* 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
This commit fixes a bug when `useAbsoluteUrl` is set to true and
`ServerPlatformLocation` infers the base url from the supplied
`url`. User should explicitly set the `baseUrl` when they turn on
`useAbsoluteUrl`.
Breaking change:
If you use `useAbsoluteUrl` to setup `platform-server`, you now need to
also specify `baseUrl`.
We are intentionally making this a breaking change in a minor release,
because if `useAbsoluteUrl` is set to `true` then the behavior of the
application could be unpredictable, resulting in issues that are hard to
discover but could be affecting production environments.
PR Close#39334
Removes `ViewEncapsulation.Native` which has been deprecated for several major versions.
BREAKING CHANGES:
* `ViewEncapsulation.Native` has been removed. Use `ViewEncapsulation.ShadowDom` instead. Existing
usages will be updated automatically by `ng update`.
PR Close#38882
When a ServerStylesHost instance is destroyed, all of the shared styles added to the DOM
head element by that instance should be removed. Without this removal, over time a large
number of style rules will build up and cause extra memory pressure. This brings the
ServerStylesHost in line with the DomStylesHost used by the platform browser, which
performs this same cleanup.
PR Close#38367
In version 10.0.0-next.8, we introduced absolute URL support for
server-based HTTP requests, so long as the fully-resolved URL was
provided in the initial config. However, doing so represents a
breaking change for users who already have their own interceptors
to model this functionality, since our logic executes before all
interceptors fire on a request. See original PR #37071.
Therefore, we introduce a flag to make this change consistent with
v9 behavior, allowing users to opt in to this new behavior. This
commit also fixes two issues with the previous implementation:
1. if the server was initiated with a relative URL, the absolute
URL construction would fail because needed components were empty
2. if the user's absolute URL was on a port, the port would not
be included
PR Close#37539
Previously, we would simply prepend any relative URL with the HREF
for the current route (pulled from document.location). However,
this does not correctly account for the leading slash URLs that
would otherwise be parsed correctly in the browser, or the
presence of a base HREF in the DOM.
Therefore, we use the built-in URL implementation for NodeJS,
which implements the WHATWG standard that's used in the browser.
We also pull the base HREF from the DOM, falling back on the full
HREF as the browser would, to form the correct request URL.
Fixes#37314
PR Close#37341
Before the introduction of the Ivy renderer, users would compile
their applications and use the resulting factories for SSR, since
these post-compilation artifacts ensured faster delivery. Thus,
using the original module as the rendering entrypoint was
considered suboptimal and was discouraged.
However, with the introduction of Ivy, this guidance is no longer
applicable since these factories are no longer generated.
Comparable speed is achieved using the factory-less module
renderer, and so we update the guiance in the docs for the method.
PR Close#37296
Currently, requests from the server that do not use absolute URLs
fail because the server does not have the same fallback mechanism
that browser XHR does. This adds that mechanism by pulling the
full URL out of the document.location object, if available.
PR Close#37071
Prior to this change, element namespace was not set for host elements of dynamically created components that resulted in incorrect rendering in a browser. This commit adds the logic to pick and set correct namespace for host element when component is created dynamically.
PR Close#35136
Previously we would write to class/style as strings `element.className` and `element.style.cssText`. Turns out that approach is good for initial render but not good for updates. Updates using this approach are problematic because we have to check to see if there was an out of bound write to style and than perform reconciliation. This also requires the browser to bring up CSS parser which is expensive.
Another problem with old approach is that we had to queue the DOM writes and flush them twice. Once on element advance instruction and once in `hostBindings`. The double flushing is expensive but it also means that a directive can observe that styles are not yet written (they are written after directive executes.)
The new approach uses `element.classList.add/remove` and `element.style.setProperty/removeProperty` API for updates only (it continues to use `element.className` and `element.style.cssText` for initial render as it is cheaper.) The other change is that the styling changes are applied immediately (no queueing). This means that it is the instruction which computes priority. In some circumstances it may result in intermediate writes which are than overwritten with new value. (This should be rare)
Overall this change deletes most of the previous code and replaces it with new simplified implement. The simplification results in code savings.
PR Close#34804
Most of the use of `document` in the framework is within
the DI so they just inject the `DOCUMENT` token and are done.
Ivy is special because it does not rely upon the DI and must
get hold of the document some other way. There are a limited
number of places relevant to ivy that currently consume a global
document object.
The solution is modelled on the `LOCALE_ID` approach, which has
`getLocaleId()` and `setLocaleId()` top-level functions for ivy (see
`core/src/render3/i18n.ts`). In the rest of Angular (i.e. using DI) the
`LOCALE_ID` token has a provider that also calls setLocaleId() to
ensure that ivy has the same value.
This commit defines `getDocument()` and `setDocument() `top-level
functions for ivy. Wherever ivy needs the global `document`, it calls
`getDocument()` instead. Each of the platforms (e.g. Browser, Server,
WebWorker) have providers for `DOCUMENT`. In each of those providers
they also call `setDocument()` accordingly.
Fixes#33651
PR Close#33712
Fixes Ivy's `DebugElement.triggerEventHandler` to picking up events that have been registered through a `Renderer2`, unlike ViewEngine.
This PR resolves FW-1480.
PR Close#31845
AngularJS's `$location` service doesn't have a direct counterpart in Angular. This is largely because the `Location` service in Angular was pulled out of the `Router`, but was not purpose-built to stand on its own.
This commit adds a new `@angular/common/upgrade` package with the beginnings of a new `LocationUpgradeService`. This service will more closely match the API of AngularJS and provide a way to replace the `$location` service from AngularJS.
PR Close#30055
Without this change, the framework doesn't surface URL parts such as hostname, protocol, and port. This makes it difficult to rebuild a complete URL. This change provides new APIs to read these values.
PR Close#30055
Previously there wasn't a way to retrieve `history.state` from the `Location` service. The only time the framework exposed this value was in navigation events. This meant if you weren't using the Angular router, there wasn't a way to get access to this `history.state` value other than going directly to the DOM.
This PR adds an API to retrieve the value of `history.state`. This will be useful and needed to provide a backwards-compatible `Location` service that can emulate AngularJS's `$location` service since we will need to be able to read the state data in order to produce AngularJS location transition events.
This feature will additionally be useful to any application that wants to access state data through Angular rather than going directly to the DOM APIs.
PR Close#30055
This update gives external tooling the ability for async providers to
finish resolving before the document is serialized. This is not a
breaking change since render already returns a promise. All returned
promises from `BEFORE_APP_SERIALIZED` providers will wait to be
resolved or rejected. Any rejected promises will only console.warn().
PR Close#29120
Right now the `ServerRendererFactory2` creates a new instance of the
`DomElementSchemaRegistry` for each and every request, which is quite
costly (for the Tour of Heroes SSR this takes around **30%** of the
overall execution time). Since the schema is never modified, but only
used in a read-only fashion, it should be possible to re-use a single
instance instead.
Naive performance testing with 100 concurrent connections and 1000
requests in total shows an approximate **33%** improvement in Req/Sec
on the Tour of Heroes SSR example.
PR Close#28150
PR Close#28151
All errors for existing fields have been detected and suppressed with a
`!` assertion.
Issue/24571 is tracking proper clean up of those instances.
One-line change required in ivy/compilation.ts, because it appears that
the new syntax causes tsickle emitted node to no longer track their
original sourceFiles.
PR Close#24572
Fixes#23023.
When a HTTP Interceptor injects HttpClient it causes a DI cycle. This fix is to use Injector to lazily inject HTTP_INTERCEPTORS while setting up the HttpHandler on the server so as to break the cycle.
PR Close#24229
Fixes#19278.
innerHTML is conservatively marked as an attribute for security purpose so that it's sanitized when set. However this same mapping is used by the server renderer to decide whether the `innerHTML` property needs to be reflected to the `innerhtml` attribute. The fix is to just skip the property to attribute reflection for `innerHTML`.
PR Close#24213
Previously the style encapsulation attributes(_nghost-* and _ngcontent-*) created on the server could overlap with the attributes and styles created by the client side app when it botstraps. In case the client is bootstrapping a lazy route, the client side styles are added before the server-side styles are removed. If the components on the client are bootstrapped in a different order than on the server, the styles generated by the client will cause the elements on the server to have the wrong styles.
The fix puts the styles and attributes generated on the server in a completely differemt space so that they are not affected by the client generated styles. The client generated styles will only affect elements bootstrapped on the client.
PR Close#24158
Fixes#23280, #23133.
This fix lets code access DOM types like Node, HTMLElement in the code. These are invariant across requests and the corresponding classes from Domino can be safely provided during platform initialization.
This is needed for the current sanitizer to work properly on platform-server. Also allows HTML types in injection - Ex. `@inject(DOCUMENT) doc: Document`.
PR Close#24116
Previously event handlers on the server were setup directly. This change makes it so that the event registration on the server go through EventManagerPlugin just like on client. This allows us to add custom event registration handlers on the server which allows us to hook up preboot event handlers cleanly.
PR Close#24132