Ngcc will now render additional exports for classes that are referenced in
`NgModule` decorated classes, but which were not publicly exported
from an entry-point of the package.
This is important because when ngtsc compiles libraries processed by ngcc
it needs to be able to publcly access decorated classes that are referenced
by `NgModule` decorated classes in order to build templates that use these
classes.
Doing this re-exporting is not without its risks. There are chances that
the class is not exported correctly: there may already be similarly named
exports from the entry-point or the class may be being aliased. But there
is not much more we can do from the point of view of ngcc to workaround
such scenarios. Generally, packages should have been built so that this
approach works.
PR Close#26906
There are a number of variables that need to be passed around
the program, in particular to the renderers, which benefit from being
stored in well defined objects.
The new `EntryPointBundle` structure is a specific format of an entry-point
and contains the compiled `BundleProgram` objects for the source and typings,
if appropriate.
This change helps with future refactoring, where we may need to add new
properties to this object. It allows us to maintain more stable APIs between
the constituent parts of ngcc, rather than passing lots of primitive values
around throughout the program.
PR Close#26906
The `NgModuleDecoratorHandler` can now register all the references that
it finds in the `NgModule` metadata, such as `declarations`, `imports`,
`exports` etc.
This information can then be used by ngcc to work out if any of these
references are internal only and need to be manually exported from a
library's entry-point.
PR Close#26906
By inverting the relationship between `EntryPointPaths` and
`EntryPointFormat` we can have interfaces rather than types.
Thanks to @gkalpak for this idea.
PR Close#26906
If a decorated class is not publicly exported via an entry-point then the
previous approach to finding the associated typings file failed.
Now we ensure that we extract all the class declarations from the
dtsTypings program, even if they are not exported from the entry-point.
This is achieved by also parsing statements of each source file, rather
than just parsing classes that are exported from the entry-point.
Because we now look at all the files, it is possible for there to be multiple
class declarations with the same local name. In this case, only the first
declaration with a given name is added to the map; subsequent classes are
ignored.
We are most interested in classes that are publicly exported from the
entry-point, so these are added to the map first, to ensure that they are
not ignored.
PR Close#26906
In Angular, it used to be an accepted practice to use strings as dependency
injection tokens. E.g. {provide: 'test', useValue: 'provided'}. However,
the Ivy node injection system did not support this. The Ivy DI system
attempts to patch a Bloom bit index onto each type registered with it, and
this patch operation does not work for a string token.
This commit adds string token support to the bloom filter system by
reserving bit 0 for string tokens. This eliminates the need for each string
token to store its own Bloom bit, at the expense of slightly more expensive
lookups of string tokens.
PR Close#27383
Having real functions allows me to bypass individual checks, ex.:
```
export function fixmeIvy(reason: string): boolean {
return true;
}
```
This is useful for situation where I want to see if previously disabled tests
were fixed (ex. some PRs merged). In this case I don't want to run tests that
I know are not passing (obsolete / modified).
PR Close#27372
BREAKING CHANGES:
Bazel users: rules_angular_dependencies() will no longer install transitive dependencies of build_bazel_rules_nodejs and build_bazel_rules_typescript. User WORKSPACE files will now need to install rules_nodejs and rules_typescript transitive deps directly:
```
load("@build_bazel_rules_typescript//:package.bzl", "rules_typescript_dependencies")
rules_typescript_dependencies()
load("@build_bazel_rules_nodejs//:package.bzl", "rules_nodejs_dependencies")
rules_nodejs_dependencies()
```
PR Close#27264
Previously the concept of multiple directives with the same selector was
not supported by ngtsc. This is due to the treatment of directives for a
component as a Map from selector to the directive, which is an erroneous
representation.
Now the directives for a component are stored as an array which supports
multiple directives with the same selector.
Testing strategy: a new ngtsc_spec test asserts that multiple directives
with the same selector are matched on an element.
PR Close#27298
Most of the specs in these tests are not relevant to Ivy:
//packages/compiler/test:test
//packages/compiler/test:test_web_chromium-local
However, a few test pieces of the compiler infrastructure that are used in
Ivy, and new BUILD.bazel files are created to separate them from the above
disabled targets:
//packages/compiler/test/css_parser:css_parser
//packages/compiler/test/css_parser:css_parser_web
//packages/compiler/test/expression_parser:expression_parser
//packages/compiler/test/expression_parser:expression_parser_web
//packages/compiler/test/ml_parser:ml_parser
//packages/compiler/test/ml_parser:ml_parser_web
//packages/compiler/test/selector:selector
//packages/compiler/test/selector:selector_web
PR Close#27301
These tests are not relevant to Ivy:
//packages/compiler-cli/test/diagnostics:check_types
//packages/compiler-cli/test/diagnostics:expression_diagnostics
//packages/compiler-cli/test/transformers:test
//packages/compiler-cli/test:extract_i18n
The //packages/compiler-cli/test:ngtools_api test has 2 specs, one of
which passes and the other of which depends on ngtsc supporting lazy
routes. It's now disabled with fixmeIvy().
PR Close#27301