Because the query now has `flags` which specify the mode, the static query
instruction can now be remove. It is simply normal query with `static` flag.
PR Close#40091
Previous implementation would fire changes `QueryList.changes.subscribe`
whenever the `QueryList` was recomputed. This resulted in artificially
high number of change notifications, as it is possible that recomputing
`QueryList` results in the same list. When the `QueryList` gets recomputed
is an implementation detail and it should not be the thing which determines
how often change event should fire.
This change introduces a new `emitDistinctChangesOnly` option for
`ContentChildren` and `ViewChildren`.
```
export class QueryCompWithStrictChangeEmitParent {
@ContentChildren('foo', {
// This option will become the default in the future
emitDistinctChangesOnly: true,
})
foos!: QueryList<any>;
}
```
PR Close#40091
This commit updates the logic that calculates `useFactory` function arguments to avoid relying on `instanceof`
checks (thus always retaining symbols) and relies on flags that DI decorators contain (as a monkey-patched property).
Another perf benefit is having less megamorphic reads while calculating args for the `useFactory` call: we used to
check whether a token has `ngMetadataName` property 4 times (in worst case), now we have just 1 megamorphic read in
all cases.
Closes#40143.
PR Close#40145
The `template` and `isInline` fields were previously stored in a nested
object, which was initially done to accommodate for additional template
information to support accurate source maps for external templates. In
the meantime the source mapping has been accomplished in a different
way, and I feel this flattened structure is simpler and smaller so is
preferable over the nested object. This change also makes the `isInline`
property optional with a default value of `false`.
PR Close#40383
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 "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
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
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
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
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
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 `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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
`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
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
`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
`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
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