Now we have two implementations of Zone in Angular, one is NgZone, the other is NoopZone.
They should have the same signatures, includes
1. properties
2. methods
In this PR, unify the signatures of the two implementations, and remove the unnecessary cast.
PR Close#37581
The current implementation of the TypeScriptReflectionHost does not account for members that
are string literals, i.e. `class A { 'string-literal-prop': string; }`
PR Close#38226
This commit refactors the argument of the `parseEventName` function
to use an object with named properties instead of using an object indexer.
PR Close#38089
Previously the instructions were included in the golden files to monitor the frequency and rate of
the instruction API changes for the purpose of understanding the stability of this API (as it was
considered for becoming a public API and deployed to npm via generated code).
This experiment has confirmed that the instruction API is not stable enough to be used as public
API. We've since also came up with an alternative plan to compile libraries with the Ivy compiler
for npm deployment and this plan does not rely on making Ivy instructions public.
For these reasons, I'm removing the instructions from the golden files as it's no longer important
to track them.
The are three instructions that are still being included: `ɵɵdefineInjectable`, `ɵɵinject`, and
`ɵɵInjectableDef`.
These instructions are already generated by the VE compiler to support tree-shakable providers, and
code depending on these instructions is already deployed to npm. For this reason we need to treat
them as public api.
This change also reduces the code review overhead, because changes to public api golden files now
require multiple approvals.
PR Close#38224
Close#31684.
In some rxjs operator, such as `retryWhen`, rxjs internally will set
`Subscription._unsubscribe` method to null, and the current zone.js monkey patch
didn't handle this case correctly, even rxjs set _unsubscribe to null, zone.js
still return a function by finding the prototype chain.
This PR fix this issue and the following test will pass.
```
const errorGenerator = () => {
return throwError(new Error('error emit'));
};
const genericRetryStrategy = (finalizer: () => void) => (attempts: Observable<any>) =>
attempts.pipe(
mergeMap((error, i) => {
const retryAttempt = i + 1;
if (retryAttempt > 3) {
return throwError(error);
}
return timer(retryAttempt * 1);
}),
finalize(() => finalizer()));
errorGenerator()
.pipe(
retryWhen(genericRetryStrategy(() => {
expect(log.length).toBe(3);
done();
})),
catchError(error => of(error)))
.subscribe()
```
PR Close#37091
Prior to this commit, duplicated styles defined in multiple components in the same file were not
shared between components, thus causing extra payload size. This commit updates compiler logic to
use `ConstantPool` for the styles (while generating the `styles` array on component def), which
enables styles sharing when needed (when duplicates styles are present).
Resolves#38204.
PR Close#38213
Prior to this commit, the `ConstantPool` ignored all primitive values. It turned out that it's
beneficial to include strings above certain length to the pool as well. This commit updates the
`ConstantPool` logic to allow such strings to be shared across multiple instances if needed.
For instance, this is helpful for component styles that might be reused across multiple components
in the same file.
PR Close#38213
This commit splits the transformation into 2 separate steps: Ivy compilation and actual transformation
of corresponding TS nodes. This is needed to have all `o.Expression`s generated before any TS transforms
happen. This allows `ConstantPool` to properly identify expressions that can be shared across multiple
components declared in the same file.
Resolves#38203.
PR Close#38213
This commit refactors Router package to move config utils to a separate file for better
organization and to resolve the problem with circular dependency issue.
Resolves#38212.
PR Close#38229
Close#35473
zone.js nodejs patch should also patch `EventEmitter.prototype.off` as `removeListener`.
So `off` can correctly remove the listeners added by `EventEmitter.prototype.addListener`
PR Close#37863
Close#37333
`clearTimeout` is patched by `zone.js`, and it finally calls the native delegate of `clearTimeout`,
the current implemention only call `clearNative(id)`, but it should call on object `global` like
`clearNative.call(global, id)`. Otherwise in some env, it will throw error
`clearTimeout called on an object that does not implement interface Window`
PR Close#37858
This commit fixes the spelling of the singular form
of the word function to the plural spelling in
packages/core/src/application_init.ts
PR Close#36586
This commit updates synthetic host property and listener instruction names to better align with other instructions.
The `ɵɵupdateSyntheticHostBinding` instruction was renamed to `ɵɵsyntheticHostProperty` (to match the `ɵɵhostProperty`
instruction name) and `ɵɵcomponentHostSyntheticListener` was renamed to `ɵɵsyntheticHostListener` since this
instruction is generated for both Components and Directives (so 'component' is removed from the name).
This PR is a followup after PR #35568.
PR Close#38150
This is part of a re-factor of template syntax and
structure. The first phase breaks out template syntax
into multiple documents. The second phase will be
a rewrite of each doc.
Specifically, this PR does the following:
- Breaks sections of the current template syntax document each into their own page.
- Corrects the links to and from these new pages.
- Adds template syntax subsection to the left side NAV which contains all the new pages.
- Adds the new files to pullapprove.
PR Close#36954
HTML is very lenient when it comes to closing elements, so Angular's parser has
rules that specify which elements are implicitly closed when closing a tag.
The parser keeps track of the nesting of tag names using a stack and parsing
a closing tag will pop as many elements off the stack as possible, provided
that the elements can be implicitly closed.
For example, consider the following templates:
- `<div><br></div>`, the `<br>` is implicitly closed when parsing `</div>`,
because `<br>` is a void element.
- `<div><p></div>`, the `<p>` is implicitly closed when parsing `</div>`,
as `<p>` is allowed to be closed by the closing of its parent element.
- `<ul><li>A <li>B</ul>`, the first `<li>` is implicitly closed when parsing
the second `<li>`, whereas the second `<li>` would be implicitly closed when
parsing the `</ul>`.
In all the cases above the parsed structure would be correct, however the source
span of the closing `</div>` would incorrectly be assigned to the element that
is implicitly closed. The problem was that closing an element would associate
the source span with the element at the top of the stack, however this may not
be the element that is actually being closed if some elements would be
implicitly closed.
This commit fixes the issue by assigning the end source span with the element
on the stack that is actually being closed. Any implicitly closed elements that
are popped off the stack will not be assigned an end source span, as the
implicit closing implies that no ending element is present.
Note that there is a difference between self-closed elements such as `<input/>`
and implicitly closed elements such as `<input>`. The former does have an end
source span (identical to its start source span) whereas the latter does not.
Fixes#36118
Resolves FW-2004
PR Close#38126
`ls_rollup_bundle` is no longer needed since we could invoke `ng_rollup_bundle`
directly.
Background: language service runs rollup to produce a single file to reduce
startup time in the editor. However, due to the need to load dynamic versions
of typescript at runtime (think the case where users can change typescript
version in their editor), we hack the "banner" to export a CommonJS default function,
so that we could dynamically load the typescript module provided at runtime via AMD
and use it throughout the implementation.
PR Close#38086
PR Close#38129
Currently we read lifecycle hooks eagerly during `ɵɵdefineComponent`.
The result is that it is not possible to do any sort of meta-programing
such as mixins or adding lifecycle hooks using custom decorators since
any such code executes after `ɵɵdefineComponent` has extracted the
lifecycle hooks from the prototype. Additionally the behavior is
inconsistent between AOT and JIT mode. In JIT mode overriding lifecycle
hooks is possible because the whole `ɵɵdefineComponent` is placed in
getter which is executed lazily. This is because JIT mode must compile a
template which can be specified as `templateURL` and those we are
waiting for its resolution.
- `+` `ɵɵdefineComponent` becomes smaller as it no longer needs to copy
lifecycle hooks from prototype to `ComponentDef`
- `-` `ɵɵNgOnChangesFeature` feature is now always included with the
codebase as it is no longer tree shakable.
Previously we have read lifecycle hooks from prototype in the
`ɵɵdefineComponent` so that lifecycle hook access would be monomorphic.
This decision was made before we had `T*` data structures. By not
reading the lifecycle hooks we are moving the megamorhic read form
`ɵɵdefineComponent` to instructions. However, the reads happen on
`firstTemplatePass` only and are subsequently cached in the `T*` data
structures. The result is that the overall performance should be same
(or slightly better as the intermediate `ComponentDef` has been
removed.)
- [ ] Remove `ɵɵNgOnChangesFeature` from compiler. (It will no longer
be a feature.)
- [ ] Discuss the future of `Features` as they hinder meta-programing.
Fix#30497
PR Close#38119
We currently use 16 bits to store information about nodes in a view.
The 16 bits give us 65536 entries in the array, but the problem is that while
the number is large, it can be reached by ~4300 directive instances with host
bindings which could realistically happen is a very large view, as seen in #37876.
Once we hit the limit, we end up overflowing which eventually leads to a runtime error.
These changes bump to using 20 bits which gives us around 1048576 entries in
the array or 16 times more than the current amount which could still technically
be reached, but is much less likely and the user may start hitting browser limitations
by that point.
I picked the 20 bit number since it gives us enough buffer over the 16 bit one,
while not being as massive as a 24 bit or 32 bit.
I've also added a dev mode assertion so it's easier to track down if it happens
again in the future.
Fixes#37876.
PR Close#38014
This commit adds a script to build @angular/language-service
locally so that it can be consumed by the Angular extension for
local development.
PR Close#38103
Currently the Ivy language service bundle is [10MB](
https://unpkg.com/browse/@angular/language-service@10.0.4/bundles/) because we
accidentally included typescript in the bundle.
With this change, the bundle size goes down to 1.6MB, which is even smaller
than the View Engine bundle (1.8MB).
```bash
$ yarn bazel build //packages/language-service/bundles:ivy
$ ls -lh dist/bin/packages/language-service/bundles/ivy.umd.js
1.6M Jul 15 15:49 dist/bin/packages/language-service/bundles/ivy.umd.js
```
PR Close#38088
Fixes the following issues related to how we validate properties during JIT:
- The invalid property warning was printing `null` as the node name
for `ng-content`. The problem is that when generating a template from
`ng-content` we weren't capturing the node name.
- We weren't running property validation on `ng-container` at all.
This used to be supported on ViewEngine and seems like an oversight.
In the process of making these changes, I found and cleaned up a
few places where we were passing in `LView` unnecessarily.
PR Close#37773
Adds Firefox as browser to `dev-infra/browsers` with RBE
compatibility. The default Firefox browser is not compatible similar to
the default Chromium version exposed by `rules_webtesting`.
The Angular Components repository will use this browser target as
it enables RBE support. Also it gives us more flexibility about
the Firefox version we test against. The version provided by
`rules_webtesting` is very old and most likely not frequently
updated (based on past experience).
PR Close#38029
The `fs.relative()` method assumed that the file-system is a single tree,
which is not the case in Windows, where you can have multiple drives,
e.g. `C:`, `D:` etc.
This commit changes `fs.relative()` so that it no longer forces the result
to be a `PathSegment` and then flows that refactoring through the rest of
the compiler-cli (and ngcc). The main difference is that now, in some cases,
we needed to check whether the result is "rooted", i.e an `AbsoluteFsPath`,
rather than a `PathSegment`, before using it.
Fixes#36777
PR Close#38030
In CLI v10 there was a move to use the new solution-style tsconfig
which became available in TS 3.9.
The result of this is that the standard tsconfig.json no longer contains
important information such as "paths" mappings, which ngcc might need to
correctly compute dependencies.
ngcc (and ngc and tsc) infer the path to tsconfig.json if not given an
explicit tsconfig file-path. But now that means it infers the solution
tsconfig rather than one that contains the useful information it used to
get.
This commit logs a warning in this case to inform the developer
that they might not have meant to load this tsconfig and offer
alternative options.
Fixes#36386
PR Close#38003
In an effort to make angular documentation easier for users to read,
we are moving the router tutorial currently in router.md to a new file.
To support this change, we have done the following:
* Update files to fix any broken links caused by moving the file
* Updated the new file to follow tutorial guidelines
* Add the new file to the table of contents under, Tutorials.
PR Close#37979
Builds on top of #34655 to support more cases that could be using a pipe inside host bindings (e.g. ternary expressions or function calls).
Fixes#37610.
PR Close#37883
Interestingly enough, our rollup bundle optimization pipeline
did not work properly before 1b827b058e5060963590628d4735e6ac83c6dfdd.
Unused declarations were not elided because build optimizer did not
consider the Angular packages as side-effect free. Build optimizer has
a hard-coded list of Angular packages that are considered side-effect
free. Though this one did not match in the old version of the rollup
bundle rule, as internal sources were resolved through their resolved
bazel-out paths. Hence build optimizer could not detect the known
Angular framework packages. Now though, since we leverage the
Bazel-idiomatic `@bazel/rollup` implementation, sources are resolved
through linked `node_modules`, and build optimizer is able to properly
detect files as side-effect free.
PR Close#37778
The language-service package currently sets the `module` `package.json`
property and refers to a folder called `fesm5`. The language-service
though does not build with `ng_package` so this folder never existed.
Now with APF v10, ng package would not generate this folder either.
We should just remove the property as the primary entry-point is
the UMD bundle resolved through `main`. There is no module flavour
exposed to the NPM package as `pkg_npm` uses the named AMD module
devmode output that doesn't work for `module`.
PR Close#37778
It looks like there is a leftover golden in the `ng_package`
tests that is no longer used anywhere and does not reflect
the latest Angular Package Format v10 changes. We should be
able to remove it to keep our codebase healthy.
PR Close#37778
Refactors the `ng_rollup_bundle` rule to a macro that relies on
the `@bazel/rollup` package. This means that the rule no longer
deals with custom ESM5 flavour output, but rather only builds
prodmode ES2015 output. This matches the common build output
in Angular projects, and optimizations done in CLI where
ES2015 is the default optimization input.
The motiviation for this change is:
* Not duplicating rollup Bazel rules. Instead leveraging the official
rollup rule.
* Not dealing with a third TS output flavor in Bazel.The ESM5 flavour has the
potential of slowing down local development (as it requires compilation replaying)
* Updating the rule to be aligned with current CLI optimizations.
This also _fixes_ a bug that surfaced in the old rollup bundle rule.
Code that is unused, is not removed properly. The new rule fixes this by
setting the `toplevel` flag. This instructs terser to remove unused
definitions at top-level. This matches the optimization applied in CLI
projects. Notably the CLI doesn't need this flag, as code is always
wrapped by Webpack. Hence, the unused code eliding runs by default.
PR Close#37778
Adds the `LinkablePackageInfo` to the `ng_module` rule. This allows
the linker to properly link `ng_module` targets in Node runtime
actions. Currently this does not work properly and packages like
`@angular/core` are not linked, so we cannot rely on the linker.
9a5de3728b/internal/linker/link_node_modules.bzl (L144-L146).
PR Close#37778
As of Angular Package Format v10, we no longer ship a `fesm5` and
`fesm5` output in packages. We made this change to the `ng_package`
rule but intentionally did not clean up related build actions.
This follow-up commit cleans this up by:
* No longer building fesm5 bundles, or providing esm2015 output.
* No longer requesting and building a third flavor for ESM5. We can
use TSC to downlevel ES2015 sources/prodmode output similarly to how it
is done in `ng-packagr`.
The third output flavor (ESM5) resulted in a build slow-down as we
required a full recompilation of sources. Now, we only have a single
compilation for prodmode output, and then downlevel it on-demand
to ES5 for the UMD bundles. Here is timing for building the release
packages in `angular/angular` before this change, and afterwards:
* Before: 462.157s = ~7.7min
* After: 339.703s = ~5.6min
This signifies a time reduction by 27% when running
`./scripts/build/build-packages-dist.sh`.
PR Close#37778
The `ng_module` rule supports the generation of flat module bundles. In
View Engine, information about this flat module bundle is exposed
as a Bazel provider. This is helpful as other rules like `ng_package`
could rely on this information to determine entry-points for the APF.
With Ivy this currently does not work because the flat module
information is not exposed in the provider. The reason for this is
unclear. We should also provide this information in Ivy so that rules
like `ng_package` can also determine the correct entry-points when a
package is built specifically with `--config=ivy`.
PR Close#36971