In chapter internationalization (i18n) at section "Deploy multiple locales" the syntax for angular.json is wrong.
This commit fixes the angular.json, when specifying the translation file and the baseHref for a locale.
PR Close#38553
In many testing scenarios, there is a common pattern:
1. Overwrite template (inline or external)
2. Find cursor position
3. Call one of language service APIs
4. Inspect spans in result
In order to faciliate this pattern, this commit refactors
`MockHost.overwrite()` and `MockHost.overwriteInlineTemplate()` to
allow a faux cursor symbol `¦` to be injected into the template, and
the methods will automatically remove it before updating the script snapshot.
Both methods will return the cursor position and the new text without
the cursor symbol.
This makes testing very convenient. Here's a typical example:
```ts
const {position, text} = mockHost.overwrite('template.html', `{{ ti¦tle }}`);
const quickInfo = ngLS.getQuickInfoAtPosition('template.html', position);
const {start, length} = quickInfo!.textSpan;
expect(text.substring(start, start + length)).toBe('title');
```
PR Close#38552
This commit introduces two visitors, one for Template AST and the other
for Expression AST to allow us to easily find the node that most closely
corresponds to a given cursor position.
This is crucial because many language service APIs take in a `position`
parameter, and the information returned depends on how well we can find
a good candidate node.
In View Engine implementation of language service, the search for the node
and the processing of information to return the result are strongly coupled.
This makes the code hard to understand and hard to debug because the stack
trace is often littered with layers of visitor calls.
With this new feature, we could test the "searching" part separately and
colocate all the logic (aka hacks) that's required to retrieve an accurate
span for a given node.
Right now, only the most "narrow" node is returned by the main exported
function `findNodeAtPosition`. If needed, we could expose the entire AST
path, or expose other methods to provide more context for a node.
Note that due to limitations in the template AST interface, there are
a few known cases where microsyntax spans are not recorded properly.
This will be dealt with in a follow-up PR.
PR Close#38540
We had a couple of places where we were assuming that if a particular
symbol has a value, then it will exist at runtime. This is true in most cases,
but it breaks down for `const` enums.
Fixes#38513.
PR Close#38542
When creating a commit with the git cli, git pre-populates the editor
used to enter the commit message with some comments (i.e. lines starting
with `#`). These comments contain helpful instructions or information
regarding the changes that are part of the commit. As happens with all
commit message comments, they are removed by git and do not end up in
the final commit message.
However, the file that is passed to the `commit-msg` to be validated
still contains these comments. This may affect the outcome of the commit
message validation. In such cases, the author will not realize that the
commit message is not in the desired format until the linting checks
fail on CI (which validates the final commit messages and is not
affected by this issue), usually several minutes later.
Possible ways in which the commit message validation outcome can be
affected:
- The minimum body length check may pass incorrectly, even if there is
no actual body, because the comments are counted as part of the body.
- The maximum line length check may fail incorrectly due to a very long
line in the comments.
This commit fixes the problem by removing comment lines before
validating a commit message.
Fixes#37865
PR Close#38438
At some places external link icons appear as a subscript. For example
8366effeec/aio/content/guide/roadmap.md\#L37
this commit places external link icons in the middle to improve there
positioning in a line.
PR Close#38410
updating my twitter handle and bio as it is changed from
Angular and Web Tech to Angular also the
twitter handle is changed to SantoshYadavDev
PR Close#37967
Fix a bug in the HTML sanitizer where an unclosed iframe tag would
result in an escaped closing body tag as the output:
_sanitizeHtml(document, '<iframe>') => '</body>'
This closing body tag comes from the DOMParserHelper where the HTML to be
sanitized is wrapped with surrounding body tags. When an opening iframe
tag is parsed by DOMParser, which DOMParserHelper uses, everything up
until its matching closing tag is consumed as a text node. In the above
example this includes the appended closing body tag.
By removing the explicit closing body tag from the DOMParserHelper and
relying on the body tag being closed implicitly at the end, the above
example is sanitized as expected:
_sanitizeHtml(document, '<iframe>') => ''
PR Close#38454
Previously nested container placeholders (i.e. HTML elements) were
not being fully parsed from translation files. This resulted in bad
translation of messages that contain these placeholders.
Note that this causes the canonical message ID to change for
such messages. Currently all messages generated from
templates use "legacy" message ids that are not affected by
this change, so this fix should not be seen as a breaking change.
Fixes#38422
PR Close#38452
When creating a `ParsedTranslation` from a set of message parts and
placeholder names a textual representation of the message is computed.
Previously the last placeholder and text segment were missing from this
computed message string.
PR Close#38452
This commit adds a `getTemplateOfComponent` method to the
`TemplateTypeChecker` API, which retrieves the actual nodes parsed and used
by the compiler for template type-checking. This is advantageous for the
language service, which may need to query other APIs in
`TemplateTypeChecker` that require the same nodes used to bind the template
while generating the TCB.
Fixes#38352
PR Close#38355
Creates a tool within ng-dev to checkout a pending PR from the upstream repository. This automates
an action that many developers on the Angular team need to do periodically in the process of testing
and reviewing incoming PRs.
Example usage:
ng-dev pr checkout <pr-number>
PR Close#38474
This commit introduces a new subscription in the `routerLinkActive` directive which triggers an update
when any of its associated routerLinks have changes. `RouterLinkActive` not only needs to know when
links are added or removed, but it also needs to know about if a link it already knows about
changes in some way.
Quick note that `from...mergeAll` is used instead of just a simple
`merge` (or `scheduled...mergeAll`) to avoid introducing new rxjs
operators in order to keep bundle size down.
Fixes#18469
PR Close#38511
Similarly to the change we landed in the `@angular/core` reflection
capabilities, we need to make sure that ngcc can detect pass-through
delegate constructors for classes using downleveled ES2015 output.
More details can be found in the preceding commit, and in the issue
outlining the problem: #38453.
Fixes#38453.
PR Close#38500
In the Angular Package Format, we always shipped UMD bundles and previously even ES5 module output.
With V10, we removed the ES5 module output but kept the UMD ES5 output.
For this, we were able to remove our second TypeScript transpilation. Instead we started only
building ES2015 output and then downleveled it to ES5 UMD for the NPM packages. This worked
as expected but unveiled an issue in the `@angular/core` reflection capabilities.
In JIT mode, Angular determines constructor parameters (for DI) using the `ReflectionCapabilities`. The
reflection capabilities basically read runtime metadata of classes to determine the DI parameters. Such
metadata can be either stored in static class properties like `ctorParameters` or within TypeScript's `design:params`.
If Angular comes across a class that does not have any parameter metadata, it tries to detect if the
given class is actually delegating to an inherited class. It does this naively in JIT by checking if the
stringified class (function in ES5) matches a certain pattern. e.g.
```js
function MatTable() {
var _this = _super.apply(this, arguments) || this;
```
These patterns are reluctant to changes of the class output. If a class is not recognized properly, the
DI parameters will be assumed empty and the class is **incorrectly** constructed without arguments.
This actually happened as part of v10 now. Since we downlevel ES2015 to ES5 (instead of previously
compiling sources directly to ES5), the class output changed slightly so that Angular no longer detects
it. e.g.
```js
var _this = _super.apply(this, __spread(arguments)) || this;
```
This happens because the ES2015 output will receive an auto-generated constructor if the class
defines class properties. This constructor is then already containing an explicit `super` call.
```js
export class MatTable extends CdkTable {
constructor() {
super(...arguments);
this.disabled = true;
}
}
```
If we then downlevel this file to ES5 with `--downlevelIteration`, TypeScript adjusts the `super` call so that
the spread operator is no longer used (not supported in ES5). The resulting super call is different to the
super call that would have been emitted if we would directly transpile to ES5. Ultimately, Angular no
longer detects such classes as having an delegate constructor -> and DI breaks.
We fix this by expanding the rather naive RegExp patterns used for the reflection capabilities
so that downleveled pass-through/delegate constructors are properly detected. There is a risk
of a false-positive as we cannot detect whether `__spread` is actually the TypeScript spread
helper, but given the reflection patterns already make lots of assumptions (e.g. that `super` is
actually the superclass, we should be fine making this assumption too. The false-positive would
not result in a broken app, but rather in unnecessary providers being injected (as a noop).
Fixes#38453
PR Close#38500
This commit introduces a new subscription in the `routerLinkActive` directive which triggers an update
when any of its associated routerLinks have changes. `RouterLinkActive` not only needs to know when
links are added or removed, but it also needs to know about if a link it already knows about
changes in some way.
Quick note that `from...mergeAll` is used instead of just a simple
`merge` (or `scheduled...mergeAll`) to avoid introducing new rxjs
operators in order to keep bundle size down.
Fixes#18469
PR Close#38349
Now that Ivy compiler has a proper `TemplateTypeChecker` interface
(see https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/38105) we no longer need to
keep the temporary compiler implementation.
The temporary compiler was created to enable testing infrastructure to
be developed for the Ivy language service.
This commit removes the whole `ivy/compiler` directory and moves two
functions `createTypeCheckingProgramStrategy` and
`getOrCreateTypeCheckScriptInfo` to the `LanguageService` class.
Also re-enable the Ivy LS test since it's no longer blocking development.
PR Close#38310
This commit fixes a regression from "fix(common): ensure
scrollRestoration is writable (#30630)" that caused scrolling to not
happen at all in browsers that do not support scroll restoration. The
issue was that `supportScrollRestoration` was updated to return `false`
if a browser did not have a writable `scrollRestoration`. However, the
previous behavior was that the function would return `true` if
`window.scrollTo` was defined. Every scrolling function in the
`ViewportScroller` used `supportScrollRestoration` and, with the update
in bb88c9fa3d, no scrolling would be
performed if a browser did not have writable `scrollRestoration` but
_did_ have `window.scrollTo`.
Note, that this failure was detected in the saucelabs tests. IE does not
support scroll restoration so IE tests were failing.
PR Close#38468
When removal of one view causes removal of another one from the same
ViewContainerRef it triggers an error with views length calculation. This commit
fixes this bug by removing a view from the list of available views before invoking
actual view removal (which might be recursive and relies on the length of the list
of available views).
Fixes#38201.
PR Close#38317
This commit replaces the old and slow `ReflectiveInjector` that was
deprecated in v5 with the new `Injector`. Note: This change was only
done in the spec files inside the `aio` folder.
While changing this, it was not possible to directly use `Injector.get`
to get the correct typing for the mocked classes. For example:
```typescript
locationService = injector.get<TestLocationService>(LocationService);
```
Fails with:
> Argument of type 'typeof LocationService' is not assignable to parameter
of type 'Type<TestLocationService> | InjectionToken<TestLocationService> |
AbstractType<TestLocationService>'.
Type 'typeof LocationService' is not assignable to type 'Type<TestLocationService>'.
Property 'searchResult' is missing in type 'LocationService' but required in type
'TestLocationService'.
Therefore, it was necessary to first convert to `unknown` and then to
`TestLocationService`.
```typescript
locationService = injector.get(LocationService) as unknown as TestLocationService;
```
PR Close#38408
Previously we added a browser target for `firefox` into the
dev-infra package. It looks like as part of this change, we
accidentally switched the local web testing target to `firefox`.
Web tests are not commonly run locally as we use Domino and
NodeJS tests for primary development. Sometimes though we intend
to run tests in a browser. This would currently work with Firefox
but not on Windows (as Firefox is a noop there in Bazel).
This commit switches the primary browser back to `chromium`. Also
Firefox has been added as a second browser to web testing targets.
This allows us to reduce browsers in the legacy Saucelabs job. i.e.
not running Chrome and Firefox there. This should increase stability
and speed up the legacy job (+ reduced rate limit for Saucelabs).
PR Close#38435
PR Close#38450
Firefox ESR tests fail running the acceptance tests on saucelabs. These tests are being
disabled while investigating the failure as it is not entirely clear whether this is
saucelabs failure or a something like a memory pressure error in the test itself.
PR Close#37647
PR Close#38450
We should define ngDevMode to false in Closure, but --define only works in the global scope.
With ngDevMode not being set to false, this size tracking test provides little value but a lot of
headache to continue updating the size.
PR Close#38449
The `@HostListener` functions and lifecycle hooks aren't intended to be public API but
do need to appear in the `.d.ts` files or type checking will break. Adding the
nodoc annotation will correctly hide this function on the docs site.
Again, note that `@internal` cannot be used because the result would be
that the functions then do not appear in the `.d.ts` files. This would
break lifecycle hooks because the class would be seen as not
implementing the interface correctly. This would also break
`HostListener` because the compiled templates would attempt to call the
`onClick` functions, but those would also not appear in the `d.ts` and
would produce errors like "Property 'onClick' does not exist on type 'RouterLinkWithHref'".
PR Close#38448
Fixes an error if a CSS custom property, used inside a host binding, has a
number in its name. The error is thrown because the styling parser only
expects characters from A to Z,dashes, underscores and a handful of other
characters.
Fixes#37292.
PR Close#38432
Previously commit message types were provided as part of the ng-dev config in the repository
using the ng-dev toolset. This change removes this configuration expectation and instead
predefines the valid types for commit messages.
Additionally, with this new unified set of types requirements around providing a scope have
been put in place. Scopes are either required, optional or forbidden for a given commit
type.
PR Close#38430
We recently updated the benchpress package to have a more loose
Angular core peer dependency, and less other unused dependencies.
We should make sure to use that in the dev-infra package so that
peer dependencies can be satisified in consumer projects, and so
that less unused dependencies are brought into projects.
PR Close#38440
When a commit message fails validation, rather than throwing out the commit message entirely
the commit message is saved into a draft file and restored on the next commit attempt.
PR Close#38304
Runs the `ng-dev format changed` command whenever the `git commit` command is
run. As all changes which are checked by CI will require this check passing, this
change can prevent needless roundtrips to correct lint/formatting errors. This
automatic formatting can be bypassed with the `--no-verify` flag on the `git commit`
command.
PR Close#38402
Adds an ng-dev formatter option to format all of the staged files. This will can
be used to format only the staged files during the pre-commit hook.
PR Close#38402
In TypeScript 3.8 support was added for type-only imports, which only brings in
the symbol as a type, not their value. The Angular compiler did not yet take
the type-only keyword into account when representing symbols in type positions
as value expressions. The class metadata that the compiler emits would include
the value expression for its parameter types, generating actual imports as
necessary. For type-only imports this should not be done, as it introduces an
actual import of the module that was originally just a type-only import.
This commit lets the compiler deal with type-only imports specially, preventing
a value expression from being created.
Backports #37912 to patch
PR Close#38415
Currently the Closure-related tests are not tree-shaking the dev-mode-only content, thus payload
size checks are failing even if dev-mode-only content is added.
The 2e9fdbde9e commit
added some logic to JIT compiler, which is likely triggered the payload size increase. This commit
updates the payload size limits for Closure-related test to get master and patch branches back to
the "green" state.
PR Close#38411
"Quote expressions" are expressions that start with an identifier followed by a
comma, allowing arbitrary syntax to follow. These kinds of expressions would
throw a an error in the template type checker, which would make them hard to
track down. As quote expressions are not generally used at all, the error would
typically occur for URLs that would inadvertently occur in a binding:
```html
<a [href]="https://example.com"></a>
```
This commit lets such bindings be inferred as the `any` type.
Fixes#36568
Resolves FW-2051
PR Close#37917
When using the safe navigation operator in a binding expression, a temporary
variable may be used for storing the result of a side-effectful call.
For example, the following template uses a pipe and a safe property access:
```html
<app-person-view [enabled]="enabled" [firstName]="(person$ | async)?.name"></app-person-view>
```
The result of the pipe evaluation is stored in a temporary to be able to check
whether it is present. The temporary variable needs to be declared in a separate
statement and this would also cause the full expression itself to be pulled out
into a separate statement. This would compile into the following
pseudo-code instructions:
```js
var temp = null;
var firstName = (temp = pipe('async', ctx.person$)) == null ? null : temp.name;
property('enabled', ctx.enabled)('firstName', firstName);
```
Notice that the pipe evaluation happens before evaluating the `enabled` binding,
such that the runtime's internal binding index would correspond with `enabled`,
not `firstName`. This introduces a problem when the pipe uses `WrappedValue` to
force a change to be detected, as the runtime would then mark the binding slot
corresponding with `enabled` as dirty, instead of `firstName`. This results
in the `enabled` binding to be updated, triggering setters and affecting how
`OnChanges` is called.
In the pseudo-code above, the intermediate `firstName` variable is not strictly
necessary---it only improved readability a bit---and emitting it inline with
the binding itself avoids the out-of-order execution of the pipe:
```js
var temp = null;
property('enabled', ctx.enabled)
('firstName', (temp = pipe('async', ctx.person$)) == null ? null : temp.name);
```
This commit introduces a new `BindingForm` that results in the above code to be
generated and adds compiler and acceptance tests to verify the proper behavior.
Fixes#37194
PR Close#37911
In JIT compiled apps, component definitions are compiled upon first
access. For a component class `A` that extends component class `B`, the
`B` component is also compiled when the `InheritDefinitionFeature` runs
during the compilation of `A` before it has finalized. A problem arises
when the compilation of `B` would flush the NgModule scoping queue,
where the NgModule declaring `A` is still pending. The scope information
would be applied to the definition of `A`, but its compilation is still
in progress so requesting the component definition would compile `A`
again from scratch. This "inner compilation" is correctly assigned the
NgModule scope, but once the "outer compilation" of `A` finishes it
would overwrite the inner compilation's definition, losing the NgModule
scope information.
In summary, flushing the NgModule scope queue could trigger a reentrant
compilation, where JIT compilation is non-reentrant. To avoid the
reentrant compilation, a compilation depth counter is introduced to
avoid flushing the NgModule scope during nested compilations.
Fixes#37105
PR Close#37795
The changes in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/38368 split `render3/i18n.ts` files into
smaller scripts, but the PullApprove config was not updated to reflect that. This commit updates
the PullApprove config to reflect the recent changes in i18n-related files.
PR Close#38403
Queries weren't matching directives that provide themselves via string
injection tokens, because the assumption was that any string passed to
a query decorator refers to a template reference.
These changes make it so we match both template references and
providers while giving precedence to the template references.
Fixes#38313.
Fixes#38315.
PR Close#38321
When we were outputting class members for `setClassMetadata` calls,
we were using the string representation of the member name. This can
lead to us generating invalid code when the name contains dashes and
is quoted (e.g. `@Output() 'has-dashes' = new EventEmitter()`), because
the quotes will be stripped for the string representation.
These changes fix the issue by using the original name AST node that was
used for the declaration and which knows whether it's supposed to be
quoted or not.
Fixes#38311.
PR Close#38387
This commit contains no changes to code. It only breaks `i18n.ts` file
into `i18n.ts` + `i18n_apply.ts` + `i18n_parse.ts` +
`i18n_postprocess.ts` for easier maintenance.
PR Close#38368
When a ServerStylesHost instance is destroyed, all of the shared styles added to the DOM
head element by that instance should be removed. Without this removal, over time a large
number of style rules will build up and cause extra memory pressure. This brings the
ServerStylesHost in line with the DomStylesHost used by the platform browser, which
performs this same cleanup.
PR Close#38367
The currently selected ICU was incorrectly being stored it `TNode`
rather than in `LView`.
Remove: `TIcuContainerNode.activeCaseIndex`
Add: `LView[TIcu.currentCaseIndex]`
PR Close#38345
This commit performs minor refactoring in Forms package to get rid of duplicate functions.
It looks like the functions were duplicated due to a slightly different type signatures, but
their logic is completely identical. The logic in retained functions remains the same and now
these function also accept a generic type to achieve the same level of type safety.
PR Close#38380
This commit uses getElementById and getElementsByName when an anchor scroll happens,
to avoid escaping the anchor and wrapping the code in a try/catch block.
Related to #28960
PR Close#38372
This change provides better typing for the `LView.debug` property which
is intended to be used by humans while debugging the application with
`ngDevMode` turned on.
In addition this chang also adds jasmine matchers for better asserting
that `LView` is in the correct state.
PR Close#38359
Extract `icuSwitchCase`, `icuUpdateCase`, `removeNestedIcu` into
separate functions to align them with the `.debug` property text.
PR Close#38154
PR Close#38370
I18n code breaks up internationalization into opCodes which are then stored
in arrays. To make it easier to debug the codebase this PR adds `debug`
property to the arrays which presents the data in human readable format.
PR Close#38154
PR Close#38370
The Chrome debugger is not able to render the syntax properly when the
code contains backticks. This is a known issue in Chrome and they have an
open [issue](https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=659515) for that.
This commit adds the work-around to use double backslash with one
backtick ``\\` `` at the end of the line.
This can be reproduced by running the following command:
`yarn bazel test //packages/forms/test --config=debug`
When opening the chrome debugger tools, you should see the correct
code highlighting syntax.
PR Close#38332
The order of asset- and data-groups in `ngsw-config.json` affects how a
request is handled by the ServiceWorker. Previously, this was not
clearly documented.
This commit describes how the order of asset-/data-groups affects
request handling.
Closes#21189
PR Close#38364
Previously, the [processCliCommands][1] dgeni processor, which is used
to generate the docs pages for the CLI commands, expected the CLI
commands overview page (with a URL of `cli`) to exist as a child of a
top-level navigation section (`CLI Commands`). If one tried to move the
`CLI Commands` section inside another section, `processCliCommnads`
would fail to find it and thus fail to generate the CLI commands docs.
This problem came up in #38353.
This commit updates the `processCliCommands` processor to be able to
find it regardless of the position of the `CLI Commands` section inside
the navigation doc.
[1]:
dca4443a8e/aio/tools/transforms/cli-docs-package/processors/processCliCommands.js (L7-L9)
PR Close#38365
Roll forward of #38147.
This allows Closure compiler to tree shake unused constructor calls to `NgModuleFactory`, which is otherwise considered
side-effectful. The Angular compiler generates factory objects which are exported but typically not used, as they are
only needed for compatibility with View Engine. This results in top-level constructor calls, such as:
```typescript
export const FooNgFactory = new NgModuleFactory(Foo);
```
`NgModuleFactory` has a side-effecting constructor, so this statement cannot be tree shaken, even if `FooNgFactory` is
never imported. The `NgModuleFactory` continues to reference its associated `NgModule` and prevents the module and all
its unused dependencies from being tree shaken, making Closure builds significantly larger than necessary.
The fix here is to wrap `NgModuleFactory` constructor with `noSideEffects(() => /* ... */)`, which tricks the Closure
compiler into assuming that the invoked function has no side effects. This allows it to tree-shake unused
`NgModuleFactory()` constructors when they aren't imported. Since the factory can be removed, the module can also be
removed (if nothing else references it), thus tree shaking unused dependencies as expected.
The one notable edge case is for lazy loaded modules. Internally, lazy loading is done as a side effect when the lazy
script is evaluated. For Angular, this side effect is registering the `NgModule`. In Ivy this is done by the
`NgModuleFactory` constructor, so lazy loaded modules **cannot** have their top-level `NgModuleFactory` constructor
call tree shaken. We handle this case by looking for the `id` field on `@NgModule` annotations. All lazy loaded modules
include an `id`. When this `id` is found, the `NgModuleFactory` is generated **without** with `noSideEffects()` call,
so Closure will not tree shake it and the module will lazy-load correctly.
PR Close#38320
This introduces a new `ModuleInfo` interface to represent some of the statically analyzed data from an `NgModule`. This
gets passed into transforms to give them more context around a given `NgModule` in the compilation.
PR Close#38320
PR #36601 introduces icons on all links if the link contains
https:// or http:// but there were some internal links left
which contained https://angular.io. Removed https://angular.io
from all these links.
PR Close#38360
Some specialised browsers that do not support scroll restoration
(e.g. some web crawlers) do not allow `scrollRestoration` to be
writable.
We already sniff the browser to see if it has the `window.scrollTo`
method, so now we also check whether `window.history.scrollRestoration`
is writable too.
Fixes#30629
PR Close#30630
PR Close#38357
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 `ngOnDestroy` method called `unsubscribe` regardless of if `subscription` had
been initialized. This can lead to an error attempting to call `unsubscribe` of undefined.
This change prevents this error, and instead only attempts `unsubscribe` when the subscription
has been defined.
PR Close#38344
The `TscPlugin` interface using a type of `ts.CompilerHost&Partial<UnifiedModulesHost>` for the `host` parameter
of the `wrapHost` method. However, prior to this change, the interface implementing `NgTscPlugin` class used a
type of `ts.CompilerHost&UnifiedModulesHost` for the parameter. This change corrects the inconsistency and
allows `UnifiedModulesHost` members to be optional when using the `NgtscPlugin`.
PR Close#38004
Previously, each Angular repository had its own strategy/configuration
for merging pull requests and cherry-picking. We worked out a new
strategy for labeling/branching/versioning that should be the canonical
strategy for all actively maintained projects in the Angular organization.
This PR provides a `ng-dev` merge configuration that implements the
labeling/branching/merging as per the approved proposal.
See the following document for the proposal this commit is based on
for the merge script labeling/branching: https://docs.google.com/document/d/197kVillDwx-RZtSVOBtPb4BBIAw0E9RT3q3v6DZkykU
The merge tool label configuration can be conveniently accesed
within each `.ng-dev` configuration, and can also be extended
if there are special labels on individual projects. This is one
of the reasons why the labels are not directly built into the
merge script. The script should remain unopinionated and flexible.
The configuration is conceptually powerful enough to achieve the
procedures as outlined in the versioning/branching/labeling proposal.
PR Close#38223
The merge tool provides a way for configurations to determine the branches
for a label lazily. This is supported because it allows labels to respect
the currently selected base branch through the Github UI. e.g. if `target: label`
is applied on a PR and the PR is based on the patch branch, then the change
could only go into the selected target branch, while if it would be based on
`master`, the change would be cherry-picked to `master` too. This allows for
convenient back-porting of changes if they did not apply cleanly to the primary
development branch (`master`).
We want to expand this function so that it is possible to report failures if an
invalid target label is appplied (e.g. `target: major` not allowed in
some situations), or if the Github base branch is not valid for the given target
label (e.g. if `target: lts` is used, but it's not based on a LTS branch).
PR Close#38223
The merge script currently accepts a configuration function that will
be invoked _only_ when the `ng-dev merge` command is executed. This
has been done that way because the merge tooling usually relies on
external requests to Git or NPM for constructing the branch configurations.
We do not want to perform these slow external queries on any `ng-dev` command
though, so this became a lazily invoked function.
This commit adds support for these configuration functions to run
asynchronously (by returning a Promise that will be awaited), so that
requests could also be made to the Github API. This is benefical as it
could avoid dependence on the local Git state and the HTTP requests
are more powerful/faster.
Additionally, in order to be able to perform Github API requests
with an authenticated instance, the merge tool will pass through
a `GithubClient` instance that uses the specified `--github-token`
(or from the environment). This ensures that all API requests use
the same `GithubClient` instance and can be authenticated (mitigating
potential rate limits).
PR Close#38223
This reverts commit b4449e35bf.
The example given from the previous change was for a component selector and not a provider selector.
This change fixes it.
Fixes#38323.
PR Close#38325
Within an angular template, when a character entity is unable to be parsed, previously a generic
unexpected character error was thrown. This does not properly express the issue that was discovered
as the issue is actually caused by the discovered character making the whole of the entity unparsable.
The compiler will now instead inform via the error message what string was attempted to be parsed
and what it was attempted to be parsed as.
Example, for this template:
```
<p>
ģp
</p>
```
Before this change:
`Unexpected character "p"`
After this change:
`Unable to parse entity "ģp" - hexadecimal character reference entities must end with ";"`
Fixes#26067
PR Close#38319
This commit updates the `tslint.json` configuration file, that is used
to lint the docs examples, to match the one generated for new Angular
CLI apps. There are some minimal differences (marked with `TODO`
comments) for things, such as component selector prefix, that would
require extensive and/or difficult to validate changes in guides.
This commit also includes the final adjustments to make the docs
examples code compatible with the new tslint rules. (The bulk of the
work has been done in previous commits.)
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
following Angular-specific tslint rules:
- `component-selector`
- `directive-selector`
- `no-conflicting-lifecycle`
- `no-host-metadata-property`
- `no-input-rename`
- `no-output-native`
- `no-output-rename`
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`prefer-const` tslint rule.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`variable-name` tslint rule without requiring the
`allow-leading-underscore` and `allow-trailing-underscore` options.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`no-shadowed-variable` and `variable-name` tslint rules.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`member-ordering` tslint rule.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`no-angle-bracket-type-assertion` tslint rule.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`no-string-literal`, `object-literal-key-quotes` and
`object-literal-shorthand` tslint rules.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`only-arrow-functions` tslint rule.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`jsdoc-format` tslint rule.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`semicolon` tslint rule.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the `align`,
`space-before-function-paren` and `typedef-whitespace` tslint rules.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
This commit updates the docs examples to be compatible with the
`import-spacing` tslint rule.
This is in preparation of updating the docs examples `tslint.json` to
match the one generated for new Angular CLI apps in a future commit.
PR Close#38143
The `03-*` code style rule have been removed from the style guide in
be0bc799f3.
This commit removes the corresponding files and related unused code from
the`styleguide` example project.
PR Close#38143
This commit removes compiler instantiation at startup.
This is because the constructor is invoked during the plugin loading phase,
in which the project has not been completely loaded.
Retrieving `ts.Program` at startup will trigger an `updateGraph` operation,
which could only be called after the Project has loaded completely.
Without this change, the Ivy LS cannot be loaded as a tsserver plugin.
Note that the whole `Compiler` class is temporary, so changes made there are
only for development. Once we have proper integration with ngtsc the
`Compiler` class would be removed.
PR Close#38120
Currently the `getInheritedFactory` function is implemented to allow
closure to remove the call if the base factory is unused. However, this
method does not work with terser. By adding the PURE annotation,
terser will also be able to remove the call when unused.
PR Close#38291
This commit fixes a bug in View Engine whereby the compiler errorneously
thinks that a method of a component has decorator metadata when that
method is one of those in `Object.prototype`, for example `toString`.
This bug is discovered in v10.0.4 of `@angular/language-service` after
the default bundle format was switched from ES5 to ES2015.
ES5 output:
```js
if (propMetadata[propName]) {
decorators.push.apply(decorators, __spread(propMetadata[propName]));
}
```
ES2015 output:
```js
if (propMetadata[propName]) {
decorators.push(...propMetadata[propName]);
}
```
The bug was not discovered in ES5 because the polyfill for the spread
operator happily accepts parameters that do not have the `iterable`
symbol:
```js
function __spread() {
for (var ar = [], i = 0; i < arguments.length; i++)
ar = ar.concat(__read(arguments[i]));
return ar;
}
```
whereas in es2015 it’ll fail since the iterable symbol is not present in
`propMetadata['toString']` which evaluates to a function.
Fixes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/859
PR Close#38292
This reverts commit 7f8c2225f2.
This commit caused test failures internally, which were traced back to the
optimizer removing NgModuleFactory constructor calls when those calls caused
side-effectful registration of NgModules by their ids.
PR Close#38303
This commit corrects the type of makeDiagnostic()'s messageText parameter,
which was not compatible with some compiler refactorings merged to 10.0.x
due to unforeseen dependencies on prior refactorings.
Previously, an anonymous type was used for creating a diagnostic with related
information. The anonymous type would then be translated into the necessary
`ts.DiagnosticRelatedInformation` shape within `makeDiagnostic`. This commit
switches the `makeDiagnostic` signature over to taking `ts.DiagnosticRelatedInformation`
directly and introduces `makeRelatedInformation` to easily create such objects.
This is done to aid in making upcoming work more readable.
PR Close#37587
This commit disables one TypeChecker test (added as a part of
https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/38105) which make assertions about the filename while
running on Windows.
Such assertions are currently suffering from a case sensitivity issue.
PR Close#38294
The documentation is not clear on how the base href and APP_BASE_HREF are used. This commit
should help clarify more complicated use-cases beyond the most common one of just a '/'
PR Close#38123
This allows Closure compiler to tree shake unused constructor calls to `NgModuleFactory`, which is otherwise considered
side-effectful. The Angular compiler generates factory objects which are exported but typically not used, as they are
only needed for compatibility with View Engine. This results in top-level constructor calls, such as:
```typescript
export const FooNgFactory = new NgModuleFactory(Foo);
```
`NgModuleFactory` has a side-effecting constructor, so this statement cannot be tree shaken, even if `FooNgFactory` is
never imported. The `NgModuleFactory` continues to reference its associated `NgModule` and prevents the module and all
its unused dependencies from being tree shaken. This effectively prevents all components from being tree shaken, making
Closure builds significantly larger than they should be.
The fix here is to wrap `NgModuleFactory` constructor with `noSideEffects(() => /* ... */)`, which tricks the Closure
compiler into assuming that the invoked function has no side effects. This allows it to tree-shake unused
`NgModuleFactory()` constructors when they aren't imported. Since the factory can be removed, the module can also be
removed (if nothing else references it), thus tree shaking unused components as expected.
PR Close#38147
Large strings constants are now wrapped in a function which is called whenever used. This works around a unique
limitation of Closure, where it will **always** inline string literals at **every** usage, regardless of how large the
string literal is or how many times it is used.The workaround is to use a function rather than a string literal.
Closure has differently inlining semantics for functions, where it will check the length of the function and the number
of times it is used before choosing to inline it. By using a function, `ngtsc` makes Closure more conservative about
inlining large strings, and avoids blowing up the bundle size.This optimization is only used if the constant is a large
string. A wrapping function is not included for other use cases, since it would just increase the bundle size and add
unnecessary runtime performance overhead.
PR Close#38253
Prior to this commit, SVG icons were all loaded in the constructor
of the `CustomIconRegistry`. This commit avoids that, and loads SVG
icons on demand.
PR Close#38268
This commit simplifies the creation of the temporary, hidden
`<textarea>` element used by `CopierService` by switching from absolute
to fixed positioning and not requiring page's scroll offset.
It also makes the following minor improvements:
- Make the element invisible (via `opacity: 0`).
- Instruct screen-readers to ignore the element (via
`aria-hidden: true`).
NOTE: These improvements are based on Angular CDK's [PendingCopy][1]
class and the changes proposed in PR angular/components#20073.
[1]: https://github.com/angular/components/blob/89b5fa89d1437c3054c5/src/cdk/clipboard/pending-copy.ts
PR Close#38244
The `CopierService` is used for copying text to the user's clipboard. It
is, for example, used in `CodeComponent` to copy example code snippets.
This is implemented by creating a temporary, hidden `<textarea>`
elements, setting its value to the text that needs to be copied,
executing the `copy` command and finally removing the element from the
DOM.
Previously, as a result of `CopierService`'s implementation, the focused
element would lose focus, while the temporary `<textarea>` element would
implicitly gain focus when selecting its contents. This had an even
worse side-effect on IE11, which seems to scroll to the bottom of the
containing element (here `<body>`) when the focused element is removed.
This commit fixes these issues by keeping track of the previously
focused element and restoring its focus after the copy operation.
NOTE: This fix is inspired by Angular CDK's [PendingCopy][1] class.
[1]: https://github.com/angular/components/blob/89b5fa89d1437c3054c5/src/cdk/clipboard/pending-copy.tsFixes#37796
PR Close#38244
This commit improves the code readability of the `CopierService` by:
- Adding/Improving JSDoc comments for methods.
- Avoiding unnecessary instance-wide properties.
- Fixing indentation to be consistent (at two spaces).
- Clearly separating the logic for creating and populating a
`<textarea>` from the logic for selecting and copying its contents.
PR Close#38244
This commit adds a method `getDiagnosticsForComponent` to the
`TemplateTypeChecker`, which does the minimum amount of work to retrieve
diagnostics for a single component.
With the normal `ReusedProgramStrategy` this offers virtually no improvement
over the standard `getDiagnosticsForFile` operation, but if the
`TypeCheckingProgramStrategy` supports separate shims for each component,
this operation can yield a faster turnaround for components that are
declared in files with many other components.
PR Close#38105
Previously, a stable template id was implemented for each component in a
file. This commit adds this id to each `TemplateDiagnostic` generated from
the template type-checker, so it can potentially be used for filtration.
PR Close#38105
This commit adds an `overrideComponentTemplate` operation to the template
type-checker. This operation changes the template used during template
type-checking operations.
Overriding a template causes any previous work for it to be discarded, and
the template type-checking engine will regenerate the TCB for that template
on the next request.
This operation can be used by a consumer such as the language service to
get rapid feedback or diagnostics as the user is editing a template file,
without the need for a full incremental build iteration.
Closes#38058
PR Close#38105
Previously, the `TemplateTypeChecker` abstraction allowed fetching
diagnostics for a single file, but under the hood would generate type
checking code for the entire program to satisfy the request.
With this commit, an `OptimizeFor` hint is passed to `getDiagnosticsForFile`
which indicates whether the user intends to request diagnostics for the
whole program or is truly interested in just the single file. If the latter,
the `TemplateTypeChecker` can perform only the work needed to produce
diagnostics for just that file, thus returning answers more efficiently.
PR Close#38105
The template type-checking engine relies on the abstraction interface
`TypeCheckingProgramStrategy` to create updated `ts.Program`s for
template type-checking. The basic API is that the type-checking engine
requests changes to certain files in the program, and the strategy provides
an updated `ts.Program`.
Typically, such changes are made to 'ngtypecheck' shim files, but certain
conditions can cause template type-checking to require "inline" operations,
which change user .ts files instead. The strategy used by 'ngc' (the
`ReusedProgramStrategy`) supports these kinds of updates, but other clients
such as the language service might not always support modifying user files.
To accommodate this, the `TypeCheckingProgramStrategy` interface was
modified to include a `supportsInlineOperations` flag. If an implementation
specifies `false` for inline support, the template type-checking system will
return diagnostics on components which would otherwise require inline
operations.
Closes#38059
PR Close#38105
This commit significantly refactors the 'typecheck' package to introduce a
new abstraction, the `TemplateTypeChecker`. To achieve this:
* a 'typecheck:api' package is introduced, containing common interfaces that
consumers of the template type-checking infrastructure can depend on
without incurring a dependency on the template type-checking machinery as
a whole.
* interfaces for `TemplateTypeChecker` and `TypeCheckContext` are introduced
which contain the abstract operations supported by the implementation
classes `TemplateTypeCheckerImpl` and `TypeCheckContextImpl` respectively.
* the `TemplateTypeChecker` interface supports diagnostics on a whole
program basis to start with, but the implementation is purposefully
designed to support incremental diagnostics at a per-file or per-component
level.
* `TemplateTypeChecker` supports direct access to the type check block of a
component.
* the testing utility is refactored to be a lot more useful, and new tests
are added for the new abstraction.
PR Close#38105
Previously in the template type-checking engine, it was assumed that every
input file would have an associated type-checking shim. The type check block
code for all components in the input file would be generated into this shim.
This is fine for whole-program type checking operations, but to support the
language service's requirements for low latency, it would be ideal to be
able to check a single component in isolation, especially if the component
is declared along with many others in a single file.
This commit removes the assumption that the file/shim mapping is 1:1, and
introduces the concept of component-to-shim mapping. Any
`TypeCheckingProgramStrategy` must provide such a mapping.
To achieve this:
* type checking record information is now split into file-level data as
well as per-shim data.
* components are now assigned a stable `TemplateId` which is unique to the
file in which they're declared.
PR Close#38105
```
export const __core_private_testing_placeholder__ = '';
```
This API should be removed. But doing so seems to break `google3` and
so it requires a bit of investigation. A work around is to mark it as
`@codeGenApi` for now and investigate later.
PR Close#38274
Since PullApprove starts all inactive groups as a pending state, to properly
assess if any groups we care about are pending we must only check the active
groups. We additionally do this with rejected because the intention of the
reusable checks is around checking active rules only.
PR Close#38259
`Attribute` decorator has defined `attributeName` as optional but actually its
mandatory and compiler throws an error if `attributeName` is undefined. Made
`attributeName` mandatory in the `Attribute` decorator to reflect this functionality
Fixes#32658
PR Close#38131
It was determined that the list of 'pending' groups also included inactive groups.
That means that the 'no-groups-above-this-pending' would generally fail because
there's almost always some inactive group above it.
This commit removes the conditions for phased review while we
investigate if the inactive groups can be excluded.
PR Close#38257
Project DOCS-736 to rewrite headings to focus on user tasks,
verify that the content is up-to-date and complete, and
add relevant links to other NgModule topics to improve readability.
Also addresses one of many issues in GitHub issue 21531.
PR Close#38206
* Add alxhub, atscott, and AndrewKushnir to code owners
* Add atscott & AndrewKushnir to public-api and size-tracking
Follow-up to #37994
PR Close#38170
Project DOCS-734 to rewrite headings to focus on user tasks,
verify that the content is up-to-date and complete, and
add relevant links to other NgModule topics to improve readability.
Also addresses one of many issues in GitHub issue 21531.
PR Close#38148
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
This commit clarifies some of the language regarding pipes in the pipes guide.
This commit also specifies the term transforming rather than formatting.
PR Close#37950
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
There are a few changes in this PR to ensure conditions that are based
on groups (i.e. `- groups.pending.length == 0`) do not fail the verify
task:
* Remove the warning when a condition is encountered that depends on the
`groups` state. The warning will otherwise be printed once for every
file that triggers the execution of the condition (400,000+ times)
* Add an `unverifiable` flag to `GroupCondition` interface and set it to
true when an error is encountered due to attempting to get the state of
`groups` in a condition
* Ignore any unverifiable conditions when gathering unmatched
conditions. These should not be considered `unmatched` for verification
purposes.
* Print the unverifiable conditions by group in the results
Sample output:
```
┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ PullApprove results by group │
└──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Groups skipped (4 groups)
Matched conditions by Group (37 groups)
Unmatched conditions by Group (0 groups)
Unverifiable conditions by Group (3 groups)
[public-api]
len(groups.pending.exclude("required-minimum-review")...
len(groups.rejected.exclude("required-minimum-review")...
[size-tracking]
len(groups.pending.exclude("required-minimum-review")...
len(groups.rejected.exclude("required-minimum-review")...
[circular-dependencies]
len(groups.pending.exclude("required-minimum-review")...
len(groups.rejected.exclude("required-minimum-review")...
```
PR Close#37798
The size-tracking, public-api, and circular-dependencies groups can get a lot of
PRs to review. In addition, the members of these groups do not always
have the necessary context to fully review the PR in question. This
change ensures that the owners in the groups where the changes are being
made have approve the changes (ie, the aren't pending or rejected)
before requesting final sign-off from these three critical groups.
PR Close#37798
global-approvers, global-docs-approvers, and required-minimum-review groups are always active. It's useful
to have aliases for getting groups that are active/pending/rejected while excluding these few.
PR Close#37798
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
Previously, `ExampleZipper` (the tool used for creating ZIP archives
from our docs examples) used the `PackageJsonCustomizer` to generate
`package.json` files for each example type. This had the following
drawbacks:
- The generated files had to be kept up-to-date with the corresponding
boilerplate files in `aio/tools/examples/shared/boilerplate/` and
there was no easy way to find out when the files got out-of-sync.
- The `PackageJsonCustomizer` logic was non-trivial and difficult to
reason about.
- The same information was duplicated in the boilerplate files and the
customizer configuration files.
This setup was useful when we used a single `package.json` file for all
docs examples. Now, however, each example type can have its own
boilerplate `package.json` file, including scripts and dependencies
relevant to the example type. Therefore, it is no longer necessary to
generate `package.json` files for ZIP archives.
This commit eliminates the drawbacks mentioned above and simplifies the
`ExampleZipper` tool by removing `PackageJsonCustomizer` and re-using
the boilerplate `package.json` files for ZIP archives.
The changes in this commit also fix some ZIP archives that were
previously broken (for example due to missing dependencies).
PR Close#38192
Conditions can refer to the groups array that is a list of the preceding groups.
This commit adds support to the verification for those conditions.
This commit also adds some tests to the parsing and condition matching
to ensure everything works as expected.
PR Close#38164
To avoid unnecessary code duplication in docs examples, we have some
boilerplate files for various example types (in
`aio/tools/examples/shared/boilerplate/`). These files are copied to
each example project in `aio/content/examples/` (according to the
example's type, as specified in its `example-config.json` file).
Previously, the `example-boilerplate.js`, which is responsible for
copying the boilerplate files, had lists for files to be copied for each
project type and only copied the listed files from the boilerplate
directory to the example directory. This approach had some drawbacks:
- Files need to be updated in two separate locations: in the boilerplate
directory that includes the files and the file list in
`example-boilerplate.js`.
- It is easy to add a file in the boilerplate directory but forget to
add it in `example-boilerplate.js` and not realize that it is not
being included in the example project (including the generated
StackBlitz project and ZIP archive).
This commit changes the approach by removing the boilerplate file
listings from `example-boilerplate.js` and copying all files from a
boilerplate directory to example directories. This addresses the above
drawbacks and simplifies the `example-boilerplate.js` script.
I have verified that the resulting code example doc regions as well as
the generated StackBlitz projects and ZIP archives are identical to the
ones generated before this commit.
PR Close#38173
Previously, the `.gitignore` file that is part of the boilerplate files
for CLI-based docs examples (located in
`aio/tools/examples/shared/boilerplate/cli/`) was not added to the
example projects, because it was not included in the boilerplate file
list in `example-boilerplate.js`.
This commit fixes it by adding the `.gitignore` file to the list. This
ensures that docs examples more closely match CLI-generated projects.
PR Close#38173
Docs examples of type `i18n` need a slightly modified version of
`polyfills.ts` that imports `@angular/localize/init`. Previously, this
file was not included in `i18n` example projects for two reasons:
- While the file was included in the `i18n` boilerplate files (at
`aio/tools/examples/shared/boilerplate/i18n/`), it was not included in
the boilerplate file list in `example-boilerplate.js`.
- The file was in the wrong location: It was located at the project root
instead of inside the `src/` directory.
This commit addresses the above issues (i.e. adds the file to the
boilerplate file list for `i18n` projects and moves the file inside the
`src/` directory).
PR Close#38173
There were some `systemjs.config.web[.build].js` files in the `systemjs`
boilerplate directory that are not used any more. In the past, these
files were used in the Plunker-based live examples, but we no longer use
Plunker for live examples.
This commit removes these obsolete files.
PR Close#38173
There were two `typings.d.ts` files with SystemJS module definitions in
`aio/src/` and `aio/tools/examples/shared/boilerplate/cli/`. These are
remnants from old CLI versions that used SystemJS and are no longer
needed. For docs examples specifically, these files were never copied
over to example projects and thus not included in StackBlitz projects
and ZIP archives.
This commit removes these obsolete files.
PR Close#38173
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
With @matsko leaving the Angular team, we need to update the pullapprove
configuration to reflect his no longer being a reviewer for file groups
throughout the repository.
PR Close#38146
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
Add new type: confusing and type: use-case labels to the triage readme as well
as clarify that freq and severity are only required for type: bug/fix
PR Close#38081
Some issue reports don't really fall into any of the current buckets that count
towards triage level 2: bug/fix, feature, or refactor. Some reports are:
* working as intended but confusing - the labels might be 'type: confusing', 'comp: docs', 'comp: router'
* generally working as originally designed but a use-case could be argued for a different implementation.
This type of report is a little hard to triage; it may be neither a bug, nor feature but more of a
'type: use-case'. These may eventually turn into a bug/fix or feature, but can't necessarily be
put in those buckets immediately.
PR Close#38081
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
Adds a note to the provider docs that users shouldn't mutate an array that
is returned from a `multi` provider, because it can cause unforeseen
consequences in other parts of the app.
Closes#37481.
PR Close#37645
Docs state that `strictInjectionParameters` is true by default in `ng new`, however this is not the case in `10.0.1`. It is only set when `--strict` is provided. Clarified that the `--strict` flag is required.
`strictTemplates` does not mention anything about `--strict`, so I included a similar point that it is `true` when a new project is generated with `--strict`.
PR Close#37982
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
Fix two issues that affected displaying of SVG icons in IE11:
1. All SVG icons except for one appeared empty. This was related how the
CustomIconRegistry re-used the same <div> element to create all
SVG elements.
2. The GitHub and Twitter buttons next to the search bar were not sized
properly.
Fixes#37847
PR Close#38046
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
* Add petebacondarwin to public-api, size-tracking, and circular-dependencies
* Add mhevery, josephperrott, and jelbourn to code-ownership
PR Close#37994
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
As part of our CI checks, we ensure the a11y score on certain angular.io
pages do not fall below some thresholds.
This commit increases these thresholds based on our current scores to
ensure we do not regress below current values.
PR Close#37899
* Without this BUILD file we were seeing errors about the reference to
expand_template.bzl in ng_rollup_bundle.bzl because dev-infra/bazel
was not considered a package.
PR Close#38026
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
Angular Console has been renamed and links no longer work. It has been decided to remove references to this third-party tool from the AIO documentation.
Closes#37604
PR Close#37608
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
Remove an article from the `Data flow in forms` section of the forms overview guide. The use of `the` and `a` together
is not syntactically correct.
PR Close#37933
In #37957, parts of the testing guide were broken out into separate
guides. As part of that work, the `<live-example>` tags were also copied
to the new guides. These `<live-example>` tags did not specify the
targeted example project via the `name` attribute, thus they were
implicitly targeting the example with the same name as the guide they
were in. See the [Docs style guide][1] for more info.
However, there is only one example project (`testing/`) and all
`<live-example>` tags were supposed to target that. This worked fine on
the `testing.md` guide, but it broke on other guides (which tried to
target non-existing example projects based on their names).
This commit fixes it by explicitly specifying which example is targeted
by the `<live-example>` tags. It also removes the `embedded-style`
attribute that has no effect.
[1]: https://angular.io/guide/docs-style-guide#live-examplesFixes#38036
PR Close#38038
With `rules_nodejs` v2.0.0 being in RC phase currently, we should
make sure that the package is compatible so that we can use it
in the components repo in combination with rules_nodejs v2.0.0.
In v2.0.0 of the NodeJS rules, Bazel workspaces are recommended
to no longer be symlinked under a separate repository. Instead,
bazel rules and targets should be accessed directly from the
user-selected NPM repository. Usually `@npm`, so that the import
changes to `@npm//@angular/dev-infra-private/<..>`.
PR Close#37968
An extra semicolon in searchHeroes function was removed in the http guide
found in aio/content/guide/http.md
docs(http): Remove extra semicolon in a code example found in the http guide
Removed extra semicolon in handleError function in the file located at
aio/content/examples/http/src/app/config/config.service.ts, which serves
as a source of code examples for the http guide.
Replace a comma for a dot in the comment at line 79 to ensure consistency
with the rest of the document.
Capitalized and added a dot at the end of the comment at line 84 to
ensure consistency with the other comments.
PR Close#37228
The Stackblitz and zip-file include `doc-files` unnecssarily and are missing
the locale files. This commit updates the `stackblitz.json` to fix this.
PR Close#37947
The `zipper.json` file is only needed if the example does not
have a `stackblitz.json` file, which this (i18n) example does.
Moreover, it appears that having both can cause the generated
zip file to be corrupted and not unzippable.
Fixes #37849
PR Close#37947
This doc is very old and rusty. I'm reformatting it to follow the one-setence-per-line rule.
I also updated a few sections, since they were either poorly written or obsolete.
PR Close#37951
This file is inert unless it's explicitly included into the local git config via:
```
git config --add include.path '../.ng-dev/gitconfig'
```
Calling that command will append the following into `.git/config` of the current git workspace
(i.e. $GIT_DIR, typically `angular/.git/config`):
```
[include]
path = ../.ng-dev/gitconfig
```
I'm intentionally keeping the config inert for now until we prove that this is a good idea.
Eventually we could roll this change out to all the contributors via an npm post-install script.
PR Close#37951
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
The dev-infra commit message validation optionally can check for lines
to not exceed a given amount of characters. This is desired for most
commit messages, but sometimes not actionable if a long URL is inserted
into the commit message. With this commit, we skip the max line length
check for lines that start with an URL.
PR Close#37890
Splits the dev-infra configurations into individual files inside the
`.ng-dev/` folder. This helps with clarity as there is no single
configuration file that becomes extremely large and difficult to
maintain.
Additionally, more explicit configuration types are now used. This
fixed the max-line length setting for commit message validation.
This option is currently named incorrectly and a noop.
PR Close#37890
We recently added a new folder for common bazel utilities
to `dev-infra`. The `ng_rollup_bundle` rule relies on an
utility that is provided by this `bazel/` folder.
Unfortunately though it looks like this folder is currently
not included in the NPM package, so that the `ng_rollup_bundle`
rule does not work as expected. This commit fixes that by
including the bazel utilities in the NPM package.
PR Close#37891
Leverage the caretaker note label configuration in ng-dev's merge
tooling to prompt the caretaker for confirmation when a PR has
the `PR action: merge-assistance` label. This should help to
surface for the caretaker, PRs which may need additional steps
taken, announcement messaging, etc.
PR Close#37778
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
Updates to the latest commit of the `angular/components` repository. We
need to do this because we removed the `esm5.bzl` output flavour aspect,
but an old version of the components repo relied on this file to exist.
This is no longer the case, and we can simply update the version of the
components repo we can test against.
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
GitClient now uses GithubClient for github API interactions. GithubClient is
a class which extends Octokit and provides a member which allows for GraphQL
requests against the Github GraphQL api, as well as providing convenience methods
for common/repeated Github API requests.
PR Close#37778
Cleans up the dependencies used in the shared dev-infra package
configuration. With the recent benchmarking utilities that have
been added, a lot of peer dependencies have been added.
We decided that we don't want to list every used dependencies as
peer dependency as that could result in unnecessary churn/noise
for consumers of the dev-infra package. Additionally, not all parts
of the dev-infra package are necessarily used.
Due to this, we want to apply the following rules for the package
dependencies:
1. If a dependency is only used in a shipped Bazel macro/rule that can be
optionally consumed, omit it from `package.json`. Bazel reports the
missing dependency on its own, so we want to avoid adding it to the
package json file.
2. Otherwise, if the dependency is large and commonly used (like
buildifier), add it to the `peerDependencies`. If not, add it
to the dependencies that are always brought in. We consider it
as acceptable to bring in a few small dependencies that might not
be used or not. Making all of those option would complicate the
use of the dev-infra package.
ds
PR Close#37778
We added a new dependency on `fs-extra` to the dev-infra package. We can
remove this dependency and replace it with `shelljs` that is extensively
used in other places already.
The motiviation is that we can reduce dependencies needed for
for consumption of the shared dev-infra package.
PR Close#37778
Adds support for a caretaker note label to the merge script.
Whenever a configured label is applied, the merge script will
not merge automatically, but instead prompt first in order
to ensure that the caretaker paid attention to the manual
caretaker note on the PR. This helps if a PR needs special
attention.
PR Close#37595
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
Angular 9 introduces a new value for providedIn called `any` which lets us use unique instance
for servicec in each lazy loaded module, this PR is to document the same
fixes#35179
PR Close#35283
Some ServiceWorker operations and methods require normalized URLs.
Previously, the generic `string` type was used.
This commit introduces a new `NormalizedUrl` type, a special kind of
`string`, to make this requirement explicit and use the type system to
enforce it.
PR Close#37922
In some cases, it is useful to use a relative base href in the app (e.g.
when an app has to be accessible on different URLs, such as on an
intranet and the internet - see #25055 for a related discussion).
Previously, the Angular ServiceWorker was not able to handle relative
base hrefs (for example when building the with `--base-href=./`).
This commit fixes this by normalizing all URLs from the ServiceWorker
configuration wrt the ServiceWorker's scope.
Fixes#25055
PR Close#37922
This is in preparation of enabling the ServiceWorker to handle
relative paths in `ngsw.json` (as discussed in #25055), which will
require normalizing URLs in other parts of the ServiceWorker.
PR Close#37922
The Angular ServiceWorker can serve requests to a special virtual path,
`ngsw/state`, showing [information about its internal state][1], which
can be useful for debugging.
Previously, this would only work if the ServiceWorker's [scope][2] was
the root directory (`/`). Otherwise, (e.g. when building the app with
`--baseHref=/some/path/`), the ServiceWorker would fail to detect a
request to `/some/path/ngsw/state` as matching `ngsw/state` and would
not serve it with the debugging information.
This commit fixes it by ensuring that the ServiceWorker's scope is taken
into account when detecting a request to `ngsw/state`.
[1]: https://angular.io/guide/service-worker-devops#locating-and-analyzing-debugging-information
[2]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/ServiceWorkerRegistration/scopeFixes#30505
PR Close#37922
The wildcard example leads to display a 404 page with the PageNotFoundComponent. But before, there is a wildcard to redirect to the FirstComponent and because of the routes order the FirstComponent will be displayed; which it is not the target of the wildcard route example code. Also, fixing some wildcard docregions
PR Close#37127
One of the ivy acceptance tests currently fails in IE10. This
is because we recently added a new test that asserts that injecting
`ViewRef` results in a `NullInjectorError`.
Due to limitations in TypeScript and in polyfills for `setPrototypeOf`,
the error cannot be thrown as `ViewRef` is always considered injectable.
In reality, `ViewRef` should not be injectable, as explicitly noted
in c00f4ab2ae.
There seems no way to simulate the proper prototype chain in such
browsers that do not natively support `__proto__`, so TypeScript
and `core-js` polyfills simply break the prototype chain and
assign inherited properties directly on `ViewRef`. i.e. so that
`ViewRef.__NG_ELEMENT_ID__` exists and DI picks it up.
There is a way for TypeScript to theoretically generate proper
prototype chain in ES5 output, but they intend to only bother
about the proper prototype chain in ES6 where `setPrototypeOf`
etc. are offically standarized. See the response:
https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/1601#issuecomment-94892833.
PR Close#37892
This commit updates the version of Angular CLI used in angular.io to
version 10.0.1. It also reverts some changes (namely commits 38dfbc775f
and eee2fd22e0) which were made due to an older bug that is fixed in
the latest version. See #37688 for more details.
Fixes#37699
PR Close#37898
This commit removes some duplicate imports of Material themes and
theming-related utilities. While this change does not have any impact on
the size of the generated `styles.css` file, it silences a build warning
pointing to [Avoiding duplicated theming styles][1].
[1]: db4b0cd1bf/guides/duplicate-theming-styles.md
PR Close#37898
This commit updates the version of Angular Components used in angular.io
to version 10.0.1. It also updates the angular.io app to adapt to
breaking changes.
PR Close#37898
This commit updates the version of Angular framework used in angular.io
to version 10.0.2. It also features a commit message with a 100+ chars
long body.
PR Close#37898
Before this refactoring we had the WrappedValue class in
2 separate places:
- packages/core/src/change_detection/change_detection_util.ts
- packages/core/src/util/WrappedValue.ts
This commit removes the duplicate, leaving the class that has
the deprecation notice.
PR Close#37940
This commit breaks up the testing document into nine total documents, with each document focusing on an existing section of the current testing documentation. There are no content changes.
PR Close#37957
The motivation behind this change is to improve the productivity in the angular/angular repo
without sacrificing the original goal of having better understanding of changes within
the repo.
When the minBodyLength limit was originally introduced the goal was simple: force
committers to provide more contextual information for each change coming into the
repo. Too often we found ourselves in a situation where nobody understood what
motivated some of the changes and we needed more contextual info to know if the
change was correct, desirable, and still relevant (at a later point in time).
When the limit was introduced, we needed to pick a minimum body length - given no
data, and frustration with even big changes being committed with just a words in
the subject (along the lines of "fix(core): fixing a bug"), we overcompensated
and started off with a really high bar of minBodyLength set to 100 chars.
This turned out to be impractical and created a big friction point in making valid
changes in the angular/angular repo, and in fact caused some of the refactorings
and smaller changes to be either skipped or combined into other commits which
increased the burden for code reviewers.
The evidence in the friction points can be seen in the number of PRs that fail to pass
the current lint check on the first try, but more importantly also in the "creative"
writing that some of the committers are forced to resort to in order to satisfy the
current checks. Examples:
- 286fbf42c6
- b2816a1536
Given that we primarily care to document the motivation behind each change
(the answer to the ultimate question: WHY?), I've collected several *common* &
*valid* commit messages that are minimalistic and capture the WHY sufficiently:
```
Refactoring for readability. => 28 chars
Improving variable naming. => 26 chars
Additional test coverage. => 25 chars
Cleaning up the code. => 21 chars
Simplified the code. => 20 chars
```
These commit message bodies in addition to the commit message subject should
sufficiently satisfy the need to capture the context and motivation behind each
change without creating an undue burden on committers.
Example minimalistic commit message:
------
refactor(core): cleanup the expression parser
Simplifying the code.
----
Given this research, I'm decreasing the minBodyLenth in angular/angular to 20 chars.
The commit message quality can be additionally improved by implementing a commit message
template via `.gitmessage` that will guide the committers in following our commit message
guidelines via instructions provided in the form of in-the-flow help rather than as an after
the fact lint check.
More info: https://thoughtbot.com/blog/better-commit-messages-with-a-gitmessage-template
I'm intentionally deferring such change for a separate PR as not to complicate or delay the
minBodyLength limit decrease.
PR Close#37949
Often changelogs are generated from the patch branch and then
cherry-picked into the `CHANGELOG.md` file in `master` for
better access and readability. This is problematic though as
`conventional-changelog` (the tool we use for generating the
changelog), will duplicate commits when a future changelog
is generated from `master` then (i.e. for a new minor release).
This happens because conventional-changelog always generates the
changelog from the latest tag in a given branch to `HEAD`. The
tag in the patch branch does not correspond to any SHA in `master`
so the intersection of commits is not automatically omitted.
We work around this naively (until we have a better tool provided
by dev-infra), by deduping commits that are already part of the
changelog. This has proven to work as expected in the components
repo.
PR Close#37956
This commit includes a couple of minor fixes to docs related to updating
to v10:
- Fix markdown link in "Updating to Angular version 10" guide.
- Correctly display numbered list in
"Solution-style `tsconfig.json` migration" guide.
PR Close#37897
The merge script uses `git cherry-pick` for both the API merge strategy
and the autosquash strategy. It uses cherry-pick to push commits to
different target branches (e.g. into the `10.0.x` branch).
Those commits never point to the commits that landed in the primary
Github branch though. For the autosquash strategy the pull request number
is always included, so there is a way to go back to the source. On the other
hand though, for commits cherry-picked in the API merge strategy, the
pull request number might not always be included (due to Github's
implementation of the rebase merge method).
e.g.
27f52711c0
For those cases we'd want to link the cherry-picked commits to the
original commits so that the corresponding PR is easier to track
down. This is not needed for the autosquash strategy (as outlined
before), but it would have been good for consistency. Unfortunately
though this would rather complicate the strategy as the autosquash
strategy cherry-picks directly from the PR head, so the SHAs that
are used in the primary branch are not known.
PR Close#37889
As part of angular.io's responsive layout, the menu shown in the top-bar
is collapsed into the sidenav on narrow screens at the point where the
search-bar (on the right side of the top-bar) would overlap with the
menu's nav-items.
Previously, the value used as break-point would work on marketing pages,
where the hamburger button is not shown on wide screens. However, on
docs pages (where the hamburger button is always shown, pushing the menu
further to the right), the search-bar would still overlap the menu
nav-items on some resolutions.
This commit fixes it by raising the screen width threshold at a value
that ensures there is no overlap even on pages where the hamburger
button is visible alongside the top-bar menu.
Fixes#37937
PR Close#37938
As part of angular.io's responsive layout, the following rules are
applied:
- On wide screens, a menu is shown in the top-bar and the sidenav is
shown side-by-side with the docs content.
- On narrow screens, the top-menu is moved from the top-bar to the
sidenav and the sidenav is closed by default and floats over the
content when manually opened.
Previously, the break-points at which the top-menu was shown in the
top-bar and the sidenav was shown side-by-side with the content were the
same (using a single variable).
This commit decouples the two break-points to make it possible to use
different values in the future.
PR Close#37938
Use a Sass variable for the screen width break-point at which the
top-bar hamburger button is hidden/shown. This allows more easily
updating the break-point.
PR Close#37938
In `aio/`, we have a mechanism to apply patches in a `postinstall` hook.
See `aio/tools/cli-patches/README.md` for more info.
Previously, we had to update `aio/tools/cli-patches/patch.js` to list
each `.patch` file separately. While working on #37688, I found it
helpful for the script to automatically pick up `.patch` files.
This commit updates the script to automatically pick up and apply
`.patch` files from the `aio/tools/cli-patches/` directory. If one wants
to keep a `.patch` file but not apply it, they can change the file's
extension or move it to a sub-directory (without having to update the
script).
PR Close#37896
Currently when the `plural` or `select` keywords in an ICU contain trailing spaces (e.g. `{count, select , ...}`), these spaces are also included into the key names in ICU vars (e.g. "VAR_SELECT "). These trailing spaces are not desirable, since they will later be converted into `_` symbols while normalizing placeholder names, thus causing mismatches at runtime (i.e. placeholder will not be replaced with the correct value). This commit updates the code to trim these spaces while generating an object with placeholders, to make sure the runtime logic can replace these placeholders with the right values.
PR Close#37866
The logic to exclude certain types of commits (specifically 'docs' ones) was implemented in c5b125b7db. The ng-dev config was updated in the followup commit acf3cff9ee, but there was a typo that prevented the new logic from being activated. This commit updates the name of the config option in the ng-dev config to the right one (minBodyLengthTypeExcludes).
PR Close#37862
The current code is missing a single quote at the end of the import.
(cherry picked from commit e13171ea2960dd0fa0666cb964b53799d2883e3a)
PR Close#37854
Incremental compilation allows for the output state of one compilation to be
reused as input to the next compilation. This involves retaining references
to instances from prior compilations, which must be done carefully to avoid
memory leaks.
This commit fixes such a leak with a complicated retention chain:
* `TrackedIncrementalBuildStrategy` unnecessarily hangs on to the previous
`IncrementalDriver` (state of the previous compilation) once the current
compilation completes.
In general this is unnecessary, but should be safe as long as the chain
only goes back one level - if the `IncrementalDriver` doesn't retain any
previous `TrackedIncrementalBuildStrategy` instances. However, this does
happen:
* `NgCompiler` indirectly causes retention of previous `NgCompiler`
instances (and thus previous `TrackedIncrementalBuildStrategy` instances)
through accidental capture of the `this` context in a closure created in
its constructor. This closure is wrapped in a `ts.ModuleResolutionCache`
used to create a `ModuleResolver` class, which is passed to the program's
`TraitCompiler` on construction.
* The `IncrementalDriver` retains a reference to the `TraitCompiler` of the
previous compilation, completing the reference chain.
The final retention chain thus looks like:
* `TrackedIncrementalBuildStrategy` of current program
* `.previous`: `IncrementalDriver` of previous program
* `.lastGood.traitCompiler`: `TraitCompiler`
* `.handlers[..].moduleResolver.moduleResolutionCache`: cache
* (via `getCanonicalFileName` closure): `NgCompiler`
* `.incrementalStrategy`: `TrackedIncrementalBuildStrategy` of previous
program.
The closure link is the "real" leak here. `NgCompiler` is creating a closure
for `getCanonicalFileName`, delegating to its
`this.adapter.getCanonicalFileName`, for the purposes of creating a
`ts.ModuleResolutionCache`. The fact that the closure references
`NgCompiler` thus eventually causes previous `NgCompiler` iterations to be
retained. This is also potentially problematic due to the shared nature of
`ts.ModuleResolutionCache`, which is potentially retained across multiple
compilations intentionally.
This commit fixes the first two links in the retention chain: the build
strategy is patched to not retain a `previous` pointer, and the `NgCompiler`
is patched to not create a closure in the first place, but instead pass a
bound function. This ensures that the `NgCompiler` does not retain previous
instances of itself in the first place, even if the build strategy does
end up retaining the previous incremental state unnecessarily.
The third link (`IncrementalDriver` unnecessarily retaining the whole
`TraitCompiler`) is not addressed in this commit as it's a more
architectural problem that will require some refactoring. However, the leak
potential of this retention is eliminated thanks to fixing the first two
issues.
PR Close#37835
This commit fixes a spelling error in the word error in the
observables.md guide. It is currently
spelled errror and the mistake is not intentional.
PR Close#36437
change in the definition of providedIn:any any instance creates a singleton instance
for each lazy loaded module and one instance for eager loaded module
PR Close#35292
The major sections Angular Libraries, Schematics, and CLI Builders appear twice, in their old location under Techniques, and in the new correct location under Extending Angular.
PR Close#37833
PR https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/37523 failed when trying to use `rxjs delay` operator
inside `fakeAsync`, and the reasons are:
1. we need to import `rxjs-fake-async` patch to make the integration work.
2. since in `angular` repo, the bazel target `/tools/testing:node` not using `zone-testing` bundle,
instead it load `zone-spec` packages seperately, so it causes one issue which is the `zone.js/testing/fake-async`
package is not loaded, we do have a fallback logic under `packages/core/testing` calles `fake_async_fallback`,
but the logic is out of date with `fake-async` under `zone.js` package.
So this PR, I updated the content of `fake_async_fallback` to make it consistent with
`fake-async`. And I will make another PR to try to remove the `fallback` logic.
PR Close#37680
When ngcc creates an entry-point program, the `allowJs` option is enabled
in order to operate on the JavaScript source files of the entry-point.
A side-effect of this approach is that external modules that don't ship
declaration files will also have their JavaScript source files loaded
into the program, as the `allowJs` flag allows for them to be imported.
This may pose an issue in certain edge cases, where ngcc would inadvertently
operate on these external modules. This can introduce all sorts of undesirable
behavior and incompatibilities, e.g. the reflection host that is selected for
the entry-point's format could be incompatible with that of the external
module's JavaScript bundles.
To avoid these kinds of issues, module resolution that would resolve to
a JavaScript file located outside of the package will instead be rejected,
as if the file would not exist. This would have been the behavior when
`allowJs` is set to false, which is the case in typical Angular compilations.
Fixes#37508
PR Close#37596
Changes `isWithinPackage` to take an `AbsoluteFsPath` instead of `ts.SourceFile`,
to allow for an upcoming change to use it when no `ts.SourceFile` is available,
but just a path.
PR Close#37596
Previously, event listeners for component output events attached on an
Angular custom element before inserting it into the DOM (i.e. before
instantiating the underlying component) didn't fire for events emitted
during initialization lifecycle hooks, such as `ngAfterContentInit`,
`ngAfterViewInit`, `ngOnChanges` (initial call) and `ngOnInit`.
The reason was that `NgElementImpl` [subscribed to events][1] _after_
calling [ngElementStrategy#connect()][2], which is where the
[initial change detection][3] takes place (running the initialization
lifecycle hooks).
This commit fixes this by:
1. Ensuring `ComponentNgElementStrategy#events` is defined and available
for subscribing to, even before instantiating the component.
2. Changing `NgElementImpl` to subscribe to `NgElementStrategy#events`
(if available) before calling `NgElementStrategy#connect()` (which
initializes the component instance) if available.
3. Falling back to the old behavior (subscribing to `events` after
calling `connect()` for strategies that do not initialize `events`
before their `connect()` is run).
NOTE:
By falling back to the old behavior when `NgElementStrategy#events` is
not initialized before calling `NgElementStrategy#connect()`, we avoid
breaking existing custom `NgElementStrategy` implementations (with
@remackgeek's [ElementZoneStrategy][4] being a commonly used example).
Jira issue: [FW-2010](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-2010)
[1]: c0143cb2ab/packages/elements/src/create-custom-element.ts (L167-L170)
[2]: c0143cb2ab/packages/elements/src/create-custom-element.ts (L164)
[3]: c0143cb2ab/packages/elements/src/component-factory-strategy.ts (L158)
[4]: f1b6699495/projects/elements-zone-strategy/src/lib/element-zone-strategy.tsFixes#36141
PR Close#37570
Previously an error thrown in the `analyzeFn` would cause
the ngcc process to exit immediately without removing the
lockfile, and potentially before the unlocker process had been
successfully spawned resulting in the lockfile being orphaned
and left behind.
Now we catch these errors and remove the lockfile as needed.
PR Close#37739
Invoking a callback registered through `ViewRef.onDestroy` throws an error, because we weren't registering it correctly in the internal data structure. These changes also remove the `storeCleanupFn` function, because it was mostly identical to `storeCleanupWithContext` and was only used in one place.
Fixes#36213.
PR Close#37543
PR Close#37783
Verify that HTML parsing is supported in addition to DOMParser existence.
This maybe wasn't as important before when DOMParser was used just as a
fallback on Firefox, but now that DOMParser is the default choice, we need
to be more accurate.
PR Close#37783
The `inertDocument` member is only needed when using the InertDocument
strategy. By separating the DOMParser and InertDocument strategies into
separate classes, we can easily avoid creating the inert document
unnecessarily when using DOMParser.
PR Close#37783
If [innerHTML] is used in a component and a Content-Security-Policy is set
that does not allow inline styles then Firefox and Chrome show the following
message:
> Content Security Policy: The page’s settings observed the loading of a
resource at self (“default-src”). A CSP report is being sent.
This message is caused because Angular is creating an inline style tag to
test for a browser bug that we use to decide what sanitization strategy to
use, which causes CSP violation errors if inline CSS is prohibited.
This test is no longer necessary, since the `DOMParser` is now safe to use
and the `style` based check is redundant.
In this fix, we default to using `DOMParser` if it is available and fall back
to `createHTMLDocument()` if needed. This is the approach used by DOMPurify
too.
The related unit tests in `html_sanitizer_spec.ts`, "should not allow
JavaScript execution when creating inert document" and "should not allow
JavaScript hidden in badly formed HTML to get through sanitization (Firefox
bug)", are left untouched to assert that the behavior hasn't changed in
those scenarios.
Fixes#25214.
PR Close#37783
This commit updates the golden file that contains the set of symbols used in the test TODO app. The `storeCleanupFn` function was replaced by `storeCleanupWithContext` in 75b119eafc and this commit updates the golden file to reflect that.
PR Close#37785
Invoking a callback registered through `ViewRef.onDestroy` throws an error, because we weren't registering it correctly in the internal data structure. These changes also remove the `storeCleanupFn` function, because it was mostly identical to `storeCleanupWithContext` and was only used in one place.
Fixes#36213.
PR Close#37543
Special DI tokens like `ChangeDetectorRef` and `ElementRef` can provide a factory via `NG_ELEMENT_ID`. The problem is that we were reading it off the token as `token[NG_ELEMENT_ID]` which will go up the prototype chain if it couldn't be found on the current token, resulting in the private `ViewRef` API being exposed, because it extends `ChangeDetectorRef`.
These changes fix the issue by guarding the property access with `hasOwnProperty`.
Fixes#36235.
PR Close#37574
This commit fixes a bug whereby the language service would incorrectly
return HTML elements if autocomplete is requested for an unknown symbol.
This is because we walk through every possible scenario, and fallback to
element autocomplete if none of the scenarios match.
The fix here is to return results from interpolation if we know for sure
we are in a bound text. This means we will now return an empty results if
there is no suggestions.
This commit also refactors the code a little to make it easier to
understand.
PR Close#37518
docs commits are sometimes trivial (e.g. an obvious typo fix) and in such cases its very
akward to to write up 100 chars worth of text about why this typo fix is the best thing in the
world and why it is so important and crucial that we must know why we are fixing the typo
at all. After all most typos are not just typos. Or are they? We'll shall see...
PR Close#37764
This feature will allow us to exclude certain commits from the 100 chars minBodyLength requirement for commit
messages which is hard to satisfy for commits that make trivial changes (e.g. fixing typos in docs or comments).
PR Close#37764
This commit replaces an assert with more descriptive error message that is thrown in case `<ng-template>` or `<ng-container>` is used as host element for a Component.
Resolves#35240.
PR Close#35916
The shims_for_IE.js file contains vendor code that predates the third_party
directory. This file is currently used for internal karma testing setup. This
change corrects this by moving the shims_for_IE file to //third_part/
PR Close#37624
`getExternalFiles()` is an API that could optionally be provided by a tsserver plugin
to notify the server of any additional files that should belong to a particular project.
This API was removed in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/34260 mainly
due to performance reasons.
However, with the introduction of "solution-style" tsconfig in typescript 3.9,
the Angular extension could no longer reliably detect the owning Project solely
based on the ancestor tsconfig.json. In order to support this use case, we have
to reinstate `getExternalFiles()`.
Fixes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/824
PR Close#37750
Scripts provided in the `ng-dev` command might use local `git`
commands. For such scripts, we keep track of the branch that
has been checked out before the command has been invoked.
We do this so that we can later (upon command completion)
restore back to the original branch. We do not want to
leave the Git repository in a dirty state.
It looks like this logic currently only deals with branches
but does not work properly when a command is invoked from
a detached head. We can make it work by just checking out
the previous revision (if no branch is checked out).
PR Close#37737
Adds the publishConfig registry value to the package.json of the
@angular/benchpress package to publish it via wombat rather than
through npm directly.
PR Close#37752
I was using schematics with the `--name` parameter instead of the `--project`, I did both ways before sending and my suspicion about outdated documentation was confirmed
PR Close#37681
Addresses small typos such as extra whitespaces.
This change was extracted from #29505.
This change was extracted from #29505.
This change was extracted from #29505.
PR Close#37753
The deployment to aio is currently failing because #37721 introduced
"project" entry into the firebase.json which means that we now need to
select the deployment target before deploying to firebase.
This change fixes the issue and refactors the file to be easier to read.
I also added extra echo statements so that the CI logs are easier to
read in case we need to troubleshoot future issues.
PR Close#37762
This typo caused the script to fail on Linux (interestingly it works fine on Mac).
This is a painful reminder that we should not write any more Bash scripts EVER. shelljs FTW! :-)
PR Close#37754
Currently when bootstrapped component is being removed using `ComponentRef.destroy` or `NgModuleRef.destroy` methods, DOM nodes may be retained in the DOM tree. This commit fixes that problem by always attaching host element of the internal root view to the component's host view node, so the cleanup can happen correctly.
Resolves#36449.
PR Close#37600
As of v10, the `undecorated-classes-with-decorated-fields` migration
generally deals with undecorated classes using Angular features. We
intended to run this migation as part of v10 again as undecorated
classes with Angular features are no longer supported in planned v11.
The migration currently behaves incorrectly in some cases where an
`@Injectable` or `@Pipe` decorated classes uses the `ngOnDestroy`
lifecycle hook. We incorrectly add a TODO for those classes. This
commit fixes that.
Additionally, this change makes the migration more robust to
not migrate a class if it inherits from a component, pipe
injectable or non-abstract directive. We previously did not
need this as the undecorated-classes-with-di migration ran
before, but this is no longer the case.
Last, this commit fixes an issue where multiple TODO's could be
added. This happens when multiple Angular CLI build targets have
an overlap in source files. Multiple programs then capture the
same source file, causing the migration to detect an undecorated
class multiple times (i.e. adding a TODO twice).
Fixes#37726.
PR Close#37732
Commit 4213e8d5 introduced shim reference tagging into the compiler, and
changed how the `TypeCheckProgramHost` worked under the hood during the
creation of a template type-checking program. This work enabled a more
incremental flow for template type-checking, but unintentionally introduced
several regressions in performance, caused by poor incrementality during
`ts.Program` creation.
1. The `TypeCheckProgramHost` was made to rely on the `ts.CompilerHost` to
retrieve instances of `ts.SourceFile`s from the original program. If the
host does not return the original instance of such files, but instead
creates new instances, this has two negative effects: it incurs
additional parsing time, and it interferes with TypeScript's ability to
reuse information about such files.
2. During the incremental creation of a `ts.Program`, TypeScript compares
the `referencedFiles` of `ts.SourceFile` instances from the old program
with those in the new program. If these arrays differ, TypeScript cannot
fully reuse the old program. The implementation of reference tagging
introduced in 4213e8d5 restores the original `referencedFiles` array
after a `ts.Program` is created, which means that future incremental
operations involving that program will always fail this comparison,
effectively limiting the incrementality TypeScript can achieve.
Problem 1 exacerbates problem 2: if a new `ts.SourceFile` is created by the
host after shim generation has been disabled, it will have an untagged
`referencedFiles` array even if the original file's `referencedFiles` was
not restored, triggering problem 2 when creating the template type-checking
program.
To fix these issues, `referencedFiles` arrays are now restored on the old
`ts.Program` prior to the creation of a new incremental program. This allows
TypeScript to get the most out of reusing the old program's data.
Additionally, the `TypeCheckProgramHost` now uses the original `ts.Program`
to retrieve original instances of `ts.SourceFile`s where possible,
preventing issues when a host would otherwise return fresh instances.
Together, these fixes ensure that program reuse is as incremental as
possible, and tests have been added to verify this for certain scenarios.
An optimization was further added to prevent the creation of a type-checking
`ts.Program` in the first place if no type-checking is necessary.
PR Close#37690
This commit uses the correct component (`HeroesComponent`) in the.
`MessageService`. Previously, the `MessageService` was using
`HeroeService`.
Closes#37654
PR Close#37666
v9.angular.io was used to pilot the firebase hosting multisites setup for angular.io.
The deployments so far have been done manually to control the deployment process.
This change, automates the deployment for v9.angular.io so that future deployments can be made from
the CI.
See https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/DEV-125 for more info.
In the process of updating the scripts I rediscovered a bug in the deploy-to-firebase.sh script that
incorrect compared two numbers as strings. This previously worked correctly because we were comparing
single digit numbers. With the release of v10, we now compare 9 > 10 which behaves differently for
strings and numbers. The bug was fixed by switching to an arithmetic comparison of the two variables.
This bug has been fixed on the master branch but not on the 9.1.x branch. I realized this during the
rebase, but found my version to be a bit cleaner, so I kept it.
PR Close#37721
Previously, `registerOnChange` used `hasOwnProperty` to identify if the
property is supported. However, this does not work as the `selectedOptions`
property is an inherited property. This commit fixes this by verifying
the property on the prototype instead.
Closes#37433
PR Close#37620
Value of "undefined" passed as segment in routerLink is stringified to string "undefined".
This change introduces the same behavior for value of "null".
PR Close#32616
When using the routerLinkActive directive inside a component that is using ChangeDetectionStrategy.OnPush and lazy loaded module routes the routerLinkActive directive does not update after clicking a link to a lazy loaded route that has not already been loaded.
Also the OnPush nav component does not set routerLinkActive correctly when the default route loads, the non-OnPush nav component works fine.
regression caused by #15943closes#19934
PR Close#21411
* add a param called ng_assets to the component_benchmark macro to allow static assets to be provided to the base angular app, not just through the ts_devserver
PR Close#37695
This commit adds the support schedule for v10.
v10.0.0 was released on June 24, 2020.
Active support ends six months later, on Dec 24, 2020.
Long term support ends a year after that, on Dec 24, 2021.
PR Close#37745
Previously, dev-infra approval (via PullApprove) was required for all
.bazel files in the monorepo, including those in packages/compiler-cli.
The compiler-cli package is a little special in this sense:
* it's not shipped to NPM in the APF
* it uses lots of internal subpackages to organize and test its code
As a result:
* changes to compiler-cli BUILD.bazel files are not user visible and
don't have larger implications for the packages published to NPM,
unlike changes to other BUILD.bazel files in the repo
* the requirement for dev-infra approval for BUILD.bazel changes is
overly burdensome, because compiler-cli build files change more
rapidly than those of other packages.
This commit exempts the compiler-cli's build files from the requirement
for dev-infra approval. It will be sufficient for such files to be
approved by the normal compiler reviewers.
PR Close#37558
Error message mention that ngModel and ngModelChange will be removed in Angular v7 but right not now sure when it will be removed so changed it to a future version
PR Close#37643
Api search functionality only had unit tests @gkalpak suggested we should have some e2e tests too. Added some end to end tests.
Fixes#35170
PR Close#37612
Mostly just adding links to the migrations that were missing, adding the migrations into the navbar,
as well as correcting the @angular/bazel removal in the update guide.
I also added a commented out preamble for the release notes.
PR Close#37705
adds new DI technique recommendation for libraries to ensure tree-shaking for unused services
includes reasons for packaging schematics with libraries, clarify schematic usage recommendation
PR Close#36144
This adds documentation for the v10.0 tooling migration `update-module-and-target-compiler-options` contained within the `@schematics/angular` package.
PR Close#37429
This update includes modifications to the navigation.json file to
remove unneeded migration guides.
TODO: Redirects from v9 topics to v10; links to removed migration
guides need to point to v9.angular.io.
PR Close#37152
7521834296 added content for CLI
deprecations to the `angular.io` deprecations guide. It looks
like the anchor for the CLI deprecations is incorrect and
ends up showing up as code in the guide.
This commit fixes the anchor so that it doesn't show
up as code in the guide.
PR Close#37662
The ContentChildren decorator has a metadata property named "read" which
can be used to read a different token from the queried elements. The
documentation incorrectly says "True to read..." when it should say
"Used to read...".
PR Close#37626
With this change we add the special `package.json` which is used to mark the application free of non-local side-effects in the application source files section
PR Close#37521
In routerLink if a fragment is added than fragment example shows that it is added before the params '/user/bob#education?debug=true' but actually they are added after that '/user/bob?debug=true#education' changed documentation to show correct example
Fixes#18630
PR Close#37590
The method was previously looping through all controls, even after finding at least one that
satisfies the provided condition. This can be a bottleneck with large forms. The new version
of the method returns as soon as a single control which conforms to the condition is found.
PR Close#32534
This change adds an implicit approval for any change by the
PR author. This allows for a PR author to provide the required
owner approval for an area of the code base.
This change helps to align the review methodology with how Google's
internal system works. Where anyone is able to provide the LGTM
for a change if thats all that is needed.
PR Close#36915
We would love for you to contribute to Angular and help make it even better than it is
today! As a contributor, here are the guidelines we would like you to follow:
We would love for you to contribute to Angular and help make it even better than it is today!
As a contributor, here are the guidelines we would like you to follow:
- [Code of Conduct](#coc)
- [Question or Problem?](#question)
@ -12,52 +12,63 @@ today! As a contributor, here are the guidelines we would like you to follow:
- [Commit Message Guidelines](#commit)
- [Signing the CLA](#cla)
## <a name="coc"></a> Code of Conduct
Help us keep Angular open and inclusive. Please read and follow our [Code of Conduct][coc].
Help us keep Angular open and inclusive.
Please read and follow our [Code of Conduct][coc].
## <a name="question"></a> Got a Question or Problem?
Do not open issues for general support questions as we want to keep GitHub issues for bug reports and feature requests. You've got much better chances of getting your question answered on [Stack Overflow](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/angular) where the questions should be tagged with tag `angular`.
Do not open issues for general support questions as we want to keep GitHub issues for bug reports and feature requests.
Instead, we recommend using [Stack Overflow](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/angular) to ask support-related questions. When creating a new question on Stack Overflow, make sure to add the `angular` tag.
Stack Overflow is a much better place to ask questions since:
- there are thousands of people willing to help on Stack Overflow
- questions and answers stay available for public viewing so your question / answer might help someone else
- questions and answers stay available for public viewing so your question/answer might help someone else
- Stack Overflow's voting system assures that the best answers are prominently visible.
To save your and our time, we will systematically close all issues that are requests for general support and redirect people to Stack Overflow.
If you would like to chat about the question in real-time, you can reach out via [our gitter channel][gitter].
## <a name="issue"></a> Found a Bug?
If you find a bug in the source code, you can help us by
[submitting an issue](#submit-issue) to our [GitHub Repository][github]. Even better, you can
[submit a Pull Request](#submit-pr) with a fix.
If you find a bug in the source code, you can help us by [submitting an issue](#submit-issue) to our [GitHub Repository][github].
Even better, you can [submit a Pull Request](#submit-pr) with a fix.
## <a name="feature"></a> Missing a Feature?
You can *request* a new feature by [submitting an issue](#submit-issue) to our GitHub
Repository. If you would like to *implement* a new feature, please submit an issue with
a proposal for your work first, to be sure that we can use it.
Please consider what kind of change it is:
You can *request* a new feature by [submitting an issue](#submit-issue) to our GitHub Repository.
If you would like to *implement* a new feature, please consider the size of the change in order to determine the right steps to proceed:
* For a **Major Feature**, first open an issue and outline your proposal so that it can be discussed.
This process allows us to better coordinate our efforts, prevent duplication of work, and help you to craft the change so that it is successfully accepted into the project.
**Note**: Adding a new topic to the documentation, or significantly re-writing a topic, counts as a major feature.
* For a **Major Feature**, first open an issue and outline your proposal so that it can be
discussed. This will also allow us to better coordinate our efforts, prevent duplication of work,
and help you to craft the change so that it is successfully accepted into the project. **Note**:
Adding a new topic to the documentation, or significantly re-writing a topic, counts as a major
feature.
* **Small Features** can be crafted and directly [submitted as a Pull Request](#submit-pr).
## <a name="submit"></a> Submission Guidelines
### <a name="submit-issue"></a> Submitting an Issue
Before you submit an issue, please search the issue tracker, maybe an issue for your problem already exists and the discussion might inform you of workarounds readily available.
We want to fix all the issues as soon as possible, but before fixing a bug we need to reproduce and confirm it. In order to reproduce bugs, we will systematically ask you to provide a minimal reproduction. Having a minimal reproducible scenario gives us a wealth of important information without going back & forth to you with additional questions.
We want to fix all the issues as soon as possible, but before fixing a bug we need to reproduce and confirm it.
In order to reproduce bugs, we require that you provide a minimal reproduction.
Having a minimal reproducible scenario gives us a wealth of important information without going back and forth to you with additional questions.
A minimal reproduction allows us to quickly confirm a bug (or point out a coding problem) as well as confirm that we are fixing the right problem.
We will be insisting on a minimal reproduction scenario in order to save maintainers time and ultimately be able to fix more bugs. Interestingly, from our experience, users often find coding problems themselves while preparing a minimal reproduction. We understand that sometimes it might be hard to extract essential bits of code from a larger codebase but we really need to isolate the problem before we can fix it.
We require a minimal reproduction to save maintainers' time and ultimately be able to fix more bugs.
Often, developers find coding problems themselves while preparing a minimal reproduction.
We understand that sometimes it might be hard to extract essential bits of code from a larger codebase but we really need to isolate the problem before we can fix it.
Unfortunately, we are not able to investigate / fix bugs without a minimal reproduction, so if we don't hear back from you, we are going to close an issue that doesn't have enough info to be reproduced.
@ -65,57 +76,66 @@ You can file new issues by selecting from our [new issue templates](https://gith
### <a name="submit-pr"></a> Submitting a Pull Request (PR)
Before you submit your Pull Request (PR) consider the following guidelines:
1. Search [GitHub](https://github.com/angular/angular/pulls) for an open or closed PR
that relates to your submission. You don't want to duplicate effort.
1. Be sure that an issue describes the problem you're fixing, or documents the design for the feature you'd like to add.
Discussing the design up front helps to ensure that we're ready to accept your work.
We cannot accept code without this. Make sure you sign with the primary email address of the Git identity that has been granted access to the Angular repository.
1.Fork the angular/angular repo.
1. Make your changes in a new git branch:
1. Search [GitHub](https://github.com/angular/angular/pulls) for an open or closed PR that relates to your submission.
You don't want to duplicate existing efforts.
2. Be sure that an issue describes the problem you're fixing, or documents the design for the feature you'd like to add.
Discussing the design upfront helps to ensure that we're ready to accept your work.
3.Please sign our [Contributor License Agreement (CLA)](#cla) before sending PRs.
We cannot accept code without a signed CLA.
Make sure you author all contributed Git commits with email address associated with your CLA signature.
4. Fork the angular/angular repo.
5. Make your changes in a new git branch:
```shell
git checkout -b my-fix-branch master
```
1. Create your patch, **including appropriate test cases**.
1. Follow our [Coding Rules](#rules).
1. Run the full Angular test suite, as described in the [developer documentation][dev-doc],
and ensure that all tests pass.
1. Commit your changes using a descriptive commit message that follows our
[commit message conventions](#commit). Adherence to these conventions
is necessary because release notes are automatically generated from these messages.
6. Create your patch, **including appropriate test cases**.
7. Follow our [Coding Rules](#rules).
8. Run the full Angular test suite, as described in the [developer documentation][dev-doc], and ensure that all tests pass.
9. Commit your changes using a descriptive commit message that follows our [commit message conventions](#commit).
Adherence to these conventions is necessary because release notes are automatically generated from these messages.
```shell
git commit -a
```
Note: the optional commit `-a` command line option will automatically "add" and "rm" edited files.
1. Push your branch to GitHub:
10. Push your branch to GitHub:
```shell
git push origin my-fix-branch
```
1. In GitHub, send a pull request to `angular:master`.
* If we suggest changes then:
* Make the required updates.
* Re-run the Angular test suites to ensure tests are still passing.
* Rebase your branch and force push to your GitHub repository (this will update your Pull Request):
11. In GitHub, send a pull request to `angular:master`.
```shell
git rebase master -i
git push -f
```
If we ask for changes via code reviews then:
* Make the required updates.
* Re-run the Angular test suites to ensure tests are still passing.
* Rebase your branch and force push to your GitHub repository (this will update your Pull Request):
```shell
git rebase master -i
git push -f
```
That's it! Thank you for your contribution!
#### After your pull request is merged
After your pull request is merged, you can safely delete your branch and pull the changes
from the main (upstream) repository:
After your pull request is merged, you can safely delete your branch and pull the changes from the main (upstream) repository:
* Delete the remote branch on GitHub either through the GitHub web UI or your local shell as follows:
@ -141,55 +161,66 @@ from the main (upstream) repository:
git pull --ff upstream master
```
## <a name="rules"></a> Coding Rules
To ensure consistency throughout the source code, keep these rules in mind as you are working:
* All features or bug fixes **must be tested** by one or more specs (unit-tests).
* All public API methods **must be documented**. (Details TBC).
* We follow [Google's JavaScript Style Guide][js-style-guide], but wrap all code at
**100 characters**. An automated formatter is available, see
[DEVELOPER.md](docs/DEVELOPER.md#clang-format).
* All public API methods **must be documented**.
* We follow [Google's JavaScript Style Guide][js-style-guide], but wrap all code at **100 characters**.
If the commit reverts a previous commit, it should begin with `revert: `, followed by the header of the reverted commit. In the body it should say: `This reverts commit <hash>.`, where the hash is the SHA of the commit being reverted.
The `<type>` and `<summary>` fields are mandatory, the `(<scope>)` field is optional.
##### Type
### Type
Must be one of the following:
* **build**: Changes that affect the build system or external dependencies (example scopes: gulp, broccoli, npm)
@ -202,67 +233,95 @@ Must be one of the following:
* **style**: Changes that do not affect the meaning of the code (white-space, formatting, missing semi-colons, etc)
* **test**: Adding missing tests or correcting existing tests
### Scope
##### Scope
The scope should be the name of the npm package affected (as perceived by the person reading the changelog generated from commit messages).
The following is the list of supported scopes:
* **animations**
* **bazel**
* **benchpress**
* **common**
* **compiler**
* **compiler-cli**
* **core**
* **elements**
* **forms**
* **http**
* **language-service**
* **localize**
* **platform-browser**
* **platform-browser-dynamic**
* **platform-server**
* **platform-webworker**
* **platform-webworker-dynamic**
* **router**
* **service-worker**
* **upgrade**
* **zone.js**
* `animations`
* `bazel`
* `benchpress`
* `common`
* `compiler`
* `compiler-cli`
* `core`
* `elements`
* `forms`
* `http`
* `language-service`
* `localize`
* `platform-browser`
* `platform-browser-dynamic`
* `platform-server`
* `platform-webworker`
* `platform-webworker-dynamic`
* `router`
* `service-worker`
* `upgrade`
* `zone.js`
There are currently a few exceptions to the "use package name" rule:
* **packaging**: used for changes that change the npm package layout in all of our packages, e.g.
public path changes, package.json changes done to all packages, d.ts file/format changes, changes
to bundles, etc.
* **changelog**: used for updating the release notes in CHANGELOG.md
* **docs-infra**: used for docs-app (angular.io) related changes within the /aio directory of the
repo
* **dev-infra**: used for dev-infra related changes within the directories /scripts, /tools and /dev-infra
* **migrations**: used for changes to the `ng update` migrations.
* **ngcc**: used for changes to the [Angular Compatibility Compiler](./packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/README.md)
* **ve**: used for changes specific to ViewEngine (legacy compiler/renderer).
* none/empty string: useful for `style`, `test` and `refactor` changes that are done across all
packages (e.g. `style: add missing semicolons`) and for docs changes that are not related to a
specific package (e.g. `docs: fix typo in tutorial`).
* `packaging`: used for changes that change the npm package layout in all of our packages, e.g. public path changes, package.json changes done to all packages, d.ts file/format changes, changes to bundles, etc.
### Subject
The subject contains a succinct description of the change:
* `changelog`: used for updating the release notes in CHANGELOG.md
* `dev-infra`: used for dev-infra related changes within the directories /scripts, /tools and /dev-infra
* `docs-infra`: used for docs-app (angular.io) related changes within the /aio directory of the repo
* `migrations`: used for changes to the `ng update` migrations.
* `ngcc`: used for changes to the [Angular Compatibility Compiler](./packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/README.md)
* `ve`: used for changes specific to ViewEngine (legacy compiler/renderer).
* none/empty string: useful for `style`, `test` and `refactor` changes that are done across all packages (e.g. `style: add missing semicolons`) and for docs changes that are not related to a specific package (e.g. `docs: fix typo in tutorial`).
##### Summary
Use the summary field to provide a succinct description of the change:
* use the imperative, present tense: "change" not "changed" nor "changes"
* don't capitalize the first letter
* no dot (.) at the end
### Body
Just as in the **subject**, use the imperative, present tense: "change" not "changed" nor "changes".
The body should include the motivation for the change and contrast this with previous behavior.
### Footer
The footer should contain any information about **Breaking Changes** and is also the place to
reference GitHub issues that this commit **Closes**.
#### Commit Message Body
**Breaking Changes** should start with the word `BREAKING CHANGE:` with a space or two newlines. The rest of the commit message is then used for this.
Just as in the summary, use the imperative, present tense: "fix" not "fixed" nor "fixes".
Explain the motivation for the change in the commit message body. This commit message should explain _why_ you are making the change.
You can include a comparison of the previous behavior with the new behavior in order to illustrate the impact of the change.
#### Commit Message Footer
The footer can contain information about breaking changes and is also the place to reference GitHub issues, Jira tickets, and other PRs that this commit closes or is related to.
Breaking Change section should start with the phrase "BREAKING CHANGE: " followed by a summary of the breaking change, a blank line, and a detailed description of the breaking change that also includes migration instructions.
### Revert commits
If the commit reverts a previous commit, it should begin with `revert: `, followed by the header of the reverted commit.
The content of the commit message body should contain:
- information about the SHA of the commit being reverted in the following format: `This reverts commit <SHA>`,
- a clear description of the reason for reverting the commit message.
A detailed explanation can be found in this [document][commit-message-format].
## <a name="cla"></a> Signing the CLA
@ -273,18 +332,17 @@ changes to be accepted, the CLA must be signed. It's a quick process, we promise
* For corporations, we'll need you to
[print, sign and one of scan+email, fax or mail the form][corporate-cla].
<hr>
If you have more than one GitHub accounts, or multiple email addresses associated with a single GitHub account, you must sign the CLA using the primary email address of the GitHub account used to author Git commits and send pull requests.
If you have more than one Git identity, you must make sure that you sign the CLA using the primary email address associated with the ID that has been granted access to the Angular repository. Git identities can be associated with more than one email address, and only one is primary. Here are some links to help you sort out multiple Git identities and email addresses:
The following documents can help you sort out issues with GitHub accounts and multiple email addresses:
Note that if you have more than one Git identity, it is important to verify that you are logged in with the same ID with which you signed the CLA, before you commit changes. If not, your PR will fail the CLA check.
The Angular CLI is a command-line interface tool that you use to initialize, develop, scaffold, and maintain Angular applications. You can use the tool directly in a command shell, or indirectly through an interactive UI such as [Angular Console](https://angularconsole.com).
The Angular CLI is a command-line interface tool that you use to initialize, develop, scaffold, and maintain Angular applications directly from a command shell.
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