new Optional()`. This commit fixes resolution of
provider deps to also support `Optional` (without the new). This keeps us
backwards compatible with what View Engine supported.
PR Close#30216
Stores the views that are part of a container directly on the `LContainer`, rather than maintaining a dedicated sub-array.
This PR resolves FW-1288.
PR Close#30179
Currently, we are not properly resolving forward refs when they appear
in deps for providers created with the useFactory strategy. This commit
wraps provider deps in the resolveForwardRef call so the tokens are
passed into the inject function as expected.
PR Close#30201
Fixes `HostBinding` and `HostListener` declarations not being inherited from base classes that don't have an Angular decorator.
This PR resolves FW-1275.
PR Close#30158
Currently the `static-query` migrations fails at the final step of
updating a query when the query already specifies options which
cannot be transformed easily. e.g. the options are computed through
a function call: `@ViewChild(..., getQueryOpts());` or `@ViewChild(..., myOptionsVar)`.
In these cases we technically could add additionally logic to update
the query options, but given that this is an edge-case and it's
potentially over-engineering the migration schematic, we just
always add a TODO for the timing and print out the determined
query timing in the console. The developer in that case just needs
to manually update the logic for the query options to contain the
printed query timing.
Potentially related to: https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/14298
PR Close#30178
This PR adds the implementation for `definitionAndBoundSpan` because
it's now preferred over `definition`. vscode would send this new request
for `Go to definition`. As part of this PR the implementation for
`definition` is refactored and simplified. Goldens for both methods are
checked in.
PR Close#30125
This commit introduces a new interface, which abstracts access
to the underlying `FileSystem`. There is initially one concrete
implementation, `NodeJsFileSystem`, which is simply wrapping the
`fs` library of NodeJs.
Going forward, we can provide a `MockFileSystem` for test, which
should allow us to stop using `mock-fs` for most of the unit tests.
We could also implement a `CachedFileSystem` that may improve the
performance of ngcc.
PR Close#29643
By passing a `pathMappings` configuration (a subset of the
`ts.CompilerOptions` interface), we can instuct ngcc to process
additional paths outside the `node_modules` folder.
PR Close#29643
When working out the dependencies between entry-points
ngcc must parse the import statements and then resolve the
import path to the actual file. This is complicated because module
resolution is not trivial.
Previously ngcc used the node.js `require.resolve`, with some
hacking to resolve modules. This change refactors the `DependencyHost`
to use a new custom `ModuleResolver`, which is optimized for this use
case.
Moreover, because we are in full control of the resolution,
we can support TS `paths` aliases, where not all imports come from
`node_modules`. This is the case in some CLI projects where there are
compiled libraries that are stored locally in a `dist` folder.
See //FW-1210.
PR Close#29643
Previously we completely ignored entry-points that had not been
compiled with Angular, since we do not need to compile them
with ngcc. But this makes it difficult to reason about dependencies
between entry-points that were compiled with Angular and those that
were not.
Now we do track these non-Angular compiled entry-points but they
are marked as `compiledByAngular: false`.
PR Close#29643
The test now attempts to compile an entry-point (@angular/common/http/testing)
that has a transient "private" dependency. A private dependency is one that is
only visible by looking at the compiled JS code, rather than the generated TS
typings files.
This proves that we can't rely on typings files alone for computing the
dependencies between entry-points.
PR Close#29643
The `Transformer` and `Renderer` classes do not
actually need a `sourcePath` value as by the time
they are doing their work we are only working directly
with full absolute paths.
PR Close#29643
Introduces a new Bazel test that allows us to inspect
what source-files contribute to a given bundled file
and how much bytes they contribute to the bundle size.
Additionally the size-tracking rule groups the size
data by directories. This allows us to compare size
changes in the scope of directories. e.g. a lot of
files in a directory could increase slightly in size, but
in the directory scope the size change could be significant
and needs to be reported by the test target.
Resolves FW-1278
PR Close#30070
Disables the injectable pipe migration until we can decide whether this is the right solution for Ivy. Rolling it out properly will involve a more detailed plan and more changes like updating the styleguide, scaffolding schematics etc.
Context for the new `test-migrations.json`: since we use the `migrations.json` both for the real migrations and for tests, it doesn't allow us to disable a schematic, but continue running its tests. This change adds the test-specific file so that we can continue running the `injectable-pipe` tests, even though the schematic itself is disabled.
PR Close#30180
Currently the injectable pipe schematic generates invalid imports like `import import { Pipe, PipeTransform, Injectable } from '@angular/core'; from '@angular/core';`. The issue wasn't caught by the unit tests, because the invalid import still contains the valid one.
Fixes#30159.
PR Close#30170
This PR removes `tsserverlibrary` from rollup globals since the symbol
should not appear by the time rollup is invoked. `tsserverlibrary` is
used for types only, so the import statement should not be emitted by
tsc.
PR Close#30123
Fixes Ivy reflecting properties with `undefined` values, rather than omitting them. Also fixes that Ivy doesn't clear the reflected values when property value changes from something that is defined to undefined.
This PR resolves FW-1277.
PR Close#30103
Move tests for special tokens like `Injector`, `ElementRef`, `TemplateRef`, `ViewContainerRef`, `ChangeDectetorRef` and custom string tokens.
PR Close#29299
- Extracts and documents code that will be common to interpolation instructions
- Ensures that binding indices are updated at the proper time during compilation
- Adds additional tests
Related #30011
PR Close#30129
Prior to this commit, we were pulling DebugNode and DebugElement
into production builds because BrowserModule automatically pulled
in NgProbe and thus getDebugNode. In Ivy, this is not necessary
because Ivy has its own set of debug utilities. We should use these
existing tools instead of NgProbe.
This commit adds an Ivy switch so we do not pull in NgProbe utilities
when running with Ivy. This saves us ~8KB in prod builds.
PR Close#30130
Leading trivia, such as whitespace or comments, is
confusing for developers looking at source-mapped
templates, since they expect the source-map segment
to start after the trivia.
This commit adds skipping trivial characters to the lexer;
and then implements that in the template parser.
PR Close#30095
Previously, the ServiceWorker registration options should be defined as
an object literal (in order for them to be compatible with Ahead-of-Time
compilation), thus making it impossible to base the ServiceWorker
behavior on runtime conditions.
This commit allows specifying the registration options using a regular
provider, which means that it can take advantage of the `useFactory`
option to determine the config at runtime, while still remaining
compatible with AoT compilation.
PR Close#21842
With #30058, the ngUpgrade internal `angular.module()` method was
renamed to `angular.module_()` (to avoid a webpack bug).
Merging #29794 afterwards resulted in some broken tests, because it
still used the old `angular.module()` method name. (The PR had been
tested on CI against a revision that did not contain the rename.)
This commit fixes the broken tests by renaming the remaining occurrences
of `angular.module()`.
PR Close#30126
Previously, under certain circumstances, `NgZone#onMicrotaskEmpty` could
emit while a `$digest` was in progress, thus triggering another
`$digest`, which in turn would throw a `$digest already in progress`
error. Furthermore, throwing an error from inside the `onMicrotaskEmpty`
subscription would result in unsubscribing and stop triggering further
`$digest`s, when `onMicrotaskEmpty` emitted.
Usually, emitting while a `$digest` was already in progress was a result
of unintentionally running some part of AngularJS outside the Angular
zone, but there are valid (if rare) usecases where this can happen
(see #24680 for details).
This commit addresses the issue as follows:
- If a `$digest` is in progress when `onMicrotaskEmpty` emits, do not
trigger another `$digest` (to avoid the error). `$evalAsync()` is used
instead, to ensure that the bindings are evaluated at least once more.
- Since there is still a high probability that the situation is a result
of programming error (i.e. some AngularJS part running outside the
Angular Zone), a warning will be logged, but only if the app is in
[dev mode][1].
[1]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/78146c189/packages/core/src/util/ng_dev_mode.ts#L12Fixes#24680
PR Close#29794
Previously, ngtsc included query fields in the list of fields which can
affect the type of a directive via its type constructor. This feature
however has yet to be built, and View Engine in default mode does not
do this inference.
This caused an unexpected bug where private query fields (which should be
an error but are allowed by View Engine) cause the type constructor
signature to be invalid. This commit fixes that issue by disabling the
logic to include query fields.
PR Close#30094
ngtsc generates type constructors which infer the type of a directive based
on its inputs. Previously, a bug existed where this inference would fail in
the case of 'any' input values. For example, the inference of NgForOf fails
when an 'any' is provided, as it causes TypeScript to attempt to solve:
T[] = any
In this case, T gets inferred as {}, the empty object type, which is not
desirable.
The fix is to assign generic types in type constructors a default type of
'any', which TypeScript uses instead of {} when inference fails.
PR Close#30094
The proposed ES dynamic import() is now supported by the Angular CLI and the
larger toolchain. This renders the `loadChildren: string` API largely
redundant, as import() is far more natural, is less error-prone, and is
standards compliant. This commit deprecates the `string` form of
`loadChildren` in favor of dynamic import().
DEPRECATION:
When defining lazy-loaded route, Angular previously offered two options for
configuring the module to be loaded, both via the `loadChildren` parameter
of the route. Most Angular developers are familiar withthe `string` form of
this API. For example, the following route definition configures Angular to
load a `LazyModule` NgModule from `lazy-route/lazy.module.ts`:
```
[{
path: 'lazy',
loadChildren: 'lazy-route/lazy.module#LazyModule',
}]
```
This "magic string" configuration was previously necessary as there was
no dynamic module loading standard on the web. This has changed with the
pending standardization of dynamic `import()` expressions, which are now
supported in the Angular CLI and in web tooling in general. `import()`
offers a more natural and robust solution to dynamic module loading. The
above example can be rewritten to use dynamic `import()`:
```
[{
path: 'lazy',
loadChildren: () => import('./lazy-route/lazy.module').then(mod => mod.LazyModule),
}]
```
This form of lazy loading offers significant advantages in terms of:
* type checking via TypeScript
* simplicity of generated code
* future potential to run natively in supporting browsers
(see: [caniuse: dynamic import()](https://caniuse.com/#feat=es6-module-dynamic-import))
As a result, Angular is deprecating the `loadChildren: string` syntax in
favor of ES dynamic `import()`. An automatic migration will run during
`ng upgrade` to convert your existing Angular code to the new syntax.
PR Close#30073
When targeting ES2015 (as is the default in cli@8), `const` is not
downleveled to `var` and thus declaring `const module` throws an error
due to webpack wrapping the code in a function call with a `module`
argument (even when compiling for the `web` environment).
Related: webpack/webpack#7369
Fixes#30050
PR Close#30058
This commit provides a replacement for `$location`. The new service is written in Angular, and can be consumed into existing applications by using the downgraded version
of the provider.
Prior to this addition, applications upgrading from AngularJS to Angular could get into a situation where AngularJS wanted to control the URL, and would often parse or se
rialize the URL in a different way than Angular. Additionally, AngularJS was alerted to URL changes only through the `$digest` cycle. This provided a buggy feedback loop
from Angular to AngularJS.
With this new `LocationUpgradeProvider`, the `$location` methods and events are provided in Angular, and use Angular APIs to make updates to the URL. Additionally, change
s to the URL made by other parts of the Angular framework (such as the Router) will be listened for and will cause events to fire in AngularJS, but will no longer attempt
to update the URL (since it was already updated by the Angular framework).
This centralizes URL reads and writes to Angular and should help provide an easier path to upgrading AngularJS applications to Angular.
PR Close#30055
This abstract class (and AngularJSUrlCodec) are used for serializing and deserializing pieces of a URL string. AngularJS had a different way of doing this than Angular, and using this class in conjunction with the LocationUpgradeService an application can have control over how AngularJS URLs are serialized and deserialized.
PR Close#30055
When using the `history` API, setting a new `state` and retrieving it does not pass a `===` test to the object used to set the state. In other words, `history.state` is always a copy. This change makes the `MockPlatformLocation` behave in the same way.
PR Close#30055
This feature adds an `onUrlChange` to Angular's `Location` class. This is useful to track all updates coming from anywhere in the framework. Without this method, it's difficult (or impossible) to track updates run through `location.go()` or `location.replaceState()` as the browser doesn't publish events when `history.pushState()` or `.replaceState()` are run.
PR Close#30055
AngularJS's `$location` service doesn't have a direct counterpart in Angular. This is largely because the `Location` service in Angular was pulled out of the `Router`, but was not purpose-built to stand on its own.
This commit adds a new `@angular/common/upgrade` package with the beginnings of a new `LocationUpgradeService`. This service will more closely match the API of AngularJS and provide a way to replace the `$location` service from AngularJS.
PR Close#30055
Without this change, the framework doesn't surface URL parts such as hostname, protocol, and port. This makes it difficult to rebuild a complete URL. This change provides new APIs to read these values.
PR Close#30055
Previously there wasn't a way to retrieve `history.state` from the `Location` service. The only time the framework exposed this value was in navigation events. This meant if you weren't using the Angular router, there wasn't a way to get access to this `history.state` value other than going directly to the DOM.
This PR adds an API to retrieve the value of `history.state`. This will be useful and needed to provide a backwards-compatible `Location` service that can emulate AngularJS's `$location` service since we will need to be able to read the state data in order to produce AngularJS location transition events.
This feature will additionally be useful to any application that wants to access state data through Angular rather than going directly to the DOM APIs.
PR Close#30055