Currently, when Angular code is built with Bazel and with Ivy, generated
factory shims (.ngfactory files) are not processed via the majority of
tsickle's transforms. This is a subtle effect of the build infrastructure,
but it boils down to a TsickleHost method `shouldSkipTsickleProcessing`.
For ngc_wrapped builds (Bazel + Angular), this method is defined in the
`@bazel/typescript` (aka bazel rules_typescript) implementation of
`CompilerHost`. The default behavior is to skip tsickle processing for files
which are not present in the original `srcs[]` of the build rule. In
Angular's case, this includes all generated shim files.
For View Engine factories this is probably desirable as they're quite
complex and they've never been tested with tsickle. Ivy factories however
are smaller and very straightforward, and it makes sense to treat them like
any other output.
This commit adjusts two independent implementations of
`shouldSkipTsickleProcessing` to enable transformation of Ivy shims:
* in `@angular/bazel` aka ngc_wrapped, the upstream `@bazel/typescript`
`CompilerHost` is patched to treat .ngfactory files the same as their
original source file, with respect to tsickle processing.
It is currently not possible to test this change as we don't have any test
that inspects tsickle output with bazel. It will be extensively tested in
g3.
* in `ngc`, Angular's own implementation is adjusted to allow for the
processing of shims when compiling with Ivy. This enables a unit test to
be written to validate the correct behavior of tsickle when given a host
that's appropriately configured to process factory shims.
For ngtsc-as-a-plugin, a similar fix will need to be submitted upstream in
tsc_wrapped.
PR Close#35848
XLIFF translation files can contain multiple `<file>` elements,
each of which contains translations. In ViewEngine all these
translations are merged into a single translation bundle.
Previously in Ivy only the translations from the last `<file>`
element were being loaded. Now all the translations from each
`<file>` are merged into a single translation bundle.
Fixes#35839
PR Close#35936
TemplateAst values are currently typed as the base class AST, but they
are actually constructed with ASTWithSource. Type them as such, because
ASTWithSource gives more information about the consumed expression AST
to downstream customers (namely, the expression AST source).
Unblocks #35271
PR Close#35892
This commit improves the `canParse()` method to check that the file is
valid XML and has the expected root node. Previously it was relying upon
a regular expression to do this.
PR Close#35793
Previously, the `Xliff2TranslationParser` only matched files that had a narrow
choice of extensions (e.g. `xlf`) and also relied upon a regular expression
match of an optional XML namespace directive.
This commit relaxes the requirement on both of these and, instead, relies
upon parsing the file into XML and identifying an element of the form
`<xliff version="2.0">` which is the minimal requirement for such files.
PR Close#35793
Previously, the `Xliff1TranslationParser` only matched files that had a narrow
choice of extensions (e.g. `xlf`) and also relied upon a regular expression
match of an optional XML namespace directive.
This commit relaxes the requirement on both of these and, instead, relies
upon parsing the file into XML and identifying an element of the form
`<xliff version="1.2">` which is the minimal requirement for such files.
PR Close#35793
This modifies the internal (but shared with CLI) API for loading/parsing
translation files. Now the parsers will return a new `Diagnostics` object
along with any translations and locale extracted from the file.
It is up to the caller to decide what to do about this, if there are errors
it is suggested that an error is thrown, which is what the `TranslationLoader`
class does.
PR Close#35793
Calling `tick(0, null)` defaults `processNewMacroTasksSynchronously` flag to `true`, however calling `tick(0, null, {})` defaults `processNewMacroTasksSynchronously` to `undefined`. This is undesirable behavior since unless the flag is set explicitly it should still default to `true`.
PR Close#35814
Currently, the `ng_module` rule incorrectly uses manifest paths for
generated imports from the Angular compiler.
This breaks packaging as prodmode output (i.e. `esnext`) is copied in
various targets (`es5` and `es2015`) to the npm package output.
e.g. imports are generated like:
_node_modules/my-pkg/es2015/imports/public-api.js_
```ts
import * as i1 from "angular/packages/bazel/test/ng_package/example/imports/second";
```
while it should be actually:
```ts
import * as i1 from "./second";
```
The imports can, and should be relative so that the files are
self-contained and do not rely on custom module resolution.
PR Close#35841
In some cases, we want to test the AIO app or docs examples against the
locally built Angular packages (for example to ensure that the changes
in a commit do not introduce a breaking change). In order to achieve
this, we have the `ng-packages-installer` script that handles updating
a project's `package.json` file to use the locally built Angular
packages (and appropriate versions for their (dev-/peer-)dependencies).
Previously, `ng-packages-installer` would only consider the locally
built Angular packages (from `dist/packages-dist/`). However, given that
Zone.js is now part of the `angular/angular` repo, it makes sense to
also use the locally built Zone.js package (from `dist/zone.js-dist/`).
Otherwise, the tests might fail for commits that update both the Angular
packages (and related docs examples) and the Zone.js package. An example
of such a simultaneous change (that would have broken tests) is #33838.
This commit updates the script to install the locally built Zone.js
package (in addition to the Angular ones). The commit ensures that the
Zone.js package will always be available alongside the Angular packages
(i.e. that the Zone.js package will be built by the same script that
builds the Angular packages and that the `dist/zone.js-dist/` directory
will be cached on CI).
Note: This problem was discovered while enabling docs examples unit
tests in #34374.
PR Close#35858
The options for `flatModuleId` and `flatModuleOutFile` had been removed in the CLI
from generated libraries with 718ee15b9a.
This has been done because `ng-packagr` (which is used to build the
libraries) automatically set these options in-memory when it compiles the library.
No migration has been created for this because there was no actual need to get rid of
this. Keeping the options in the library `tsconfig` does not cause any problems unless
the `tsconfig` is used outside of `ng-packagr`. This was not anticipated, but is now
commonly done in `ng update` migrations.
The `ng update` migrations try to create an instance of the `AngularCompilerProgram` by
simply parsing the `tsconfig`. The migrations make the valid assumption that `tsconfig` files
are not incomplete/invalid. They _definitely_ are in the file system though. It just works for
libraries because `ng-packagr` in-memory completes the invalid `tsconfig` files, so that they
can be passed to the `@angular/compiler-cli`.
We can't have this logic in the `ng update` migrations because it's
out-of-scope for individual migrations to distinguish between libraries
and applications. Also it would be out-of-scope to parse the
`ng-packagr` configuration and handle the tsconfig in-memory completion.
As a workaround though, we can remove the flat-module bundle options
in-memory when creating the compiler program. This is acceptable since
we don't emit the program and the flat module bundles are not needed.
Fixes#34985.
PR Close#35824
Creates the scaffolding for an @angular/dev-infra-private package
which will not be published to npm but will be pushed to
https://github.com/angular/dev-infra-private-builds repo for each
commit to master.
The contents of this npm package will then be depended on via
package.json dependency for angular/angular angular/angular-cli and
angular/components.
PR Close#35862
This version of `LockFile` creates an "unlocker" child-process that monitors
the main ngcc process and deletes the lock file if it exits unexpectedly.
This resolves the issue where the main process could not be killed by pressing
Ctrl-C at the terminal.
Fixes#35761
PR Close#35861
The previous implementation mixed up the management
of locking a piece of code (both sync and async) with the
management of writing and removing the lockFile that is
used as the flag for which process has locked the code.
This change splits these two concepts up. Apart from
avoiding the awkward base class it allows the `LockFile`
implementation to be replaced cleanly.
PR Close#35861
In pr #34978 colors were not properly set, if we type wrong url in the browser and we are directed to the 404 page there some text is set to white color which as not visible set it to dark gray for visibility
PR Close#35866
This reduces the time that `findEntryPoints` takes from 9701.143ms to 4177.278ms, by reducing the file operations done.
Reference: #35717
PR Close#35756
ng_update_migrations will still access the global yarn cache on its `ng update` call and there is no way to avoid this that I can see but if no other integration tests access the global yarn cache then that one test can have free reign over it.
PR Close#35877
This reverts commit 7d832ae1001b6264bb7124086089e9e69c10c9b6; breaks CI
with error `Concurrent upstream jobs persisted the same file(s) into the workspace:`
PR Close#35857
In some cases, we want to test the AIO app or docs examples against the
locally built Angular packages (for example to ensure that the changes
in a commit do not introduce a breaking change). In order to achieve
this, we have the `ng-packages-installer` script that handles updating
a project's `package.json` file to use the locally built Angular
packages (and appropriate versions for their (dev-/peer-)dependencies).
Previously, `ng-packages-installer` would only consider the locally
built Angular packages (from `dist/packages-dist/`). However, given that
Zone.js is now part of the `angular/angular` repo, it makes sense to
also use the locally built Zone.js package (from `dist/zone.js-dist/`).
Otherwise, the tests might fail for commits that update both the Angular
packages (and related docs examples) and the Zone.js package. An example
of such a simultaneous change (that would have broken tests) is #33838.
This commit updates the script to install the locally built Zone.js
package (in addition to the Angular ones). The commit ensures that the
Zone.js package will always be available alongside the Angular packages
(i.e. that the Zone.js package will be built by the same script that
builds the Angular packages and that the `dist/zone.js-dist/` directory
will be cached on CI).
Note: This problem was discovered while enabling docs examples unit
tests in #34374.
PR Close#35780
Previously, `NgPackagesInstaller` would only look for Angular local
packages and do so by listing all (deeply nested) files in
`dist/packages-dist/` and looking for `package.json` files nested two
levels deep (i.e. `dist/packages-dist/*/package.json`). Thus, it would
unnecessarily check a large number of files.
This commit changes the package detection logic to instead look for
a `package.json` file directly inside each subdirectory of
`dist/packages-dist/`, which speeds up the operation.
It also refactors the code to make it easier to look for packages in
other directories (besides `dist/packages-dist/`). This will be useful
in a subsequent commit to look for and use the locally built `zone.js`
package (from `dist/zone.js-dist/`).
PR Close#35780