`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
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
Add a schematic to update users to the new v11 `initialNavigation`
options for `RouterModule`. This replaces the deprecated/removed
`true`, `false`, `legacy_disabled`, and `legacy_enabled` options
with the newer `enabledBlocking` and `enabledNonBlocking` options.
PR Close#36926
Adds a migration that finds all imports and calls to the deprecated `async` function from
`@angular/core/testing` and replaces them with `waitForAsync`.
These changes also move a bit of code out of the `Renderer2` migration so that it can be reused.
PR Close#39212
This is a roll forward of #39082, using `ts.createIdentifier(`'legacy'`)` as a cross-version compatible way of making
a single quoted string literal.
Migrated code now uses single quotes, which is in line with the default linting options, so there is no lint error after
migration.
PR Close#39102
As of #32671, the type of `AbstractControl.parent` can be null which can cause
compilation errors in existing apps. These changes add a migration that will append
non-null assertions to existing unsafe accesses.
````
// Before
console.log(control.parent.value);
// After
console.log(control.parent!.value);
```
The migration also tries its best to avoid cases where the non-null assertions aren't
necessary (e.g. if the `parent` was null checked already).
PR Close#39009
This updates the migration to align with the style guide and work with default lint rules. It avoids a lint error on
newly migrated projects and fixes a test in the CLI repo.
PR Close#39070
The default value for `relativeLinkResolution` is changing from 'legacy' to 'corrected'.
This migration updates `RouterModule` configurations that use the default value to
now specifically use 'legacy' to prevent breakages when updating.
PR Close#38698
In #38227 the signatures of `navigateByUrl` and `createUrlTree` were updated to exclude unsupported
properties from their `extras` parameter. This migration looks for the relevant method calls that
pass in an `extras` parameter and drops the unsupported properties.
**Before:**
```
this._router.navigateByUrl('/', {skipLocationChange: false, fragment: 'foo'});
```
**After:**
```
this._router.navigateByUrl('/', {
/* Removed unsupported properties by Angular migration: fragment. */
skipLocationChange: false
});
```
These changes also move the method call detection logic out of the `Renderer2` migration and into
a common place so that it can be reused in other migrations.
PR Close#38825
As of v10, the `undecorated-classes-with-decorated-fields` migration
generally deals with undecorated classes using Angular features. We
intended to run this migation as part of v10 again as undecorated
classes with Angular features are no longer supported in planned v11.
The migration currently behaves incorrectly in some cases where an
`@Injectable` or `@Pipe` decorated classes uses the `ngOnDestroy`
lifecycle hook. We incorrectly add a TODO for those classes. This
commit fixes that.
Additionally, this change makes the migration more robust to
not migrate a class if it inherits from a component, pipe
injectable or non-abstract directive. We previously did not
need this as the undecorated-classes-with-di migration ran
before, but this is no longer the case.
Last, this commit fixes an issue where multiple TODO's could be
added. This happens when multiple Angular CLI build targets have
an overlap in source files. Multiple programs then capture the
same source file, causing the migration to detect an undecorated
class multiple times (i.e. adding a TODO twice).
Fixes#37726.
PR Close#37732
Enables the `ng update` migrations for v10. Status for individual
migrations:
**undecorated-classes-with-di**.
This migration dealt exlusively with inherited constructors and
cases where a derived component was undecorated. In those cases,
the migration added `@Directive()` or copied the inherited decorator
to the derived class.
We don't need to run this migration again because ngtsc throws if
constructor is inherited from an undecorated class. Also ngtsc will
throw if a NgModule references an undecorated class in the declarations.
***undecorated-classes-with-decorated-fields***
This migration exclusively deals with undecorated classes that use
Angular features but are not decorated. Angular features include
the use of lifecycle hooks or class fields with Angular decorators,
such as `@Input()`.
We want to re-run this migration in v10 as we will disable the
compatibility code in ngtsc that detects such undecorated classes
as `@Directive`.
**module-with-providers**:
This migration adds an explicit generic type to `ModuleWithProviders`.
As of v10, the generic type is required, so we need to re-run the
migration again.
**renderer-to-renderer2**:
We don't need to re-run that migration again as the
renderer has been already removed in v9.
**missing-injectable**:
This migration is exclusively concerned with undecorated
providers referenced in an `NgModule`. We should re-run
that migration again as we don't have proper backsliding
prevention for this yet. We can consider adding an error
in ngtsc for v10, or v11. In either way, we should re-run
the migration.
**dynamic-queries**:
We ran this one in v9 to reduce code complexity in projects. Instead
of explicitly passing `static: false`, not passing any object literal
has the same semantics. We don't need to re-run the migration again
since there is no good way to prevent backsliding and we cannot always
run this migration for future versions (as some apps might actually
intentionally use the explicit `static: false` option).
PR Close#36921
As of v10, undecorated classes using Angular features are no longer
supported. In v10, we plan on removing the undecorated classes
compatibility code in ngtsc. This means that old patterns for
undecorated classes will result in compilation errors.
We had a migration for this in v9 already, but it looks like
the migration does not handle cases where classes uses lifecycle
hooks. This is handled in the ngtsc compatibility code, and we
should handle it similarly in migrations too.
This has not been outlined in the migration plan initially,
but an appendix has been added for v10 to the plan document.
https://hackmd.io/vuQfavzfRG6KUCtU7oK_EA?both.
Note: The migration is unable to determine whether a given undecorated
class that only defines `ngOnDestroy` is a directive or an actual
service. This means that in some cases the migration cannot do
more than adding a TODO and printing an failure.
Certainly there are more ways to determine the type of such classes,
but it would involve metadata and NgModule analysis. This is out of
scope for this migration.
PR Close#36921
Based on the migration guide, provided classes which don't have
either `@Injectable`, `@Directive`, `@Component` or `@Pipe` need
to be migrated.
This is not correct as provided classes with an `@NgModule` also
have a factory function that can be read by the r3 injector. It's
unclear in which cases the `@NgModule` decorator is used for
provided classes, but this scenario has been reported.
Either we fix this in the migration, or we make sure to report
this as unsupported in the Ivy compiler.
Fixes#35700.
PR Close#36369
The undecorated-classes-with-decorated-fields migration relies on
the type checker to resolve base classes of individual classes.
It could happen that resolved base classes have no value declaration.
e.g. if they are declared through an interface in the default types.
Currently the migration will throw in such situations because it assumes
that `ts.Symbol#valueDeclaration` is always present. This is not the
case, but we don't get good type-checking here due to a bug in the
TypeScript types. See:
https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/24706.
Fixes#36522.
PR Close#36543
In rare cases a project with configured `rootDirs` that has imports to
non-existent identifiers could fail in the migration.
This happens because based on the application code, the migration could
end up trying to resolve the `ts.Symbol` of such non-existent
identifiers. This isn't a problem usually, but due to a upstream bug
in the TypeScript compiler, a runtime error is thrown.
This is because TypeScript is unable to compute a relative path from the
originating source file to the imported source file which _should_
provide the non-existent identifier. An issue for this has been reported
upstream: https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/37731. The
issue only surfaces since our migrations don't provide an absolute base
path that is used for resolving the root directories.
To fix this, we ensure that we never use relative paths when parsing
tsconfig files. More details can be found in the TS issue.
Fixes#36346.
PR Close#36367
In version 10, undecorated base classes that use Angular features need
to be decorated explicitly with `@Directive()`. Additionally, derived
classes of abstract directives need to be decorated.
The migration already handles this for undecorated classes that are
not explicitly decorated, but since in V9, abstract directives can be
used, we also need to handle this for explicitly decorated abstract
directives. e.g.
```
@Directive()
export class Base {...}
// needs to be decorated by migration when updating from v9 to v10
export class Wrapped extends Base {}
@Component(...)
export class Cmp extends Wrapped {}
```
PR Close#35339
The `undecorated-classes-with-decorated-fields` migration has been
introduced with 904a2018e0, but misses
logic for decorating derived classes of undecorated classes which use
Angular features. Example scenario:
```ts
export abstract class MyBaseClass {
@Input() someInput = true;
}
export abstract class BaseClassTwo extends MyBaseClass {}
@Component(...)
export class MyButton extends BaseClassTwo {}
```
Both abstract classes would need to be migrated. Previously, the migration
only added `@Directive()` to `MyBaseClass`, but with this change, it
also decorates `BaseClassTwo`.
This is necessary because the Angular Compiler requires `BaseClassTwo` to
have a directive definition when it flattens the directive metadata for
`MyButton` in order to perform type checking. Technically, not decorating
`BaseClassTwo` does not break at runtime.
We basically want to enforce consistent use of `@Directive` to simplify the
mental model. [See the migration guide](https://angular.io/guide/migration-undecorated-classes#migrating-classes-that-use-field-decorators).
Fixes#34376.
PR Close#35339
The options for `flatModuleId` and `flatModuleOutFile` had been removed in the CLI
from generated libraries with 718ee15b9a.
This has been done because `ng-packagr` (which is used to build the
libraries) automatically set these options in-memory when it compiles the library.
No migration has been created for this because there was no actual need to get rid of
this. Keeping the options in the library `tsconfig` does not cause any problems unless
the `tsconfig` is used outside of `ng-packagr`. This was not anticipated, but is now
commonly done in `ng update` migrations.
The `ng update` migrations try to create an instance of the `AngularCompilerProgram` by
simply parsing the `tsconfig`. The migrations make the valid assumption that `tsconfig` files
are not incomplete/invalid. They _definitely_ are in the file system though. It just works for
libraries because `ng-packagr` in-memory completes the invalid `tsconfig` files, so that they
can be passed to the `@angular/compiler-cli`.
We can't have this logic in the `ng update` migrations because it's
out-of-scope for individual migrations to distinguish between libraries
and applications. Also it would be out-of-scope to parse the
`ng-packagr` configuration and handle the tsconfig in-memory completion.
As a workaround though, we can remove the flat-module bundle options
in-memory when creating the compiler program. This is acceptable since
we don't emit the program and the flat module bundles are not needed.
Fixes#34985.
PR Close#35824
Previously the calls to run the schematics were not being properly
or consistently awaited in the tests. While this currently does not
affect the tests' performance, this fix corrects the syntax and
adds stability for future changes.
PR Close#34364
In View Engine, providers which neither used `useValue`, `useClass`,
`useFactory` or `useExisting`, were interpreted differently.
e.g.
```
{provide: X} -> {provide: X, useValue: undefined}, // this is how it works in View Engine
{provide: X} -> {provide: X, useClass: X}, // this is how it works in Ivy
```
The missing-injectable migration should migrate such providers to the
explicit `useValue` provider. This ensures that there is no unexpected
behavioral change when updating to v9.
PR Close#33709
The `renderer-to-renderer2` migration currently does not work
properly in v9 because the migration relies on the type checker
for detecting references to `Renderer` from `@angular/core`.
This is contradictory since the `Renderer` is no longer
exported in v9 `@angular/core`. In order to make sure that
the migration still works in v9, and that we can rely on the
type checker for the best possible detection, we take advantage
of module augmentation and in-memory add the `Renderer` export
to the `@angular/core` module.
PR Close#33571
Currently TypeScript projects with an invalid tsconfig configuration,
cause the undecorated-classes-with-di migration to throw. Instead we
should gracefully exit the migration (like we do for syntactical
diagnostics), but report that there are configuration issues.
This issue surfaced when testing this migration in combination
with the Angular CLI migrations. One of the CLI migrations currently
causes invalid tsconfig files which then cause this issue in the
undecorated-classes-with-di migration.
PR Close#33567
Currently if one of the project targets could not be analyzed
due to AOT compiler program failures, we gracefully proceed
with the migration. This is expected, but we should not
print a message at the end of the migration that the migration
was _successful_. The migration was only done partially, hence
it's potentially incomplete and we should make it clear that once
the failures are resolved, the migration should be re-run.
PR Close#33315
Currently the `missing-injectable` migration seems to add
`@Injectable()` to third-party classes in type definitions.
This not an issue in general since we do not generate broken code
by inserting a decorator into a type definition file. Though, we can
avoid adding the decorator since it won't have any effect and in
general we should not write to non source files of the compilation unit.
PR Close#33286
We should not migrate the reference from `useExisting`. This is because
developers can only use the `useExisting` value as a token. e.g.
```ts
@NgModule({
providers: [
{provide: AppRippleConfig, useValue: rippleOptions},
{provide: MAT_RIPPLE_OPTIONS, useExisting: AppRippleConfig},
]
})
export class AppModule {}
```
In the case above, nothing should be decorated with `@Injectable`. The
`AppRippleConfig` class is just used as a token for injection.
PR Close#33286
Currently the migration is unable to migrate instances where
the provider definition uses `forwardRef`. Since this is a
common pattern, we should support that from within the migration.
The solution to the problem is adding a foreign function resolver
to the `PartialEvaluator`. This basically matches the usage of
the static evaluation that is used by the ngtsc annotations.
PR Close#33286
Static methods that return a type of ModuleWithProviders currently
do not have to specify a type because the generic falls back to any.
This is problematic because the type of the actual module being
returned is not present in the type information.
Since Ivy uses d.ts files exclusively for downstream packages
(rather than metadata.json files, for example), we no longer have
the type of the actual module being created.
For this reason, a generic type should be added for
ModuleWithProviders that specifies the module type. This will be
required for all users in v10, but will only be necessary for
users of Ivy in v9.
PR Close#33217
Currenly the `missing-injectable` migration only migrates providers referenced from
`@NgModule` definitions. The schematic currently does not cover the migration for
providers referenced in `@Directive` or `@Component` definitions.
We need to handle the following keys for directives/components:
- `@Directive` -> `providers`
- `@Component` -> `providers` and `viewProviders`.
This commit ensures that the migration handles providers for these
definitions.
PR Close#33011
Re-enables the dynamic queries migration, now that we have all of the necessary framework changes in place.
Also moves the logic that identifies static queries out of the compiler and into the static queries migration, because that's the only place left that's using it.
PR Close#32992
Currently the undecorated-classes-with-di migration leverages NGC in order
to work with metadata resolution. Since NGC by default tries to resolve referenced
resources on initialization of the underlying TS program, it can result in unexpected
migration failures due to missing resource files.
This is especially an issue since the CLI wraps the `AngularCompilerProgram` with
special logic (i.e. to support SCSS preprocessing etc.). We don't have all of this since
we instantiate a vanilla NGC program.
The solution to the problem is to simply treat resource requests as valid, and returning
a fake content. The migration is not dependent on templates or stylesheets.. so it's the
simplest and most robust solution.
Fixes#32826
PR Close#32953
ec4381d explicitly set `enableIvy: false` for all migrations inside
the core package. This actually hides migration issues because the
migration itself should ensure that it instantiates the right
compiler program if it relies on `@angular/compiler-cli`.
We should remove these options from all migration tests to
ensure that we catch issues with migrations running in version
9 where Ivy is enabled by default.
e.g. e5636a322c
was accidentally hidden due to the `enableIvy: false` option.
PR Close#32954
ec4381d enabled Ivy by default. This is problematic as migrations
like `static-queries` depend on the `AngularCompilerProgram` (NGC)
in order to perform the migration from version 7 to version 8.
In order to ensure that the migration always runs with NGC
(and doesn't get the `NgtscProgram`), we need to explicitly disable
ivy when creating the `@angular/compiler-cli` program for the migration.
This code is still relevant even though the update from version 7
to version 8 landed. Developers can run `ng update` from version 7
and immediately get to version 9 where Ivy is enabled by default (and in
that case we need to ensure that ngtsc is not accidentally used).
Similar to
e5636a322c.
PR Close#32954
Initially the `missing-injectable` migration was only being used
in google3. Wiring the migration up in the CLI migrations was
planned to be done in a follow-up.
PR Close#32349
Currently the undecorated classes migration decorates base classes if no
explicit constructor is defined on all classes in the inheritance chain.
We only want to decorate base classes which define a constructor that is
inherited. Additionally for best practice, all classes in between the class
that inherits the constructor and the one that defines it are also decorated.
PR Close#32319
The `undecorated-classes-with-di` migration currently creates invalid object literals from parsed
NGC metadata files if there are object literal properties with keys that contain special characters.
e.g. consider a decorated base class with a host binding using `[class.X]`. Currently the migration
parses and converts the metadata to TypeScript code but incorrectly uses `[class.X]` unquoted as
identifier.
PR Close#32319