One of the main goals of the bundling tests is to verify that unused symbols are tree-shaken away in prod bundles.
Currently both Reactive and Template-driven test apps are merged into one. In order to make these tree-shaking
tests even more useful, this commit splits exiting test app into two, so that we can further optimize sets of
symbols that should be retained in both scenarios.
PR Close#41108
Previously, injector definitions contained a `factory` property that
was used to create a new instance of the associated NgModule class.
Now this factory has been moved to its own `ɵfac` static property on the
NgModule class itself. This is inline with how directives, components and
pipes are created.
There is a small size increase to bundle sizes for each NgModule class,
because the `ɵfac` takes up a bit more space:
Before:
```js
let a = (() => {
class n {}
return n.\u0275mod = c.Cb({type: n}),
n.\u0275inj = c.Bb({factory: function(t) { return new (t || n) }, imports: [[e.a.forChild(s)], e.a]}),
n
})(),
```
After:
```js
let a = (() => {
class n {}
return n.\u0275fac = function(t) { return new (t || n) },
n.\u0275mod = c.Cb({type: n}),
n.\u0275inj = c.Bb({imports: [[r.a.forChild(s)], r.a]}),
n
})(),
```
In other words `n.\u0275fac = ` is longer than `factory: ` (by 5 characters)
and only because the tooling insists on encoding `ɵ` as `\u0275`.
This can be mitigated in a future PR by only generating the `ɵfac` property
if it is actually needed.
PR Close#41022
This commit adds a semi-comprehensive README file which describes the
design goals and implementation of the template type checking engine,
which powers the Angular Language Service as well as the main compiler's
understanding of types in templates.
PR Close#41004
The compiler performs cycle analysis for the used directives and pipes
of a component's template to avoid introducing a cyclic import into the
generated output. The used directives and pipes are represented by their
output expression which would typically be an `ExternalExpr`; those are
responsible for the generation of an `import` statement. Cycle analysis
needs to determine the `ts.SourceFile` that would end up being imported
by these `ExternalExpr`s, as the `ts.SourceFile` is then checked against
the program's `ImportGraph` to determine if the import is allowed, i.e.
does not introduce a cycle. To accomplish this, the `ExternalExpr` was
dissected and ran through module resolution to obtain the imported
`ts.SourceFile`.
This module resolution step is relatively expensive, as it typically
needs to hit the filesystem. Even in the presence of a module resolution
cache would these module resolution requests generally see cache misses,
as the generated import originates from a file for which the cache has
not previously seen the imported module specifier.
This commit removes the need for the module resolution by wrapping the
generated `Expression` in an `EmittedReference` struct. This allows the
reference emitter mechanism that is responsible for generating the
`Expression` to also communicate from which `ts.SourceFile` the
generated `Expression` would be imported, precluding the need for module
resolution down the road.
PR Close#40948
The import graph scans source files for its import and export statements
to extract the source files that it imports/exports. Such statements
contain a module specifier string and this module specifier used to be
resolved to the actual source file using an explicit module resolution
step. This is especially expensive in incremental rebuilds, as the
module resolution cache has not been primed during program creation
(assuming that the incremental program was able to reuse the module
resolution results from a prior compilation). This meant that all module
resolution requests would have to hit the filesystem, which is
relatively slow.
This commit is able to replace the module resolution with TypeScript's
bound symbol of the module specifier. This symbol corresponds with the
`ts.SourceFile` that is being imported/exported, which is exactly what
the import graph was interested in. As a result, no filesystem accesses
are done anymore.
PR Close#40948
This is necessary for closure compiler in order to support cross chunk code motion.
I'm intentionally not annotating these call sites with @__PURE__ at the moment because
build-optimizer does it within the Angular CLI build. In the future we might want to consider
having both annotations here in case we change how build-optimizer works.
PR Close#41096
This change marks all relevant define* callsites as pure, causing the compiler to
emmit either @__PURE__ or @pureOrBreakMyCode annotation based on whether we are
compiling code annotated for closure or terser.
This change is needed in g3 where we don't run build optimizer but we
need the code to be annotated for the closure compiler.
Additionally this change allows for simplification of CLI and build optimizer as they
will no longer need to rewrite the generated code (there are still other places where
a build optimizer rewrite will be necessary so we can't remove it, we can only simplify it).
PR Close#41096
Adds a new flag to `localize-extract` called `--migrateMapFile` which will generate a JSON file
that can be used to map legacy message IDs to cannonical ones.
Also includes a new script called `localize-migrate` that can take the mapping file which was
generated by `localize-extract` and migrate all of the IDs in the files that were passed in.
PR Close#41026
In Angular programs, changing a file may require other files to be
emitted as well due to implicit NgModule dependencies. For example, if
the selector of a directive is changed then all components that have
that directive in their compilation scope need to be recompiled, as the
change of selector may affect the directive matching results.
Until now, the compiler solved this problem using a single dependency
graph. The implicit NgModule dependencies were represented in this
graph, such that a changed file would correctly also cause other files
to be re-emitted. This approach is limited in a few ways:
1. The file dependency graph is used to determine whether it is safe to
reuse the analysis data of an Angular decorated class. This analysis
data is invariant to unrelated changes to the NgModule scope, but
because the single dependency graph also tracked the implicit
NgModule dependencies the compiler had to consider analysis data as
stale far more often than necessary.
2. It is typical for a change to e.g. a directive to not affect its
public API—its selector, inputs, outputs, or exportAs clause—in which
case there is no need to re-emit all declarations in scope, as their
compilation output wouldn't have changed.
This commit implements a mechanism by which the compiler is able to
determine the impact of a change by comparing it to the prior
compilation. To achieve this, a new graph is maintained that tracks all
public API information of all Angular decorated symbols. During an
incremental compilation this information is compared to the information
that was captured in the most recently succeeded compilation. This
determines the exact impact of the changes to the public API, which
is then used to determine which files need to be re-emitted.
Note that the file dependency graph remains, as it is still used to
track the dependencies of analysis data. This graph does no longer track
the implicit NgModule dependencies, which allows for better reuse of
analysis data.
These changes also fix a bug where template type-checking would fail to
incorporate changes made to a transitive base class of a
directive/component. This used to be a problem because transitive base
classes were not recorded as a transitive dependency in the file
dependency graph, such that prior type-check blocks would erroneously
be reused.
This commit also fixes an incorrectness where a change to a declaration
in NgModule `A` would not cause the declarations in NgModules that
import from NgModule `A` to be re-emitted. This was intentionally
incorrect as otherwise the performance of incremental rebuilds would
have been far worse. This is no longer a concern, as the compiler is now
able to only re-emit when actually necessary.
Fixes#34867Fixes#40635Closes#40728
PR Close#40947
This commit refactors Ivy runtime code to move `readPatchedData` and `attachPatchedData` functions to a single
location for better maintainability and to make it easier to do further changes if needed. The `readPatchedLView`
function was also moved to the same location (since it's a layer on top of the `readPatchedData` function).
PR Close#41097
For certain generated function calls, the compiler emits a 'PURE' annotation
which informs Terser (the optimizer) about the purity of a specific function
call. This commit expands that system to produce a new Closure-specific
'pureOrBreakMyCode' annotation when targeting the Closure optimizer instead
of Terser.
PR Close#41021
We currently provide completions for DOM elements in the schema as well
as attributes when we are in the context of an external template.
However, these completions are already provided by other extensions for
HTML contexts (like Emmet). To avoid duplication of results, this commit
updates the language service to exclude DOM completions for external
templates. They are still provided for inline templates because those
are not handled by the HTML language extensions.
PR Close#41078
In the new behavior Angular cleanups `popstate` and `hashchange` event listeners
when the root view gets destroyed, thus event handlers are not added twice
when the application is bootstrapped again.
BREAKING CHANGE:
Methods of the `PlatformLocation` class, namely `onPopState` and `onHashChange`,
used to return `void`. Now those methods return functions that can be called
to remove event handlers.
PR Close#31546
PR Close#40867
This commit updates the type of the `APP_INITIALIZER` injection token to
better document the expected types of values that Angular handles. Only
Promises and Observables are awaited and other types of values are ignored,
so the type of `APP_INITIALIZER` has been updated to
`Promise<unknown> | Observable<unknown> | void` to reflect this behavior.
BREAKING CHANGE:
The type of the `APP_INITIALIZER` token has been changed to more accurately
reflect the types of return values that are handled by Angular. Previously,
each initializer callback was typed to return `any`, this is now
`Promise<unknown> | Observable<unknown> | void`. In the unlikely event that
your application uses the `Injector.get` or `TestBed.inject` API to inject
the `APP_INITIALIZER` token, you may need to update the code to account for
the stricter type.
Additionally, TypeScript may report the TS2742 error if the `APP_INITIALIZER`
token is used in an expression of which its inferred type has to be emitted
into a .d.ts file. To workaround this, an explicit type annotation is needed,
which would typically be `Provider` or `Provider[]`.
Closes#40729
PR Close#40986
The codebase currently contains several `EMPTY_OBJ` constants,
and they can end up in the bundle of an application.
A recent commit 6fbe219 tipped us off
as it introduced several `noop` occurrences in the golden symbol files.
After investigating, we decided to remove the duplicated symbols.
This probably shaves only a few bytes,
but this commit removes the duplicated functions,
by always using the one in `core/src/utils/empty`.
PR Close#41066
These constants were created in a very early phase of Ivy development.
They have never been used in the framework, no the build-optimizer tool.
PR Close#41040
Previously, `ɵɵgetFactoryOf()` was "privately" published from
`@angular/core` since in the past it was assumed that this
might be an instruction generated by the compiler.
This is not currently the case, so this commit removes it from
the private exports and renames it to indicate that it is a local
helper function.
PR Close#41040
This method does not appear to be used in the project.
This commit removes it and code that it exclusively
depended upon, or depended upon it.
PR Close#41040
Before `unknown` was available, the `never` type was used to discourage
application developers from using "private" properties. The `unknown` type
is much better suited for this.
PR Close#41040
The compiler considers template diagnostics to "belong" to the source file
of the component using the template. This means that when diagnostics for
a source file are reported, it returns diagnostics of TS structures in the
actual source file, diagnostics for any inline templates, and diagnostics of
any external templates.
The Language Service uses a different model, and wants to show template
diagnostics in the actual .html file. Thus, it's not necessary (and in fact
incorrect) to include such diagnostics for the actual .ts file as well.
Doing this currently causes a bug where external diagnostics appear in the
TS file with "random" source spans.
This commit changes the Language Service to filter the set of diagnostics
returned by the compiler and only include those diagnostics with spans
actually within the .ts file itself.
Fixes#41032
PR Close#41070
The current logic in the compiler is to bail when there are errors when
parsing a template into an HTML AST or when there are errors in the i18n
metadata. As a result, a template with these types of parse errors
_will not have any information for the language service_. This is because we
never attempt to conver the HTML AST to a template AST in these
scenarios, so there are no template AST nodes for the language service
to look at for information. In addition, this also means that the errors
are never displayed in the template to the user because there are no
nodes to map the error to.
This commit adds an option to the template parser to temporarily ignore
the html parse and i18n meta errors and always perform the template AST
conversion. At the end, the i18n and HTML parse errors are appended to
the returned errors list. While this seems risky, it at least provides
us with more information than we had before (which was 0) and it's only
done in the context of the language service, when the compiler is
configured to use poisoned data (HTML parse and i18n meta errors can be
interpreted as a "poisoned" template).
fixes angular/vscode-ng-language-service#1140
PR Close#41068
An opening tag `<` without any characters after it is interperted as a
text node (just a "less than" character) rather than the start of an
element in the template AST. This commit adjusts the autocomplete engine
to provide element autocompletions when the nearest character to the
left of the cursor is `<`.
Part of the fix for angular/vscode-ng-language-service#1140
PR Close#41068
The compiler's parsing code has logic to recover from incomplete open
tags (i.e. `<div`) but the recovery logic does not handle when the
incomplete tag is terminated by an EOF. This commit updates the logic to
allow for the EOF character to be interpreted as the end of the tag open
so that the parser can continue processing. It will then fail to find
the end tag and recover by marking the open tag as incomplete.
Part of https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/1140
PR Close#41054
This commit adds a new configuration option, `forceStrictTemplates` to the
language service plugin to allow users to force enable `strictTemplates`.
This is needed so that the Angular extension can be used inside Google without
changing the underlying compiler options in the `ng_module` build rule.
PR Close#41062
VSCode only de-duplicates references results for "go to references" requests
but does not de-duplicate them for "find all references" requests. The
result is that users see duplicate references for results in TypeScript
files - one from the built-in TS extension and one from us.
While this is an issue in VSCode (see https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues/117095)
this commit provides a quick workaround on our end until it can be addressed there.
This commit should be reverted when microsoft/vscode/issues/117095 is resolved.
fixes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/1124
PR Close#41041
1. The error function throws, so no code after it is reachable.
2. Some switch statements are exhaustive, so no code after them are reachable.
PR Close#40984
Currently, when importing `BrowserAnimationsModule`, Angular uses `AnimationRenderer`
as the renderer. When the root view is removed, the `AnimationRenderer` defers the actual
work to the `TransitionAnimationEngine` to do this, and the `TransitionAnimationEngine`
doesn't actually remove the DOM node, but just calls `markElementAsRemoved()`.
The actual DOM node is not removed until `TransitionAnimationEngine` "flushes".
Unfortunately, though, that "flush" will never happen, since the root view is being
destroyed and there will be no more flushes.
This commit adds `flush()` call when the root view is being destroyed.
BREAKING CHANGE:
DOM elements are now correctly removed when the root view is removed. It
is possible that tests could be accidentally relying on the old behavior by
trying to find an element that was not removed in a previous test. If
this is the case, the failing tests should be updated to ensure they
have proper setup code which initializes elements they rely on.
PR Close#41001
Now the language service always uses the name of the JavaScript property on the
component or directive instance for this input or output. This PR will use the right
binding property name.
PR Close#41005
Ngcc uses the `paths` property to compute the potential base-paths
for packages that are being processed. If the `paths` contain a wildcard
`*` within a path segment, ngcc was not finding the base-path correctly.
Now when a wildcard is found, there is an additional search to look for
paths that might match the wildcard.
Fixes#41014
PR Close#41033
The codebase currently contains several `EMPTY_ARRAY` constants,
and they can end up in the bundle of an application.
A recent commit 6fbe219 tipped us off
as it introduced several `noop` occurrences in the golden symbol files.
After investigating with @petebacondarwin,
we decided to remove the duplicated symbols.
This probably shaves only a few bytes,
but this commit removes the duplicated functions,
by always using the one in `core/src/utils/empty`.
PR Close#40991
This change fixes an incompatibility between the old `@angular/http` package
and its successor (`@angular/common/http`) by re-introducing the types that were supported before.
It now allows to use number and boolean directly as HTTP params, instead of having to convert it to string first.
Before:
this.http.get('/api/config', { params: { page: `${page}` } });
After:
this.http.get('/api/config', { params: { page }});
`HttpParams` has also been updated to have most of its methods accept number or boolean values.
Fixes#23856
BREAKING CHANGE:
The methods of the `HttpParams` class now accept `string | number | boolean`
instead of `string` for the value of a parameter.
If you extended this class in your application,
you'll have to update the signatures of your methods to reflect these changes.
PR Close#40663
Previously, when `ngcc` encountered an entry-point with a format-path
that pointed to a non-existing or empty file it would throw an error and
stop processing the remaining tasks.
In the past, we used to ignore such format-paths and continue processing
the rest of the tasks ([see code][1]). This was changed to a hard
failure in 2954d1b5ca. Looking at the code
history, the reason for changing the behavior was an (incorrect)
assumption that the condition could not fail. This assumption failed to
take into account the case where a 3rd-party library has an invalid
format-path in its `package.json`. This is an issue with the library,
but it should not prevent `ngcc` from processing other
packages/entry-points/formats.
This commit fixes this by reporting the task as failed but not throwing
an error, thus allowing `ngcc` to continue processing other tasks.
[1]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/3077c9a1f89c5bd75fb96c16e/packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/src/main.ts#L124Fixes#40965
PR Close#40985
This commit adds more configurability to the `Router#isActive` method
and `RouterLinkActive#routerLinkActiveOptions`.
It allows tuning individual match options for query params and the url
tree, which were either both partial or both exact matches in the past.
Additionally, it also allows matching against the fragment and matrix
parameters.
fixes#13205
BREAKING CHANGE:
The type of the `RouterLinkActive.routerLinkActiveOptions` input was
expanded to allow more fine-tuned control. Code that previously read
this property may need to be updated to account for the new type.
PR Close#40303
Currently the only way to disable animations is by providing the `NoopAnimationsModule`
which doesn't allow for it to be disabled based on runtime information. These changes
add support for disabling animations based on runtime information by using
`BrowserAnimationsModule.withConfig({disableAnimations: true})`.
PR Close#40731
Currently there are two entry points for the `@angular/language-service`
package:
- `@angular/language-service`
This default entry point is for View Engine LS. Through the redirection
of `main` field in `package.json`, it resolves to
`./bundles/language-service.js`.
- `@angular/language-service/bundles/ivy.js`
This secondary entry point is for Ivy LS.
TypeScript recently changed the behavior of tsserver to allow only package
names as plugin names [1] for security reasons. This means the secondary
entry point for Ivy LS can no longer be used.
We implemented a quick hack in the module resolver (in the extension repo)
to fix this, but the long term fix should be in `@angular/language-service`.
Here, the `main` field in `package.json` is changed to `index.js`, and in the
index file we conditionally load View Engine or Ivy based on the input config.
This eliminates the need for multiple entry points.
As part of this PR, I also removed all source code for View Engine and Ivy
included in the NPM package. Consumers of this package should run the bundled
output and nothing else. This would help us prevent an accidental import that
results in execution of unbundled code.
[1]: https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/pull/42713
PR Close#40967
These tests were relying upon unix-like paths, which
caused them to fail on Windows.
Note that the `filegroup` Bazel rule tends not to work well
on Windows, so this has been replaced with `copy_to_bin`
instead.
PR Close#40952
Some tools (such as Language Server and ng-packagr) only care about
the processed typings generated by ngcc. Forcing these tools to process
the JavaScript files as well has two disadvantages:
First, unnecessary work is being done, which is time consuming.
But more importantly, it is not always possible to know how the final bundling
tools will want the processed JavaScript to be configured. For example,
the CLI would prefer the `--create-ivy-entry-points` option but this would
break non-CLI build tooling.
This commit adds a new option (`--typings-only` on the command line, and
`typingsOnly` via programmatic API) that instructs ngcc to only render changes
to the typings files for the entry-points that it finds, and not to write any
JavaScript files.
In order to process the typings, a JavaScript format will need to be analysed, but
it will not be rendered to disk. When using this option, it is best to offer ngcc a
wide range of possible JavaScript formats to choose from, and it will use the
first format that it finds. Ideally you would configure it to try the `ES2015` FESM
format first, since this will be the most performant.
Fixes#40969
PR Close#40976
This commit updates compiler_spec.ts in the Ivy LS suite to utilize the new
testing environment which was introduced in the previous commit. Eventually
all specs should be converted, but converting one right now helps ensure
that the new testing env is working properly and able to support real tests.
PR Close#40966
With this change we drop support for zone.js 0.10.x.
This is needed because in version 12 the CLI will only work with `~0.11.4`. See angular/angular-cli#20034.
BREAKING CHANGE:
Minimum supported `zone.js` version is `0.11.4`
PR Close#40823
The Angular LS does not provide quick info when the given position is not
inside a template. As an optimization, we can quickly look at the
file and determine if we are at a position that is part of an Angular
template. If not, we bail before asking the compiler for any more
information. Note that the Angular LS _already_ provides no quick info
when outside a template file, but currently asks the compiler to analyze
the program before it determines that information.
PR Close#40956
Currently `NgTemplateOutlet` recreates its view if its template is swapped out or a context
object with a different shape is passed in. If an object with the same shape is passed in,
we preserve the old view and we mutate the previous object. This mutation of the original
object can be undesirable if two objects with the same shape are swapped between two
different template outlets.
The current behavior is a result of a limitation in `core` where the `context` of an embedded
view is read-only, however a previous commit made it writeable.
These changes resolve the context mutation issue and clean up a bunch of unnecessary
logic from `NgTemplateOutlet` by taking advantage of the earlier change.
Fixes#24515.
PR Close#40360
Currently `EmbeddedViewRef.context` is read-only which means that the only way to update
it is to mutate the object which can lead to some undesirable outcomes if the template
and the context are provided by an external consumer (see #24515).
These changes make the property writeable since there doesn't appear to be a specific
reason why it was readonly to begin with.
PR Close#40360
This commit moves a constant which is affected by a g3 sync patch into a
separate file. This way, changes to the rest of the compiler codebase have
no chance of conflicting with the patched code.
PR Close#40950
When certain information is requested from the Angular Language Service, we
know that there will be no additional Angular information if the requested
position is not in an inline template, template url, or style url. To avoid
unnecessary compiler compilations, we short circuit and return `undefined`
before asking the compiler for any type of answer which would trigger a
partial compilation, at the very least.
fixes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/1104
PR Close#40946
fix https://github.com/angular/components/issues/21674
When setting `ngZoneRunCoalescing` to true, `onStable` is not emitted correctly.
the reason is before this commit, the code looks like this:
```
// application code call `ngZone.run()`
ngzone.run(() => {}); // step 1
// inside NgZone, in the OnInvoke hook, NgZone try to delay the checkStable()
function delayChangeDetectionForEvents(zone: NgZonePrivate) {
if (zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId !== -1) { // step 9
return;
}
zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId = zone.nativeRequestAnimationFrame.call(global, () => { // step 2
if (!zone.fakeTopEventTask) {
zone.fakeTopEventTask = Zone.root.scheduleEventTask('fakeTopEventTask', () => {
zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId = -1; // step 3
updateMicroTaskStatus(zone); // step 4
checkStable(zone); // step 6
}, undefined, () => {}, () => {});
}
zone.fakeTopEventTask.invoke();
});
updatemicroTaskStatus(zone);
}
function updateMicroTaskStatus(zone: NgZonePrivate, ignoreCheckRAFId = false) {
if (zone._hasPendingMicrotasks ||
((zone.shouldCoalesceEventChangeDetection || zone.shouldCoalesceRunChangeDetection) &&
zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId !== -1)) { // step 5
zone.hasPendingMicrotasks = true;
} else {
zone.hasPendingMicrotasks = false;
}
}
function checkStable(zone: NgZonePrivate) {
if (zone._nesting == 0 && !zone.hasPendingMicrotasks && !zone.isStable) { // step 7
try {
zone._nesting++;
zone.onMicrotaskEmpty.emit(null);
...
}
// application ref subscribe onMicroTaskEmpty
ngzone.onMicroTaskEmpty.subscribe(() => {
ngzone.run(() => { // step 8
tick();
});
});
```
and the process is:
1. step 1: application call ngZone.run()
2. step 2: NgZone delay the checkStable() call in a requestAnimationFrame, and also set
zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId
3. step 3: Inside the requestAnimationFrame callback, reset zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId first
4. step 4: update microTask status
5, step 5: if zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId is -1, that means no microTask pending.
6. step 6: checkStable and trigger onMicrotaskEmpty emitter.
7. step 7: ApplicationRef subscribed onMicrotaskEmpty, so it will call another `ngZone.run()` to process
tick()
8. step 8: And this new `ngZone.run()` will try to check `zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId` in `step 9`
when trying to delay the checkStable(), and since the zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId is already reset
to -1 in step 3, so this ngZone.run() will run into step 2 again.
9. and become a infinite loop..., so onStable is never emit
in this commit, there is a new flag `zone.isCheckStableRunning` added to
prevent re-entry when `shouldCoaleascing` flag is enabled.
PR Close#40540
Currently TestBed (both ViewEngine and Ivy) invoke `ApplicationInitStatus.runInitializers` as a part of the
bootstrap process to mimic real bootstrap steps. This is problematic for the `ApplicationInitStatus` class
tests since the `runInitializers` call performed by TestBed interfere with actual tests.
This commit updates ApplicationInitStatus tests to interact with the class directly instead of relying on TestBed
APIs to retrieve the class though DI.
PR Close#33222
This commit adds support for Observables that now can be used as a part of APP_INITIALIZER. Previously, only
Primises were supported.
Closes#15088.
PR Close#33222
This commit updates compiler_spec.ts in the Ivy LS suite to utilize the new
testing environment which was introduced in the previous commit. Eventually
all specs should be converted, but converting one right now helps ensure
that the new testing env is working properly and able to support real tests.
PR Close#40679
The Ivy Language Service codebase testing suite contains a few testing
utilities which allow for assertions of Language Service operations against
an in-memory project. However, this existing utility lacks the flexibility
to test more complex scenarios, such as those involving multiple TS projects
with dependencies between them.
This commit introduces a new 'testing' package for the Ivy LS which attempts
to more faithfully represent the possible states of an IDE, and allows for
testing of more advanced scenarios. The new utility borrows from the prior
version and is geared towards more ergonomic testing. Only basic
functionality is present in this initial implementation, but this will grow
over time.
PR Close#40679
This PR performs a small refactoring to use `RuntimeError` class and corresponding error code (by calling
`throwProviderNotFoundError` which formats the message) to make it more consistent with other places where
similar errors are thrown.
PR Close#40901
This PR formalizes, documents, and makes public the router outlet contract.
The set of `RouterOutlet` methods used by the `Router` has not changed
in over 4 years, since the introduction of route reuse strategies.
Creation of custom router outlets is already possible and is used by the
Ionic framework
(https://github.com/ionic-team/ionic-framework/blob/master/angular/src/directives/navigation/ion-router-outlet.ts).
There is a small "hack" that is needed to make this work, which is that
outlets must register with `ChildrenOutletContexts`, but it currently
only accepts our `RouterOutlet`.
By exposing the interface the `Router` uses to activate and deactivate
routes through outlets, we allow for developers to more easily and safely
extend the `Router` and have fine-tuned control over navigation and component
activation that fits project requirements.
PR Close#40827
Currently, the function that is provided through `HAMMER_LOADER` is called the
same number of times as the `HammerGesturesPlugin.addEventListener` method is called
(until the Hammer is loaded).
This commit adds a class property in which the loader call is saved, thereby
preventing multiple calls to the loader function.
PR Close#25995
PR Close#40911
Previously we were calling `updateSourceLocations()` as part of
`extractMessages()` for every file that was passed in, regardless of
whether any `$localize` tagged strings were to be found in the file.
This was very wasteful because it is non-trivial to compute the flattened
source-map for files if it is not needed.
PR Close#40891
This is a pre-requisite for #40360. Given the following template which has a listener
that references a variable from a parent template (`name`):
```
<ng-template let-name="name">
<button (click)="hello(name)"></button>
</ng-template>
```
We generate code that looks that looks like. Note how we access `name` through `ctx`:
```js
function template(rf, ctx) {
if (rf & 1) {
const r0 = ɵɵgetCurrentView();
ɵɵelementStart(0, "button", 2);
ɵɵlistener("click", function() {
ɵɵrestoreView(r0);
const name_r0 = ctx.name; // Note the `ctx.name` access here.
const ctx_r1 = ɵɵnextContext();
return ctx_r1.log(name_r0);
});
ɵɵelementEnd();
}
}
```
This works fine at the moment, because the template context object can't be changed after creation.
The changes in #40360 allow for the object to be changed, which means that the `ctx` reference
inside the listener will be out of date, because it was bound during creation mode.
This PR aims to address the issue by accessing the context inside listeners through the saved
view reference. With the new code, the generated code from above will look as follows:
```js
function template(rf, ctx) {
if (rf & 1) {
const r0 = ɵɵgetCurrentView();
ɵɵelementStart(0, "button", 2);
ɵɵlistener("click", function() {
const restoredCtx = ɵɵrestoreView(r0);
const name_r0 = restoredCtx.name;
const ctx_r1 = ɵɵnextContext();
return ctx_r1.log(name_r0);
});
ɵɵelementEnd();
}
}
```
PR Close#40833
This commit adds `ngDevMode` guard to show the warning only
in dev mode (similar to how things work in other parts of Ivy runtime code).
The `ngDevMode` flag helps to tree-shake the warning from production builds
(in dev mode everything will work as it works right now) to decrease production bundle size.
PR Close#40876
Our approach for handling cyclic imports results in code that is
not easy to tree-shake, so it is not suitable for publishing in a
library.
When compiling in partial compilation mode, we are targeting
such library publication, so we now create a fatal diagnostic
error instead of trying to handle the cyclic import situation.
Closes#40678
PR Close#40782
Fix router to ensure that a route module is only loaded once especially
in relation to the use of preload strategies with delayed or partial
loading.
Add test to check the interaction of PreloadingStrategy and normal
router navigation under differing scenarios.
Checking:
* Prevention of duplicate loading of modules.
related to #26557
* Prevention of duplicate RouteConfigLoad(Start|End) events
related to #22842
* Ensuring preload strategy remains active for submodules if needed
The selected preload strategy should still decide when to load submodules
* Possibility of memory leak with unfinished preload subscription
related to #26557
* Ensure that the stored loader promise is cleared so that subsequent
load will try the fetch again.
* Add error handle error from loadChildren
* Ensure we handle error from with NgModule create
Fixes#26557#22842#26557
PR Close#40389
This commit adds the `emitEvent` option to the following FormArray and FormGroup methods:
* FormGroup.addControl
* FormGroup.removeControl
* FormGroup.setControl
* FormArray.push
* FormArray.insert
* FormArray.removeAt
* FormArray.setControl
* FormArray.clear
This option can be used to prevent an event from being emitted when adding or removing controls.
BREAKING CHANGE:
The `emitEvent` option was added to the following `FormArray` and `FormGroup` methods:
* FormGroup.addControl
* FormGroup.removeControl
* FormGroup.setControl
* FormArray.push
* FormArray.insert
* FormArray.removeAt
* FormArray.setControl
* FormArray.clear
If your app has custom classes that extend `FormArray` or `FormGroup` classes and override the
above-mentioned methods, you may need to update your implementation to take the new options into
account and make sure that overrides are compatible from a types perspective.
Closes#29662.
PR Close#31031
The previous commits refactored the `ShadowCss` emulator to support
desirable use-cases of `:host-context()`, but it dropped support
for passing a comma separated list of selectors to the `:host-context()` .
This commit rectifies that omission, despite the use-case not being
valid according to the ShadowDOM spec, to ensure backward compatibility
with the previous implementation.
PR Close#40494
In `ViewEncapsulation.Emulated` mode the compiler converts `:host` and
`:host-context` pseudo classes into new CSS selectors.
Previously, when there was both `:host-context` and `:host` classes in a
selector, the compiler was generating incorrect selectors. There are two
scenarios:
* Both classes are on the same element (i.e. not separated). E.g.
`:host-context(.foo):host(.bar)`. This setup should only match the
host element if it has both `foo` and `bar` classes. So the generated
CSS selector should be: `.foo.bar<hostmarker>`.
* The `:host` class is on a descendant of the `:host-context`. E.g.
`:host-context(.foo) :host(.bar)`. This setup should only match the
`.foo` selector if it is a proper ancestor of the host (and not on the
host itself). So the generated CSS selector should be:
`.foo .bar<hostmarker>`.
This commit fixes the generation to handle these scenarios.
Fixes#14349
PR Close#40494
In `ViewEncapsulation.Emulated` mode, the compiler must generate additional
combinations of selectors to handle the `:host-context()` pseudo-class function.
Previously, when there is was more than one `:host-context()` selector in a
rule, the compiler was generating invalid selectors.
This commit generates all possible combinations of selectors needed to
match the same elements as the native `:host-context()` selector.
Fixes#19199
PR Close#40494
In Chrome 83 passing a TrustedScript to eval just returns the
TrustedScript back without evaluating it, causing the
newTrustedFunctionFor{Dev,JIT} functions to fail. This is a browser bug
that has been fixed in Chrome 84, and only affects Angular applications
running with JIT (which includes unit tests).
As a temporary workaround for users still on Chrome 83, detect when this
occurs in the newTrustedFunctionFor* functions and fall back to the
straightforward, non-Trusted Types compatible implementation. The only
combination that is left affected consists of Angular applications
running with JIT, that have explicitly configured Trusted Types in
enforcement mode, with users that are still on Chrome 83.
Also correct docstring for newTrustedFunctionForJIT.
PR Close#40815
This commit implements creating of `ɵɵngDeclarePipe()` calls in partial
compilation, and processing of those calls in the linker and JIT compiler.
See #40677
PR Close#40803
`@angular/platform-server` provides the foundation for rendering an
Angular app on the server. In order to achieve that, it uses a
server-side DOM implementation (currently [domino][1]).
For rendering on the server to work as closely as possible to running
the app on the browser, we need to make DOM globals (such as `Element`,
`HTMLElement`, etc.), which are normally provided by the browser,
available as globals on the server as well.
Currently, `@angular/platform-server` achieves this by extending the
`global` object with the DOM implementation provided by `domino`. This
assignment happens in the [setDomTypes()][2] function, which is
[called in a `PLATFORM_INITIALIZER`][3]. While this works in most cases,
there are some scenarios where the DOM globals are needed sooner (i.e.
before initializing the platform). See, for example, #24551 and #39950
for more details on such issues.
This commit provides a way to solve this problem by exposing a
side-effect-ful entry-point (`@angular/platform-server/init`), that
shims the `global` object with DOM globals. People will be able to
import this entry-point in their server-rendered apps before
bootstrapping the app (for example, in their `main.server.ts` file).
(See also [#39950 (comment)][4].)
In a future update, the [`universal` schematics][5] will include such an
import by default in newly generated projects.
[1]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/domino
[2]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/0fc8466f1be392917e0c/packages/platform-server/src/domino_adapter.ts#L17-L21
[3]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/0fc8466f1be392917e0c/packages/platform-server/src/server.ts#L33
[4]: https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/39950#issuecomment-747598403
[5]: https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/blob/cc51432661eb4ab4b6a3/packages/schematics/angular/universal
PR Close#40559
The `platform-server` package currently depends on the [domino][1]
package. This commit adds `domino` to the list of dependencies for the
`platform-server` `ng_module` target.
[1]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/domino
PR Close#40559
This commit causes imports added by ngtsc's `ImportManager` to have their
TypeScript "original node" set to the generated `ts.ImportDeclaration`
statement.
In g3, the tsickle transformer runs after the Angular transformer and post-
processes Angular's compilation output. One of its post-processing tasks is
to transform generated imports and references to imported symbols from the
commonjs module system to the g3 module system. Part of this transformation
involves recognizing modules with specific metadata and altering references
to symbols from those modules accordingly.
Normally, tsickle can rely on TypeScript's binding for an imported symbol to
find its origin module and thus the correct metadata for the symbol. However
the Angular transform generates new synthetic imports which don't have such
binding information. Angular's imports are always namespace imports of the
form:
```
import * as qualifier 'module/specifier';
```
References to such an import are then of the form `qualifier.SymbolName`.
To process such imports properly, tsickle needs to be able to associate the
reference to `qualifier` in the expression `qualifer.SymbolName` with the
`ts.ImportDeclaration` statement that defines it. It expects to do this by
looking at the `ts.getOriginalNode()` for the `qualifier` reference, which
should be the `ts.ImportDeclaration`. This commit changes ngtsc's import
generation mechanism to set the original node on `qualifier` identifiers
according to this expectation.
This commit is not tested in the direct compiler tests, since:
1) there is no observable behavior externally from setting the original node
2) we don't have tests that intercept transformer operations (which could be
used to directly assert against the AST nodes)
3) tsickle's published version does not (yet) contain the g3-specific
transformations which rely on the original node and would thus allow the
behavior to be observed.
Instead, we rely on the g3 testing suite to validate the correctness of this
fix. Breaking this functionality would cause g3 compilation errors for
targets, since tsickle would be unable to transform imports correctly.
PR Close#40711
Fix router to ensure that a route module is only loaded once especially
in relation to the use of preload strategies with delayed or partial
loading.
Add test to check the interaction of PreloadingStrategy and normal
router navigation under differing scenarios.
Checking:
* Prevention of duplicate loading of modules.
related to #26557
* Prevention of duplicate RouteConfigLoad(Start|End) events
related to #22842
* Ensuring preload strategy remains active for submodules if needed
The selected preload strategy should still decide when to load submodules
* Possibility of memory leak with unfinished preload subscription
related to #26557
* Ensure that the stored loader promise is cleared so that subsequent
load will try the fetch again.
* Add error handle error from loadChildren
* Ensure we handle error from with NgModule create
Fixes#26557#22842#26557
PR Close#40389
This commit adds support for Finnish full date formatting,
as well as `c/cc/ccc/cccc/ccccc/cccccc` date formats in the `DatePipe`.
Fixes#26922
PR Close#40766
Before this change, when Google Chrome cancels a XMLHttpRequest, an Observable of the response
never finishes. This happens, for example, when you put your computer to sleep or just press
Ctrl+S to save the browser page. After this commit, if request is canceled or aborted an
appropriate Observable will be completed with an error.
Fixes#22324
PR Close#40767
The parser does not include parenthesis in the AST, so if a LHS
expression would be parenthesized then its start span would start
after the opening parenthesis. Previously, some parent AST nodes would
be created with the start span of its LHS as its own start, so this
resulted in the parent AST node not encompassing the opening parenthesis
in its source span. This commit fixes the issue by capturing the start
index prior to parsing a child AST tree, which is then used as the
start of the source span of the the parent AST node that is parsed.
Fixes#40721
PR Close#40740
In 5c547675b11a24b16c20df1718583a0e7ed49cbd the `EventEmitter.subscribe`
API was extended with a new signature that allows the emitter's generic
type `T` to flow into the subscribe callback. This new signature removes
the need for the special `_outputHelper` function that used to be
emitted into TCBs when `strictOutputEventTypes`/`strictTemplates` is
enabled.
PR Close#40738
Adds an error if a reference is used more than once on the same element (e.g. `<div #a #a>`).
We used to have this error in ViewEngine, but it wasn't ported over to Ivy.
Fixes#40536.
PR Close#40538
This commit fixes the issue of the ASSERTION ERROR issue when
a projected node(RNode) inside an array is checked against the types
of TNodeType.Element, TNodeType.Container, TNodeType.ElementContainer,
TNodeType.IcuContainer, TNodeType.Projection. As it's inside an array,
it doesn't fall into any of those types, as a result, it throws
the ASSERTION ERROR.
PR Close#37120
PR Close#37167
Produces a diagnostic when we cannot resolve a component's external style sheet or external template.
The previous behavior was to throw an exception, which crashed the
Language Service.
fixes angular/vscode-ng-language-service#1079
PR Close#40660
When using the [timeout attribute](https://xhr.spec.whatwg.org/#the-timeout-attribute) and an XHR
request times out, browsers trigger the `timeout` event (and execute the XHR's `ontimeout`
callback). Additionally, Safari 9 handles timed-out requests in the same way, even if no `timeout`
has been explicitly set on the XHR.
In the above cases, `HttpClient` would fail to capture the XHR's completing (with an error), so
the corresponding `Observable` would never complete.
PR Close#26453
PR Close#39807
When the downleveling helper function has been inlined into the
`$localize` call, it is a bit more tricky to parse out the cooked and
raw strings. There was already code to do this but it assumed that
the `cooked` and `raw` items were both arrays.
Sometimes the `raw` array is just a copy of the `cooked` array
via an expression similar to `raw || (raw=tcookedslice(0))`. This
commit changes the `unwrapMessagePartsFromLocalizeCall()`
function to be able to handle such a situation.
Fixes#40702
PR Close#40754
Previously if the code is invalid the error message might look like:
```
Unexpected messageParts for `$localize` (expected an array of strings).
```
This is not very helpful for debugging where the problem occurs.
Now we build a "code-frame" description to give more useful information:
```
TypeError: Cannot create property 'message' on string '.../src/app/app.component.js:
Unexpected messageParts for `$localize` (expected an array of strings).
4 | export class AppComponent {
5 | constructor() {
> 6 | this.title = $localize(a = ['myapp'], []);
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
7 | }
8 | }
```
PR Close#40724
Prior to this patch, if an element was removed multiple times (due
to the nature of parent/child elements), the leave listeners may
have been fired for an element that was already removed. This patch
adds a guard within the animations code to prevent this.
PR Close#40712
Close#40387
Currently zone.js patches `setTimeout` and keeps a `tasksByHandleId` map to keep `timerId` <-> `ZoneTask`
relationship. This is needed so that when `clearTimeout(timerId)` is called, zone.js can find the associated
`ZoneTask`. Now zone.js set the `tasksByHandleId` map in the `scheduleTask` function, but if the `setTimeout`
is running in the `FakeAsyncZoneSpec` or any other `ZoneSpec` with `onScheduleTask` hooks. The `scheduleTask`
in `timer` patch may not be invoked.
For example:
```
fakeAsync(() => {
setTimeout(() => {});
tick();
});
```
In this case, the `timerId` kept in the `tasksByHandleId` map is not cleared.
This is because the `FakeAsyncZoneSpec` in the `onScheduleTask` hook looks like this.
```
onScheduleTask(delegate, ..., task) {
fakeAsyncScheduler.setTimeout(task);
return task;
}
```
Because `FakeAsyncZoneSpec` handles the task itself and it doesn't call `parentDelegate.onScheduleTask`,
therefore the default `scheduleTask` in the `timer` patch is not invoked.
In this commit, the cleanup logic is moved from `scheduleTask` to `setTimeout` patch entry to
avoid the memory leak.
PR Close#40586
This commit adds the missing `min` and `max` validators.
BREAKING CHANGE:
Previously `min` and `max` attributes defined on the `<input type="number">`
were ignored by Forms module. Now presence of these attributes would
trigger min/max validation logic (in case `formControl`, `formControlName`
or `ngModel` directives are also present on a given input) and
corresponding form control status would reflect that.
Fixes#16352
PR Close#39063
No longer emits to `Router.events` after the router has been destroyed. Also
returns a resolved promise to the navigation methods.
Fixes#40502.
PR Close#40638
Two motivations behind this change:
1. We would like to expose the types of the Language Service to external
users (like the VSCode extension) via the npm package, on the top
level of the package
2. We would like the View Engine and Ivy LS to share a common interface
(notably after the inclusion of `getTcb`, the Ivy LS upholds a
strict superset of `ts.LanguageService`; previously both VE and Ivy
LS were aligned on `ts.LanguageService`.)
To this end, this commit refactors the exports on the toplevel of the
`language-service/` package to just be types common to both the VE and
Ivy language services. The VE and Ivy build targets then import and use
these types accordingly, and the expectation is that an external user
will just import the relevant typings from the toplevel package without
diving into either the VE or Ivy sources.
Follow up on #40607
PR Close#40621
This commit updates `AbstractControlStatus` directive code to remove duplicated logic in getters and replaces
that logic with a new function that accepts an argument.
PR Close#40651
The `AsyncPipe.transform<T>(emitter)` method must infer the `T`
type from the `emitter` parameter. Since we changed the `AsyncPipe`
to expect a `Subscribable<T>` rather than `Observable<T>` the
`EventEmitter.subscribe()` method needs to have a tighter signature.
Otherwise TypeScript struggles to infer the type and ends up making
it `unknown`.
Fixes#40637
PR Close#40644
The `TemplateTypeChecker.overrideComponentTemplate` operation was originally
conceived as a "fast path" for the Language Service to react to a template
change without needing to go through a full incremental compilation step. It
served this purpose until the previous commit, which switches the LS to use
the new resource-only incremental change operation provided by `NgCompiler`.
`overrideComponentTemplate` is now no longer utilized, and is known to have
several hard-to-overcome issues that prevent it from being useful in any
other situations. As such, this commit removes it entirely.
PR Close#40585
This commit changes the Language Service's "compiler factory" mechanism to
leverage the new resource-only update path for `NgCompiler`. When an
incoming change only affects a resource file like a component template or
stylesheet, going through the new API allows the Language Service to avoid
unnecessary incremental steps of the `NgCompiler` and return answers more
efficiently.
PR Close#40585
Normally the template parsing operation normalizes all template line endings
to '\n' only. This normalization operation causes source mapping errors when
the original template uses '\r\n' line endings.
The compiler already parses templates again to create a "diagnostic"
template AST with accurate source maps, to avoid other parsing issues that
affect source map accuracy. This commit configures this diagnostic parse to
also preserve line endings.
PR Close#40597
In b6cd38ff05 we fixed the DatePipe so
that when it parsed date strings that looked like `YYYY-MM` it created a UTC
date that was not affected by the local timezone of the JavaScript engine.
This commit does the same for date strings of the form `YYYY`.
(Note that the previous commit, mentioned above, attempted to fix this case
too but the test was not actually checking the correct input string.)
Fixes#33944
PR Close#40620
PR Close#40629
In 2aba8b0 we fixed the DatePipe so that when it parsed date strings
that looked like `YYYY-MM-DD` it created a UTC date that was not
affected by the local timezone of the JavaScript engine.
This commit does the same for date strings of the form `YYYY-MM`
and `YYYY`.
Fixes#33944
PR Close#40620
fix https://github.com/angular/components/issues/21674
When setting `ngZoneRunCoalescing` to true, `onStable` is not emitted correctly.
The reason is before this commit, the code looks like this
```
// Application code call `ngZone.run()`
ngZone.run(() => {}); // step 1
// Inside NgZone, in the OnInvoke hook, NgZone try to delay the checkStable()
function delayChangeDetectionForEvents(zone: NgZonePrivate) {
if (zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId !== -1) { // step 9
return;
}
zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId = zone.nativeRequestAnimationFrame.call(global, () => { // step 2
if (!zone.fakeTopEventTask) {
zone.fakeTopEventTask = Zone.root.scheduleEventTask('fakeTopEventTask', () => {
zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId = -1; // step 3
updateMicroTaskStatus(zone); // step 4
checkStable(zone); // step 6
}, undefined, () => {}, () => {});
}
zone.fakeTopEventTask.invoke();
});
updateMicroTaskStatus(zone);
}
function updateMicroTaskStatus(zone: NgZonePrivate, ignoreCheckRAFId = false) {
if (zone._hasPendingMicrotasks ||
((zone.shouldCoalesceEventChangeDetection || zone.shouldCoalesceRunChangeDetection) &&
zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId !== -1)) { // step 5
zone.hasPendingMicrotasks = true;
} else {
zone.hasPendingMicrotasks = false;
}
}
function checkStable(zone: NgZonePrivate) {
if (zone._nesting == 0 && !zone.hasPendingMicrotasks && !zone.isStable) { // step 7
try {
zone._nesting++;
zone.onMicrotaskEmpty.emit(null);
...
}
// application ref subscribe onMicroTaskEmpty
ngZone.onMicroTaskEmpty.subscribe(() => {
ngZone.run(() => { // step 8
tick();
});
});
```
And the process is:
1. step 1: application call ngZone.run()
2. step 2: NgZone delay the checkStable() call in a requestAnimationFrame, and also set
zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId
3. step 3: Inside the requestAnimationFrame callback, reset zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId first
4. step 4: update microTask status
5, step 5: if zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId is -1, that means no microTask pending.
6. step 6: checkStable and trigger onMicrotaskEmpty emitter.
7. step 7: ApplicationRef subscribed onMicrotaskEmpty, so it will call another `ngZone.run()` to process
tick()
8. step 8: And this new `ngZone.run()` will try to check `zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId` in `step 9`
when trying to delay the checkStable(), and since the zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId is already reset
to -1 in step 3, so this ngZone.run() will run into step 2 again.
9. And become a infinite loop..., so onStable is never emit
In this commit, the `zone.lastRequestAnimationFrameId` reset is moved after `checkStable()` call.
PR Close#40540
They aim to improve code readability.
Since they are defined by `const enum` they have zero runtime performance impact
over just using constant literals.
Fixes#23543
PR Close#23548
When parsing interpolations, if we encounter an empty interpolation
(`{{}}`), the current code uses a "pretend" value of `$implicit` for the
name as if the interplotion were really `{{$implicit}}`. This is
problematic because the spans are then incorrect downstream since they
are based off of the `$implicit` text.
This commit changes the interpretation of empty interpolations so that
the text is simply an empty string.
Fixes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/1077
Fixes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/1078
PR Close#40583
The codebase currently contains several `EMPTY_ARRAY` constants,
and they can end up in the bundle of an application.
A recent commit 6fbe219 tipped us off
as it introduced several `noop` occurrences in the golden symbol files.
After investigating with @petebacondarwin,
we decided to remove the duplicated symbols.
This probably shaves only a few bytes,
but this commit removes the duplicated functions,
by always using the one in `core/src/utils/empty`.
PR Close#40587
If the template parse option `leadingTriviaChars` is configured to
consider whitespace as trivia, any trailing whitespace of an element
would be considered as leading trivia of the subsequent element, such
that its `start` span would start _after_ the whitespace. This means
that the start span cannot be used to mark the end of the current
element, as its trailing whitespace would then be included in its span.
Instead, the full start of the subsequent element should be used.
To harden the tests that for the Ivy parser, the test utility `parseR3`
has been adjusted to use the same configuration for `leadingTriviaChars`
as would be the case in its production counterpart `parseTemplate`. This
uncovered another bug in offset handling of the interpolation parser,
where the absolute offset was computed from the start source span
(which excludes leading trivia) whereas the interpolation expression
would include the leading trivia. As such, the absolute offset now also
uses the full start span.
Fixes#39148
PR Close#40513
This commit adds a new `IncrementalResourceCompilationTicket` which reuses
an existing `NgCompiler` instance and updates it to optimally process
template-only and style-only changes. Performing this update involves both
instructing `DecoratorHandler`s to react to the resource changes, as well as
invalidating `TemplateTypeChecker` state for the component(s) in question.
That way, querying the `TemplateTypeChecker` will trigger new TCB generation
for the changed template(s).
PR Close#40561
To prepare for the optimization of template-only changes, this commit
refactors the `ComponentDecoratorHandler`'s handling of template parsing.
Previously, templates were extracted from the raw decorator metadata and
parsed in a single operation.
To better handle incremental template updates, this commit splits this
operation into a "declaration" step where the template info is extracted
from the decorator metadata, and a "parsing" step where the declared
template is read and parsed. This allows for re-reading and re-parsing of
the declared template at a future point, using the same template declaration
extracted from the decorator.
PR Close#40561
Previously, the incremental flow for NgCompiler was simple: when creating a
new NgCompiler instance, the consumer could pass state from a previous
compilation, which would cause the new compilation to be performed
incrementally. "Local" information about TypeScript files which had not
changed would be passed from the old compilation to the new and reused,
while "global" information would always be recalculated.
However, this flow could be made more efficient in certain cases, such as
when no TypeScript files are changed in a new compilation. In this case,
_all_ information extracted during the first compilation is reusable. Doing
this involves reusing the previous `NgCompiler` instance (the container for
such global information) and updating it, instead of creating a new one for
the next compilation. This approach works cleanly, but complicates the
lifecycle of `NgCompiler`.
To prevent consumers from having to deal with the mechanics of reuse vs
incremental steps of `NgCompiler`, a new `CompilationTicket` mechanism is
added in this commit. Consumers obtain a `CompilationTicket` via one of
several code paths depending on the nature of the incoming compilation, and
use the `CompilationTicket` to obtain an `NgCompiler` instance. This
instance may be a fresh compilation, a new `NgCompiler` for an incremental
compilation, or an existing `NgCompiler` that's been updated to optimally
process a resource-only change. Consumers can use the new `NgCompiler`
without knowledge of its provenance.
PR Close#40561
The Language Service uses the source span of AST nodes to recognize which
node a user has selected, given their cursor position in a template. This is
used to trigger autocompletion.
The previous source span of BindingPipe nodes created a problem when:
1) the pipe binding had no identifier (incomplete or in-progress expression)
2) the user typed trailing whitespace after the pipe character ('|')
For example, the expression `{{foo | }}`. If the cursor preceded the '}' in
that expression, the Language Service was unable to detect that the user was
autocompleting the BindingPipe expression, since the span of the BindingPipe
ended after the '|'.
This commit changes the expression parser to expand the span of BindingPipe
expressions with a missing identifier, to include any trailing whitespace.
This allows the Language Service to correctly recognize this case as
targeting the BindingPipe and complete it successfully. The `nameSpan` of
the BindingPipe is also moved to be right-aligned with the end of any
whitespace present in the pipe binding expression.
This change allows for the disabled test in the Language Service for pipe
completion in this case to be re-enabled.
PR Close#40346
The `LanguageServiceAdapter` must implement `realpath` in order to resolve
symlinks in `node_modules`.
Local libraries are often symlinked in `node_modules` by adding a local
dependency in `package.json`.
Fix https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/1083
PR Close#40593
Previously, in `_mismatch()`, the `DefaultIterableDiffer` first checks
`_linkedRecords` for `itemTrackBy`, then checks `_unlinkedRecords`.
This cause the `DefaultIterableDiffer` to move "later" items that match the
`itemTrackBy` from the old collection, rather than using the "earlier" one.
Now we check `_unlinkedRecords` first, so that the `DefaultIterableDiffer`
can give a more stable and reasonable result after diffing. For example,
rather than (`a1` and `a2` have same trackById)
```
a1 b c a2 => b a2 c a1
```
we get
```
a1 b c a2 => b a1 c a2
```
where a1 and a2 retain their original order despite both
having the same track by value.
Fixes#23815
PR Close#23941
Updates to rules_nodejs@2.3.3 to take advantage of windows specific fixes.
rules_nodejs@2.3.3 was created as a patch specifically with a fix for
the issues we found updating to rules_nodejs@2.2.2.
PR Close#40581
Update to the latest version of bazel.
`4.0.0` introduced a breaking change on unnecessary backslashes and these
instance are corrected in this change.
PR Close#40579
This is a follow up fix for
894286dd0c.
It turns out that comments can be closed in several ways:
- `<!-->`
- `<!-- -->`
- `<!-- --!>`
All of the above are valid ways to close comment per:
https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/syntax.html#comments
The new fix surrounds `<` and `>` with zero width space so that it
renders in the same way, but it prevents the comment to be closed eagerly.
PR Close#40525
Previously, we were naïvely checking whether a function name was a partial linker
declaration call by testing the map of linkers with `linkers[name]`. Since
`linkers` was a plain object, it also matched function names like `toString`!
This has been refactored as a `Map` to avoid the problem.
PR Close#40563
This PR adds a way for the language server to retrieve compiler options
diagnostics via `languageService.getCompilerOptionsDiagnostics()`.
This will be used by the language server to show a prompt in the editor if
users don't have `strict` or `fullTemplateTypeCheck` turned on.
Ref https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/1053
PR Close#40423
Prior to this commit, the `patchValue()` of the `FormGroup` and `FormArray` classes used to throw an exception
when the `value` argument contained a data structure that has `null` or `undefined` as a value for a field
that represents an instance of `FormGroup` or `FormArray` (for `FormControl` it's not a problem, since it
doesn't have nested controls), since the `patchValue()` method tried to iterate over provided values to
match current data structure.
This commit updates the `patchValue()` logic in `FormGroup` and `FormArray` classes to just ignore `null` and
`undefined` values (without any changes to corresponding `FormGroup` and `FormArray` instances). This
behavior looks inline with the `patchValue()` method goal of "doing its best to match the values to the
correct controls" (quote from docs).
Fixes#36672.
Fixes#21021.
PR Close#40534
PR #39235 introduced additional cleanup logic for form controls and directives. The cleanup logic relies
on the presence of ControlValueAccessor instances on FormControlName and FormControl directives. In general
these fields are present and there are also checks to make sure that the mentioned directive instances are
created with CVAs. However some scenarios (primarily tests) may invoke the logic in a way that the directive
instance would not be fully initialized, thus causing CVA to be absent. As a result, the cleanup logic fails
while trying to call some methods on associated CVA instances.
This commit updates the cleanup logic to take into account the situation when CVA is not present.
Fixes#40521.
PR Close#40526
The ARB format doesn't have a dedicated field for message meaning so these changes include it
as a customize attribute called `x-meaning`.
Fixes#40506.
PR Close#40546
The compliance test runner has various macros that process the
expectation files before actually checking their contents. Among those
macros are i18n helpers, which uses a global message counter to be able
to uniquely identify ICU variables.
Because of the global nature of this message index, it was susceptible
to ordering issues which could result in flaky tests, although it failed
very infrequently.
This commit resets the global message counter before applying the macros.
As a result of this change an expectation file had to be updated; this
is actually a bug fix as said test used to fail if run in isolation (if
`focusTest: true` was set for that particular testcase).
PR Close#40529
When migrating zone.js from gulp to bazel, some legacy build config files are still there,
we have `rollup-es5.config.js` and `rollup-es5_global-es2015.config.js`, since in gulp build
system, build `es5` or `esm` files are set in the config file, but in the bazel world,
the output format is not config in the config.js file, but is required by the downstream
bazel target. So we don't really need the two rollup config files any longer.
Another difference is in `rollup-es5.config.js`, the `external` and `global` libraries names
are also config there, and these settings are also valid for `es2015` build, these settings
are not in the `es2015.config.js` for some legacy reasons. So we don't need to keep this
difference either.
PR Close#40481
This commit reverts commit [_fix(service-worker): handle error with
ErrorHandler_](https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/39990/commits/552419d).
With Angular v11.0.4 and commit [_fix(service-worker): handle error with
ErrorHandler_](https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/39990/commits/552419d)
Angular start to send all service worker registration errors to the Angular
standard `ErrorHandler#handleError()` interface, instead of logging them in the
console.
But users existing `ErrorHandler#handleError()` implementations are not adapted
to service worker registration errors and it might result in broken apps or
bad UI.
Passing to `ErrorHandler` is desirable for some and undesirable for others and
the same is true for passing to `console.error()`.
But `console.error()` was used for a long time and thus it is preferable to keep
it as long as a good solution is not found with `ErrorHandler`.
Right now it's hard to define a good solution for `ErrorHandler` because:
1. Given the nature of the SW registration errors (usually outside the control
of the developer, different error messages on each browser/version, often
quite generic error messages, etc.), passing them to the `ErrorHandler` is
not particularly helpful.
2. While `ErrorHandler#handleError()` accepts an argument of type `any` (so
theoretically we could pass any object without changing the public API), most
apps expect an `Error` instance, so many apps could break if we changed the
shape.
3. Ideally, the Angular community want to re-think the `ErrorHandler` API
and add support for being able to pass additional metadata for each error
(such as the source of the error or some identifier, etc.). This change,
however, could potentially affect many apps out there, so the community must
put some thought into it and design it in a way that accounts for the needs
of all packages (not just the SW).
4. Given that we want to more holistically revisit the `ErrorHandler` API, any
changes we make in the short term to address the issue just for the SW will
make it more difficult/breaky for people to move to a new API in the future.
To see the whole explanation see GitHub PR #40236.
PR Close#40236
This is a follow up fix for
894286dd0c.
It turns out that comments can be closed in several ways:
- `<!-->`
- `<!-- -->`
- `<!-- --!>`
All of the above are valid ways to close comment per:
https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/syntax.html#comments
The new fix surrounds `<` and `>` with zero width space so that it
renders in the same way, but it prevents the comment to be closed eagerly.
PR Close#40525
In `ViewEncapsulation.Emulated` mode, the compiler must generate additional
combinations of selectors to handle the `:host-context()` pseudo-class function.
Previously, when there is was more than one `:host-context()` selector in a
rule, the compiler was generating invalid selectors.
This commit generates all possible combinations of selectors needed to
match the same elements as the native `:host-context()` selector.
Fixes#19199
PR Close#40494
When a source-map has an inline source, any source-map linked from
that source should only be loaded if itself is also inline; it should not
attempt to load a source-map from the file-system. Otherwise we can
find ourselves with inadvertent infinite cyclic dependencies.
For example, if a transpiler takes a file (e.g. index.js) and generates
a new file overwriting the original file - capturing the original
source inline in the new source-map (index.js.map) - the source
file loader might read the inline original file (also index.js) and
then try to load the `index.js.map` file from disk - ad infinitum.
Note that the first call to `loadSourceFile()` is special, since you can
pass in the source-file and source-map contents directly as in-memory
strrngs. This is common if the transpiler has just generated these and has
not yet written them to disk.
When the contents are passed into `loadSourceFile()` directly, they are
not treated as "inline" for the purposes described above since there is
no chance of these "in-memory" source and source-map contents being caught
up in a cyclic dependency.
Fixes#40408
PR Close#40435
This patch adds an API to retrieve the template typecheck block for a
template (if any) at a file location, and a selection of the TS node
in the TCB corresponding to the template node at which the request for
a TCB was made (if any).
Probably not something we want to land soon, but a useful debugging tool
for folks working with TCBs.
PR Close#39974
rxjs was only used within one location within the static queries migration to workaround
a previous limitation that schematics could not directly use a promise. However, promise
support has been available since 8.0. This change removes the observable promise wrapping.
It also removes an any cast that was previously needed to workaround rxjs version mismatches
during compilation.
PR Close#38657
Adds an `appendAll()` method to `HttpParams` that can construct the HTTP
request/response body from an object of parameters and values.
This avoids calling `append()` multiple times when multiple parameters
need to be added.
Fixes#20798
PR Close#20930
For the Google Cloud Console within Google we observed errors in the
shallowEqual function for users in IE and Edge. This patch was made within
Google and the errors went away. This commit upstreams the change into Angular.
PR Close#40488
This commits adds additional expectations to verify that the bloom
filter is able to correctly handle token IDs that exceed the size of
the bloom filter (which is currently 256 bits).
PR Close#40489
The injector system uses a bloom filter to determine if a token is
possibly defined in the node injector tree, which is stored across
multiple bloom buckets that each represent 32 bits of the full 256-bit
wide bloom hash. This means that a computation is required to determine
the exact bloom bucket which is responsible for storing any given 32-bit
interval, which was previously computed using three bitmask operations
and three branches to derive the bloom bucket offset.
This commit exploits the observation that all bits beyond the low 5 bits
of the bloom hash are an accurate representation for the bucket offset,
if shifted right such that those bits become the least significant bits.
This reduces the three bitmask operations and three branches with a
single shift operation, while additionally offering a code size
improvement.
PR Close#40489
Rather than mutating the span on the template when renaming literal strings,
this commit updates the logic to mutate the `TextSpan` equivalent that
is used by the Language Service.
PR Close#40484