Kara Erickson de8ebbdfd0 feat(ivy): make Hammer support tree-shakable (#32203)
Currently, it's not possible to tree-shake away the
coordination layer between HammerJS and Angular's
EventManager. This means that you get the HammerJS
support code in your production bundle whether or
not you actually use the library.

This commit removes the Hammer providers from the
default platform_browser providers list and instead
provides them as part of a `HammerModule`. Apps on
Ivy just need to import the `HammerModule` at root
to turn on Hammer support. Otherwise all Hammer code
will tree-shake away. View Engine apps will require
no change.

BREAKING CHANGE

Previously, in Ivy applications, Hammer providers
were included by default. With this commit, apps
that want Hammer support must import `HammerModule`
in their root module.

PR Close #32203
2019-08-21 11:43:51 -07:00
..

Integration tests for Angular

This directory contains end-to-end tests for Angular. Each directory is a self-contained application that exactly mimics how a user might expect Angular to work, so they allow high-fidelity reproductions of real-world issues.

For this to work, we first build the Angular distribution just like we would publish it to npm, then install the distribution into each app.

To test Angular CLI applications, we use the integration test cli-hello-world. When a significant change is released in the CLI, the application should be updated with ng update:

$ cd integration/cli-hello-world
$ yarn install
$ yarn ng update @angular/cli @angular-devkit/build-angular
# yarn build
# yarn test
# typescript version

Render3 tests

The directory cli-hello-world-ivy-compat contains a test for render3 used with the angular cli.

The cli-hello-world-ivy-minimal contains a minimal ivy app that is meant to mimic the bazel equivalent in packages/core/test/bundling/hello_world, and should be kept similar.

Writing an integration test

The API for each test is:

  • Each sub-directory here is an integration test
  • Each test should have a package.json file
  • The test runner will run yarn and yarn test on the package

This means that the test should be started by test script, like

"scripts": {"test": "runProgramA && assertResultIsGood"}

Note that the package.json file uses a special file://../../dist scheme to reference the Angular packages, so that the locally-built Angular is installed into the test app.

Also, beware of floating (non-locked) dependencies. If in doubt you can install the package directly from file:../../node_modules.

Running integration tests

$ ./integration/run_tests.sh

The test runner will first re-build any stale npm packages, then cd into each subdirectory to execute the test.