`Object.values` is not supported in IE11 without a polyfill. The quickest,
most straightfoward fix for this is to simply use `Object.keys` instead.
We may want to consider including the polyfill in the CLI in the future
or just wait until IE11 support is dropped before using
`Object.values`.
PR Close#40370
Currently the language service has to force `compileNonExportedClasses` to
`true` to handle inline NgModules in tests, regardless of the value in user's
tsconfig.json.
However, the override is not reinstated after the compiler option changes
(triggered by a change in tsconfig.json).
This commit fixes the bug.
PR Close#40364
This commit documents how to add a helper function which combines all the params
in the router state tree into a single object. It provides a starting point for
developers to reference if they require a more fine-tuned approach.
Fixes#11023
PR Close#40306
In #37182 the in-memory-web-api module was moved into this repo.
Copy the reamde into this repo with the following changes:
* Removed Travis badges
* Updated github links to point to Angular repo
* Removed 'running tests' as it is no longer relevant
Fixes#40190
PR Close#40203
When we attach a `ViewRef` to a `ViewContainerRef`, we save a reference to the container
onto the `ViewRef` so that we can remove it when the ref is destroyed. The problem is
that if the container's `hostView` is destroyed first, the `ViewRef` has no way of knowing
that it should stop referencing the container.
These changes remove the leak by not saving a reference at all. Instead, when a `ViewRef`
is destroyed, we clean it up through the `LContainer` directly. We don't need to worry
about the case where the container is destroyed before the view, because containers
automatically clean up all of their views upon destruction.
Fixes#38648.
PR Close#40219
The `NgControlStatusGroup` directive is shared between template-driven and reactive form modules. In cases when
only reactive forms module is present, the `NgControlStatusGroup` directive is still activated on all `<form>`
elements, but if there is no other reactive directive applied (such as `formGroup`), corresponding `ControlContainer`
token is missing, thus causing exceptions (since `NgControlStatusGroup` directive relies on it to determine the
status). This commit updates the logic to handle the case when no `ControlContainer` is present (effectively making
directive logic a noop in this case).
Alternative approach (more risky) worth considering in the future is to split the `NgControlStatusGroup` into
2 directives with different set of selectors and include them into template-driven and reactive modules separately.
The downside is that these directives might be activated simultaneously on the same element (e.g. `<form>`),
effectively doing the work twice.
Resolves#38391.
PR Close#40344
This class is refactored to extend the new `NodeJSReadonlyFileSystem`
which itself extends `NodeJSPathManipulation`. These new classes allow
consumers to create file-systems that provide a subset of the full file-system.
PR Close#40281
Now that `ReadonlyFileSystem` and `PathManipulation` interfaces are
available, this commit updates the localize package to use these more
focussed interfaces.
PR Close#40281
Now that `ReadonlyFileSystem` and `PathManipulation` interfaces are
available, this commit updates the compiler-cli to use these more
focussed interfaces.
PR Close#40281
This interface now extends `ReadonlyFileSystem` which in turn
extends `PathManipulation`. This means consumers of these
interfaces can be more specific about what is needed, and so
providers do not need to implement unnecessary methods.
PR Close#40281
The "monitoring" workflow has been failing since #40127 was merged,
due to a Saucelabs test failure in Internet Explorer 11. The issue is
with the test's expectation which does not account for Ivy instruction
invocations to use "anonymous" instead of the instruction's function
name. This commit changes the test expectation to also accept
"anonymous", which was already the case for similar expectations.
PR Close#40342
Now when the animation trigger output event is missing its phase value name, the `BoundEvent` will be ignored,
but it's useful for completion in language service.
PR Close#39925
This commit adds special handling to the completion builder by detecting
a two way binding context and ensuring that we filter out any `Input`s
that do not support two way binding.
PR Close#40185
Rather than expecting that a position in a template only targets a
single node, this commit simply adjusts the approach to account for two way
bindings. Specifically, we attempt to get references for each targeted
node and then return the combination of all results, or `undefined` if
none of the target nodes had references.
PR Close#40185
Rather than expecting that a position in a template only targets a
single node, this commit adjusts the approach to account for two way
bindings. In particular, we attempt to get definitions for each targeted
node and then return the combination of all results, or `undefined` if
none of the target nodes had definitions.
PR Close#40185
Adjust the visitor logic of the template target as well as the
consumption of the visitor result to account for two-way bindings.
This sets up downstream consumers for being able to handle the
possibility of a template position that targets both an input and an
output.
PR Close#40185
The current template target implementation only allows a way to
represent the template position as targeting a single node in the
template AST. However, there is at least one case (banana-in-a-box)
where a given template position refers to two template targets.
This commit expands the contexts that the `TemplateTarget` can return to
include support for the banana-in-a-box syntax, which has two logically
targetted AST nodes given a position within the `keySpan` of the
binding.
PR Close#40185
This commit fixes the Template Type Checker's `getSymbolOfNode` so that
it is able to retrieve a symbol for the `BoundEvent` of a two-way
binding. Previously, the implementation would locate the node in the TCB
for the input because it appeared first and shares the same `keySpan` as
the event binding. To fix this, the TCB node search now verifies that
the located node matches the expected name for the output subscription:
either `addEventListener` for a native listener or the class member of the Angular `@Output`
in the case of an Angular output, as would be the case for two-way
bindings.
PR Close#40185
Currently when analyzing the metadata of a directive, we bundle together the bindings from `host`
and the `HostBinding` and `HostListener` together. This can become a problem later on in the
compilation pipeline, because we try to evaluate the value of the binding, causing something like
`@HostBinding('class.foo') public true = 1;` to be treated the same as
`host: {'[class.foo]': 'true'}`.
While looking into the issue, I noticed another one that is closely related: we weren't treating
quoted property names correctly. E.g. `@HostBinding('class.foo') public "foo-bar" = 1;` was being
interpreted as `classProp('foo', ctx.foo - ctx.bar)` due to the same issue where property names
were being evaluated.
These changes resolve both of the issues by treating all `HostBinding` instance as if they're
reading the property from `this`. E.g. the `@HostBinding('class.foo') public true = 1;` from above
is now being treated as `host: {'[class.foo]': 'this.true'}` which further down the pipeline becomes
`classProp('foo', ctx.true)`. This doesn't have any payload size implications for existing code,
because we've always been prefixing implicit property reads with `ctx.`. If the property doesn't
have an identifier that can be read using dotted access, we convert it to a quoted one (e.g.
`classProp('foo', ctx['is-foo']))`.
Fixes#40220.
Fixes#40230.
Fixes#18698.
PR Close#40233
This commit changes the `PartialComponentLinker` to use the original source
of an external template when compiling, if available, to ensure that the
source-mapping of the final linked code is accurate.
If the linker is given a file-system and logger, then it will attempt
to compute the original source of external templates so that the final
linked code references the correct template source.
PR Close#40237
Now, if a source-mapping compliance test fails, the message displays both
the path to the generated file, and more helpfully the path to the expected
file.
PR Close#40237
Previously the names of the source and expectation files were often reused,
which caused potential confusion.
There is now a single source file for
each test-case, which is important when they are being compiled with different
compiler options, since the GOLDEN_PARTIAL file will only contain one copy
per file name.
The names of the expectation files have now been changed so that is clearer
which test-case they are related to.
PR Close#40237
The filename of the source-span is now added to the Babel location
when setting the source-map range in the `BabelAstHost`.
Note that the filename is only added if it is different to the main file
being processed. Otherwise Babel will generate two entries in its
generated source-map.
PR Close#40237
When a source-map/source-file tree has nodes that refer to the same file, the
flattened source-map rendering was those files multiple times, rather than
consolidating them into a single source-map source.
PR Close#40237
When partially compiling a component with an external template, we must
synthesize a new AST node for the string literal that holds the contents of
the external template, since we want to source-map this expression directly
back to the original external template file.
PR Close#40237
`Object.entries` is not supported in IE11 without a polyfill. The quickest,
most straightfoward fix for this is to simply use `Object.keys` instead.
We may want to consider including the polyfill in the CLI in the future
or just wait until IE11 support is dropped before using
`Object.entries`.
PR Close#40340
This commit ensures that the template type checker returns symbols for
all outputs if a template output listener binds to more than one.
PR Close#40144
During route activation, a componentless route will not have a context created
for it, but the logic continues to recurse so that children are still
activated. This can be seen here:
362f45c4bf/packages/router/src/operators/activate_routes.ts (L151-L158)
The current deactivation logic does not currently account for componentless routes.
This commit adjusts the deactivation logic so that if a context cannot
be retrieved for a given route (because it is componentless), we
continue to recurse and deactivate the children using the same
`parentContexts` in the same way that activation does.
Fixes#20694
PR Close#40196
We need a means to preserve typecheck files when a project is reloaded,
otherwise the Ivy compiler will throw an error when it's unable to find
them. This commit implements `getExternalFiles()` called by the langauge
server to achieve this goal.
For more info see https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/1030
PR Close#40162
`ts.server.ServerHost.resolvePath()` is different from Angular's
`FileSystem.resolve()` because the signature of the former is
```ts
resolvePath(path: string): string; // ts.server.ServerHost
```
whereas the signature of the latter is
```ts
resolve(...paths: string[]): AbsoluteFsPath; // FileSystem on compiler-cli
```
The current implementation calls `path.join()` to concatenate all the input
paths and pass the result to `ts.server.ServerHost.resolvePath()`, but doing
so results in filenames like
```
/foo/bar/baz/foo/bar/baz/tsconfig.json
```
if both input paths are absolute.
`ts.server.ServerHost` should not be used to implement the
`resolve()` method expected by Angular's `FileSystem`.
We should use Node's `path.resolve()` instead, which will correctly collapse
the absolute paths.
Fix https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/1035
PR Close#40242
When resolving references, the Ivy compiler has a few strategies it could use.
For relative path, one of strategies is [`RelativePathStrategy`](
https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/master/packages/compiler-cli/src/
ngtsc/imports/README.md#relativepathstrategy). This strategy
relies on `compilerOptions.rootDir` and `compilerOptions.rootDirs` to perform
the resolution, but language service only passes `rootDirs` to the compiler,
and not `rootDir`.
In reality, `rootDir` is very different from `rootDirs` even though they
sound the same.
According to the official [TS documentation][1],
> `rootDir` specifies the root directory of input files. Only use to control
> the output directory structure with --outDir.
> `rootDirs` is a list of root folders whose combined content represent the
> structure of the project at runtime. See [Module Resolution documentation](
> https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/
> module-resolution.html#virtual-directories-with-rootdirs)
> for more details.
For now, we keep the behavior between compiler and language service consistent,
but we will revisit the notion of `rootDir` and how it is used later.
Fixangular/vscode-ng-language-service#1039
[1]: https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/compiler-options.html
PR Close#40243
CSS supports escaping in selectors, e.g. writing `.foo:bar` will match an element with the
`foo` class and `bar` pseudo-class, but `.foo\:bar` will match the `foo:bar` class. Our
shimmed shadow DOM encapsulation always assumes that `:` means a pseudo selector
which breaks a selector like `.foo\:bar`.
These changes add some extra logic so that escaped characters in selectors are preserved.
Fixes#31844.
PR Close#40264
In some browsers, notably a mobile version of webkit on iPad, the
result of calling `DOMParser.parseFromString()` returns a document
whose `body` property is null until the next tick of the browser.
Since this is of no use to us for sanitization, we now fall back to the
"inert document" strategy for this case.
Fixes#39834
PR Close#40107
The `ɵɵngDeclareComponent` calls are designed to be translated to fully
AOT compiled code during a build transform, but in cases this is not
done it is still possible to compile the declaration object in the
browser using the JIT compiler. This commit adds a runtime
implementation of `ɵɵngDeclareComponent` which invokes the JIT compiler
using the declaration object, such that a compiled component definition
is made available to the Ivy runtime.
PR Close#40127
The `render3` test targets are currently also executed for ViewEngine
builds, even though the `render3` infrastructure only concerns Ivy
infrastructure. This commit tags the test targets as ivy-only to disable
those tests for View Engine.
PR Close#40127
The link to the "speeding-up-ngcc-compilation" URL does not exist,
it was removed shortly after it was added, but the link in the ngcc
error message was not updated.
Fixes#39837
PR Close#40285
Currently we check whether a property binding contains an interpolation using a regex so
that we can throw an error. The problem is that the regex doesn't account for quotes
which means that something like `[prop]="'{{ foo }}'"` will be considered an error, even
though it's not actually an interpolation.
These changes build on top of the logic from #39826 to account for interpolation
characters inside quotes.
Fixes#39601.
PR Close#40267
The trustConstantHtml and trustConstantResourceUrl functions are only
meant to be passed constant strings extracted from Angular application
templates, as passing other strings or variables could introduce XSS
vulnerabilities.
To better protect these APIs, turn them into template tags. This makes
it possible to assert that the associated template literals do not
contain any interpolation, and thus must be constant.
Also add tests for the change to prevent regression.
PR Close#40082
When talking about parameter inheritance, one might think that matrix
parameters can be inherited from the "parent" segment, or the segment
which appears immediately to the left. In reality, when we talk about
a "parent" in the `Router`, we mean the parent `Route` config. This
config may contain more than one segment and matrix parameters must
appear at the end or they do not "belong" to any config.
PR Close#40304
There are two parts to this commit:
1. Revert the changes from #38379. This change had an incomplete view of
how things worked and also diverged the implementations of
`applyRedirects` and `recognize` even more.
2. Apply the fixes from the `recognize` algorithm to ensure that named
outlets with empty path parents can be matched. This change also passes
all the tests that were added in #38379 with the added benefit of being
a more complete fix that stays in-line with the `recognize` algorithm.
This was made possible by using the same approach for `split` by
always creating segments for empty path matches (previously, this was
only done in `applyRedirects` if there was a `redirectTo` value). At the
end of the expansions, we need to squash all empty segments so that
serializing the final `UrlTree` returns the same result as before.
Fixes#39952Fixes#10726Closes#30410
PR Close#40029
The `applyRedirects` and `recognize` algorithms have the same overall goal:
match a `UrlTree` with the application's `Routes` config. There are a
few key functions in these algorithms which can be shared rather than
duplicated between the two. This also makes it easier to see how the two
are similar and where they diverge.
PR Close#40029
This commit updates the `recognize` algorithm to work with named outlets
which have empty path parents. For example, given the following config
```
const routes = [
{
path: '',
children: [
{path: 'a', outlet: 'aux', component: AuxComponent}
]}
];
```
The url `/(aux:a)` should match this config. In order to do so, we need
to allow the children of `UrlSegmentGroup`s to match a `Route` config
for a different outlet (in this example, the `primary`) when it's an
empty path. This should also *only* happen if we were unable to find a
match for the outlet in the level above. That is, the matching strategy
is to find the first `Route` in the list which _matches the given
outlet_. If we are unable to do that, then we allow empty paths from
other outlets to match and try to find some child there whose outlet
matches our segment.
PR Close#40029
To make the tests suite easier to follow, `Recognize#apply` can be made
into a synchronous function rather than one that return an `Observable`.
Also, as a chore, remove as many `any` types as possible.
PR Close#40029
This commit updates the `recognize` algorithm to return `null` when a
segment does not match a given config rather than throwing an error.
This makes the code much easier to follow because the "no match" result
has to be explicitly handled rather than catching the error in very
specific places.
PR Close#40029
When stepping through the `recognize` algorithm, it is much easier to
follow when using a simple `for...of` rather than the helper
`mapChildrenIntoArray` with the passed closure. The only special thing that
`mapChildrenIntoArray` does is ensure the primary route appears first.
This change will have no affect on the result because `processChildren` later calls
`sortActivatedRouteSnapshots`, which does the same thing.
PR Close#40029
Prior to this commit, removing `FormControlDirective` and `FormGroupName` directive instances didn't clear
the callbacks previously registered on FromControl/FormGroup class instances. As a result, these callbacks
were executed even after `FormControlDirective` and `FormGroupName` directive instances were destroyed. That was
also causing memory leaks since these callbacks also retained references to DOM elements.
This commit updates the cleanup logic to take care of properly detaching FormControl/FormGroup/FormArray instances
from the view by removing view-specific callback at destroy time.
Closes#20007, #37431, #39590.
PR Close#39235
DI providers can be defined via `useFactory` function, which may have arguments configured via `deps` array.
The `deps` array may contain DI flags represented by DI decorators (such as `@Self`, `@SkipSelf`, etc). Prior to this
commit, having the `@Host` decorator in `deps` array resulted in runtime error in Ivy. The problem was that the `@Host`
decorator was not taken into account while `useFactory` argument list was constructed, the `@Host` decorator was
treated as a token that should be looked up.
This commit updates the logic which prepares `useFactory` arguments to recognize the `@Host` decorator.
PR Close#40122
The CLI integration can provide code files in a non-deterministic
order, which led to the extracted translation files having
messages in a non-consistent order between extractions.
This commit fixes this by ensuring that serialized messages
are ordered by their location.
Fixes#39262
PR Close#40192
`Route` configs with `redirectTo` as well as `canActivate` are not valid
because the `canActivate` guards will never execute. Redirects are
applied before activation. There is no error currently for these
configs, but another commit will change this so that an error does
appear in dev mode. This migration fixes the configs by removing the
`canActivate` property.
PR Close#40067
Redirects in the router are processed before activations. This means that a canActivate will
never execute if a route has a redirect. Rather than silently ignoring
the invalid config, developers should be notified so they know why it
doesn't work.
Closes#18605
The feature request for a function/class redirect is covered in #13373.
PR Close#40067
Given the template
`<div (click)="doSomething($event)"></div>`
If you request references for the `$event`, the results include both `$event` and `(click)="doSomething($event)"`.
This happens because in the TCB, `$event` is passed to the `subscribe`/`addEventListener`
function as an argument. So when we ask typescript to give us the references, we
get the result from the usage in the subscribe body as well as the one passed in as an argument.
This commit adds an identifier to the `$event` parameter in the TCB so
that the result returned from `getReferencesAtPosition` can be
identified and filtered out.
fixes#40157
PR Close#40158
According to the [spec](https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#scroll-to-fragid),
we should attempt to set the browser focus after scrolling to a
fragment. Note that this change does not exactly follow the robust steps
outlined in the spec by finding a fallback target if the original is not
focusable. Instead, we simply attempt to focus the element by calling
`focus` on it, which will do nothing if the element is not focusable.
fixes#30067
PR Close#40241
The `ɵɵngDeclareDirective` calls are designed to be translated to fully
AOT compiled code during a build transform, but in cases this is not
done it is still possible to compile the declaration object in the
browser using the JIT compiler. This commit adds a runtime
implementation of `ɵɵngDeclareDirective` which invokes the JIT compiler
using the declaration object, such that a compiled directive definition
is made available to the Ivy runtime.
PR Close#40101
The linker is implemented using a Babel transform such that Babel needs
to parse and walk a source file to find the declarations that need to be
compiled. If it can be determined that a source file is known not to
contain any declarations the parsing and walking can be skipped as a
performance improvement. This commit adds an exposed function for tools
that integrate the linker to use to allow short-circuiting of the linker
transform.
PR Close#40137
Internally we store lifecycle hooks in the format `[index, hook, index, hook]` and when
iterating over them, we check one place ahead to figure out whether we've hit found
a hook or an index. The problem is that the loop is set up to iterate up to `hooks.length`
which means that we may go out of bounds on the last iteration, depending on where
we started. This appears to happen under a specific set of circumstances where a
directive calls `detectChanges` from an input setter while it has `ngOnChanges` and
`ngAfterViewInit` hooks.
These changes resolve the issue by only iterating up to `length - 1` which guarantees that
we can always look one place ahead.
This appears to have regressed some time in version 10.
Fixes#38611.
PR Close#40206
Previously `\r\n` was being treated as a single character in source-map
line start positions, which caused segment positions to become offset.
Now the `\r` is ignored when splitting, leaving it at the end of the
previous line, which solves the offsetting problem, and does not affect
source-mappings.
Fixes#40169Fixes#39654
PR Close#40187
This commit fixes an issue in the ivy native language service
that caused the logic that finds a target node given a template
position to throw away the results. This happened because the
source span of a variable node in the shorthand structural
directive syntax (i.e. `*ngIf=`) included the entire binding.
The result was that we would add the variable node to the path and then
later detect that the cursor was outside the key and value spans and
throw away the whole result. In general, we do this because we do not
want to show information when the cursor is between a key/value
(`inputA=¦"123"`). However, when using the shorthand syntax, we run into
the situation where we can match an `AttributeBinding` as well as the
vaariable in `*ngIf="som¦eValue as myLocalVar"`. This commit updates the
visitor to retain enough information in the visit path to throw away
invalid targets but keep valid ones if there were multiple results on a
`t.Element` or `t.Template`.
PR Close#40239
The linker entry-points were not previously exposed in the NPM Bazel
target so they were omitted from the bundle. This commit adds the
necessary entry-points to the compiler-cli's npm_package target.
PR Close#40180
The types of directives and pipes that are used in a component's
template may be emitted into the partial declaration wrapped inside a
closure, which is needed when the type is declared later in the module.
This poses a problem for JIT compilation of partial declarations, as
this closure is indistinguishable from a class reference itself. To mark
the forward reference function as such, this commit changes the partial
declaration codegen to emit a `forwardRef` invocation wrapped around
the closure, which ensures that the closure is properly tagged as a
forward reference. This allows the forward reference to be treated as
such during JIT compilation.
PR Close#40117
PR #39876 introduced an error where the `onDestroy` of `ComponentRef`
would only get called if `ngDevMode` was set to true. This was because
in dev mode we would freeze `TCleanup` to verify that no more
static cleanup would get added to `TCleanup` array. This ensured
that `TCleanup` was always present in dev mode. In production the
`TCleanup` would get created only when needed. The resulting cleanup
code was incorrectly indented and would only run if `TCleanup` was
present causing this issue.
Fix#40105
PR Close#40120
Escape the content of the strings so that it can be safely inserted into a comment node.
The issue is that HTML does not specify any way to escape comment end text inside the comment.
`<!-- The way you close a comment is with "-->". -->`. Above the `"-->"` is meant to be text
not an end to the comment. This can be created programmatically through DOM APIs.
```
div.innerHTML = div.innerHTML
```
One would expect that the above code would be safe to do, but it turns out that because comment
text is not escaped, the comment may contain text which will prematurely close the comment
opening up the application for XSS attack. (In SSR we programmatically create comment nodes which
may contain such text and expect them to be safe.)
This function escapes the comment text by looking for the closing char sequence `-->` and replace
it with `-_-_>` where the `_` is a zero width space `\u200B`. The result is that if a comment
contains `-->` text it will render normally but it will not cause the HTML parser to close the
comment.
PR Close#40136
Currently when `ɵɵtemplate` and `ɵɵelement` instructions are generated by compiler, all static attributes are
duplicated for both instructions. As a part of this duplication, i18n translation blocks for static i18n attributes
are generated twice as well, causing duplicate entries in extracted translation files (when Ivy extraction mechanisms
are used). This commit fixes this issue by introducing a cache for i18n translation blocks (for static attributes
only).
Also this commit further aligns `ɵɵtemplate` and `ɵɵelement` instruction attributes, which should help implement
more effective attributes deduplication logic.
Closes#39942.
PR Close#40077
Durring analysis we find template parse errors. This commit changes
where the type checking context stores the parse errors. Previously, we
stored them on the AnalysisOutput this commit changes the errors to be
stored on the TemplateData (which is a property on the shim). That way,
the template parse errors can be grouped by template.
Previously, if a template had a parse error, we poisoned the module and
would not procede to find typecheck errors. This change does not poison
modules whose template have typecheck errors, so that ngtsc can emit
typecheck errors for templates with parse errors.
Additionally, all template diagnostics are produced in the same place.
This allows requesting just the template template diagnostics or just
other types of errors.
PR Close#40026
Refactors the i18n error tests to be unit tests in ngtsc_spec.ts. There
is two reasons for doing this.
First is that the tests in compliace_old expected an expection to be be
thrown but did not fail the test if no exception was thrown. That means
that this test could miss catching a bug. It is also a big hacky to call
compile directly and expect an exception to be thrown for diagnostics.
Also, this can easily be unit tested and an end-to-end test is not
necessary since we are not making use of the goldfiles for these tests.
It is easier to maintain and less hacky to validate that we get helpful
error messages when nesting i18n sections by calling getDiagnostics
directly.
PR Close#40026
This commit temporarily excludes classes declared in .d.ts files from checks
regarding whether providers are actually injectable.
Such classes used to be ignored (on accident) because the
`TypeScriptReflectionHost.getConstructorParameters()` method did not return
constructor parameters from d.ts files, mostly as an oversight. This was
recently fixed, but caused more providers to be exposed to this check, which
created a breakage in g3.
This commit temporarily fixes the breakage by continuing to exclude such
providers from the check, until g3 can be patched.
PR Close#40118
This comit adds support for autocompletion of attributes that create
structural directives. Such completions differ from those of normal
attributes, as the structural directive syntax creates a synthetic
<ng-template> node which has different attributes from the main element.
PR Close#40032
This commit introduces an `isStructural` flag on directive metadata, which
is `true` if the directive injects `TemplateRef` (and thus is at least
theoretically usable as a structural directive). The flag is not used for
anything currently, but will be utilized by the Language Service to offer
better autocompletion results for structural directives.
PR Close#40032
This commit adds attribute completion to the Language Service. It completes
from 3 sources:
1. inputs/outputs of directives currently present on the element
2. inputs/outputs/attributes of directives in scope for the element, that
would become present if the input/output/attribute was added
3. DOM properties and attributes
We distinguish between completion of a property binding (`[foo|]`) and a
completion in an attribute context (`foo|`). For the latter, bindings to
the attribute are offered, as well as a property binding which adds the
square bracket notation.
To determine hypothetical matches (directives which would become present if
a binding is added), directives in scope are scanned and matched against a
hypothetical version of the element which has the attribute.
PR Close#40032
This commit adds two new APIs to the `TemplateTypeChecker`:
`getPotentialDomBindings` and `getDirectiveMetadata`. Together, these will
support the Language Service in performing autocompletion of directive
inputs/outputs.
PR Close#40032
The `annotations` package in the compiler previously contained a registry
which tracks NgModule scopes for template type-checking, including unifying
all type-checking metadata across class inheritance lines.
This commit generalizes this utility and prepares it for use in the
`TemplateTypeChecker` as well, to back APIs used by the language service.
PR Close#40032
This commit expands the autocompletion capabilities of the language service
to include element tag names. It presents both DOM elements from the Angular
DOM schema as well as any components (or directives with element selectors)
that are in scope within the template as options for completion.
PR Close#40032
This commit extends the template targeting system, which determines the node
being referenced given a template position, to return additional context if
needed about the particular aspect of the node to which the position refers.
For example, a position pointing to an element node may be pointing either
to its tag name or to somewhere in the node body. This is the difference
between `<div|>` and `<div foo | bar>`.
PR Close#40032
The vim editor produces temporarily files that can end in both .swo and
.swp. This commits add .swp to the .gitignore so we don't accidentaly
commit temporary files.
PR Close#40094
This commit replaces `bazel` with `yarn bazel` in the error message (that instructs to regenerate golden file)
thrown while executing compliance tests. We use `yarn bazel` in other places (so we use the local version of bazel,
not the global one).
PR Close#40078
Projects opened in the LS are often larger in scope than the compilation
units seen by the compiler when actually building. For example, in the LS
it's not uncommon for the project to include both application as well as
test files. This can create issues when the combination of files results
in errors that are not otherwise present - for example, if test files
have inline NgModules that re-declare components (a common Angular pattern).
Such code is valid when compiling the app only (test files are excluded, so
only one declaration is seen by the compiler) or when compiling tests only
(since tests run in JIT mode and are not seen by the AOT compiler), but when
both sets of files are mixed into a single compilation unit, the compiler
sees the double declaration as an error.
This commit attempts to mitigate the problem by forcing the compiler flag
`compileNonExportedClasses` to `false` in a LS context. When tests contain
duplicate declarations, often such declarations are inline in specs and not
exported from the top level, so this flag can be used to greatly improve the
IDE experience.
PR Close#40092
When `checkTypeOfPipes` is set to `false`, the configuration is meant to
ignore the signature of the pipe's `transform` method for diagnostics.
However, we still should produce some information about the pipe for the
`TemplateTypeChecker`. This change refactors the returned symbol for
pipes so that it also includes information about the pipe's class
instance as it appears in the TCB.
PR Close#39555
The TCB utility functions used to find nodes in the TCB are currently
configured to ignore results when an ignore marker is found. However,
these ignore markers are only meant to affect diagnostics requests. The
Language Service may have a need to find nodes with diagnostic ignore
markers. The most common example of this would be finding references for
generic directives. The reference appears to the generic directive's
class appears on the type ctor in the TCB, which is ignored for
diagnostic purposes.
These functions should only skip results when the request is in the
context of a larger request for _diagnostics_. In all other cases, we
should get matches, even if a diagnostic ignore marker is encountered.
PR Close#40071
The ignore marker is only used to ignore certain nodes in the TCB for
the purposes of diagnostics. The marker itself has been renamed as well
as the helper function to see if the marker is present. Both now
indicate that the marker is specifically for diagnostics.
PR Close#40071
With regard to the code in `router_module.ts`, the correct equivalent for `enabled`
should be` enabledBlocking` and not `enabledNonBlocking`.
PR Close#40061
This commit adds the ability to find references for a directive or component
from within a component template. That is, you can find component references
from the element tag `<my-c|omp></my-comp>` (where `|` is the cursor position)
as well as find references for directives that match a given attribute
`<div d|ir></div>`.
PR Close#40054
If we've already identified that we are within a `keySpan` of a node, we
exit the visitor logic early. It can be the case that we have two nodes
which technically match a given location when the end span of one node
touches the start of the keySpan for the candidate node. Because
our `isWithin` logic is inclusive on both ends, we can match both nodes.
This change exits the visitor logic once we've identified a node where
the position is within its `keySpan`.
PR Close#40047
The visitor has a check in it with the goal of preventing the structural directive
parent elements from matching when we have already found the candidate we want.
However, this code did not check to ensure that it was looking at the correct
type of node for this case and was evaluating this logic in places it shouldn't.
This special check can be more easily done by simply not traversing the
template children if we've already found a candidate on the template
node itself.
PR Close#40047
This commit moves the code for cleaning jqLite/jQuery data on an element
to a re-usable helper function. This way it is easier to keep the code
consistent across all places where we need to clean data (now and in the
future).
PR Close#40045
Prior to this change, the `setClassMetadata` call would be invoked
inside of an IIFE that was marked as pure. This allows the call to be
tree-shaken away in production builds, as the `setClassMetadata` call
is only present to make the original class metadata available to the
testing infrastructure. The pure marker is problematic, though, as the
`setClassMetadata` call does in fact have the side-effect of assigning
the metadata into class properties. This has worked under the assumption
that only build optimization tools perform tree-shaking, however modern
bundlers are also able to elide calls that have been marked pure so this
assumption does no longer hold. Instead, an `ngDevMode` guard is used
which still allows the call to be elided but only by tooling that is
configured to consider `ngDevMode` as constant `false` value.
PR Close#39987
Allow configuration of `relativeTo` in the `routerLink` directive. This
is related to the clearing of auxiliary routes, where you need to use
`relativeTo: route.parent` in order to clear it from the activated
auxiliary component itself. This is because `relativeTo: route` will
consume the segment that we're trying to clear, so there is really no
way to do this with routerLink at the moment.
Related issue: #13523
Related (internal link): https://yaqs.corp.google.com/eng/q/5999443644645376
PR Close#39720
Currently the compiler treats something like `{{ '{{a}}' }}` as a nested
binding and throws an error, because it doesn't account for quotes
when it looks for binding characters. These changes add a bit of
logic to skip over text inside quotes when parsing.
Fixes#39601.
PR Close#39826
This commit adds support to the Language Service for autocompletion within
expression contexts. Specifically, this is auto completion of property reads
and method calls, both in normal and safe-navigational forms.
PR Close#39727
When `checkTypeOfOutputEvents` is `false`, we still need to produce the access
to the `EventEmitter` so the Language Service can still get the
type information about the field. That is, in a template `<div
(output)="handle($event)"`, we still want to be able to grab information
when the cursor is inside the "output" parens. The flag is intended only
to affect whether the compiler produces diagnostics for the inferred
type of the `$event`.
PR Close#39515
PR #39665 added the `keySpan` to the output field access so we no longer
need to get there from the call expression and can instead just find the
node we want directly.
PR Close#39515
These tests started failing because they had type-check
errors in their templates, and a recent commit turned on
full template type-checking by default.\
This commit fixes those templates and updates the expected
files as necessary.
PR Close#40040
These tests do not pass the typecheck phase of the compiler and fail.
The option to disable typechecking was removed recently so these tests
need to be fixed to be valid applications.
PR Close#40033
A couple reasons to justify removing the flag:
* It adds code to the compiler that is only meant to support test cases
and not any production. We should avoid code in that's only
meant to support tests.
* The flag enables writing tests that do not mimic real-world behavior
because they allow invalid applications
PR Close#40013
Rather than returning `null`, we can provide some useful information to the Language Service
by returning a symbol for the `addEventListener` function call when the consumer
of a binding as an element.
PR Close#39312
Previously, due to the way the AngularJS and Angular clean-up processes
interfere with each other when removing an AngularJS element that
contains a downgraded Angular component, the data associated with the
host element of the downgraded component was not removed. This data was
kept in an internal AngularJS cache, which prevented the element and
component instance from being garbage-collected, leading to memory
leaks.
This commit fixes this by ensuring the element data is explicitly
removed when cleaning up a downgraded component.
NOTE:
This is essentially the equivalent of #26209 but for downgraded (instead
of upgraded) components.
Fixes#39911Closes#39921
PR Close#39965
The prior usage of a ternary expression caused the code to be formatted
in a weird way, so this commit replaces the ternary with an `if` statement.
PR Close#39961
Prior to this change the interpolation config value was cast to
`[string, string]` without checking whether there really were two
string values available. This commit extracts the logic of parsing the
interpolation config into a separate function and adds a check that
the array contains exactly two strings.
PR Close#39961
This change allows the `AstObject` and `AstValue` types to provide
their represented type as a generic type argument, which is helpful
for documentation and discoverability purposes.
PR Close#39961
This allows the code generation to correspond with a type, which is
helpful for documentation and discoverability purposes. This does not
offer any type-safety with respect to the actually generated code.
PR Close#39961
When the compiler option `checkTypeOfAttributes` is `false`, we should
still be able to produce type information from the
`TemplateTypeChecker`. The current behavior ignores all attributes that
map to directive inputs. This commit includes those attribute bindings
in the TCB but adds the "ignore for diagnostics" marker so they do not
produce errors. This way, consumers of the TTC (the Language Service)
can still get valid information about these attributes even when the
user has configured the compiler to not produce diagnostics/errors for them.
PR Close#39537
The golden files for the partial compliance tests need to be updated
with individual Bazel run invocations, which is not very ergonomic when
a large number of golden files need to updated. This commit adds a
script to query the Bazel targets that update the goldens and then runs
those targets sequentially.
PR Close#39989
This test migrates source-mapping tests to the new compliance test framework.
The original tests are found in the file at:
`packages/compiler-cli/test/ngtsc/template_mapping_spec.ts`.
These new tests also check the mappings resulting from partial compilation
followed by linking, after flattening the pair of source-maps that each
process generates.
Note that there are some differences between the mappings for full compile
and linked compile modes, due to how TypeScript and Babel use source-span
information on AST nodes. To accommodate this, there are two expectation
files for most of these source files.
PR Close#39939
This commit allows compliance test-cases to be written that specify
source-map mappings between the source and generated code.
To check a mapping, add a `// SOURCE:` comment to the end of a line:
```
<generated code> // SOURCE: "<source-url>" <source code>
```
The generated code will still be checked, stripped of the `// SOURCE` comment,
as normal by the `expectEmit()` helper.
In addition, the source-map segments are checked to ensure that there is a
mapping from `<generated code>` to `<source code>` found in the file at
`<source-url>`.
Note:
* The source-url should be absolute, with the directory containing the
TEST_CASES.json file assumed to be `/`.
* Whitespace is important and will be included when comparing the segments.
* There is a single space character between each part of the line.
* Newlines within a mapping must be escaped since the mapping and comment
must all appear on a single line of this file.
PR Close#39939
Previously one could set a flag in a `TEST_CASES.json` file to exclude
the test-cases from being run if the input files were being compiled
partially and then linked.
There are also scenarios where one might want to exclude test-cases
from "full compile" mode test runs.
This commit changes the compliance test tooling to support a new
property `compilationModeFilter`, which is an array containing one or
more of `"full compile"` and `"linked compile"`. Only the tests
whose `compilationModeFilter` array contains the current compilation
mode will be run.
PR Close#39939
Previously files were serialized with an extra newline seperator that
was not removed when parsing. This caused the parsed file to start with
an extra newline that invalidated its source-map.
Also, the splitting was producing an empty entry at the start of the extracted
golden files which is now ignored.
PR Close#39939
The schema accidentally included the `expectedErrors` and `extraCheck`
properties below the `files` property instead of below the `expectations`
property.
PR Close#39939
Add a TaggedTemplateExpr to represent tagged template literals in
Angular's syntax tree (more specifically Expression in output_ast.ts).
Also update classes that implement ExpressionVisitor to add support for
tagged template literals in different contexts, such as JIT compilation
and conversion to JS.
Partial support for tagged template literals had already been
implemented to support the $localize tag used by Angular's i18n
framework. Where applicable, this code was refactored to support
arbitrary tags, although completely replacing the i18n-specific support
for the $localize tag with the new generic support for tagged template
literals may not be completely trivial, and is left as future work.
PR Close#39122
Add test for when `checkTypeOfDomReferences = false` to ensure that we
do not regress in behavior at any point. The desired behavior for this
case is that the `TemplateTypeChecker` will honor the user's
configuration and not produce symbols for the dom reference.
PR Close#39539
Differs tries to inject parent differ in order to support extending.
This does not work in the 'root' injector as the provider overrides the
default injector. The fix is to just assume standard set of providers
and extend those instead.
PR close#25015
Issue close#11309 `Can't extend IterableDiffers`
Issue close#18554 `IterableDiffers.extend is not AOT compatible`
(This is fixed because we no longer have an arrow function in the
factory but a proper function which can be imported.)
PR Close#39981
We intend to run the `@angular/upgrade` tests against all supported
versions of AngularJS (v1.5+). Previously, we only ran them against
v1.5, v1.6 and v1.7.
Since AngularJS v1.8 was released recently, this commit adds it to the
list of AngularJS versions we test against.
PR Close#39972
This commit adds `ngDevMode` guard to call `_ngModelWarning` only
in dev mode (similar to how things work in other parts of Ivy runtime code).
The `ngDevMode` flag helps to tree-shake this function from production builds
(since it will act as no-op, in dev mode everything will work as it works right now)
to decrease production bundle size.
PR Close#39964
This commit adds ngDevMode guard to show warning only
in dev mode (similar to how things work in other parts of Ivy runtime code).
The ngDevMode flag helps to tree-shake this warning from production builds
(in dev mode everything will work as it works right now) to decrease production bundle size.
PR Close#39964
This commit adds ngDevMode guard to show warnings only
in dev mode (similar to how things work in other parts of Ivy runtime code).
The ngDevMode flag helps to tree-shake these warnings from production builds
(in dev mode everything will work as it works right now) to decrease production bundle size.
PR Close#39964
This commit adds `ngDevMode` guard to run `checkNoChanges` only
in dev mode (similar to how things work in other parts of Ivy runtime code).
The `ngDevMode` flag helps to tree-shake this code from production builds
(in dev mode everything will work as it works right now) to decrease production bundle size.
PR Close#39964
The partial compiler will add a version number to the objects that are
generated so that the linker can select the appropriate partial linker
class to process the metadata.
Previously this version matching was a simple number check. Now
the partial compilation writes the current Angular compiler version
into the generated metadata, and semantic version ranges are used
to select the appropriate partial linker.
PR Close#39847
This commit adds `ngDevMode` guard to show sanitization warnings only
in dev mode (similar to how things work in other parts of Ivy runtime code).
The `ngDevMode` flag helps to tree-shake these warnings from production builds
(in dev mode everything will work as it works right now) to decrease production bundle size.
PR Close#39959
This commit adds support in the Ivy Language Service for autocompletion in a
global context - e.g. a {{foo|}} completion.
Support is added both for the primary function `getCompletionsAtPosition` as
well as the detail functions `getCompletionEntryDetails` and
`getCompletionEntrySymbol`. These latter operations are not used yet as an
upstream change to the extension is required to advertise and support this
capability.
PR Close#39250
This expands the deprecation message that started to pop up in v11.0.3
after the landing of commit e148382bd0,
that deprecated the `{[key: string]: any}` type for the options property of the `FormBuilder.group` method.
It turns out that having a custom validator declared as
`{ validators: (group: FormGroup) => ValidationErrors|null }` works in practice,
but is now inferred by TS as the deprecated version of `group`
(because `FormGroup` is a subclass of `AbstractControl` that `ValidatorFn` expects).
We considered the possibility of tweaking the forms API to accept such validators,
but it turns out to generate too many changes in the framework or possible breaking changes for Angular users.
We settled for a more explicit deprecation message, elaborated with the help of @petebacondarwin.
This will hopefully help developers to understand why the deprecation warning is showing up
when they think they are already using the non-deprecated overload.
PR Close#39946
The newly built compliance test runner was not using the shared source
file cache that was added in b627f7f02e,
which offers a significant performance boost to the compliance test
targets.
PR Close#39956
In the past, the legacy (VE-based) language service would use a
`UrlResolver` instance to resolve file paths, primarily for compiler
resources like external templates. The problem with this is that the
UrlResolver is designed to resolve URLs in general, and so for a path
like `/a/b/#c`, `#c` is treated as hash/fragment rather than as part
of the path, which can lead to unexpected path resolution (f.x.,
`resolve('a/b/#c/d.ts', './d.html')` would produce `'a/b/d.html'` rather
than the expected `'a/b/#c/d.html'`).
This commit resolves the issue by using Node's `path` module to resolve
file paths directly, which aligns more with how resources are resolved
in the Ivy compiler.
The testing story here is not great, and the API for validating a file
path could be a little bit prettier/robust. However, since the VE-based
language service is going into more of a "maintenance mode" now that
there is a clear path for the Ivy-based LS moving forward, I think it is
okay not to spend too much time here.
Closes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/892
Closes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/1001
PR Close#39917
Create stubs for `findRenameLocations` for both VE and Ivy Language Service
implementations. This will prevent failed requests when it is implemented on the vscode plugin side.
PR Close#39919
At the moment, when creating a root module, a subscription to the
`onError` subject is also created. It captures the scope where `NgModuleRef`
is created and prevents it from being garbage collected. Also note that this
`NgModuleRef` has a reference to the root module instance (e.g. `AppModule`),
which also prevents it from being GC'd.
PR Close#39940
When the compiler is invoked via ngc or the Angular CLI, its APIs are used
under the assumption that Angular analysis/diagnostics are only requested if
the program has no TypeScript-level errors. A result of this assumption is
that the incremental engine has not needed to resolve changes via its
dependency graph when the program contained broken imports, since broken
imports are a TypeScript error.
The Angular Language Service for Ivy is using the compiler as a backend, and
exercising its incremental compilation APIs without enforcing this
assumption. As a result, the Language Service has run into issues where
broken imports cause incremental compilation to fail and produce incorrect
results.
This commit introduces a mechanism within the compiler to keep track of
files for which dependency analysis has failed, and to always treat such
files as potentially affected by future incremental steps. This is tested
via the Language Service infrastructure to ensure that the compiler is doing
the right thing in the case of invalid imports.
PR Close#39923
Previously, if a component had an external template with a hard error, the
compiler would "forget" the link between that component and its NgModule.
Additionally, the NgModule would be marked as being in error, because the
template issue would prevent the compiler from registering the component
class as a component, so from the NgModule it would look like a declaration
of a non-directive/pipe class. As a combined result, the next incremental
step could fix the template error, but would not refresh diagnostics for the
NgModule, leading to an incrementality issue.
The various facets of this problem were fixed in prior commits. This commit
adds a test verifying the above case works now as expected.
PR Close#39923
To avoid overwhelming a user with secondary diagnostics that derive from a
"root cause" error, the compiler has the notion of a "poisoned" NgModule.
An NgModule becomes poisoned when its declaration contains semantic errors:
declarations which are not components or pipes, imports which are not other
NgModules, etc. An NgModule also becomes poisoned if it imports or exports
another poisoned NgModule.
Previously, the compiler tracked this poisoned status as an alternate state
for each scope. Either a correct scope could be produced, or the entire
scope would be set to a sentinel error value. This meant that the compiler
would not track any information about a scope that was determined to be in
error.
This method presents several issues:
1. The compiler is unable to support the language service and return results
when a component or its module scope is poisoned.
This is fine for compilation, since diagnostics will be produced showing the
error(s), but the language service needs to still work for incorrect code.
2. `getComponentScopes()` does not return components with a poisoned scope,
which interferes with resource tracking of incremental builds.
If the component isn't included in that list, then the NgModule for it will
not have its dependencies properly tracked, and this can cause future
incremental build steps to produce incorrect results.
This commit changes the tracking of poisoned module scopes to use a flag on
the scope itself, rather than a sentinel value that replaces the scope. This
means that the scope itself will still be tracked, even if it contains
semantic errors. A test is added to the language service which verifies that
poisoned scopes can still be used in template type-checking.
PR Close#39923
Previously, if a trait's analysis step resulted in diagnostics, the trait
would be considered "errored" and no further operations, including register,
would be performed. Effectively, this meant that the compiler would pretend
the class in question was actually undecorated.
However, this behavior is problematic for several reasons:
1. It leads to inaccurate diagnostics being reported downstream.
For example, if a component is put into the error state, for example due to
a template error, the NgModule which declares the component would produce a
diagnostic claiming that the declaration is neither a directive nor a pipe.
This happened because the compiler wouldn't register() the component trait,
so the component would not be recorded as actually being a directive.
2. It can cause incorrect behavior on incremental builds.
This bug is more complex, but the general issue is that if the compiler
fails to associate a component and its module, then incremental builds will
not correctly re-analyze the module when the component's template changes.
Failing to register the component as such is one link in the larger chain of
issues that result in these kinds of issues.
3. It lumps together diagnostics produced during analysis and resolve steps.
This is not causing issues currently as the dependency graph ensures the
right classes are re-analyzed when needed, instead of showing stale
diagnostics. However, the dependency graph was not intended to serve this
role, and could potentially be optimized in ways that would break this
functionality.
This commit removes the concept of an "errored" trait entirely from the
trait system. Instead, analyzed and resolved traits have corresponding (and
separate) diagnostics, in addition to potentially `null` analysis results.
Analysis (but not resolution) diagnostics are carried forward during
incremental build operations. Compilation (emit) is only performed when
a trait reaches the resolved state with no diagnostics.
This change is functionally different than before as the `register` step is
now performed even in the presence of analysis errors, as long as analysis
results are also produced. This fixes problem 1 above, and is part of the
larger solution to problem 2.
PR Close#39923
If the testcase has not specified that errors were expected, then any
errors that have occurred should be reported. These errors may have
prevented an output file from being generated, which resulted in hard
to debug test failures due to missing files.
PR Close#39862
This commit adds a few tests to verify that the `onDestroy` callbacks are invoked when `ComponentRef` instance
is destroyed and the logic is consistent between ViewEngine and Ivy.
PR Close#39876
In the new behavior Angular removes applications from the testability registry when the
root view gets destroyed. This eliminates a memory leak, because before that the
TestabilityRegistry holds references to HTML elements, thus they cannot be GCed.
PR Close#22106
PR Close#39876
The Language Service "find references" currently uses the
`ngtypecheck.ts` suffix to determine if a file is a shim file. Instead,
a better API would be to expose a method in the template type checker
that does this verification so that the LS does not have to "know" about
the typecheck suffix. This also fixes an issue (albeit unlikely) whereby a file
in the user's program that _actually_ is named with the `ngtypecheck.ts`
suffix would have been interpreted as a shim file.
PR Close#39768
This commit adds "find references" functionality to the Ivy integrated
language service. The basic approach is as follows:
1. Generate shims for all files to ensure we find references in shims
throughout the entire program
2. Determine if the position for the reference request is within a
template.
* Yes, it is in a template: Find which node in the template AST the
position refers to. Then find the position in the shim file for that
template node. Pass the shim file and position in the shim file along
to step 3.
* No, the request for references was made outside a template: Forward
the file and position to step 3.
3. (`getReferencesAtTypescriptPosition`): Call the native TypeScript LS
`getReferencesAtPosition`. For each reference that is in a shim file, map those
back to a template location, otherwise return it as-is.
PR Close#39768
There were two issues with the current TCB:
1. The logic for only wrapping the right hand side of the property write
if it was not already a parenthesized expression was incorrect. A
parenthesized expression could still have a trailing comment, and if
that were the case, that span comment would still be ambiguous, as explained
by the comment in the code before `wrapForTypeChecker`.
2. The right hand side of keyed writes was not wrapped in parens at all
PR Close#39768
In order to map the a safe property read's method access in the type check block
directly back to the property in the template source, we need to
include the `SafePropertyRead`'s `nameSpan` with the `ts.propertyAccess` for
the pipe's transform method.
Note that this is specifically relevant to the Language Service's "find
references" feature. As an example, with something like `{{a?.value}}`,
when calling "find references" on the 'value' we want the text
span of the reference to just be `value` rather than the entire source
`a?.value`.
PR Close#39768
In order to map the pipe's `transform` method in the type check block
directly back to the pipe name in the template source, we need to
include the `BindingPipe`'s `nameSpan` with the `ts.methodAccess` for
the pipe's transform method.
Note that this is specifically relevant to the Language Service's "find
references" feature. As an example, with something like `-2.5 | number:'1.0-0'`,,
when calling "find references" on the 'number' pipe we want the text
span of the reference to just be `number` rather than the entire binding
pipe's source `-2.5 | number:'1.0-0'`.
PR Close#39768
Fix a case where, if the parent class had already been patched, it would
not patch the child class. In addition to checking if the method is
defined in the prototype, and not inherited, it also does the same for
the unpatched method.
PR Close#39850
Currently we convert objects to strings using `'' + value` which is quickest,
but it stringifies the value using its `valueOf`, rather than `toString`. These
changes switch to using `String(value)` which has identical performance
and calls the `toString` method as expected. Note that another option
was calling `toString` directly, but benchmarking showed it to be slower.
I've included the benchmark I used to verify the performance so we have it
for future reference and we can reuse it when making changes to `renderStringify`
in the future.
Also for reference, here are the results of the benchmark:
```
Benchmark: renderStringify
concat: 2.006 ns(0%)
concat with toString: 2.201 ns(-10%)
toString: 237.494 ns(-11741%)
toString with toString: 121.072 ns(-5937%)
constructor: 2.201 ns(-10%)
constructor with toString: 2.201 ns(-10%)
toString mono: 14.536 ns(-625%)
toString with toString mono: 9.757 ns(-386%)
```
Fixes#38839.
PR Close#39843
Previously this would have just printed that `false` was not equal to
`true`, which, although true, is not very helpful. This commit adds
details about which special check failed together with the generated
code, for easier debugging.
PR Close#39863
We currently only wrap the event listener in the function which ensures
ancestors are marked for check when the listener is placed on an element
that has a native method for listening to an event. We actually need to do
this wrapping in all cases so that events that are attached to non-rendered
template items (`ng-template` and `ng-container`) also mark ancestors for check
when they receive the event.
fixes#39832
PR Close#39833
DEPRECATION:
Mark the {[key: string]: any} type for the options property of the FormBuilder.group method as deprecated.
Using AbstractControlOptions gives the same functionality and is type-safe.
PR Close#39769
`@angular/core` support zone.js `^0.10.2 and ^0.11.3`, so this PR updates the
peerDependencies to `^0.10.2 || ^ 0.11.3`, so the app will not show warning about
peer denepdency not consistent when using zone.js 0.10.x version.
PR Close#39809
This commit provides the machinery for the new file-based compliance test
approach for i18n tests, and migrates the i18n tests to this new format.
PR Close#39661
For element queries that return sufficiently large NodeList
objects, using spread syntax to populate the results array
causes a RangeError due to the call stack limit being reached.
This commit updates the code to use regular "for" loop instead.
Fixes#38551.
PR Close#39646
The ARB format is a JSON file containing an object where the keys are the
message ids and the values are the translations.
It is extensible because it can also contain metadata about each message.
For example:
```
{
"@@locale": "...",
"message-id": "Translated message string",
"@message-id": {
"type": "text",
"description": "Some description text",
"x-locations": [{ "start": {"line": 23, "column": 145}, "file": "some/file.ts" }]
},
}
```
For more information, see:
https://github.com/google/app-resource-bundle/wiki/ApplicationResourceBundleSpecification
PR Close#36795
Create stubs for getTypeDefinitionAtPosition for both VE and Ivy Language Service
implementations. This will prevent failed requests when it is implemented on the vscode plugin side.
PR Close#39829
This commit implements partial compilation of components, together with
linking the partial declaration into its full AOT output.
This commit does not yet enable accurate source maps into external
templates. This requires additional work to account for escape sequences
which is non-trivial. Inline templates that were represented using a
string or template literal are transplated into the partial declaration
output, so their source maps should be accurate. Note, however, that
the accuracy of source maps is not currently verified in tests; this is
also left as future work.
The golden files of partial compilation output have been updated to
reflect the generated code for components. Please note that the current
output should not yet be considered stable.
PR Close#39707
In production mode this flag defaults to `true`, but the compliance
tests override this to `false` unless it is provided. As such, the
linker should also adhere to this default as otherwise the compilation
output would not align with the output of the full tests.
There are still tests that exercise the value of this flag, together
with it being `undefined` to verify the behavior of the actual default
value.
PR Close#39707
The linker does not currently support outputting ES5 syntax, so any
compliance tests that request ES5 output cannot be run in partial
compilation mode. This commit marks these tests as pending.
PR Close#39707
This commit adds the `i18nUseExternalIds` option to the linker options,
as the compliance tests exercise compilation results with and without
this flag enabled. We therefore need to configure the linker to take
this option into account, as otherwise the compliance test output would
not be identical.
Additionally, this commit switches away from spread syntax to set
the default options. This introduced a problem when the user-provided
options object did specify the keys, but with an undefined value. This
would have prevented the default options from being applied.
PR Close#39707
This commit is a precursor to supporting the partial compilation of
components, which leverages some of the compilation infrastructure that
is in place for directives.
PR Close#39707
The metadata specification of queries allows for the boolean properties
`first`, `descendants` and `static` to be missing, but the linker did
not account for their omission.
This fix is tested in subsequent commits that implement compilation of
components, at which point this will be covered by the compliance tests.
PR Close#39707
The compilation result of components may have inserted template
functions into the constant pool, which would be inserted into the Babel
AST upon program exit. Babel will then proceed with visiting this newly
inserted subtree, but we have already cleaned up the linker instance
when exiting the program. Any call expressions within the template
functions would then fail to be processed, as a file linker would no
longer be available.
Since the inserted AST subtree is known not to contain yet more partial
declarations, it is safe to skip visiting call expressions when no
file linker is available.
PR Close#39707
The type checker had to do extensive work in resolving the
`NodePath.get` method call for the `NodePath` that had an intersection
type of `ts.VariableDeclarator&{init:t.Expression}`. The `NodePath.get`
method is typed using a conditional type which became expensive to
compute with this intersection type. As a workaround, the original
`init` property is explicitly omitted which avoids the performance
cliff. This brings down the compile time by 15s.
PR Close#39707
The JSON schema reference was off-by-one, preventing IDEs from finding
the file and offering suggestions and documentation. Additionally the
name of the golden file was slightly off.
PR Close#39707
If a template declares a reference to a missing target then referring to
that reference from elsewhere in the template would crash the template
type checker, due to a regression introduced in #38618. This commit
fixes the crash by ensuring that the invalid reference will resolve to
a variable of type any.
Fixes#39744
PR Close#39805
Archives most of the content in the template expression operators doc.
The pipes precedence section that was originally in
template expression operators moves into the pipes doc
with some editing and an addition of a ternary example.
PR Close#39170
Since 5be4edfa17, a failing cache-busted
network request (such as requests for fetching uncached assets) will
cause the ServiceWorker to incorrectly enter a degraded
`EXISTING_CLIENTS_ONLY` mode. A failing network request could be caused
by many reasons, including the client or server being offline, and does
not necessarily signify a broken ServiceWorker state.
This commit fixes the logic in `cacheBustedFetchFromNetwork()` to
correctly handle errors in network requests.
For more details on the problem and the implemented fix see #39775.
Fixes#39775
PR Close#39786
Script tags, inline event handlers and other script contexts are
forbidden or stripped from Angular templates by the compiler. In the
context of Trusted Types, this leaves no sinks that require use of a
TrustedScript. This means that trustConstantScript is never used, and
can be removed.
PR Close#39554
Previously all constant values of security-sensitive attributes and
properties were promoted to Trusted Types. While this is not inherently
bad, it is also not optimal.
Use the newly added Trusted Types schema to restrict promotion to
constants that are in a Trusted Types-relevant context.
PR Close#39554
To minimize security risk (XSS in particular) in the i18n pipeline,
disallow i18n translation of attributes that are Trusted Types sinks.
Add integration tests to ensure that such sinks cannot be translated.
PR Close#39554
As only methods from the Subscribable interface are currently used in the
implementation of the async pipe, it makes sense to make it explicit so
that it works successfully with any other implementation instead of
only Observable.
PR Close#39627
The value of a `FormControl` is treated in a special way (called boxed values) when it's an object with exactly
2 fields: `value` and `disabled`. This commit adds a test which verifies that an object is not treated as a boxed
value when `disabled` field is present, but `value` is missing.
PR Close#39801
Currently all of our migrations are set up to find the tsconfig paths within a project,
create a `Program` out of each and migrate the files inside of the `Program`. The
problem is that the `Program` can include files outside of the project and the CLI
APIs that we use to interact with the file system assume that all files are within
the project.
These changes consolidate the logic, that determines whether a file can be migrated,
in a single place and add an extra check to exclude files outside of the root.
Fixes#39778.
PR Close#39790
We need to expose the declaration files for Ivy sources so that they can
be consumed by the Angular language server (`@angular/language-server`).
PR Close#39748
There are many places where examples use just a string for the command
in outlets. When using nested outlets, we do not correctly handle
this case, as the types and algorithm always expect an array.
This PR updates the `createUrlTree` algorithm to account for the
possibility of a string literal as the command for an outlet.
Fixes#18928
PR Close#39728
When parsing for i18n messages, interpolated strings are
split into `Text` and `Placeholder` pieces. The method that
does this `_visitTextWithInterpolation()` was becoming too
complex. This commit refactors that method along with some
associated functions that it uses.
PR Close#39717
When the `preserveWhitespaces` is not true, the template parser will
process the parsed AST nodes to remove excess whitespace. Since the
generated `goog.getMsg()` statements rely upon the AST nodes after
this whitespace is removed, the i18n extraction must make a second pass.
Previously this resulted in innacurrate source-spans for the i18n text and
placeholder nodes that were extracted in the second pass.
This commit fixes this by reusing the source-spans from the first pass
when extracting the nodes in the second pass.
Fixes#39671
PR Close#39717
`zone.js` 0.8.25 introduces `zone-testing` bundle and move all `fakeAsync/async` logic
from `@angular/core/testing` to `zone.js` package. But in case some user still using the old
version of `zone.js`, an old version of `fakeAsync/async` logic were still kept inside `@angular/core/testing`
package as `fallback` logic. Since now `Angular8+` already use `zone.js 0.9+`, so
those fallback logic is removed.
PR Close#37879
The codebase currently contains two `getOutlet` functions,
and they can end up in the bundle of an application.
A recent commit 6fbe21941d tipped us off
as it introduced several `noop` occurrences in the golden symbol files.
After investigating with @petebacondarwin,
we decided to remove the duplicated functions.
This probably shaves only a few bytes,
but this commit removes the duplicated functions,
by always using the one in `router/src/utils/config`.
PR Close#39764
This commit fixes a bug when `Attribute` DI decorator is used in the
`deps` section of a token that uses a factory function. The problem
appeared because the `Attribute` DI decorator was not handled correctly
while injecting factory function attributes.
Closes#36479
PR Close#37085
Consumers of the `TemplateTypeChecker` API could be interested in
mapping from a shim location back to the original source location in the
template. One concrete example of this use-case is for the "find
references" action in the Language Service. This will return locations
in the TypeScript shim file, and we will then need to be able to map the
result back to the template.
PR Close#39715
Both `ReferenceSymbol` and `VariableSymbol` have two locations of
interest to an external consumer.
1. The location for the initializers of the local TCB variables allow consumers
to query the TypeScript Language Service for information about the initialized type of the variable.
2. The location of the local variable itself (i.e. `_t1`) allows
consumers to query the TypeScript LS for references to that variable
from within the template.
PR Close#39715
The codebase currently contains several `noop` functions,
and they can end up in the bundle of an application.
A recent commit 6fbe21941d tipped us off
as it introduced several `noop` occurrences in the golden symbol files.
After investigating with @petebacondarwin,
we decided to remove the duplicated functions.
This probably shaves only a few bytes,
but this commit removes the duplicated functions,
by always using the one in `core/src/utils/noop`.
PR Close#39761
In #38762 we added a migration to replace the deprecated `preserveQueryParams`
option with `queryParamsHandling`, however due to a typo, we ended up replacing it
with `queryParamsHandler` which is invalid.
Fixes#39755.
PR Close#39763
There is a typo in zone.js bundle format breaking change part,
the correct version should be `0.11.1` not `0.11.11`, and add
more clear text to explain the new bundle format directory structure.
PR Close#39508
The 15.x versions of `yargs` relied upon a version of `y18n` that
has a SNYK vulnerability.
This commit updates the overall project, and therefore also the
`localize` and `compiler-cli` packages to use the latest version
of `yargs` that does not depend upon the vulnerable `y18n`
version.
The AIO project was already on the latest `yargs` version and so
does not need upgrading.
Fixes#39743
PR Close#39749
language_service_adapter_spec was renamed to adapters_spec as part of
d39c4bbe37, but I failed to check in
adapters_spec, thereby just deleting the spec. This reintroduces it.
PR Close#39742
The `HttpParamsOptions` was not documented or included in the public API even
though it is a constructor argument of `HttpParams` which is a part of the
public API. This commit adds the `HttpParamsOptions` into the exports, thus
making it a part of the public API.
Resolves#20276
PR Close#35829
Currently `readConfiguration` relies on the file system to perform disk
utilities needed to read determine a project configuration file and read
it. This poses a challenge for the language service, which would like to
use `readConfiguration` to watch and read configurations dependent on
extended tsconfigs (#39134). Challenges are at least twofold:
1. To test this, the langauge service would need to provide to the
compiler a mock file system.
2. The language service uses file system utilities primarily through
TypeScript's `Project` abstraction. In general this should correspond
to the underlying file system, but it may differ and it is better to
go through one channel when possible.
This patch alleviates the concern by directly providing to the compiler
a "ParseConfigurationHost" with read-only "file system"-like utilties.
For the language service, this host is derived from the project owned by
the language service.
For more discussion see
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1TrbT-m7bqyYZICmZYHjnJ7NG9Vzt5Rd967h43Qx8jw0/edit?usp=sharing
PR Close#39619
Before this change, when trying to load a JSONP script that calls the JSONP callback inside a
microtask, it will fail in Internet Explorer 11 and EdgeHTML. This commit changes the onLoad cleanup
to be queued after the loaded endpoint executed any potential microtask itself. This ensures that
the aforementioned browsers will first evaluate the loaded script calling the JSONP callback and
only then run the cleanup inside onLoad.
Fixes#39496
PR Close#39512
This commit adds new language service testing infrastructure which allows
for in-memory testing. It solves a number of issues with the previous
testing infrastructure that relied on a single integration project across
all of the tests, and also provides for much faster builds by using
the compiler-cli's mock versions of @angular/core and @angular/common.
A new `LanguageServiceTestEnvironment` class (conceptually mirroring the
compiler-cli `NgtscTestEnvironment`) controls setup and execution of tests.
The `FileSystem` abstraction is used to drive a `ts.server.ServerHost`,
which backs the language service infrastructure.
Since many language service tests revolve around the template, the API is
currently optimized to spin up a "skeleton" project and then override its
template for each test.
The existing Quick Info tests (quick_info_spec.ts) were ported to the new
infrastructure for validation. The tests were cleaned up a bit to remove
unnecessary initializations as well as correct legitimate template errors
which did not affect the test outcome, but caused additional validation of
test correctness to fail. They still utilize a shared project with all
fields required for each individual unit test, which is an anti-pattern, but
new tests can now easily be written independently without relying on the
shared project, which was extremely difficult previously. Future cleanup
work might refactor these tests to be more independent.
PR Close#39594
In preparation for in-memory testing infrastructure, the existing Ivy
language service tests are moved to a `legacy` directory. These existing
tests rely on a single integration project in `test/project/app`, which
presents a number of challenges:
* adding extra fields/properties to the integration project for one test
can cause others to fail/flake.
* it's especially difficult to test any cases that require introducing
intentional errors, as those tend to break other tests.
* tests load files from disk, which is slower.
* tests rely on the real built versions of @angular/core and
@angular/common, which makes them both slow to build and require rebuilds
on every compiler change.
* tests share a single tsconfig.json, making it extremely difficult to test
how the language service handles different configuration scenarios (e.g.
different type-checking flags).
PR Close#39594
ngtsc's testing infrastructure uses a mock version of @angular/core, which
allows tests to run without requiring the real version of core to be built.
This commit adds a mock version of @angular/common as well, as the language
service tests are written to test against common.
Only a handful of directives/pipes from common are currently supported.
PR Close#39594
ngtsc has a robust suite of testing utilities, designed for in-memory
testing of a TypeScript compiler. Previously these utilities lived in the
`test` directory for the compiler-cli package.
This commit moves those utilities to an `ngtsc/testing` package, enabling
them to be depended on separately and opening the door for using them from
the upcoming language server testing infrastructure.
As part of this refactoring, the `fake_core` package (a lightweight API
replacement for @angular/core) is expanded to include functionality needed
for Language Service test use cases.
PR Close#39594
The result of utf-8 encoding a string was represented in a string, where
each individual character represented a single byte according to its
character code. All usages of this data were interested in the byte
itself, so this required conversion from a character back to its code.
This commit simply stores the individual bytes in array to avoid the
conversion. This yields a ~10% performance improvement for i18n message
ID computation.
PR Close#39694
Message ID computation makes extensive use of big integer
multiplications in order to translate the message's fingerprint into
a numerical representation. In large compilations with heavy use of i18n
this was showing up high in profiler sessions.
There are two factors contributing to the bottleneck:
1. a suboptimal big integer representation using strings, which requires
repeated allocation and conversion from a character to numeric digits
and back.
2. repeated computation of the necessary base-256 exponents and their
multiplication factors.
The first bottleneck is addressed using a representation that uses an
array of individual digits. This avoids repeated conversion and
allocation overhead is also greatly reduced, as adding two big integers
can now be done in-place with virtually no memory allocations.
The second point is addressed by a memoized exponentiation pool to
optimize the multiplication of a base-256 exponent.
As an additional optimization are the two 32-bit words now converted to
decimal per word, instead of going through an intermediate byte buffer
and doing the decimal conversion per byte.
The results of these optimizations depend a lot on the number of i18n
messages for which a message should be computed. Benchmarks have shown
that computing message IDs is now ~6x faster for 1,000 messages, ~14x
faster for 10,000 messages, and ~24x faster for 100,000 messages.
PR Close#39694
Currently when we encounter an implicit method call (e.g. `{{ foo(1) }}`) and we manage to resolve
its receiver to something within the template, we assume that the method is on the receiver itself
so we generate a type checking code to reflect it. This assumption is true in most cases, but it
breaks down if the call is on an implicit receiver and the receiver itself is being invoked. E.g.
```
<div *ngFor="let fn of functions">{{ fn(1) }}</div>
```
These changes resolve the issue by generating a regular function call if the method call's receiver
is pointing to `$implicit`.
Fixes#39634.
PR Close#39686
In order to more accurately map from a node in the TCB to a template position,
we need to provide more span information in the TCB. These changes are necessary
for the Language Service to map from a TCB node back to a specific
locations in the template for actions like "find references" and
"refactor/rename". After the TS "find references" returns results,
including those in the TCB, we need to map specifically to the matching
key/value spans in the template rather than the entire source span.
This also has the benefit of producing diagnostics which align more
closely with what TypeScript produces.
The following example shows TS code and the diagnostic produced by an invalid assignment to a property:
```
let a: {age: number} = {} as any;
a.age = 'laksjdf';
^^^^^ <-- Type 'string' is not assignable to type 'number'.
```
A corollary to this in a template file would be [age]="'someString'". The diagnostic we currently produce for this is:
```
Type 'number' is not assignable to type 'string'.
1 <app-hello [greeting]="1"></app-hello>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
```
Notice that the underlined text includes the entire span.
If we included the keySpan for the assignment to the property,
this diagnostic underline would be more similar to the one produced by TypeScript;
that is, it would only underline “greeting”.
[design/discussion doc]
(https://docs.google.com/document/d/1FtaHdVL805wKe4E6FxVTnVHl38lICoHIjS2nThtRJ6I/edit?usp=sharing)
PR Close#39665
This commit removes the TODO comment that proposed
that we use the built-in RxJS `isObservable()` function.
This is not a viable approach since the built-in function
requires that the `obj` contains additional methods that
our "observable" types (such as `EventEmitter`) do not
necessarily have.
See #39643 for more information.
PR Close#39669
`ViewRef` and `ApplicationRef` had a circular reference. This change
introduces `ViewRefTracker` which is a subset of `ApplicationRef` for
this purpose.
PR Close#39621
JIT needs to identify which type is `ChangeDetectorRef`. It was doing so
by importing `ChangeDetectorRef` and than comparing the types. This creates
circular dependency as well as prevents tree shaking. The new solution is
to brand the class with `__ChangeDetectorRef__` so that it can be identified
without creating circular dependency.
PR Close#39621
`LContainer` stores `ViewRef`s this is not quite right as it creates
circular dependency between the two types. Also `LContainer` should not
be aware of `ViewRef` which iv ViewEngine specific construct.
PR Close#39621
Due to historical reasons `Injector.__NG_ELEMENT_ID__` was set to `-1`.
This changes it to be consistent with other `*Ref.__NG_ELEMENT_ID__`
constructs.
PR Close#39621
`Renderer2` is declared in ViewEngine but it sub-classed in Ivy. This creates a circular
dependency between ViewEngine `Renderer2` which needs to declare `__NG_ELEMENT_ID__` and
ivy factory which needs to create it. The workaround used to be to pass the `Renderer2`
through stack but that created a very convoluted code. This refactoring simply bundles the
two files together and removes the stack workaround making the code simpler to follow.
PR Close#39621
`ChangeDetectorRef` is declared in ViewEngine but it sub-classed in Ivy. This creates a circular
dependency between ViewEngine `ChangeDetectorRef` which needs to declare `__NG_ELEMENT_ID__` and
ivy factory which needs to create it. The workaround used to be to pass the `ChangeDetectorRef`
through stack but that created a very convoluted code. This refactoring simply bundles the
two files together and removes the stack workaround making the code simpler to follow.
PR Close#39621
`ViewContainerRef` is declared in ViewEngine but it sub-classed in Ivy. This creates a circular
dependency between ViewEngine `ViewContainerRef` which needs to declare `__NG_ELEMENT_ID__` and
ivy factory which needs to create it. The workaround used to be to pass the `ViewContainerRef`
through stack but that created a very convoluted code. This refactoring simply bundles the
two files together and removes the stack workaround making the code simpler to follow.
PR Close#39621
`TemplateRef` is declared in ViewEngine but it sub-classed in Ivy. This creates a circular
dependency between ViewEngine `TemplateRef` which needs to declare `__NG_ELEMENT_ID__` and
ivy factory which needs to create it. The workaround used to be to pass the `TemplateRef`
through stack but that created a very convoluted code. This refactoring simply bundles the
two files together and removes the stack workaround making the code simpler to follow.
PR Close#39621
`ElementRef` is declared in ViewEngine but it sub-classed in Ivy. This creates a circular
dependency between ViewEngine `ElementRef` which needs to declare `__NG_ELEMENT_ID__` and
ivy factory which needs to create it. The workaround used to be to pass the `ElementRef`
through stack but that created a very convoluted code. This refactoring simply bundles the
two files together and removes the stack workaround making the code simpler to follow.
PR Close#39621
Close#39348
Now `NgZone` has an option `shouldCoalesceEventChangeDetection` to coalesce
multiple event handler's change detections to one async change detection.
And there are some cases other than `event handler` have the same issues.
In #39348, the case like this.
```
// This code results in one change detection occurring per
// ngZone.run() call. This is entirely feasible, and can be a serious
// performance issue.
for (let i = 0; i < 100; i++) {
this.ngZone.run(() => {
// do something
});
}
```
So such kind of case will trigger multiple change detections.
And now with Ivy, we have a new `markDirty()` API will schedule
a requestAnimationFrame to trigger change detection and also coalesce
the change detections in the same event loop, `markDirty()` API doesn't
only take care `event handler` but also all other cases `sync/macroTask/..`
So this PR add a new option to coalesce change detections for all cases.
test(core): add test case for shouldCoalesceEventChangeDetection option
Add new test cases for current `shouldCoalesceEventChangeDetection` in `ng_zone.spec`, since
currently we only have integration test for this one.
PR Close#39422
`setComponentScope` was previously undocumented. This commit adds a short
explanation of what the function does, and adds a link to a doc which
explains issues with cycles in more detail.
PR Close#39662
ngtsc will avoid emitting generated imports that would create an import
cycle in the user's program. The main way such imports can arise is when
a component would ordinarily reference its dependencies in its component
definition `directiveDefs` and `pipeDefs`. This requires adding imports,
which run the risk of creating a cycle.
When ngtsc detects that adding such an import would cause this to occur, it
instead falls back on a strategy called "remote scoping", where a side-
effectful call to `setComponentScope` in the component's NgModule file is
used to patch `directiveDefs` and `pipeDefs` onto the component. Since the
NgModule file already imports all of the component's dependencies (to
declare them in the NgModule), this approach does not risk adding a cycle.
It has several large downsides, however:
1. it breaks under `sideEffects: false` logic in bundlers including the CLI
2. it breaks tree-shaking for the given component and its dependencies
See this doc for further details: https://hackmd.io/Odw80D0pR6yfsOjg_7XCJg?view
In particular, the impact on tree-shaking was exacerbated by the naive logic
ngtsc used to employ here. When this feature was implemented, at the time of
generating the side-effectful `setComponentScope` call, the compiler did not
know which of the component's declared dependencies were actually used in
its template. This meant that unlike the generation of `directiveDefs` in
the component definition itself, `setComponentScope` calls had to list the
_entire_ compilation scope of the component's NgModule, including directives
and pipes which were not actually used in the template. This made the tree-
shaking impact much worse, since if the component's NgModule made use of any
shared NgModules (e.g. `CommonModule`), every declaration therein would
become un-treeshakable.
Today, ngtsc does have the information on which directives/pipes are
actually used in the template, but this was not being used during the remote
scoping operation. This commit modifies remote scoping to take advantage of
the extra context and only list used dependencies in `setComponentScope`
calls, which should ameliorate the tree-shaking impact somewhat.
PR Close#39662
This commit adds bazel rules to test whether linking the golden partial
files for test cases produces the same output as a full compile of the
test case would.
PR Close#39617
This commit contains the basic runner logic and a couple of sample test cases
for the "full compile" compliance tests, where source files are compiled
to full definitions and checked against expectations.
PR Close#39617
This commit renames the original `compliance` test directory to `compliance_old`.
Eventually this directory will be deleted once all the tests have been
migrated to the new test case based compliance tests.
PR Close#39617
Similar to #39613, #39609, and #38898, we should store the `keySpan` for
Reference nodes so that we can accurately map from a template node to a
span in the original file. This is most notably an issue at the moment
for directive references `#ref="exportAs"`. The current behavior for the
language service when requesting information for the reference
is that it will return a text span that results in
highlighting the entire source when it should only highlight "ref" (test
added for this case as well).
PR Close#39616
Though we currently have the knowledge of where the `key` for an
event binding appears during parsing, we do not propagate this
information to the output AST. This means that once we produce the
template AST, we have no way of mapping a template position to the key
span alone. The best we can currently do is map back to the
`sourceSpan`. This presents problems downstream, specifically for the
language service, where we cannot provide correct information about a
position in a template because the AST is not granular enough.
This is essentially identical to the change from #38898, but for event
bindings rather than input bindings.
PR Close#39609
Similar to #39609 and #38898, though we currently have the knowledge of where the key for an
attribute appears during parsing, we do not propagate this
information to the output AST. This means that once we produce the
template AST, we have no way of mapping a template position to the key
span alone. The best we can currently do is map back to the
sourceSpan. This presents problems downstream, specifically for the
language service, where we cannot provide correct information about a
position in a template because the AST is not granular enough.
PR Close#39613
The resource loader uses TypeScript's module resolution system to
determine at which locations it needs to look for a resource file. A
marker string is used to force the module resolution to fail, such that
all failed lookup locations can then be considered for actual resource
resolution. Any filesystem requests targeting files/directories that
contain the marker are known not to exist, so no filesystem request
needs to be done at all.
PR Close#39604
The type alias allows for this pattern to be more easily used in other
areas of the compiler code. The current usages of this pattern have been
updated to use the type alias.
PR Close#39604
When a `ViewContainerRef` is injected, we dynamically create a comment node next to the host
so that it can be used as an anchor point for inserting views. The comment node is inserted
through the `appendChild` helper from `node_manipulation.ts` in most cases.
The problem with using `appendChild` here is that it has some extra logic which doesn't return
a parent `RNode` if an element is at the root of a component. I __think__ that this is a performance
optimization which is used to avoid inserting an element in one place in the DOM and then
moving it a bit later when it is projected. This can break down in some cases when creating
a `ViewContainerRef` for a non-component node at the root of another component like the following:
```
<root>
<div #viewContainerRef></div>
</root>
```
In this case the `#viewContainerRef` node is at the root of a component so we intentionally don't
insert it, but since its anchor element was created manually, it'll never be projected. This will
prevent any views added through the `ViewContainerRef` from being inserted into the DOM.
These changes resolve the issue by not going through `appendChild` at all when creating a comment
node for `ViewContainerRef`. This should work identically since `appendChild` doesn't really do
anything with the T structures anyway, it only uses them to reach the relevant DOM nodes.
Fixes#39556.
PR Close#39599
Currently when an instance of the `FormControlName` directive is destroyed, the Forms package invokes
the `cleanUpControl` to clear all directive-specific logic (such as validators, onChange handlers,
etc) from a bound control. The logic of the `cleanUpControl` function should revert all setup
performed by the `setUpControl` function. However the `cleanUpControl` is too aggressive and removes
all callbacks related to the onChange and disabled state handling. This is causing problems when
a form control is bound to multiple FormControlName` directives, causing other instances of that
directive to stop working correctly when the first one is destroyed.
This commit updates the cleanup logic to only remove callbacks added while setting up a control
for a given directive instance.
The fix is needed to allow adding `cleanUpControl` function to other places where cleanup is needed
(missing this function calls in some other places causes memory leak issues).
PR Close#39623
* Fixes that the Ivy styling logic wasn't accounting for `!important` in the property value.
* Fixes that the default DOM renderer only sets `!important` on a property with a dash in its name.
* Accounts for the `flags` parameter of `setStyle` in the server renderer.
Fixes#35323.
PR Close#39603
TCB generation occasionally transforms binding expressions twice, which can
result in a `BindingPipe` operation being `resolve()`'d multiple times. When
the pipe does not exist, this caused multiple OOB diagnostics to be recorded
about the missing pipe.
This commit fixes the problem by making the OOB recorder track which pipe
expressions have had diagnostics produced already, and only producing them
once per expression.
PR Close#39517
With this change we remove code which was used to support both TypeScript 3.9 and TypeScript 4.0
This code is now no longer needed because G3 is on TypeScript 4.0
PR Close#39586
As with regular Angular components, Angular elements are expected to
have their views update when inputs change.
Previously, Angular Elements views were not updated if the underlying
component used the `OnPush` change detection strategy.
This commit fixes this by calling `markForCheck()` on the component
view's `ChangeDetectorRef`.
NOTE:
This is similar to how `@angular/upgrade` does it:
3236ae0ee1/packages/upgrade/src/common/src/downgrade_component_adapter.ts (L146).
Fixes#38948
PR Close#39452
`ComponentNgElementStrategy` is supposed to call `ngOnChanges()` on the
underlying component instance if available, but not fail if the
component does not have an `ngOnChanges()` method. This works as
expected. However, the test used to verify that was invalid; i.e. the
test would pass even if `ComponentNgElementStrategy` would try to call
`ngOnChanges()` on a component without such a method.
This commit replaces the invalid test with a new one that correctly
verifies that `ComponentNgElementStrategy` does not try to call
`ngOnChanges()`.
PR Close#39452
Previously, the `componentRef` property of `FakeComponentFactory` used
in `elements` tests was initialy set to a spy object with all mock
properties defined as spied methods. Later, the properties where
overwritten to the actual mock values.
This commit simplifies the creation of `componentRef` by correctly using
the arguments of [jasmine.createSpyObj()][1] to specify the desired
shape of the spy object (separating spied properties from methods and
directly providing the mock values).
[1]: https://jasmine.github.io/api/3.5/jasmine.html#.createSpyObj
PR Close#39452
In ViewEngine, SelfSkip would navigate up the tree to get tokens from
the parent node, skipping the child. This restores that functionality in
Ivy. In ViewEngine, if a special token (e.g. ElementRef) was not found
in the NodeInjector tree, the ModuleInjector was also used to lookup
that token. While special tokens like ElementRef make sense only in a
context of a NodeInjector, we preserved ViewEngine logic for now to
avoid breaking changes.
We identified 4 scenarios related to @SkipSelf and special tokens where
ViewEngine behavior was incorrect and is likely due to bugs. In Ivy this
is implemented to provide a more intuitive API. The list of scenarios
can be found below.
1. When Injector is used in combination with @Host and @SkipSelf on the
first Component within a module and the injector is defined in the
module, ViewEngine will get the injector from the module. In Ivy, it
does not do this and throws instead.
2. When retrieving a @ViewContainerRef while @SkipSelf and @Host are
present, in ViewEngine, it throws an exception. In Ivy it returns the
host ViewContainerRef.
3. When retrieving a @ViewContainerRef on an embedded view and @SkipSelf
is present, in ViewEngine, the ref is null. In Ivy it returns the parent
ViewContainerRef.
4. When utilizing viewProviders and providers, a child component that is
nested within a parent component that has @SkipSelf on a viewProvider
value, if that provider is provided by the parent component's
viewProviders and providers, ViewEngine will return that parent's
viewProviders value, which violates how viewProviders' visibility should
work. In Ivy, it retrieves the value from providers, as it should.
These discrepancies all behave as they should in Ivy and are likely bugs
in ViewEngine.
PR Close#39464
There is a compiler transform that downlevels Angular class decorators
to static properties so that metadata is available for JIT compilation.
The transform was supposed to ignore non-Angular decorators but it was
actually completely dropping decorators that did not conform to a very
specific syntactic shape (i.e. the decorator was a simple identifier, or
a namespaced identifier).
This commit ensures that all non-Angular decorators are kepts as-is
even if they are built using a syntax that the Angular compiler does not
understand.
Fixes#39574
PR Close#39577
Rather than re-reading component metadata that was already interpreted
by the Ivy compiler, the Language Service should instead use the
compiler APIs to get information it needs about the metadata.
PR Close#39476
Tokenized text node may have leading whitespace skipped from their
source-span. But the source-span is used to compute where there are
interpolated blocks, resulting in placeholder nodes whose source-spans
are offset by the amount of skipped characters.
This fix uses the `fullStart` location of text source-spans for computing
the source-span of placeholders, so that they are accurate.
Fixes#39195
PR Close#39486
This commit ensures that when leading whitespace is skipped by
the tokenizer, the original start location (before skipping) is captured
in the `fullStart` property of the token's source-span.
PR Close#39486
The lexer is able to skip leading trivia in the `start` location of tokens.
This makes the source-span more friendly since things like elements
appear to begin at the start of the opening tag, rather than at the
start of any leading whitespace, which could include newlines.
But some tooling requires the full source-span to be available, such
as when tokenizing a text span into an Angular expression.
This commit simply adds the `fullStart` location to the `ParseSourceSpan`
class, and ensures that places where such spans are cloned, this
property flows through too.
PR Close#39486
In an i18n message, two placeholders next to each other must have
an "empty" message-part to separate them. Previously, the source-span
for this message-part was pointing to the wrong original location.
This caused problems in the generated source-maps and lead to extracted
i18n messages from being rendered incorrectly.
PR Close#39486
Close#38863
Monkey patches `queueMicrotask()` API, so the callback runs in the zone
when scheduled, and also the task is run as `microTask`.
```
Zone.current.fork({
name: 'queueMicrotask',
onScheduleTask: (delegate: ZoneDelegate, curr: Zone, target: Zone, task: Task) => {
logs.push(task.type);
logs.push(task.source);
return delegate.scheduleTask(target, task);
}
}).run(() => {
queueMicrotask(() => {
expect(logs).toEqual(['microTask', 'queueMicrotask']);
expect(Zone.current.name).toEqual('queueMicrotask');
done();
});
});
```
PR Close#38904
Prior to this commit, the `cleanUpControl` function (responsible for cleaning up control instance)
was not taking validators into account. As a result, these validators remain registered on a detached
form control instance, thus causing memory leaks. This commit updates the `cleanUpControl` function
logic to also run validators cleanup.
As a part of this change, the logic to setup and cleanup validators was refactored and moved to
separate functions (with completely opposite behavior), so that they can be reused in the future.
This commit doesn't add the `cleanUpControl` calls to all possible places, it just fixes the cases
where this function is being called, but doesn't fully perform a cleanup. The `cleanUpControl`
function calls will be added to other parts of code (to avoid more memory leaks) in a followup PR.
PR Close#39234
For consistency with other generated code, the partial declaration
functions are renamed to use the `ɵɵ` prefix which indicates that it is
generated API.
This commit also removes the declaration from the public API golden
file, as it's not yet considered stable at this point. Once the linker
is finalized will these declaration function be included into the golden
file.
PR Close#39518
This commit implements partial code generation for directives, which
will be transformed by the linker plugin to fully AOT compiled code in
follow-up work.
PR Close#39518
In PR #38938 an additional Bazel target was introduced for the compliance
tests, as preparation to run the compliance tests in partial compilation
mode and then apply the linker transform. The linker plugin itself was
not available at the time but has since been implemented, so this commit
updates the prelink target of the compliance tests to apply the linker
transform using the Babel plugin.
Actually emitting partial compilations to be transformed will be done in
follow-up work.
PR Close#39518
This introduces `AstObject.toMap` as an alternative to `AstObject
.toLiteral`, and adds `AstValue.getSymbolName` to query the symbol name
of a value using the encapsulated AST host.
PR Close#39518
When a class with a custom decorator is transpiled to ES5, it looks something like this:
```
var SomeClass = (function() {
function SomeClass() {...};
var SomeClass_1 = __decorate([Decorator()], SomeClass);
SomeClass = SomeClass_1;
return SomeClass;
})();
```
The problem is that if the class also has an Angular decorator that refers to the class itself
(e.g. `{provide: someToken, useClass: SomeClass}`), the generated `setClassMetadata` code will
be emitted after the IIFE, but will still refer to the intermediate `SomeClass_1` variable from
inside the IIFE. This happens, because we generate the `setClassMetadata` call directly from
the source AST which contains identifiers that TS will rename when it emits the ES5 code.
These changes resolve the issue by looking through the metadata AST and cloning any `Identifier`
that is referring to the class. Since TS doesn't have references to the clone, it won't rename
it when transpiling to ES5.
Fixes#39509.
PR Close#39527
Alex Eagle wrote an external article on our decision to move Bazel out of
Angular repo, and it's useful for users who want to know more about what's next.
PR Close#39507
This commit takes the `HybridVisitor` in the language service and gives it
the ability to return not just a node but the template context in which it
appears. In the future, more context regarding where a node appears in the
template might become necessary (ex: the microsyntax container for binding
nodes), and this refactoring enables that.
In the process, `HybridVisitor` is renamed and the concept of a
`TemplateTarget` interface is introduced to contain the results of this
operation.
PR Close#39505
This commit refactors the QuickInfo abstraction shared between the VE and
Ivy services and used to implement hover tooltips (quick info), which was
extracted from the VE code in commit faa81dc. The new DisplayParts
abstraction is more general and can be used to extract information needed by
various LS functions (e.g. autocompletion).
This commit effectively reverts faa81dc, returning the original code to the
VE implementation as the Ivy code is now diverged.
PR Close#39505
When registering an NgModule based on its id, all transitively imported
NgModules are also registered. This commit introduces a visited set to
avoid traversing into NgModules that are reachable from multiple import
paths multiple times.
Fixes#39487
PR Close#39514
The variable declaration for a template context is only needed when it
is referenced from somewhere, so the TCB operation to generate the
declaration is marked as optional.
PR Close#39321
When there is a primary outlet present in the outlets map and the object is also prefixed
with some other commands, the current logic only uses the primary outlet and ignores
the others. This change ensures that all outlets are respected at the
segment level when prefixed with other commands.
PR Close#39456
This commit has a small refactor of some methods in create_url_tree.ts
and adds some test cases, including two that will fail at the moment but
should pass. A follow-up commit will make use of the refactorings to fix
the test with minimal changes.
PR Close#39456
Currently expressions `$event.foo()` and `this.$event.foo()`, as well as `$any(foo)` and
`this.$any(foo)`, are treated as the same expression by the compiler, because `this` is considered
the same implicit receiver as when the receiver is omitted. This introduces the following issues:
1. Any time something called `$any` is used, it'll be stripped away, leaving only the first parameter.
2. If something called `$event` is used anywhere in a template, it'll be preserved as `$event`,
rather than being rewritten to `ctx.$event`, causing the value to undefined at runtime. This
applies to listener, property and text bindings.
These changes resolve the first issue and part of the second one by preserving anything that
is accessed through `this`, even if it's one of the "special" ones like `$any` or `$event`.
Furthermore, these changes only expose the `$event` global variable inside event listeners,
whereas previously it was available everywhere.
Fixes#30278.
PR Close#39323
This commit updates the week-numbering year format from `r` -> `Y` based on the description in
http://www.unicode.org/reports/tr35/tr35-dates.html#dfst-year.
Note: this is not a breaking change, since the week-numbering year format was introduced in
v11.0.0-next.3 (984ed39195)
and the major version that contains that change was not released yet.
PR Close#39495
The Language Service is not only interested in external resources, but
also inline styles and templates. By storing the expression of the
inline resources, we can more easily determine if a given position is
part of the inline template/style expression.
PR Close#39482
To support recovery of malformed binding property names like `([a)`,
`[a`, or `()`, the binding parser needs to be more permissive w.r.t. the
kinds of bindings it can detect. This is difficult to do maintainably
with a regex, but is trivial with a "hand-rolled" string parser. This
commit refactors render3's binding attribute parsing to use this method
for multi-delimited bindings (namely via the `()`, `[]`, and `[()]`)
syntax, making the way recovery of malformed bindings in a future patch.
Note that we can keep using a regex for prefix-only binding syntax
(e.g. `bind-`, `ref-`) because validation of the binding is complete
once we have matched the prefix, and the only thing left to do is check
that the binding identifier is non-empty, which is trivial.
Part of #38596
PR Close#39375
This commit updates the docs for the `tView.preOrderHooks` and `tView.preOrderCheckHooks` TView
fields. Current docs are not up-to-date as it was pointed out in #39439.
Closes#39439.
PR Close#39497
This is follow-up from [an earlier discussion](https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/39408#discussion_r511908358).
After some testing, it looks like the type of `Element.attributes` was correct in specifying that it
only has `TextAttribute` instances. This means that the extra checks that filter out `BoundAttribute`
instances from the array isn't necessary. There is another loop a bit further down that actually
extracts the bound i18n attributes.
PR Close#39498
Close#39296
Fix an issue that `markDirty()` will not trigger change detection.
The case is for example we have the following component.
```
export class AppComponent implements OnInit {
constructor(private router: Router) {}
ngOnInit() {
this.router.events
.pipe(filter((e) => e instanceof NavigationEnd))
.subscribe(() => ɵmarkDirty(this));
}
}
export class CounterComponent implements OnInit, OnDestroy {
ngOnInit() {
this.countSubject.pipe(takeUntil(this.destroy)).subscribe((count) => {
this.count = count;
ɵmarkDirty(this);
});
}
```
Then the app navigate from `AppComponent` to `CounterComponent`,
so there are 2 `markDirty()` call at in a row.
The `1st` call is from `AppComponent` when router changed, the
`2nd` call is from `CounterComponent.ngOnInit()`.
And the `markDirty()->scheduleTick()` code look like this
```
function scheduleTick(rootContext, flags) {
const nothingScheduled = rootContext.flags === 0 /* Empty */;
rootContext.flags |= flags;
if (nothingScheduled && rootContext.clean == _CLEAN_PROMISE) {
rootContext.schedule(() => {
...
if (rootContext.flags & RootContextFlags.DetectChanges)
rootContext.flags &= ~RootContextFlags.DetectChanges;
tickContext();
rootContext.clean = _CLEAN_PROMISE;
...
});
```
So in this case, the `1st` markDirty() will
1. set rootContext.flags = 1
2. before `tickContext()`, reset rootContext.flags = 0
3. inside `tickContext()`, it will call `CounterComponent.ngOnint()`,
so the `2nd` markDirty() is called.
4. and the `2nd` scheduleTick is called, `nothingScheduled` is true,
but rootContext.clean is not `_CLEAN_PROMISE` yet, since the `1st` markDirty tick
is still running.
5. So nowhere will reset the `rootContext.flags`.
6. then in the future, any other `markDirty()` call will not trigger the tick, since
`nothingScheduled` is always false.
So `nothingScheduled` means no tick is scheduled, `rootContext.clean === _CLEAN_PROMISE`
means no tick is running.
So we should set the flags to `rootContext` only when `no tick is scheudled or running`.
PR Close#39316
This commit handles the following cases:
- incomplete pipes in a pipe chain
- incomplete arguments in a pipe chain
- incomplete arguments provided to a pipe
- nested pipes
The idea is to unconditionally recover on the presence of a pipe, which
should be okay because expression parsing can be independently between
pipes.
PR Close#39437
Angular-internal type definitions for Trusted Types were added in #39211.
When compiled using the Closure compiler with certain optimization
flags, identifiers from these type definitions (such as createPolicy)
are currently uglified and renamed to shorter strings. This causes
Angular applications compiled in this way to fail to create a Trusted
Types policy, and fall bock to using strings.
To fix this, mark the internal Trusted Types definitions as declarations
using the "declare" keyword. Also convert types to interfaces, for
the reasons explained in https://ncjamieson.com/prefer-interfaces/
PR Close#39471
This commit improves the ngModel docs, specifically:
- clarifies purpose of the name attribute in ngModelOptions
- clarifies on the interaction with a parent form or lack thereof
- fix inconsistency with analogy for two-way binding
- cleans up some typos and extra wordiness
- clarifies language around common properties
- adds missing preposition to commit message format origins
PR Close#39481
In the current release doc, we are using some shortcut of `git` command
such as `git ci` `git co`, so in this PR we are updating them
to the normal command, so these commands will work event without
these shortcuts.
PR Close#39442
In addition to the template mapping that already existed, we want to also track the mapping for external
style files. We also store the `ts.Expression` in the registry so external tools can look up a resource
on a component by expression and avoid reading the value.
PR Close#39373
adds RuntimeError and code enum to improve debugging experience
refactor ExpressionChangedAfterItHasBeenCheckedError to code NG0100
refactor CyclicDependency to code NG0200
refactor No Provider to code NG0201
refactor MultipleComponentsMatch to code NG0300
refactor ExportNotFound to code NG0301
refactor PipeNotFound to code NG0302
refactor BindingNotKnown to code NG0303
refactor NotKnownElement to code NG0304
PR Close#39188
This commit refactors validators-related logic that is common across most of the directives.
A couple notes on this refactoring:
* common logic was moved to the `AbstractControlDirective` class (including `validator` and
`asyncValidator` getters)
* sync/async validators are now composed in `AbstractControlDirective` class eagerly when validators
are set with `_setValidators` and `_setAsyncValidators` calls and the result is stored in directive
instance (thus getters return cached versions of validator fn). This is needed to make sure composed
validator function remains the same (retains its identity) for a given directive instance, so that
this function can be added and later removed from an instance of an AbstractControl-based class
(like `FormControl`). Preserving validator function is required to perform proper cleanup (in followup
PRs) of the AbstractControl-based classes when a directive is destroyed.
PR Close#38280
Currently render3's `parseTemplate` throws away the parsed AST and
returns an empty list of HTML nodes if HTML->R3 translation failed. This
is not preferrable in some contexts like that of a language service,
where we would like a well-formed AST even if it is has errors.
PR Close#39413
This reverts commit 561c0f81a0.
The original commit provided a quick escape from an already terminal
situation by killing the process if the PID in the lockfile was not
found in the list of processes running on the current machine.
But this broke use-cases where the node_modules was being shared between
multiple machines (or more commonly Docker containers on the same actual
machine).
Fixes#38875
PR Close#39435
Currently `i18n` attributes are treated the same no matter if they have data bindings or not. This
both generates more code since they have to go through the `ɵɵi18nAttributes` instruction and
prevents the translated attributes from being injected using the `@Attribute` decorator.
These changes makes it so that static translated attributes are treated in the same way as regular
static attributes and all other `i18n` attributes go through the old code path.
Fixes#38231.
PR Close#39408
This commit introduces two new methods to the TemplateTypeChecker, which
retrieve the directives and pipes that are "in scope" for a given component
template. The metadata returned by this API is minimal, but enough to power
autocompletion of selectors and attributes in templates.
PR Close#39278
This commit introduces caching of `Symbol`s produced by the template type-
checking infrastructure, in the same way that autocompletion results are
now cached.
PR Close#39278
This commit refactors the previously introduced `getGlobalCompletions()` API
for the template type-checker in a couple ways:
* The return type is adjusted to use a `Map` instead of an array, and
separate out the component context completion position. This allows for a
cleaner integration in the language service.
* A new `CompletionEngine` class is introduced which powers autocompletion
for a single component, and can cache completion results.
* The `CompletionEngine` for each component is itself cached on the
`TemplateTypeCheckerImpl` and is invalidated when the component template
is overridden or reset.
This refactoring simplifies the `TemplateTypeCheckerImpl` class by
extracting the autocompletion logic, enables caching for better performance,
and prepares for the introduction of other autocompletion APIs.
PR Close#39278
This commit removes a workaround to calculate the `expandoStartIndex` value. That workaround was needed
because the `expandoStartIndex` was updated previously, so it pointed at the wrong location. The problem
was fixed in PR #39301 and the workaround is no longer needed.
PR Close#39416
In production mode, the `ngDevMode` global may not have been declared.
This is typically not a problem, as optimizers should have removed all
usages of the `ngDevMode` variables. This does however require the
bundler/optimizer to have been configured in a certain way, as to allow
for `ngDevMode` guarded code to be removed.
As an example, Terser can be configured to remove the `ngDevMode`
guarded code using the following configuration:
```js
const terserOptions = {
// ...
compress: {
// ...
global_defs: require('@angular/compiler-cli').GLOBAL_DEFS_FOR_TERSER,
}
}
```
(Taken from https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/31595#issuecomment-519129090)
If this is not done, however, the bundle should still work (albeit with
larger code size due to missed tree-shaking opportunities). This commit
adds a check for whether `ngDevMode` has been declared, as it is a
top-level statement that executes before `ngDevMode` has been initialized.
Fixes#31595
PR Close#39415
The previous ViewEngine extraction tooling added `ctype` and `type`
attributes to XLIFF 1.2 and 2.0 translation files, respectively.
This commit adds this to the new $localize based extraction tooling.
Since the new extraction tooling works from the compiled output rather
than having direct access to the template content, the placeholder types
must be inferred from the name of the placeholder. This is considered
reasonable, since it already does this to compute opening and closing
tag placeholders.
Fixes#38791
PR Close#39398
Runtime i18n logic doesn't distinguish `<ng-content>` tag placeholders and regular element tag
placeholders in i18n messages, so there is no need to have a special marker for projection-based
placeholders and element markers can be used instead.
PR Close#39172
Due to how the global and sticky flag make RegExp objects stateful,
adds section detailing how it is not recommended
to use these flags for control validations.
PR Close#39055
Previously only the first message, for each id, was serialized
which meant that additional message location information
was lost.
Now all the message locations are included in the serialized
messages.
Fixes#39330
PR Close#39411
This commit improves the DefaultValueAccessor directive docs by:
- adding the `ngDefaultControl` as a search keyword to the description
- adding an example of the `ngDefaultControl` usage
Closes#35375.
PR Close#39404
Close#37531
Remove `global` declaration in `zone.ts` to avoid compile error when
upgrade to `@types/node` v12.12.68. Since the new type of global become
`NodeJS.global & typeof globalThis` and not compatible with `zone.ts` declaration.
PR Close#37861
Previously the volatile status file was always provided to the ng_rollup
action which prevented it from being cacheable remotely. This change to
only provide this file as an input when the --stamp flag is used will allow
for the action to be remotely cached and prevent needing to run the action
on every CI run.
PR Close#39392
The compiler uses a `Reference` abstraction to refer to TS nodes
that it needs to refer to from other parts of the source. Such
references keep track of any identifiers that represent the referenced
node.
Prior to this commit, the compiler (and specifically `ReferenceEmitter`
classes) assumed that the reference identifiers are always free standing.
In other words a reference identifier would be an expression like
`FooDirective` in the expression `class FooDirective {}`.
But in UMD/CommonJS source, a reference can actually refer to an "exports"
declaration of the form `exports.FooDirective = ...`.
In such cases the `FooDirective` identifier is not free-standing
since it is part of a property access, so the `ReferenceEmitter`
should take this into account when emitting an expression that
refers to such a `Reference`.
This commit changes the `LocalIdentifierStrategy` reference emitter
so that if the `node` being referenced is not a declaration itself and
is in the current file, then it should be used directly, rather than
trying to use one of its identifiers.
PR Close#39346