Co-authored-by: Julio Lagos <julio.lagos.carrera@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Daniel Díaz <36966980+dalejodc@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Michael Prentice <splaktar@gmail.com>
Fixes#213
- reducir CI_AIO_MIN_PWA_SCORE
- se desconoce por qué la puntuación es 62 en CircleCI y 3/3, 3/3, 7/8 en Chrome
- comience a agregar IDs de proyectos y URLs de Angular Hispano
- elimine `test_docs_examples` ya que consume demasiados recursos
y no necesitamos verificar que los ejemplos pasen las pruebas
Relates to #3
- aclarar que el trabajo de bugs / características debe realizarse upstream
- cambiar los enlaces para que apunten dentro del repositorio en lugar de a la web
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
be0bc799f3fa99582238f29cb575e0705ce0c10f.
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 7f8c2225f2cba3dfcf3ec23e0fe08b7d2e3497e8.
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 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
When the `NgIf` directive is used in a template, its context variables
can be used to capture the bound value. This is sometimes used in
complex expressions, where the resulting value is captured in a
context variable. There's two syntax forms available:
1. Binding to `NgIfContext.ngIf` using the `as` syntax:
```html
<span *ngIf="enabled && user as u">{{u.name}}</span>
```
2. Binding to `NgIfContext.$implicit` using the `let` syntax:
```html
<span *ngIf="enabled && user; let u">{{u.name}}</span>
```
Because of the semantics of `ngIf`, it is known that the captured
context variable is truthy, however the template type checker
would not consider them as such and still report errors when
`strict` is enabled.
This commit updates `NgIf`'s context guard to make the types of the
context variables truthy, avoiding the issue.
Based on https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/35125
PR Close#36627
```
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
Since the PR #36540 change the zone.js bundles to Angular Package Format, the
bundle name/location are changed, so this PR updated the `README.md` doc for the
zone bundles.
Also add the recent added new bundles `zone-patch-message-port` doc.
PR Close#37919
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
Separate `EventTarget`, `FileReader`, `MutationObserver` and `IntersectionObserver` patches into different module.
So the user can disable those modules separately.
PR Close#31657
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
This commit creates a sample forms test application to introduce the symbol
tests. It serves as a guard to ensure that any future work on the
forms package does not unintentionally increase the payload size.
PR Close#38044
A util file is added to forms test package:
- it exposes simpleAsyncValidator, asyncValidator and asyncValidatorReturningObservable validators
- it refactors simpleAsyncValidator and asyncValidator to use common promise creation code
- it exposes currentStateOf allowing to get the validation state of a list of AbstractControl
Closes#37831
PR Close#38020
Default change detection fails in some cases for @angular/elements where
component events are called from the wrong zone.
This fixes the issue by running all ComponentNgElementStrategy methods
in the same zone it was created in.
Fixes#24181
PR Close#37814
Create initial document for Angular framework coding standards. This
document will evolve over time. This version contains all
non-controversial rules as discussed in a recent team meeting. Some text
and examples were copied from angular/components.
PR Close#37700
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
Developer docs previously stated to use `yarn bazel test //packages/...` which attempts to test all packages with View
Engine (the default), even though not all support View Engine. This updates the doc to use `yarn test-ivy-aot` and
`yarn test-non-ivy` which tests both Ivy and View Engine while filtering out tests which are not compatible with each
renderer.
PR Close#38149
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 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#38371
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#30143
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
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
For attribute bindings that target a directive's input, the template
type checker is able to verify that the type of the input expression is
compatible with the directive's declaration for said input. This
checking adheres to the `strictNullChecks` flag as configured in the
TypeScript compilation, such that errors are reported for expressions
that include `undefined` or `null` in their type if the input's
declaration does not include those types.
There was a bug with this level of type-checking for directives that
also declare coercion members, where binding an expression that includes
the `undefined` type to a directive's input that does not include the
`undefined` type would not be reported as error.
This commit fixes the bug by changing the type-constructor in type-check
code to use an intersection type of regular inputs and coerced inputs,
instead of a union type. The union type would inadvertently allow
`undefined` types to be assigned into the regular inputs, as that would
still satisfy the characteristics of a union type.
As a result of this change, you may start to see build failures if
`strictTemplates` is enabled and `strictInputTypes` is not disabled.
These errors are legitimate and some action is required to achieve a
successful build:
1. Update the templates for which an error is reported and introduce the
non-null assertion operator at the end of the expression. This
removes the `undefined` type from the expression's type, making it
appear as a valid assignment.
2. Disable `strictNullInputTypes` in the compiler options. This will
implicitly add the non-null assertion operators similar to option 1,
but all templates in the compilation are affected.
3. Update the directive's input declaration to include the `undefined`
type, if the directive is not implemented in an external library.
PR Close#38273
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
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
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
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
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
@angular/core/testing provide `async` test utility, but the name `async` is
confusing with the javascript keyword `async`. And in some test case, if you
want to use both the `async` from `@angular/core/testing` and `async/await`,
you may have to write the code like this.
```typescript
it('test async operations', async(async() => {
const result = await asyncMethod();
expect(result).toEqual('expected');
}));
```
So in this PR, the `async` is renamed to `waitForAsync` and also deprecate `async`.
PR Close#37583
This reverts commit b4449e35bfd04c5858ded17c0ce56248d680e8d4.
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
be0bc799f3fa99582238f29cb575e0705ce0c10f.
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 7f8c2225f2cba3dfcf3ec23e0fe08b7d2e3497e8.
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 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
When the `NgIf` directive is used in a template, its context variables
can be used to capture the bound value. This is sometimes used in
complex expressions, where the resulting value is captured in a
context variable. There's two syntax forms available:
1. Binding to `NgIfContext.ngIf` using the `as` syntax:
```html
<span *ngIf="enabled && user as u">{{u.name}}</span>
```
2. Binding to `NgIfContext.$implicit` using the `let` syntax:
```html
<span *ngIf="enabled && user; let u">{{u.name}}</span>
```
Because of the semantics of `ngIf`, it is known that the captured
context variable is truthy, however the template type checker
would not consider them as such and still report errors when
`strict` is enabled.
This commit updates `NgIf`'s context guard to make the types of the
context variables truthy, avoiding the issue.
Based on https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/35125
PR Close#36627
```
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
Since the PR #36540 change the zone.js bundles to Angular Package Format, the
bundle name/location are changed, so this PR updated the `README.md` doc for the
zone bundles.
Also add the recent added new bundles `zone-patch-message-port` doc.
PR Close#37919
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
Separate `EventTarget`, `FileReader`, `MutationObserver` and `IntersectionObserver` patches into different module.
So the user can disable those modules separately.
PR Close#31657
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
This commit creates a sample forms test application to introduce the symbol
tests. It serves as a guard to ensure that any future work on the
forms package does not unintentionally increase the payload size.
PR Close#38044
A util file is added to forms test package:
- it exposes simpleAsyncValidator, asyncValidator and asyncValidatorReturningObservable validators
- it refactors simpleAsyncValidator and asyncValidator to use common promise creation code
- it exposes currentStateOf allowing to get the validation state of a list of AbstractControl
Closes#37831
PR Close#38020
Default change detection fails in some cases for @angular/elements where
component events are called from the wrong zone.
This fixes the issue by running all ComponentNgElementStrategy methods
in the same zone it was created in.
Fixes#24181
PR Close#37814
Create initial document for Angular framework coding standards. This
document will evolve over time. This version contains all
non-controversial rules as discussed in a recent team meeting. Some text
and examples were copied from angular/components.
PR Close#37700
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
Developer docs previously stated to use `yarn bazel test //packages/...` which attempts to test all packages with View
Engine (the default), even though not all support View Engine. This updates the doc to use `yarn test-ivy-aot` and
`yarn test-non-ivy` which tests both Ivy and View Engine while filtering out tests which are not compatible with each
renderer.
PR Close#38149
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 refactors the way we store validators in AbstractControl-based classes:
in addition to the combined validators function that we have, we also store the original list of validators.
This is needed to have an ability to clean them up later at destroy time (currently it's problematic since
they are combined in a single function).
The change preserves backwards compatibility by making sure public APIs stay the same.
The only public API update is the change to the `AbstractControl` class constructor to extend the set
of possible types that it can accept and process (which should not be breaking).
PR Close#37881
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#37145
ReadonlyMap is a superset of Map, in keyValuePipe we do not change the value of the object so ReadonlyPipe Works right in this case and we can accomodate more types. To accomodate more types added ReadonlyMap in Key Value pipe.
Fixes#37308
PR Close#37311
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
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
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
We recently reworked our `ng_rollup_bundle` rule to no longer output
ESM5 and to optimize applications properly (previously applications were
not optimized properly due to incorrect build optimizer setup).
This change meant that a lot of symbols have been removed from the
golden correctly. See: fd65958b887f6ea8dd5235e6de1d533e4c578602
Unfortunately though, a few symbols have been accidentally removed
because they are now part of the bundle as ES2015 classes which the
symbol extractor does not pick up. This commit fixes the symbol
extractor to capture ES2015 classes. We also update the golden to
reflect this change.
PR Close#38093
Previously, the i18n message extractor just quietly ignored messages that
it extracted that had the same id. It can be helpful to identify these
to track down messages that have the same id but different message text.
Now the messages are checked for duplicate ids with different message text.
Any that are found can be reported based on the new `--duplicateMessageHandling`
command line option (or `duplicateMessageHandling` API options property).
* "ignore" - no action is taken
* "warning" - a diagnostic warning is written to the logger
* "error" - the extractor throws an error and exits
Fixes#38077
PR Close#38082
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
`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
* Add petebacondarwin to public-api, size-tracking, and circular-dependencies
* Add mhevery, josephperrott, and jelbourn to code-ownership
PR Close#37994
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#35464
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
The function was removed by default in Bazel 0.27.
It is still accessible with the flag `--incompatible_new_actions_api`
(which is set in Google code base), but the flag will be deleted very soon.
This change should be a no-op for Bazel users. The change was tested in
Google (cl/318277076) and should be safe as well.
PR Close#38080
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
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
The current method of handling duplicate navigations caused by 'hashchange' and 'popstate' events for the same url change does not correctly handle cancelled navigations. Because `scheduleNavigation` is called in a `setTimeout` in the location change subscription, the duplicate navigations are not flushed at the same time. This means that if the initial navigation hits a guard that schedules a new navigation, the navigation for the duplicate event will not compare to the correct transition (because we inserted another navigation between the duplicates). See https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/16710#issuecomment-646919529Fixes#16710
PR Close#37674
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
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#37959
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
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 38dfbc775f1
and eee2fd22e0a) 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
The ngtsc testing packages for file_system and logging were missing from the bazel deps rules, which means that they were not included in the releases
PR Close#37977
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
When loading a translation file we ask each `TranslationParser`
whether it can parse the file. Occasionally, this check can find
errors in the file that would be useful to the developer. For example
if the file has invalid XML.
This commit deprecates the previous `canParse()` method and replaces it
with a new `analyze()` method. This returns an object that includes a
boolean `canParse` and then either a `hint` if it can parse the file,
or a `diagnostics` object filled with any messages that can be used to
diagnose problems with the format of the file.
Closes #37901
PR Close#37909
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
CanLoad guards are processed in asynchronous manner with the following rules:
* If all guards return `true`, operator returns `true`;
* `false` and `UrlTree` values wait for higher priority guards to resolve;
* Highest priority `false` or `UrlTree` value will be returned.
`prioritizedGuardValue` uses `combineLatest` which in order subscribes to each Observable immediately (not waiting when previous one completes that `concatAll` do). So it makes some advantages in order to run them concurrently. Respectively, a time to resolve all guards will be reduced.
PR Close#37523
This PR changes the logic for determining when to skip route processing from
using the URL of the last attempted navigation to the actual resulting URL after
that transition.
Because guards may prevent navigation and reset the browser URL, the raw
URL of the previous transition may not match the actual URL of the
browser at the end of the navigation process. For that reason, we need to use
`urlAfterRedirects` instead.
Other notes:
These checks in scheduleNavigation were added in eb2ceff4ba
The test still passes and, more surprisingly, passes if the checks are removed
completely. There have likely been changes to the navigation handling that
handle the test in a different way. That said, it still appears to be important
to keep the checks there in some capacity because it does affect how many
navigation events occur. This addresses an issue that came up in #16710: https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/16710#issuecomment-634869739
This also partially addresses #13586 in fixing history for imperative
navigations that are cancelled by guards.
PR Close#37716
After recent correction to left nav TOC, the link to this new page was temporarily removed. This restores it to next, because the page is not yet available in stable.
PR Close#37855
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
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
Close#33657
in jasmine 3.5, there is a new feature, user can pass a properties object to `jasmine.createSpyObj`
```
const spy = jasmine.createSpyObj('spy', ['method1'], {prop1: 'foo'});
expect(spy.prop1).toEqual('foo');
```
This case will not work for Angular TestBed, for example,
```
describe('AppComponent', () => {
beforeEach(() => {
//Note the third parameter
// @ts-ignore
const someServiceSpy = jasmine.createSpyObj('SomeService', ['someFunction'], ['aProperty']);
TestBed.configureTestingModule({
declarations: [
AppComponent
],
providers: [
{provide: SomeService, useValue: someServiceSpy},
]
}).compileComponents();
});
it('should create the app', () => {
//spyObj will have someFunction, but will not have aProperty
let spyObj = TestBed.get(SomeService);
});
```
Because `jasmine.createSpyObj` will create the `aProperty` with `enumerable=false`,
and `TestBed.configureTestingModule` will try to copy all the properties from spyObj to
the injected service instance. And because `enumerable` is false, so the property (here is aProperty)
will not be copied.
This PR will monkey patch the `jasmine.createSpyObj` and make sure the new property's
`enumerable=true`.
PR Close#34624
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
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#37827
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
This commit updates the payload size limit for the `hello_world` test app built using Closure. This is likely an effect of the changes in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/36578 (that reduces the bundle size for most of the apps) and additional changes in subsequent commits.
PR Close#37784
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
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#36578
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#36578
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#36578
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
We recently added OAuth scope checking to the dev-infra Git client
and started leveraging it for the merge script. We set the `repo` scope
as required for running the merge script. We can loosen this requirement
as in the Angular org where the script is consumed, only pull requests on
public repositories are merged through the script.
This should help with reducing the risk with compromised tokens as no
access had to be granted on `repo:invite`, `repo_deployment` etc.
PR Close#37718
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
As reported in #37699, the size of the main angular.io bundle sometimes
ends up bigger than expected on CI. This usually goes away after
rerunning the job a couple of times.
It is unclear what is causing this. In order to help debug the issue,
this commit stores the JS files that are checked as part of the aio
payload-size check as CI artifacts, where they can be retrieved from and
inspected.
PR Close#37703
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
This commit disables all diagnostic tests for DynamicValue diagnostics which
make assertions about the diagnostic filename while running tests on Windows.
Such assertions are currently suffering from a case sensitivity issue.
PR Close#37763
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
Several partial_evaluator tests in the diagnostics_spec check assert
correctness of diagnostic filenames. Previously these assertions compared
a resolved (`absoluteFrom`) filename with the TypeScript `ts.SourceFile`'s
`fileName` string, which caused the tests to fail on Windows because the
drive letter case differed.
This commit changes the assertions to use `absoluteFromSourceFile` instead
of the `fileName` string, resulting in an apples-to-apples comparison of
canonicalized paths.
PR Close#37758
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
In version 10.0.0-next.8, we introduced absolute URL support for
server-based HTTP requests, so long as the fully-resolved URL was
provided in the initial config. However, doing so represents a
breaking change for users who already have their own interceptors
to model this functionality, since our logic executes before all
interceptors fire on a request. See original PR #37071.
Therefore, we introduce a flag to make this change consistent with
v9 behavior, allowing users to opt in to this new behavior. This
commit also fixes two issues with the previous implementation:
1. if the server was initiated with a relative URL, the absolute
URL construction would fail because needed components were empty
2. if the user's absolute URL was on a port, the port would not
be included
PR Close#37539
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
This commit introduces a dedicated `DynamicValue` kind to indicate that a value
cannot be evaluated statically as the function body is not just a single return
statement. This allows more accurate reporting of why a function call failed
to be evaluated, i.e. we now include a reference to the function declaration
and have a tailor-made diagnostic message.
PR Close#37587
During AOT compilation, the value of some expressions need to be known at
compile time. The compiler has the ability to statically evaluate expressions
the best it can, but there can be occurrences when an expression cannot be
evaluated statically. For instance, the evaluation could depend on a dynamic
value or syntax is used that the compiler does not understand. Alternatively,
it is possible that an expression could be statically evaluated but the
resulting value would be of an incorrect type.
In these situations, it would be helpful if the compiler could explain why it
is unable to evaluate an expression. To this extend, the static interpreter
in Ivy keeps track of a trail of `DynamicValue`s which follow the path of nodes
that were considered all the way to the node that causes an expression to be
considered dynamic. Up until this commit, this rich trail of information was
not surfaced to a developer so the compiler was of little help to explain
why static evaluation failed, resulting in situations that are hard to debug
and resolve.
This commit adds much more insight to the diagnostic that is produced for static
evaluation errors. For dynamic values, the trail of `DynamicValue` instances
is presented to the user in a meaningful way. If a value is available but not
of the correct type, the type of the resolved value is shown.
Resolves FW-2155
PR Close#37587
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
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#37641
Previously the `ProgramBasedEntryPointFinder` was parsing all the
entry-points referenced by the program for dependencies even if all the
entry-points had been processed already.
Now this entry-point finder will re-use the `EntryPointManifest` to load
the entry-point dependencies when possible which avoids having to parse
them all again, on every invocation of ngcc.
Previously the `EntryPointManifest` was only used in the
`DirectoryWalkerEntryPointFinder`, which also contained the logic for
computing the contents of the manifest. This logic has been factored out
into an `EntryPointCollector` class. Both the `ProgramBasedEntryPointFinder`
and `DirectoryWalkerEntryPointFinder` now use the `EntryPointManifest` and
the `EntryPointCollector`.
The result of this change is that there is a small cost on the first run of
ngcc to compute and store the manifest - the processing takes 102% of the
processing time before this PR. But on subsequent runs there is a
significant benefit on subsequent runs - the processing takes around 50%
of the processing time before this PR.
PR Close#37665
The integration test for i18n now makes use of the new extraction tooling
from the `@angular/localize` package rather than the old ViewEngine extractor.
PR Close#32912
This tool, which can be run from the node_modules bin folder, can parse
the source files in your compiled app and generate a translation file
formatted with the configured syntax.
For example:
```
./node_modules/.bin/localize-extract -s 'dist/**/*.js' -f xliff1 -o dist/messages.en.xlf
```
PR Close#32912
Previously source locations required an ending position but this was not
being computed effectively. Now ending position is optional and it is
computed from an `endPath` passed to `getLocation()`.
PR Close#32912
Source-maps can be linked to from a source-file by a comment at
the end of the file.
Previously the `SourceFileLoader` would read
the first comment that matched `//# sourceMappingURL=` but
this is not valid since some bundlers may include embedded
source-files that contain such a comment.
Now we only look for this comment in the last non-empty line
in the file.
PR Close#32912
Previously localized strings were not mapped to their original
source location, so it was not possible to back-trace them
in tools like the i18n message extractor.
PR Close#32912
Webpack and other build tools sometimes inline the contents of the
source files in their generated source-maps, and at the same time
change the paths to be prefixed with a protocol, such as `webpack://`.
This can confuse tools that need to read these paths, so now it is
possible to provide a mapping to where these files originated.
PR Close#32912
This method will allow us to find the original location given a
generated location, which is useful in fine grained work with
source-mapping. E.g. in `$localize` tooling.
PR Close#32912
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
Date pipe is giving wrong week number when used with the date format 'w'. If first week(according to Iso) has some days in previous year
Fixes#33961
PR Close#37632
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
introduce a boolean to track form groups/arrays own pending async validation to distinguish between pending state due to children and pending state due to own validation
Fixes#10064
PR Close#22575
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
Updates the version of `@angular/benchpress` to the next patch
version. i.e. `v0.2.1`. Additionally, the peer dependency
on `@angular/core` has been updated to be satisifed with
Angular v10 and v11.
Benchpress should be at least compatibe with the next two major
versions as it does not rely on any deprecated API from `@angular/core`.
PR Close#37676
Removes unused packages from the benchpress `package.json`. That
helps with deduping dependencies, and avoiding unused code
being downloaded.
PR Close#37676
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#37675
The file-writing error in the this commit can also be the result
of the ngcc process dying in the middle of writing files.
This commit improves the error message to offer a resolution
in case this is the reason for the error.
Fixes#36393
PR Close#37672
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
The `SourceFile` and associated code is general and reusable in
other projects (such as `@angular/localize`). Moving it to `ngtsc`
makes it more easily shared.
PR Close#37114
The `Logger` interface and its related classes are general purpose
and could be used by other tooling. Moving it into ngtsc is a more
suitable place from which to share it - similar to the FileSystem stuff.
PR Close#37114
75218342967591627ee44b73999a4cfd52fb5470 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
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
Previously, the fallback group simply determined its active state based on the
of active groups during processing. Instead, we should consider if there are
any active groups after excluding the ones we don't want to be considered, i.e.
the minimum required review group and the global approval groups. This allows
for an explicit test of the active groups that exist rather than a prone to get
out of date number of expected active groups.
With this change, we additionally need to check to ensure that global approvals
have not caused other groups to no longer be active, causing a false case of
no active groups, when they have simply been superceded by a global approval.
PR Close#37636
Previously, the required-minimum-review group was still considered active when
a global approval was provided. This would result in global approvers needing
to Reviewd-For both the global approval and minimum review groups. Instead
when a global approver provides their approval, the minimum review group should
be considered satisified.
PR Close#37636
Previously, Michael Prentice's username was erroneously listed at @michaelprentice
however his Github username is actually @Splaktar. This issue is corrected by this
change to properly allow him to provide reviews.
PR Close#37636
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#37623
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#37623
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#37623
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#37623
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#37623
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#37623
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#37623
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#37593
This reverts commit d3a817549b82c3f8c866296af4e952d1af5ac087.
The reason for the revert is the problem reported in g3 which requires additional investigation.
PR Close#37650
This dependency host tokenizes files to identify all the imported
paths. This commit calculates the last place in the source code
where there can be an import path; it then exits the tokenization
when we get to this point in the file.
Testing with a reasonably large project showed that the tokenizer
spends about 2/3 as much time scanning files. For example in a
"noop" hot run of ngcc using the program-based entry-point
finder the percentage of time spent in the `scan()` function of
the TS tokenizer goes down from 9.9% to 6.6%.
PR Close#37639
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
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#37594
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#37594
For URLs that use auxiliary route outlets in the second or following path segments,
when removing the auxiliary route segment, parenthesis remain for the primary outlet segment.
This causes the following error when trying to reload an URL: "Cannot match any route".
The commit adds a check for this scenario, serializing the URL as "a/b" instead of "a/(b)".
PR Close#24656
PR Close#37163
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
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
This feature is aimed at development tooling that has to translate
production build inputs into their devmode equivalent. The current
process involves guessing the devmode filename based on string
replace patterns. This allows consuming build actions to read the
known mappings instead.
This is a change in anticipation of an update to the general
Typescript build rules to consume this data.
PR Close#36262
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 recently added a transformer to NGC that is responsible for downleveling Angular
decorators and constructor parameter types. The primary goal was to mitigate a
TypeScript limitation/issue that surfaces in Angular projects due to the heavy
reliance on type metadata being captured for DI. Additionally this is a pre-requisite
of making `tsickle` optional in the Angular bazel toolchain.
See: 401ef71ae5b01be95d124184a0b6936fc453a5d4 for more context on this.
Another (less important) goal was to make sure that the CLI can re-use
this transformer for its JIT mode compilation. The CLI (as outlined in
the commit mentioned above), already has a transformer for downleveling
constructor parameters. We want to avoid this duplication and exported
the transform through the tooling-private compiler entry-point.
Early experiments in using this transformer over the current one, highlighted
that in JIT, class decorators cannot be downleveled. Angular relies on those
to be invoked immediately for JIT (so that factories etc. are generated upon loading)
The transformer we exposed, always downlevels such class decorators
though, so that would break CLI's JIT mode. We can address the CLI's
needs by adding another flag to skip class decorators. This will allow
us to continue with the goal of de-duplication.
PR Close#37545
Commit 24b2f1da2b introduced an `NgCompiler` which operates on a
`ts.Program` independently of the `NgtscProgram`. The NgCompiler got its
`IncrementalDriver` (for incremental reuse of Angular compilation results)
by looking at a monkey-patched property on the `ts.Program`.
This monkey-patching operation causes problems with the Angular indexer
(specifically, it seems to cause the indexer to retain too much of prior
programs, resulting in OOM issues). To work around this, `IncrementalDriver`
reuse is now handled by a dedicated `IncrementalBuildStrategy`. One
implementation of this interface is used by the `NgtscProgram` to perform
the old-style reuse, relying on the previous instance of `NgtscProgram`
instead of monkey-patching. Only for `NgTscPlugin` is the monkey-patching
strategy used, as the plugin sits behind an interface which only provides
access to the `ts.Program`, not a prior instance of the plugin.
PR Close#37339
The default value was changed from `registerWhenStable` to
`registerWhenStable:30000` in 29e8a64cf02fa9b80d38c30091e0b730403c54c8,
but the decumentation was not updated to reflect that.
This commit updates the documentation to mention the correct default
value.
PR Close#37555
In `a ? b.~{cursor}`, the LS will provide the symbols in the scope of the current template, because the `path.tail` is `falseExp` whose value is `EmptyExpr`, and the span of `falseExp` is wider than the `trueExp`, so the value of `path` should be narrowed.
PR Close#37505
In version 10, we have a new option for the `angular.json` file,
`allowedCommonJsDependencies`, so users can opt in to support
CommonJS modules.
PR Close#37331
This commit moves the contributor hover into the `@media(hover:hover)`
query. This will help to identify if the user's primary input mechanism
can hover over elements.
PR Close#37320
In version 10, there is a new `tsconfig.json` file, which contains
the paths to all other `tsconfig` files used in a workspace. The
previous `tsconfig.json` file still exists, but has been renamed to
`tsconfig.base.json`.
In addition to documenting this change, I have updated files that
refer to TypeScript configuration files generically to remove specific
references to `tsconfig.json.` This should help avoid confusing users.
PR Close#37222
This feature is aimed at development tooling that has to translate
production build inputs into their devmode equivalent. The current
process involves guessing the devmode filename based on string
replace patterns. This allows consuming build actions to read the
known mappings instead.
This is a change in anticipation of an update to the general
Typescript build rules to consume this data.
PR Close#36262
intended as a class method
Change 'function' to 'method' for clarity that getHereos() is
intended as a class method in Tour of Heroes part 4.
PR Close#35998
This checks for a Bazel flag in `ng_module()` in the `_renderer` attribute
which specifies the renderer to use for the build.
The main advantage of this flag is that it can be overridden with [Bazel
transitions](https://docs.bazel.build/versions/master/skylark/config.html),
giving much more flexibility for migrating individual applications in a
Bazel workspace to Ivy.
This flag is not intended to replace `--config ivy` or
`--define angular_ivy_enabled=True` (although it technically could). As a
result, this flag is not and will not actually be used anywhere in the
`angular/angular` repo. Instead, a `string_flag()` is provided internally
which sets the renderer via a transition. See http://cl/315749946.
Note that this does **not** introduce a dependency on Skylib for
`angular/angular`. The dependency isn't actually necessary because
`BuildSettingInfo` is not used externally anyways. By doing this, it is not
necessary for downstream, external workspaces to depend on Skylib.
PR Close#37529
Adding in a `#` prepended to each PR number in the list of conflicting PRs
found by the discover-new-conflicts script will allow for users to copy
paste the output from the script into a github comment and have the PRs
automatically link.
PR Close#37556
Bazel invocations will upload to ResultStore to allow for us to have better viewing
of execution/build logs. This is only done on CI as the BES API requires credentials
from service accounts, rather than end user accounts.
PR Close#37560
Historically files to be formatted were added to a listing (via matchers)
to be included in formatting. Instead, this change begins efforts to
instead include all files in format enforcement, relying instead on an
opt out methodology.
PR Close#36940
Historically files to be formatted were added to a listing (via matchers)
to be included in formatting. Instead, this change begins efforts to
instead include all files in format enforcement, relying instead on an
opt out methodology.
PR Close#36940
Historically files to be formatted were added to a listing (via matchers)
to be included in formatting. Instead, this change begins efforts to
instead include all files in format enforcement, relying instead on an
opt out methodology.
PR Close#36940
With this change we add redirects for config files generated by the Angular CLI. These links form part of a comment in the generated files, thus it is important that they valid for the many years to come.
PR Close#37533
After PR #36601 which added icons to all external links. Documented how this is happening via comments in scss file. For details visit PR #36601
PR Close#37025
The word "both" is automatically connected with the previous two bullet points and not the following two (because documents are usually read from top to bottom), which made the original sentence confusing for first time readers.
PR Close#35528
Fixes issue [29535](https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/29535) for the tutorial (toh-pt6) to remove the phrase that directed the reader to delete mock-heroes.ts when it is still needed for further tutorial steps.
PR Close#37516
Currently the partial evaluator isn't able to resolve a variable declaration that uses destructuring in the form of `const {value} = {value: 0}; const foo = value;`. These changes add some logic to allow for us to resolve the variable's value.
Fixes#36917.
PR Close#37497
At present, users don't have an easy way to discover what
deprecations occurred for Angular CDK or Angular Material.
This change adds a link to the changelog to the deprecations.md
file.
PR Close#37491
This PR changes the logic for determining when to skip route processing from
using the URL of the last attempted navigation to the actual resulting URL after
that transition.
Because guards may prevent navigation and reset the browser URL, the raw
URL of the previous transition may not match the actual URL of the
browser at the end of the navigation process. For that reason, we need to use
`urlAfterRedirects` instead.
Other notes:
These checks in scheduleNavigation were added in eb2ceff4ba
The test still passes and, more surprisingly, passes if the checks are removed
completely. There have likely been changes to the navigation handling that
handle the test in a different way. That said, it still appears to be important
to keep the checks there in some capacity because it does affect how many
navigation events occur. This addresses an issue that came up in #16710: https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/16710#issuecomment-634869739
This also partially addresses #13586 in fixing history for imperative
navigations that are cancelled by guards.
PR Close#37408
Previously the tslib 2.0 change was not listed in the CHANGELOG because
it was marked as a refactoring. This change is important enough to be
listed in the changelog even tough it doesn't affect most of the users.
For users that do get unexpectedly affected by this change, it might be
useful to find the change listed in the CHANGELOG.
PR Close#37303
Previously, ngcc would only be able to match an ngcc configuration to
packages that were located inside the project's top-level
`node_modules/`. However, if there are multiple versions of a package in
a project (e.g. as a transitive dependency of other packages), multiple
copies of a package (at different versions) may exist in nested
`node_modules/` directories. For example, one at
`<project-root>/node_modules/some-package/` and one at
`<project-root>/node_modules/other-package/node_modules/some-package/`.
In such cases, ngcc was only able to detect the config for the first
copy but not for the second.
This commit fixes this by returning a new instance of
`ProcessedNgccPackageConfig` for each different package path (even if
they refer to the same package name). In these
`ProcessedNgccPackageConfig`, the `entryPoints` paths have been
processed to take the package path into account.
PR Close#37040
This commit adds a `packageName` property to the `EntryPoint` interface.
In a subsequent commit this will be used to retrieve the correct ngcc
configuration for each package, regardless of its path.
PR Close#37040
In order to retrieve the ngcc configuration (if any) for an entry-point,
ngcc has to detect the containing package's version.
Previously, ngcc would try to read the version from the entry-point's
`package.json` file, which was different than the package's top-level
`package.json` for secondary entry-points. For example, it would try to
read it from `node_modules/@angular/common/http/package.json` for
entry-point `@angular/common/http`. However, the `package.json` files
for secondary entry-points are not guaranteed to include a `version`
property.
This commit fixes this by first trying to read the version from the
_package's_ `package.json` (falling back to the entry-point's
`package.json`). For example, it will first try to read it from
`@angular/common/package.json` for entry-point `@angular/common/http`.
PR Close#37040
This commit refactors the way info is retrieved from entry-point
`package.json` files to make it easier to extract more info (such as the
package's name) in the future. It also avoids reading and parsing the
`package.json` file multiple times (as was happening before).
PR Close#37040
Rename the `package` property to `packagePath` on the `EntryPoint`
interface. This makes it more clear that the `packagePath` property
holds the absolute path to the containing package (similar to how `path`
holds the path to the entry-point). This will also align with the
`packageName` property that will be added in a subsequent commit.
This commit also re-orders the `EntryPoint` properties to group related
properties together and to match the order of properties on instances
with that on the interface.
PR Close#37040
Previously, when an entry-point was ignored via an ngcc config, ngcc
would scan sub-directories for sub-entry-points, but would not use the
correct `packagePath`. For example, if `@angular/common` was ignored, it
would look at `@angular/common/http` but incorrectly use
`.../@angular/common/http` as the `packagePath` (instead of
`.../@angular/common`). As a result, it would not retrieve the correct
ngcc config for the actual package.
This commit fixes it by ensuring the correct `packagePath` is used, even
if the primary entry-point corresponding to that path is ignored. In
order to do this, a new return value for `getEntryPointInfo()` is added:
`IGNORED_ENTRY_POINT`. This is used to differentiate between directories
that correspond to no or an incompatible entry-point and those that
correspond to an entry-point that could otherwise be valid but is
explicitly ignored. Consumers of `getEntryPointInfo()` can then use this
info to discard ignored entry-points, but still use the correct
`packagePath` when scanning their sub-directories for secondary
entry-points.
PR Close#37040
In the early Zone.js versions (< 0.10.3), `ZoneAwarePromise` did not support `Symbol.species`,
so when user used a 3rd party `Promise` such as `es6-promise`, and try to load the promise library after import of `zone.js`, the loading promise library will overwrite the patched `Promise` from `zone.js` and will break `Promise` semantics with respect to `zone.js`.
Starting with `zone.js` 0.10.3, `Symbol.species` is supported therefore this will not longer be an issue. (https://github.com//pull/34533)
Before 0.10.3, the logic in zone.js tried to handle the case in the wrong way. It did so by overriding the descriptor of `global.Promise`, to allow the 3rd party libraries to override native `Promise` instead of `ZoneAwarePromise`. This is not the correct solution, and since the `Promise.species` is now supported, the 3rd party solution of overriding `global.Promise` is no longer needed.
PR removes the wrong work around logic. (This will improve the bundle size.)
PR Close#36851
Close#36839.
This is a known issue of zone.js,
```
(window as any)[(Zone as any).__symbol__('setTimeout')](() => {
let log = '';
button.addEventListener('click', () => {
Zone.current.scheduleMicroTask('test', () => log += 'microtask;');
log += 'click;';
});
button.click();
expect(log).toEqual('click;microtask;');
done();
});
```
Since in this case, we use native `setTimeout` which is not a ZoneTask,
so zone.js consider the button click handler as the top Task then drain the
microTaskQueue after the click at once, which is not correct(too early).
This case was an edge case and not reported by the users, until we have the
new option ngZoneEventCoalescing, since the event coalescing will happen
in native requestAnimationFrame, so it will not be a ZoneTask, and zone.js will
consider any Task happen in the change detection stage as the top task, and if
there are any microTasks(such as Promise.then) happen in the process, it may be
drained earlier than it should be, so to prevent this situation, we need to schedule
a fake event task and run the change detection check in this fake event task,
so the Task happen in the change detection stage will not be
considered as top ZoneTask.
PR Close#36841
Language tightened, and headings rewritten to focus on user tasks. Tasks now separated from concepts, and clarified as examples. Content is up-to-date and complete. Links to important information and relevant topics added.
PR Close#36820
Currently Angular internally already handles `InjectionToken` as
predicates for queries. This commit exposes this as public API as
developers already relied on this functionality but currently use
workarounds to satisfy the type constraints (e.g. `as any`).
We intend to make this public as it's low-effort to support, and
it's a significant key part for the use of light-weight tokens as
described in the upcoming guide: https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/36144.
In concrete, applications might use injection tokens over classes
for both optional DI and queries, because otherwise such references
cause classes to be always retained. This was also an issue in View
Engine, but now with Ivy, this pattern became worse, as factories are
directly attached to retained classes (ultimately ending up in the
production bundle, while being unused).
More details in the light-weight token guide and in: https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/16866.
Closes#21152. Related to #36144.
PR Close#37506
Build-optimizer currently uses TypeScript 3.6 which is unable to resolve an 'accessor' in 'getTypeOfVariableOrParameterOrPropertyWorker'.
Unfortunately, in Build optimizer we cannot update the version of TypeScript because of https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/38412
PR Close#37456
Adds @nocollapse to static properties added by ngcc
iff annotateForClosureCompiler is true.
The Closure Compiler will collapse static properties
into the global namespace. Adding this annotation keeps
the properties attached to their respective object, which
allows them to be referenced via a class's constructor.
The annotation is already added by ngtsc and ngc under the
same option, this commit extends the functionality to ngcc.
Closes#36618.
PR Close#36652
There were some examples for 'DoCheck' in the lifeCycle hooks guide. Added a link to the relevant section of the guide in the 'DoCheck()' api docs.
Fixes#35596
PR Close#36574
Zone.js has a lot of optional bundles, such as `zone-patch-message-port`, those
bundles are monkey patch for specified APIs usually for soem experimental APIs or
some old APIs only available for specified platforms. Those bundles will not be
loaded by default.
In this commit, since we have several main `sub packages` such as `zone`, `zone-node`,
`zone-testing`, I put all the optional bundles under `plugins` folders for consistency.
PR Close#36540
Close#35157
In the current version of zone.js, zone.js uses it's own package format, and it is not following the rule
of Angualr package format(APF), so it is not easily to be consumed by Angular CLI or other bundle tools.
For example, zone.js npm package has two bundles,
1. zone.js/dist/zone.js, this is a `es5` bundle.
2. zone.js/dist/zone-evergreen.js, this is a `es2015` bundle.
And Angular CLI has to add some hard-coding code to handle this case, o5376a8b139/packages/schematics/angular/application/files/src/polyfills.ts.template (L55-L58)
This PR upgrade zone.js npm package format to follow APF rule, https://docs.google.com/document/d/1CZC2rcpxffTDfRDs6p1cfbmKNLA6x5O-NtkJglDaBVs/edit#heading=h.k0mh3o8u5hx
The updated points are:
1. in package.json, update all bundle related properties
```
"main": "./bundles/zone.umd.js",
"module": "./fesm2015/zone.js",
"es2015": "./fesm2015/zone.js",
"fesm2015": "./fesm2015/zone.js",
```
2. re-organize dist folder, for example for `zone.js` bundle, now we have
```
dist/
bundles/
zone.js // this is the es5 bundle
fesm2015/
zone.js // this is the es2015 bundle (in the old version is `zone-evergreen.js`)
```
3. have several sub-packages.
1. `zone-testing`, provide zone-testing bundles include zone.js and testing libraries
2. `zone-node`, provide zone.js implemention for NodeJS
3. `zone-mix`, provide zone.js patches for both Browser and NodeJS
All those sub-packages will have their own `package.json` and the bundle will reference `bundles(es5)` and `fesm2015(es2015)`.
4. keep backward compatibility, still keep the `zone.js/dist` folder, and all bundles will be redirected to `zone.js/bundles` or `zone.js/fesm2015` folders.
PR Close#36540
Periodic documentation cleanup of GDEs which are no longer in the Angular program.
Removed:
- "Filip Bruun Bech-Larsen"
- "Vinci Rufus"
- "Jeff Cross"
PR Close#36467
This is a proposal commit that adds a separate scope for
migration changes. The motiviation is that migrations aren't
necessarily always affecting `@angular/core`, but are just
stored in the core package for a canonical location when
someone runs `ng update`. Additionally, it rather seems confusing in the
changelog if migration changes are listed under `core`.
PR Close#36390
It is quite common for the TS compiler to have to add synthetic
types to function signatures, where the developer has not
explicitly provided them. This results in `import(...)` expressions
appearing in typings files. For example in `@ngrx/data` there is a
class with a getter that has an implicit type:
```ts
export declare class EntityCollectionServiceBase<...> {
...
get store() {
return this.dispatcher.store;
}
...
}
```
In the d.ts file for this we get:
```ts
get store(): Store<import("@ngrx/data").EntityCache>;
```
Given that this file is within the `@ngrx/data` package already,
this caused ngcc to believe that there was a circular dependency,
causing it to fail to process the package - and in fact crash!
This commit resolves this problem by ignoring `import()` expressions
when scanning typings programs for dependencies. This ability was
only introduced very recently in a 10.0.0 RC release, and so it has
limited benefit given that up till now ngcc has been able to process
libraries effectively without it. Moreover, in the rare case that a
package does have such a dependency, it should get picked up
by the sync ngcc+CLI integration point.
PR Close#37503
This commit removes the autocompletion feature for HTML entities.
HTML entites are things like `&`, `<` etc.
There are a few reasons for the decision:
1. It is outside the core functionality of Angular LS
2. The implementation relies on regex, which incurs performance cost
3. There isn't much value if users do not already know which entity
they want to use
4. The list that we provide is not exhaustive
PR Close#37515
In v7 of Angular we removed `tsickle` from the default `ngc` pipeline.
This had the negative potential of breaking ES2015 output and SSR due
to a limitation in TypeScript.
TypeScript by default preserves type information for decorated constructor
parameters when `emitDecoratorMetadata` is enabled. For example,
consider this snippet below:
```
@Directive()
export class MyDirective {
constructor(button: MyButton) {}
}
export class MyButton {}
```
TypeScript would generate metadata for the `MyDirective` class it has
a decorator applied. This metadata would be needed in JIT mode, or
for libraries that provide `MyDirective` through NPM. The metadata would
look as followed:
```
let MyDirective = class MyDir {}
MyDirective = __decorate([
Directive(),
__metadata("design:paramtypes", [MyButton]),
], MyDirective);
let MyButton = class MyButton {}
```
Notice that TypeScript generated calls to `__decorate` and
`__metadata`. These calls are needed so that the Angular compiler
is able to determine whether `MyDirective` is actually an directive,
and what types are needed for dependency injection.
The limitation surfaces in this concrete example because `MyButton`
is declared after the `__metadata(..)` call, while `__metadata`
actually directly references `MyButton`. This is illegal though because
`MyButton` has not been declared at this point. This is due to the
so-called temporal dead zone in JavaScript. Errors like followed will
be reported at runtime when such file/code evaluates:
```
Uncaught ReferenceError: Cannot access 'MyButton' before initialization
```
As noted, this is a TypeScript limitation because ideally TypeScript
shouldn't evaluate `__metadata`/reference `MyButton` immediately.
Instead, it should defer the reference until `MyButton` is actually
declared. This limitation will not be fixed by the TypeScript team
though because it's a limitation as per current design and they will
only revisit this once the tc39 decorator proposal is finalized
(currently stage-2 at time of writing).
Given this wontfix on the TypeScript side, and our heavy reliance on
this metadata in libraries (and for JIT mode), we intend to fix this
from within the Angular compiler by downleveling decorators to static
properties that don't need to evaluate directly. For example:
```
MyDirective.ctorParameters = () => [MyButton];
```
With this snippet above, `MyButton` is not referenced directly. Only
lazily when the Angular runtime needs it. This mitigates the temporal
dead zone issue caused by a limitation in TypeScript's decorator
metadata output. See: https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/27519.
In the past (as noted; before version 7), the Angular compiler by
default used tsickle that already performed this transformation. We
moved the transformation to the CLI for JIT and `ng-packager`, but now
we realize that we can move this all to a single place in the compiler
so that standalone ngc consumers can benefit too, and that we can
disable tsickle in our Bazel `ngc-wrapped` pipeline (that currently
still relies on tsickle to perform this decorator processing).
This transformation also has another positive side-effect of making
Angular application/library code more compatible with server-side
rendering. In principle, TypeScript would also preserve type information
for decorated class members (similar to how it did that for constructor
parameters) at runtime. This becomes an issue when your application
relies on native DOM globals for decorated class member types. e.g.
```
@Input() panelElement: HTMLElement;
```
Your application code would then reference `HTMLElement` directly
whenever the source file is loaded in NodeJS for SSR. `HTMLElement`
does not exist on the server though, so that will become an invalid
reference. One could work around this by providing global mocks for
these DOM symbols, but that doesn't match up with other places where
dependency injection is used for mocking DOM/browser specific symbols.
More context in this issue: #30586. The TL;DR here is that the Angular
compiler does not care about types for these class members, so it won't
ever reference `HTMLElement` at runtime.
Fixes#30106. Fixes#30586. Fixes#30141.
Resolves FW-2196. Resolves FW-2199.
PR Close#37382
In #29083 a call to `getCompilerFacade` was added to `ApplicationRef` which pulls in a bit of JIT-specific code. Since the code path that calls the function can't be hit for an AOT-compiled app, these changes add an `ngJitMode` guard which will allow for dead code elimination to drop it completely. Testing it out against a new CLI project showed a difference of ~1.2kb.
PR Close#37372
lifecycle hooks api detailed documentation contained links which were pointing to onChanges hook only which is removed, made each hook point towards its deafult page link
PR Close#36557
Previously the comments for these files referenced a path to "packages/core/src/render3/jit/compiler_facade_interface.ts" that does not exist in the current codebase.
This PR corrects the path in these comments.
PR Close#37370
Looks like we broke the `hasLocalChanges` check in the git client
when we moved it over from the merge script. The problem is that
we are using `git` in the first argument of `git.run`. That
means that we under-the-hood run `git git <..>`.
This commit fixes that, but also switches to a better variant
for ensuring no local changes because it exits with non-zero
when there are local changes.
PR Close#37489
The dev-infra rebase PR script currently does not work due to
the following issues:
1. The push refspec is incorrect. It refers to the `base` of the PR, and
not to the `head` of the PR.
2. The push `--force-with-lease` option does not work in a detached head
as no remote-tracking branch is set up.
PR Close#37489
We recently moved over the git client from the merge script to the
common dev-infra utils. This made specifying a token optional, but
it looks like the logic for sanitizing messages doesn't account
for that, and we currently add `<TOKEN>` between every message
character. e.g.
```
Executing: git <TOKEN>g<TOKEN>i<TOKEN>t<TOKEN>
<TOKEN>s<TOKEN>t<TOKEN>a<TOKEN>t<TOKEN>u<TOKEN>s<TOKEN>
```
PR Close#37489
Previously, we would simply prepend any relative URL with the HREF
for the current route (pulled from document.location). However,
this does not correctly account for the leading slash URLs that
would otherwise be parsed correctly in the browser, or the
presence of a base HREF in the DOM.
Therefore, we use the built-in URL implementation for NodeJS,
which implements the WHATWG standard that's used in the browser.
We also pull the base HREF from the DOM, falling back on the full
HREF as the browser would, to form the correct request URL.
Fixes#37314
PR Close#37341
Prevent duplicate notifications from being emitted when multiple URL change listeners are registered using SpyLocation#onUrlChange.
Use `@internal` annotation for the `_urlChangeSubscription` properties instead of the `private` access modifier. Otherwise, we get in trouble because of `SpyLocation implements Location`.
PR Close#37459
Use the strongly typed TestBed.inject rather than the weakly typed inject test utility function. Reuse injected dependency variables between sibling test cases.
PR Close#37459
Keen and I were talking about what it would take to support getting
references at a position in the current language service, since it's
unclear when more investment in the Ivy LS will be available. Getting TS
references from a template is trivial -- we simply need to get the
definition of a symbol, which is already handled by the language
service, and ask the TS language service to give us the references for
that definition.
This doesn't handle references in templates, but that could be done in a
subsequent pass.
Part of https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/29
PR Close#37437
The function signature selection algorithm is totally naive. It'd
unconditionally pick the first signature if there are multiple
overloads. This commit improves the algorithm by returning an exact
match if one exists.
PR Close#37494
Partial resubmit of #26243
Fixes incorrect url tree generation for empty path components with children.
Adds a test to demonstrate the failure of createUrlTree for those routes.
Fixes#13011Fixes#35687
PR Close#37446
Libraries are still build using view engine even after Ivy being the default engine for building angular apps. Added note on why libraries are built using VE and how they will be automatically compiled in Ivy using ngcc making it compatible for both
Fixes#35625
PR Close#36556
There is great workaround for implementing staleWhileRevalidate strategy in service-worker by setting strategy to freshness and timeout to 0u. Documented this in service worker config where all other strategies are documented
Fixes#20402
PR Close#37301
This PR provides a more helpful error than the one currently present:
`el.setAttribute is not a function`. It is not valid to have directives with host bindings
on `ng-template` or `ng-container` nodes. VE would silently ignore this, while Ivy
attempts to set the attribute and throws an error because these are comment nodes
and do not have `setAttribute` functionality.
It is better to throw a helpful error than to silently ignore this because
putting a directive with host binding on an `ng-template` or `ng-container` is most often a mistake.
Developers should be made aware that the host binding will have no effect in these cases.
Note that an error is already thrown in Ivy, as mentioned above, so this
is not a breaking change and can be merged to both master and patch.
Resolves#35994
PR Close#37111
This commit removes all markers from the inline template in
`AppComponent` and external template in `TemplateReference`.
Test scenarios should be colocated with the test cases themselves.
Besides, many existing cases are invalid. For example, if we want to
test autocomplete for HTML element, the existing test case is like:
```
<~{cursor} h1>
```
This doesn't make much sense, becasue the language service already sees
the `h1` tag in the template. The correct test case should be:
```
<~{cursor
```
IMO, this reflects the real-world use case better.
This commit also uncovers a bug in the way HTML entities autocompletion
is done. There's an off-by-one error in which a cursor that immediately
trails the ampersand character fails to trigger HTML entities
autocompletion.
PR Close#37475
Historically we have had a pullapprove group `fallback` which acted as
a catch all for files which did not match any other groups. This
group assigned reviews to IgorMinar, however it was not apparent that
this group was assigned. This change removes this assignment. This
group as active should always coincide with failures of the pullapprove
verification script. We continue to have this group as a secondary test
ensuring all files in the repo are captured by the pullapprove config.
PR Close#36456
**Problem**
After #31109 and #31865, it's still possible to get locked in state
`EXISTING_CLIENTS_ONLY`, without any possibility to get out (even by
pushing new updates on the server).
More specifically, if control doc `/latest` of `ngsw:/:db:control` once
gets a bad value, then the service worker will fail early, and won't be
able to overwrite `/latest` with new, valid values (the ones from future
updates).
For example, once in this state, URL `/ngsw/state` will show:
NGSW Debug Info:
Driver state: EXISTING_CLIENTS_ONLY (Degraded due to failed initialization: Invariant violated (initialize): latest hash 8b75… has no known manifest
Error: Invariant violated (initialize): latest hash 8b75… has no known manifest
at Driver.<anonymous> (https://my.app/ngsw-worker.js:2302:27)
at Generator.next (<anonymous>)
at fulfilled (https://my.app/ngsw-worker.js:175:62))
Latest manifest hash: 8b75…
Last update check: 22s971u
... with hash `8b75…` corresponding to no installed version.
**Solution**
Currently, when such a case happens, the service worker [simply fails
with an assertion][1]. Because this failure happens early, and is not
handled, the service worker is not able to update `/latest` to new
installed app versions.
I propose to detect this corrupted case (a `latest` hash that doesn't
match any installed version) a few lines above, so that the service
worker can correctly call its [already existing cleaning code][2].
[1]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/3569fdf/packages/service-worker/worker/src/driver.ts#L559-L563
[2]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/3569fdf/packages/service-worker/worker/src/driver.ts#L505-L519
This change successfully fixes the problem described above.
Unit test written with the help of George Kalpakas. Thank you!
PR Close#37453
The new tooling-cli-shared-api is used to guard changes to packages/compiler-cli/src/tooling.ts
which is a private API sharing channel between Angular FW and CLI.
Changes to this file should be rare and explicitly approved by at least two members
of the CLI team.
PR Close#37467
Update the pullapprove config to require multiple reviews for sensitive groups in order
to force distribution of knowledge and improve the review quality.
PR Close#37467
Resubmit of b2bd38699b0595d0a35b501f20251f8715a9fd1c since
85b6c94cc6d4dd1cfae68fc14575d0efa57574b3 accidentally reverted
the fix due to rebasing most likely.
PR Close#37462
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 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. Ensuring `NgElementImpl` subscribes to `NgElementStrategy#events`
before calling `NgElementStrategy#connect()` (which initializes the
component instance).
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)Fixes#36141
PR Close#36161
Now in TS 3.9, classes in ES2015 can be wrapped in an IIFE.
This commit ensures that we still find the static properties that contain
decorator information, even if they are attached to the adjacent node
of the class, rather than the implementation or declaration.
Fixes#37330
PR Close#37436
There is an `exec()` helper provided by `utils/shelljs.ts`, which is a
wrapper around ShellJS' `exec()` with some default options (currently
`silent: true`). The intention is to avoid having to pass these options
to every invocation of the `exec()` function.
This commit updates all code inside `dev-infra/` to use this helper
whenever possible).
NOTE: For simplicity, the `utils/shelljs` helper does not support some
of the less common call signatures of the original `exec()`
helper, so in some cases we still need to use the original.
PR Close#37444
This change just fixes various typos and misspellings across several docs.
I've included also a fix for an issue surfaced via #37423.
Closes#37423
PR Close#37443
Clean up pullapprove tooling to use newly created common utils.
Additionally, use newly created logging levels rather than
verbose flagging.
PR Close#37338
Update the commit sha to require that PRs have been rebased beyond the one which has new header requirements so we don't get failures after merging
PR Close#37424
We recently added a better reporting mechanism for oauth tokens
in the dev-infra git util. Unfortunately the logic broke as part
of addressing PR review feedback. Right now, always the empty
promise from `oauthScopes` will be used as `getAuthScopes` considers
it as the already-requested API value. This is not the case as
the default promise is also truthy. We should just fix this by making
the property nullable.
PR Close#37439
Adds an assertion that the provided TOKEN has OAuth scope permissions for `repo`
as this is required for all merge attempts.
On failure, provides detailed error message with remediation steps for the user.
PR Close#37421
This finder is designed to only process entry-points that are reachable
by the program defined by a tsconfig.json file.
It is triggered by calling `mainNgcc()` with the `findEntryPointsFromTsConfigProgram`
option set to true. It is ignored if a `targetEntryPointPath` has been
provided as well.
It is triggered from the command line by adding the `--use-program-dependencies`
option, which is also ignored if the `--target` option has been provided.
Using this option can speed up processing in cases where there is a large
number of dependencies installed but only a small proportion of the
entry-points are actually imported into the application.
PR Close#37075
Previously we only checked for static import declaration statements.
This commit also finds import paths from dynamic import expressions.
Also this commit should speed up processing: Previously we were parsing
the source code contents into a `ts.SourceFile` and then walking the parsed
AST to find import paths.
Generating an AST is unnecessary work and it is faster and creates less
memory pressure to just scan the source code contents with the TypeScript
scanner, identifying import paths from the tokens.
PR Close#37075
Previously this host was skipping files if they had imports that spanned
multiple lines, or if the import was a dynamic import expression.
PR Close#37075
This commit will store a cached copy of the parsed tsconfig
that can be reused if the tsconfig path is the same.
This will improve the ngcc "noop" case, where there is no processing
to do, when the entry-points have already been processed.
Previously we were parsing this config every time we checked for
entry-points to process, which can take up to seconds in some
cases.
Resolves#36882
PR Close#37417
The angular.io production deployment script (`deploy-to-firebase.sh`)
compares the major version corresponding to the current branch (e.g.
`8` for branch `8.1.x`) against the major stable version (e.g. `9` if
the current stable version is `9.1.0`). It then uses the result of that
comparison to determine whether the current branch corresponds to a
newer version than stable (i.e. an RC version) and thus should not be
deployed or to an older version and thus may need to be deployed to an
archive vX.angular.io project.
Previously, the script was using string comparison (`<`) to compare the
two major versions. This could produce incorrect results for an RC major
version that is numerically greater than the stable but
lexicographically smaller. For example, 10 vs 9 (10 is numerically
greater but lexicographically smaller than 9).
Example of a CI job that incorrectly tried to deploy an RC branch to
production: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/726414
This commit fixes it by switching to an integer comparison (i.e. using
the `-lt` operator).
PR Close#37426
`NgCompiler` is the heart of ngtsc and can be used to analyze and compile
Angular programs in a variety of environments. Most of these integrations
rely on `NgProgram` and the creation of an `NgCompilerHost` in order to
create a `ts.Program` with the right shape for `NgCompiler`.
However, certain environments (such as the Angular Language Service) have
their own mechanisms for creating `ts.Program`s that don't make use of a
`ts.CompilerHost`. In such environments, an `NgCompilerHost` does not make
sense.
This commit breaks the dependency of `NgCompiler` on `NgCompilerHost` and
extracts the specific interface of the host on which `NgCompiler` depends
into a new interface, `NgCompilerAdapter`. This interface includes methods
from `ts.CompilerHost`, the `ExtendedTsCompilerHost`, as well as APIs from
`NgCompilerHost`.
A consumer such as the language service can implement this API without
needing to jump through hoops to create an `NgCompilerHost` implementation
that somehow wraps its specific environment.
PR Close#37118
When the compiler encounters a function call within an NgModule imports
section, it attempts to resolve it to an NgModule-annotated class by
looking at the function body and evaluating the statements there. This
evaluation can only understand simple functions which have a single
return statement as their body. If the function the user writes is more
complex than that, the compiler won't be able to understand it and
previously the PartialEvaluator would return a "DynamicValue" for
that import.
With this change, in the event the function body resolution fails the
PartialEvaluator will now attempt to use its foreign function resolvers to
determine the correct result from the function's type signtaure instead. If
the function is annotated with a correct ModuleWithProviders type, the
compiler will be able to understand the import without static analysis of
the function body.
PR Close#37126
If we detect that an injectable class is inheriting from another injectable, we generate code that looks something like this:
```
const baseFactory = ɵɵgetInheritedFactory(Child);
@Injectable()
class Parent {}
@Injectable()
class Child extends Parent {
static ɵfac = (t) => baseFactory(t || Child)
}
```
This usually works fine, because the `ɵɵgetInheritedFactory` resolves to the factory of `Parent`, but the logic can break down if the `Child` class has a custom decorator. Custom decorators can return a new class that extends the original once, which means that the `ɵɵgetInheritedFactory` call will now resolve to the factory of the `Child`, causing an infinite loop.
These changes fix the issue by changing the inherited factory resolution logic so that it walks up the prototype chain class-by-class, while skipping classes that have the same factory as the class that was passed in.
Fixes#35733.
PR Close#37022
Rename bazel workspace from npm_dev_infra to npm_angular_dev_infra_private to make it clear that this package is private to angular.
Change driver-utilities module_name to match the new bazel workspace name.
Correct a comment by rewording it from "deployed version" to "published version".
Fix merge conflicts in tmpl-package.json
Make "//packages/bazel/src:esm5.bzl" replacement more generalized so that importing from "//packages/bazel" works.
Deleted "dev_infra/*" path from modules/benchmarks tsconfig.
Moved //dev-infra/benchmark/browsers to //dev-infra/browsers.
PR Close#36800
Use an explicit type guard when checking if a given object is of type AbstractControlOptions,
instead of a simple function returning a boolean value. This allows us to remove manual type
casting when using this function, relying instead on TypeScript to infer correct types.
PR Close#32541
In v9, we started showing a console warning when
instantiating a token that inherited its @Injectable
decorator rather than providing its own. This warning
said that the pattern would become an error in v10.
However, we have decided to wait until at least v11
to throw in this case, so this commit updates the
warning to be less prescriptive about the exact
version when the pattern will no longer be supported.
PR Close#37383
Currently, if an ngcc process is killed in a manner that it doesn't clean
up its lock file (or is killed too quickly) the compiler reports that it
is waiting on the PID of a process that doesn't exist, and that it will
wait up to a maximum of N seconds. This PR updates the locking code to
additionally check if the process exists, and if it does not it will
immediately bail out, and print the location of the lock file so a user
may clean it up.
PR Close#37250
Remove `looseIdentical` implementation and instead use the ES2015 `Object.is` in its place.
They behave exactly the same way except for `+0`/`-0`.
`looseIdentical(+0, -0)` => `true`
`Object.is(+0, -0)` => `false`
Other than the difference noted above, this is not be a breaking change because:
1. `looseIdentical` is a private API
2. ES2015 is listed as a mandatory polyfill in the [browser support
guide](https://angular.io/guide/browser-support#mandatory-polyfills)
3. Also note that `Ivy` already uses `Object.is` in `bindingUpdated`.
PR Close#37191
This commit disables the tests for Ivy version of language service on CI
because the compiler APIs are not yet stable, so language service should
not assert against its behavipr.
PR Close#37348
Inline source-maps in typings files can impact IDE performance
so ngcc should only add such maps if the original typings file
contains inline source-maps.
Fixes#37324
PR Close#37363
Previously there was a typo in a comment within the PropDecorator function relating to and justifying the use of Object.defineProperty. This PR clears up the wording that comment
PR Close#37369
Due to an outage with the proxy we rely on for publishing, we need
to temporarily directly publish to NPM using our own angular
credentials again.
PR Close#37378
In #37221 we disabled tsickle passes from transforming the tsc output that is used to publish all
Angular framework and components packages (@angular/*).
This change however revealed a bug in the ngc that caused __decorate and __metadata calls to still
be emitted in the JS code even though we don't depend on them.
Additionally it was these calls that caused code in @angular/material packages to fail at runtime
due to circular dependency in the emitted decorator code documeted as
https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/27519.
This change partially rolls back #37221 by reenabling the decorator to static fields (static
properties) downleveling.
This is just a temporary workaround while we are also fixing root cause in `ngc` - tracked as
FW-2199.
Resolves FW-2198.
Related to FW-2196
PR Close#37317
This commit adds a link to the Bazel prototype for orchestrating
multiple CLI architects and also adds a link to the #angular channel in
the Bazel Slack workspace.
PR Close#37190
This commit adds an exception for "guide/bazel" to the navigationUrls in
the Service Worker config. This is needed for redirection to work.
PR Close#37190
This commit removes the integration test for schematics in
`@angular/bazel` that is used to generate a Bazel builder. The Bazel
builder has been deprecated.
PR Close#37190
This commit removes aio/content/guide/bazel.md from the Bazel list in
pullapprove since Bazel builder has been deprecated and the doc has been
deleted.
PR Close#37190
Fix a type of COMMITTER.md, the url of the pullapprove service should be https://docs.pullapprove.com/,
now the document has an additional `https` prefix.
PR Close#37171
Before the introduction of the Ivy renderer, users would compile
their applications and use the resulting factories for SSR, since
these post-compilation artifacts ensured faster delivery. Thus,
using the original module as the rendering entrypoint was
considered suboptimal and was discouraged.
However, with the introduction of Ivy, this guidance is no longer
applicable since these factories are no longer generated.
Comparable speed is achieved using the factory-less module
renderer, and so we update the guiance in the docs for the method.
PR Close#37296
Updates the requiredBaseCommit for merging to patch branch to the
latest commit message validation fix found in the 10.0.x branch.
Previously, the patch branch commit used was for the 9.1.x branch.
PR Close#37316
Migrate to using .ng-dev directory for ng-dev configuration to allow
better management of the configuration using multiple files. The
intention is to prevent the config file from becoming unruly.
PR Close#37142
Migrate to using .ng-dev directory for ng-dev configuration to better
allow management of the configuration using multiple files. The
intention is to prevent the config file from becoming unruly.
PR Close#37142
Deprecate the old merge script as it no longer correctly chooses
the patch branch due to relying on numerical sorting order from
git. Git actually provides a lexicographical sorting order. This
that 9.0.x will be chosen rather than 10.0.x as it is sorted based
the 9 vs 1, rather than 9 vs 10.
PR Close#37247
Migrate the release tool in ng-dev to use new logging system rather
than directly calling console.* to create a better experience
for users.
PR Close#37232
Migrate the ts-circular-dependencies tool in ng-dev to use new logging system rather
than directly calling console.* to create a better experience
for users.
PR Close#37232
Migrate the merge tool in ng-dev to use new logging system rather
than directly calling console.* to create a better experience
for users.
PR Close#37232
Migrate the pullapprove tool in ng-dev to use new logging system rather
than directly calling console.* to create a better experience
for users.
PR Close#37232
Migrate the rebase tool in ng-dev to use new logging system rather
than directly calling console.* to create a better experience
for users.
PR Close#37232
Migrate the discover-new-conflicts tool in ng-dev to use new logging system
rather than directly calling console.* to create a better experience
for users.
PR Close#37232
Migrate the commit-message tool in ng-dev to use new logging system rather
than directly calling console.* to create a better experience
for users.
PR Close#37232
Migrate the formatting tool in ng-dev to use new logging system rather
than directly calling console.* to create a better experience
for users.
PR Close#37232
Adds .group and .groupEnd functions to each of the logging functions
to allow creating groups in the logged output. Additionally removes
the color parameter from logging functions, in favor of the color
being applied to the string at the call site.
PR Close#37232
Due to the desired patch branch (10.0.x) being on a semver version
that is unreleased as stable (there is no 10.0.0 on latest, it is on
next) our logic for determining target patch branches does not work.
This change is a workaround to unblock merging in the repo while a
longer term answer is discovered.
PR Close#37245
The components repo and framework repository follow the same patch
branch concept. We should be able to share a script for determining
these merge branches.
Additonally the logic has been improved compared to the old merge script because
we no longer consult `git ls-remote` unless really needed. Currently,
`git ls-remote` is always consulted, even though not necessarily needed.
This can slow down the merge script and the caretaker process when a
couple of PRs are merged (personally saw around ~4 seconds per merge).
Additionally, the new logic is more strict and will ensure (in most
cases) that no wrong patch/minor branch is determined. Previously,
the script just used the lexicographically greatest patch branch.
This _could_ be wrong when a new patch branch has been created too
early, or by accident.
PR Close#37217
We recently added support for automatic registration of `ts-node`
when the dev-infra configuration is loaded.
In addition to registering ts-node, we should also ensure that the
`commonjs` module is set up. By default, `ts-node` would use ES module
imports that are not supported by default in NodeJS.
PR Close#37217
As of TypeScript 3.9, the tsc emit is not compatible with Closure
Compiler due to
https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/pull/32011.
There is some hope that this will be fixed by a solution like the one
proposed in
https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/38374 but currently it's
unclear if / when that will
happen.
Since the Closure support has been somewhat already broken, and the
tsickle pass has been a source
of headaches for some time for Angular packages, we are removing it for
now while we rethink our
strategy to make Angular Closure compatible outside of Google.
This change has no effect on our Closure compatibility within Google
which work well because all the
code is compiled from sources and passed through tsickle.
This change only disables the tsickle pass but doesn't remove it.
A follow up PR should either remove all the traces of tscikle or
re-enable the fixed version.
BREAKING CHANGE: Angular npm packages no longer contain jsdoc comments
to support Closure Compiler's advanced optimizations
The support for Closure compiler in Angular packages has been
experimental and broken for quite some
time.
As of TS3.9 Closure is unusable with the JavaScript emit. Please follow
https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/38374 for more
information and updates.
If you used Closure compiler with Angular in the past, you will likely
be better off consuming
Angular packages built from sources directly rather than consuming the
version we publish on npm
which is primarily optimized for Webpack/Rollup + Terser build pipeline.
As a temporary workaround you might consider using your current build
pipeline with Closure flag
`--compilation_level=SIMPLE`. This flag will ensure that your build
pipeline produces buildable and
runnable artifacts, at the cost of increased payload size due to
advanced optimizations being disabled.
If you were affected by this change, please help us understand your
needs by leaving a comment on https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/37234.
PR Close#37221
Update docs in the micro benchmarks to include:
* How to run with no turbo inlining
* Where to find the profiles in the DevTools
* Best way to debug benchmarks (using the profile_in_browser rather than --inspect-brk)
PR Close#37140
Creates common logging functions at different levels. Allows for providing
logging statements which are actually printed to the console based on the
LOG_LEVEL environment variable.
PR Close#37192
This commit updates the script that checks master and patch branches to ignore features with `dev-infra` scope
while verifying that there are no feature commits in patch branch. It's ok and in fact desirable for dev-infra features to be on the patch branch.
PR Close#37210
The `fw-testing` PullApprove group is really designed to
capture the top level public testing API groups in packages
like `common` and `router`.
The compiler-cli also has some folders that contain the path
segment `testing` but these should not require `fw-testing`
PullApprove approval.
This commit excludes the whole of `compiler-cli` package from
the `fw-testing` group.
PR Close#37220
In ES2015 IIFE wrapped classes, the identifier that would reference the class
of the NgModule may be an alias variable. Previously the `Esm2015ReflectionHost`
was not able to match this alias to the original class declaration. This resulted
in failing to identify some `ModuleWithProviders` functions in such case.
These IIFE wrapped classes were introduced in TypeScript 3.9, which is why
this issue is only recently appearing. Since 9.1.x does not support TS 3.9
there is no reason to backport this commit to that branch.
Fixes#37189
PR Close#37206
To better check that the code is working, this commit gives a
distinct name (`DecoratedWrappedClass_1`) to the "adjacent"
class declaration in the tests.
PR Close#37206
When pasting over the 9.1.8 release notes,
the link for 10.0.0-next.9 was accidentally
cut off. This commit fixes the broken link for
10.0.0-next.9 in the CHANGELOG.
Previously, the correct behavior of Angular custom elements relied on
the constructor being called (and thus the `injector` property being
initialized). However, some polyfills (e.g. `document-register-element`)
do not call the constructor of custom elements, which resulted in the
`injector` property being undefined and the `NgElementStrategy` failing
to be instantiated.
This commit fixes it by being tolerant to the `injector` property being
undefined and falling back to the injector passed to the
`createCustomElement()` config.
NOTE:
We don't have proper tests exercising the situation where the
constructor is not called. For now this is tested using a Google
internal test suite (which is how this issue was caught).
This commit also adds a rudimentary unit test to emulate this situation.
PR Close#36114
Previously, if an element started out as a regular `HTMLElement` (not a
Custom Element) and was later upgraded to a Custom Element, any
properties corresponding to component inputs that were set on the
element before upgrading it would not be captured correctly and thus not
reflected on the instantiated component.
This commit fixes it by ensuring that such properties are captured
correctly.
Jira issue: [FW-2006](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-2006)
Fixes#30848Closes#31416
PR Close#36114
Previously, the `TestStrategy` `NgElementStrategy` used in
`createCustomElement()` tests was created once and re-used in each test
(due to complications related to how `customElements.register()` works).
As a result, the `TestStrategy` instance's state (e.g. inputs) could be
polluted from previous tests and affect subsequent ones.
This commit ensures the strategy instance is reset before each test.
PR Close#36114
Previously, helper modules/components classes were declared even if the
tests were not run (because the environment did not support Custom
Elements for example).
This commit moves the declaration of the helpers inside the `describe()`
block, so they are not declared unnecessarily. This is in preparation of
adding more helpers that need to access variables declared inside the
`describe()` block.
PR Close#36114
Previously, we had to check whether `NgElementStrategy` had been
instantiated before accessing it. This was tedious and error prone,
since it was easy to forget to add the check in new call sites.
This commit switches to using a getter, so that the check has to be
performed in one place and is transparent to call sites (including any
future ones).
PR Close#36114
`createCustomElements()` creates some getters/setters for properties
corresponding to component inputs that delegate to the
`NgElementStrategy`. However, it is not guaranteed that the element's
`NgElementStrategy` will have been created when these getters/setters
are called, because some polyfills (e.g. `document-register-element`) do
not call the constructor.
Previously, trying to get/set input properties before connecting the
element to the DOM (via `connectedCallback()`) would fail due to
`NgElementStrategy` not being created.
This commit ensures that the `NgElementStrategy` is always created
before used inside the input property getters/setters (similar to how it
is done for other methods of `NgElement`).
Mentioned in https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/31416/files#r300326698.
PR Close#36114
The info about the pw storage is out of date.
We should really just point the reader to a go link, something like go/angular/passwords and keep
the info about secrets there.
PR Close#37212
The TOC at the top refers to an anchor that does not exist.
This change adds the missing anchor while preserving the old one in case someone depends on it.
PR Close#37212
`ts-node` is now an optional peer dependency of the shared dev-infra
package. Whenever a `ng-dev` command runs, and a TypeScript-based
configuration file exists, `ts-node` is set up if available.
That allows consumers of the package (as the components repo) to more
conveniently use a TypeScript-based configuration for dev-infra.
Currently, commands would need to be proxied through `ts-node`
which rather complicates the setup:
```
NG_DEV_COMMAND="ts-node ./node_modules/@angular/dev-infra-private/cli.js"
```
I'm thinking that it should be best-practice to use TypeScript for
writing the configuration files. Given that the tool is used primarily
in Angular projects (for which most sources are TypeScript), this should
be acceptable.
PR Close#37196
Adds a deprecation notice to the old merge-pr script informing the
user the script will be removed in favor of the ng-dev merge tooling.
This currently serves as a warning, and does not fail to perform the
merge.
PR Close#37204
Tslib version is bound to the TypeScript version used to compile the library. Thus, we shouldn't list `tslib` as a `peerDependencies`. This is because, a user can install libraries which have been compiled with older versions of TypeScript and thus require multiple `tslib` versions to be installed.
Reference: TOOL-1374 and TOOL-1375
Closes: #37188
PR Close#37198
PR #36601 itroduces 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#37157
The `rev` property has been in the initial commit that introduced
`resources.json` (196203f6d76ac5240d1485dbd9701bfb026eab56) and has been
added to all new entries since (always with the value `true`). This
field is a remnant from back when this data was stored in a Firebase
Database and the `rev` field indicated whether the entry has been
reviewed/approved by a DevRel lead or something. Now that the data is
kept in the repository and the reviewing is done as part of the
corresponding PR, this field is no longer necessary.
PR Close#37181
This commit removes the `bootstrap()` function in the test project since
its presence has no effect on the behavior of language service.
Also removes the explicit cast when instantiating `CounterDirectiveContext`,
and let type inference takes care of that.
PR Close#37122
Creates a tool in ng-dev which rebases a PR automatically and pushes
the rebase commits back to the PR. This is meant to be a replacement
to the local merge script currently in the repo and currently has
feature parity.
PR Close#37055
PR #13380 added support for `null` and `undefined` but the type on the parameter was not updated.
This would result in a compilation error if `fullTemplateTypeCheck` is enabled.
Fixes#36544
PR Close#37018
With 844208f46345e285cf789de431fa87f1bb483375, we disabled the
components-repo-unit-tests job. The components repo landed the required
TS 3.9.x update, so we can re-enable the job again.
PR Close#37176
As mentioned in the previous commit, the autosquash strategy has
not been used in the components repo, so we could easily regress.
After thorough manual testing of the autosquash strategy again,
now that the merge script will be moved to framework, it came
to mind that there is a bug with the base revision in the
autosquash merge strategy. The problem is that the base revision
of a given PR is relying on the amount of commits in a PR.
This is prone to error because the amount of commits could easily
change in the autosquash merge strategy, because fixup or squash
commits will be collapsed. Basically invalidating the base revision.
To fix this, we fixate the base revision by determining the actual
SHA. This one is guaranteed to not change after the autosquash rebase.
The current merge script in framework fixates the revision by creating
a separate branch, but there is no benefit in that, compared to just
using an explicit SHA that doesn't need to be cleaned up..
PR Close#37138
The components repo does not use the autosquash merge strategy, so
recent changes to that seem to broke the autosquash strategy.
Since we don't run the rebase in interactive mode, the `--autosquash`
flag has no effect. This is by design in Git. We can make it work by
setting the git sequence editor to `true` so that the rebase seems
like an interactive one to Git, while it isn't one for the user.
This matches conceptually with the merge script currently used in
framework. The only difference is that we allow a real interactive
rebase if the `commit message fixup` label is applied. This allows
commit message modifications (and others) if needed.
PR Close#37138
Integrates the merge script into the `ng-dev` CLI. The goal is that
caretakers can run the same command across repositories to merge a pull
request. The command is as followed: `yarn ng-dev pr merge <number>`.
PR Close#37138
Moves the merge script from the components repository over
to the shared dev-infra package. The merge script has been
orginally built for all Angular repositories, but we just
kept it in the components repo temporarily to test it.
Since everything went well on the components side, we now
move the script over and integrate it into the dev-infra package.
PR Close#37138
The work to support case-sensitivity in the `FileSystem` went too far
with the `LogicalFileSystem`, which is used to compute import paths
that will be added to files processed by ngtsc and ngcc.
Previously all logical paths were canonicalised, which meant that on
case-insensitive file-systems, the paths were all set to lower case.
This resulted in incorrect imports being added to files. For example:
```
import { Apollo } from './Apollo';
import { SelectPipe } from './SelectPipe';
import * as ɵngcc0 from '@angular/core';
import * as ɵngcc1 from './selectpipe';
```
The import from `./SelectPipe` is from the original file, while the
import from `./selectpipe` is added by ngcc. This causes the
TypeScript compiler to complain, or worse for paths not to be
matched correctly.
Now, when computing logical paths, the original absolute paths
are matched against rootDirs in a canonical manner, but the actual
logical path that is returned maintains it original casing.
Fixes#36992, #36993, #37000
PR Close#37008
This commit includes a couple minor fixes for the script that compares master and patch branch:
- take only relevant release commit into account while generating the diff
- fix the initial version display (avoid '+' sign from being added)
- removes obsolete parameter that was needed for v9.0.x branch only
PR Close#37150
This commit includes the following improvements:
- Document that the `create-image.sh` script (and by extention the
`update-preview-server.sh` script) need to have access to a `yarn`
executable.
- Add a note on cron jobs running in non-interactive, non-login shells
(which affects their execution context and have different behavior vs
running the same commands in an interactive, login shell).
- Change the Node.js and `yarn` installation instructions to ensure the
`yarn` executable will be available on the `PATH` and not require an
interactive, login shell (as happens, for example, when installing it
via [nvm](https://github.com/nvm-sh/nvm)). This makes it easier to set
up a cron job that runs the `update-preview-server.sh` script.
NOTE: The equivalent updates have been made on the GCE VM that hosts the
PR preview server.
PR Close#37015
In order to avoid unnecessary operations, the `update-preview-server.sh`
script, that is used to update the PR preview server Docker container,
will only try to update the Docker container if either any files in the
`aio/aio-builds-setup/` directory have changed since the last update or
if a previous update failed. A failed previous update is detected by
checking whether the temporary `aio-builds:provisional` Docker image
still exists. This temporary image is created during the update
operation and is renamed to `aio-builds:latest` if the update goes well.
Previously, the update script was not able to detect a previous failed
attempt if the operation failed before creating the
`aio-builds:provisional` Docker image, such as if the `create-image.sh`
script failed. This could lead to a situation where the preview server
Docker container would not be updated after a failed attempt.
This commit improves the logic for detecting failed attempts to account
for this type of failures. It does this by not removing an older
`aio-builds:provisional` Docker image until a new one is successfully
created.
NOTE: While this is not full-proof, it is an improvement as it
eliminates a certain kind of failures.
PR Close#37015
Some tests currently fail with a TS error
```
TS2783: 'id' is specified more than once, so this usage will be overwritten.
```
This changes fixes that.
PR Close#37129
Some properties in the DOM lib interface `CSSStyleDeclaration` are not assignable such as `getPropertyPriority` and `getPropertyValue`. With this change we filter out properties which type is not `string` to fix the below error;
```ts
ERROR in src/app/layout/doc-viewer/doc-viewer.component.ts:202:43 - error TS2322: Type 'string' is not assignable to type 'string & ((property: string) => string) & ((property: string) => string) & ((index: number) => string) & ((property: string) => string) & ((property: string, value: string | null, priority?: string | undefined) => void)'.
Type 'string' is not assignable to type '(property: string) => string'.
202 ? this.void$.pipe(tap(() => elem.style[prop] = to))
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
```
PR Close#37129
With this change we drop support for TypeScript 3.8 and remove all related tests.
BREAKING CHANGE:
TypeScript 3.8 is no longer supported, please update to TypeScript 3.9.
PR Close#37129
Previously, the CHANGELOG file was caught under the general
"*" glob, which meant that it fell under the dev-infra
approval group. This does not really make sense since it
has more to do with public-facing changes. As such, this
commit moves the CHANGELOG file specifically to the
public-api approval group.
PR Close#37143
When I made the generic mandatory for ModuleWithProviders
in 20cc3ab, I forgot to add a formal "breaking changes" note
for the CHANGELOG. This commit adds the missing breaking
changes information.
PR Close#37121
Creates a tool in ng-dev to determine the PRs which become conflicted
by merging a specified PR. Often the question is brought up of how
many PRs require a rebase as a result of a change. This script allows
to determine this impact.
PR Close#37051
`skipLibCheck` had to be added to a few AIO examples, because of a breaking change in master. These changes update to a newer version of `angular-in-memory-web-api` that accounts for the breaking change.
PR Close#37128
Previously this inline-tag-def was returning the `doc` which is rendered
to the output as `[Object Object]` - obviously not what is intended.
Now it returns `''` which effectively strips the tag handler from the
rendered output.
PR Close#37132
Adds the gitub configuration to the ng-dev configuration. This github
configuration provides information needed for making API requests to
github. Upcoming tooling related PRs will require these API requests
being possible.
PR Close#37097
Adds a gitub object to the common configuration for ng-dev. This github
configuration provides information needed for making API requests to
github.
PR Close#37097
After rewriting much of the router doc, it became apparent that the lazy loading/preloading information should be in the lazy loading doc rather than in the router doc. There is now instead a short section that touches on lazy loading but links to the lazy learning document instead of covering it in detail in the router doc.
PR Close#36748
This commit updates payload size limits that are triggering errors after merging cda2530. That commit seems to contribute to the payload size increase, but all checks were "green" for the original PR (#35889), so it looks like it's an accumulated payload size increase from multiple changes. The goal of this commit is to bring the master branch back to "green" state.
PR Close#37123
Previously all static styling information (including the ones from component/directive host bindings) would get merged into a single value before it would be written into the `@Input('class'/'style')`. The new behavior specifically excludes host values from the `@Input` bindings.
Fix#35383
PR Close#35889
Dynamic embedded views were conceptually different from inline embedded views, but we have since
removed the inline embedded views so we now only have "embedded views".
See related refactoring work to remove inline embedded views in #34715
and #37073.
PR Close#37117
If one component Parent inherit another component Base like the following:
@Component(...)
class Base {
constructor(@Inject(InjectionToken) injector: Injector) { }
}
@Component(...)
class Parent extends Base {
// no constructor
}
When creating Component Parent, the dependency injection should work on delegating ctors like above.
The code Parent code above will be compiled into something like:
class Parent extends Base {
constructor() {
super(...arguments);
}
}
The angular core isDelegateCtor function will identify the delegation ctor to the base class.
But when the code above is minified (using terser), the minified code will compress the spaces, resulting in something like:
class Parent extends Base{constructor(){super(...arguments)}}
The regex will stop working, since it wasn't aware of this case. So this fix will allow this to work in minified code cases.
PR Close#36962
The _tViewNode field (that was marked as internal) on the ViewRef is not
necessery as a reference to a relevant TView is available as a local
variable.
PR Close#36814
Release commits do not require a commit body as the context, usually
provided in commit body, is already available in the process of
releasing. No additional value is gained from adding a body message
on these commits.
PR Close#37110
The current implementation for redirecting users inside guards was in place
before the feature was added to allow `CanActivate` and `CanActivateChild` guards
to return `UrlTree` for redirecting users.
Returning `UrlTree` should be the default method, as it provides a more desirable
redirecting experience. When using `router.navigate` followed by `return false`,
the `Router` calls `resetUrlToCurrentUrlTree` (in the `finalize` operator) before
processing the navigation to the new route. This can result in an undesirable
history if the navigation was the first navigation in the application - that is,
the route will briefly be reset to just `/` (see #36187).
Fixes#36187
PR Close#37100
The current code will not work as the `e` will be an event,
If we try to access e.id and e.url it will throw an exception, the correct way is to use map or filter down to specific events
PR Close#37027
This was originally pushed by @igorminar in #36944, but later reverted in #35621
This commit reintroduces the original changes, and remove the `@angular/http` secion from the deprecations guide.
PR Close#37070
In the code base there are cases where there is, conceptually, a class
that is represented by a combination of an `interface`
(type declaration) and a `const` (value declaration).
For example:
```
export interface SomeClass {
count(a?: string): number;
}
export const: SomeClass = class {
someMethod(a: string = ''): number { ... }
};
```
These were being rendered as interfaces and also not
correctly showing the descriptions and default parameter
values.
In this commit such concepts are now rendered as classes.
The classes that are affected by this are:
* `DebugElement`
* `DebugNode`
* `Type`
* `EventEmitter`
* `TestBed`
Note that while decorators are also defined in this form
they have their own rendering type (`decorator`) and so
are not affecte by this.
PR Close#36989
With this change we update the expect of the `module resolution cache` were in the second count with cache the `fileExists` is called less then 700 times.
PR Close#36989
TypeScript 3.9 introduced a breaking change where extends `any` no longer acts as `any`, instead it acts as `unknown`.
With this change we retain the behavior we had with TS 3.8 which is;
When using the `EventEmitter` as a type you must always provide a type;
```ts
let emitter: EventEmitter<string>
```
and when initializing the `EventEmitter` class you can either provide a type or or use the fallback type which is `any`
```ts
const emitter = new EventEmitter(); // EventEmitter<any>
const emitter = new EventEmitte<string>(); // EventEmitter<string>
``
PR Close#36989
This is a workaround for a TS 3.9 regression https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/38501 where the emitted `__exportStar` helpers have a missing semi-colon at the end of the unnamed function, when targetting UMD, and causes the following runtime error `Uncaught TypeError: (intermediate value)(…) is not a function`.
This is because the anonymous `__exportStar` function will be invoked with the function on the next like as the parameter which is subsequently invoking whatever was returned.
To get around this TS bug, add `importHelpers: true` in your tsconfig. This also, is recommanded to avoid multiple copies of the same helper being inlined, which might cause increase in bundle size.
PR Close#36989
With this changer we update the CLI size-tracking changes for uncompressed
main-es2015 file. This file is larger due to new emitted shape of
ES2015 classes in TypeScript 3.9, which are now wrapped in IIFE.
PR Close#36989
In some versions of TypeScript, the transformation of synthetic
`$localize` tagged template literals is broken.
See https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/38485
We now compute what the expected final output target of the
compilation will be so that we can generate ES5 compliant
`$localize` calls instead of relying upon TS to do the downleveling
for us.
This is a workaround for the TS compiler bug, which could be removed
when this is fixed. But since it only affects ES5 targeted compilations,
which is now not the norm, it has limited impact on the majority of
Angular projects. So this fix can probably be left in indefinitely.
PR Close#36989
In TypeScript 3.9 some re-export syntaxes have changed to be getter
functions (created by calls to `Object.defineProperty()`) rather than
simple property accessors.
This commit adds support into the CommonJS and UMD reflection hosts
for this style of re-export syntax.
PR Close#36989
In the CommonJS and UMD reflection hosts, the logic for computing the
`viaModule` property of `Declaration` objects was not correct for some
cases when getting the exports of modules.
In these cases it was setting `viaModule` to the path of the local module
rather than `null`.
PR Close#36989
The term `ReexportStatement` is too general for this particular concept.
Here the re-export actually refers to a wildcard where all the module
exports are being re-exported.
When we introduce other re-export statement types later this will be
confusing.
PR Close#36989
Using backtick multiline strings leads to confusing layout
that does not fit with the surrounding indentation. Also it
can lead to test fragility due to automated code formatting.
This commit changes just one set of subject code to use
a more resilient string concatenation approach.
PR Close#36989
After the refactoring of the reflection hosts to accommodate
ES2015 classes wrapped in IIFEs. The same treatment needs to
be applied to the rendering formatters.
PR Close#36989
In TS 3.9, ES2015 output can contain ES classes that are wrapped in an
IIFE. So now ES2015 class declarations can look like one of:
```
class OuterClass1 {}
```
```
let OuterClass = class InnerClass {};
```
```
var AliasClass;
let OuterClass = AliasClass = class InnerClass {};
```
```
let OuterClass = (() => class InnerClass {}};
```
```
var AliasClass;
let OuterClass = AliasClass = (() => class InnerClass {})();
```
```
let OuterClass = (() => {
let AdjacentClass = class InnerClass {};
// ... static properties or decorators attached to `AdjacentClass`
return AdjacentClass;
})();
```
```
var AliasClass;
let OuterClass = AliasClass = (() => {
let AdjacentClass = class InnerClass {};
// ... static properties or decorators attached to `AdjacentClass`
return AdjacentClass;
})();
```
The `Esm5ReflectionHost` already handles slightly different IIFE wrappers
around function-based classes. This can be substantially reused when
fixing `Esm2015ReflectionHost`, since there is a lot of commonality
between the two.
This commit moves code from the `Esm5ReflectionHost` into the `Esm2015ReflectionHost`
and looks to share as much as possible between the two hosts.
PR Close#36989
Previously the path to the unlocker process was being resolved by the
current file-system. In the case that this was a `MockFileSystemWindows`
on a non-Windows operating system, this resulted in an incorrect path
to the entry-point.
Now the path to the entry-point is hand-crafted to avoid being broken by
whatever FileSystem is in use.
PR Close#36989
The previous implementations of `hasBaseClass()` are almost
identical to the implementation of `getBaseClassExpression()`.
There is little benefit in duplicating this code so this refactoring
changes `hasBaseClass()` to just call `getBaseClassExpression()`.
This allows the various hosts that implement this to be simplified.
PR Close#36989
The comment in this function confused me, so I updated it to clarify that
`isClass()` is not true for un-named classes.
Also, I took the opportunity to use a helper method to simplify the function
itself.
PR Close#36989
A number of overloads were added to `detectKnownDeclaration()` to
allow it to support `null` being passed through. In practice this could
easily be avoided, which allows the overloads to be removed and the
method signature and implementations to be simplified.
PR Close#36989
In TypeScript 3.9, the compiler is able to re-use (i.e. not invalidate)
the previous program if only external templates (i.e. no TS files) have
changed.
PR Close#36989
In TypeScript 3.9, type nodes need to exist in the context of a statement.
This commit ensures that the synthetic type node has such a parent.
PR Close#36989
We recently disabled the e2e tests for `upgrade-phonecat-2-hybdrid`
because the switch to APF 10 caused it to fail with an uglify
error. More details in a dedicated issue here:
https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/36957.
We can re-enable the test by switching to Terser that properly
handles ES2015 syntax. Previously the rollup bundle consisted
only of ES5 output as the Angular framework packages provided
ES5 output. With APF 10, there is no ES5 output except for the
non-optimizable UMD format.
Hence we either need to downlevel code to ES5, or use Terser
that supports ES2015 syntax.
Closes#36957.
PR Close#36969
Cindy has been working with us for a while now
and should be listed on AIO as a part of our team.
This commit adds her image / bio to the Angular
contributors page.
PR Close#37076
The ActiveIndexFlag is no longer needed because we no longer have "inline embedded views".
There is only one type of embedded view so we do not need complex tracking for
inline embedded views.
HAS_TRANSPLANTED_VIEWS now takes the place of the ACTIVE_INDEX slot as a
simple boolean rather than being a shifted flag inside the ACTIVE_INDEX bits.
PR Close#37073
Currently, requests from the server that do not use absolute URLs
fail because the server does not have the same fallback mechanism
that browser XHR does. This adds that mechanism by pulling the
full URL out of the document.location object, if available.
PR Close#37071
This commit removes the duplicate `and` found in the
`Support for the development cycle` section part of the
getting started guide.
Fixes#37060
PR Close#37067
The local rebase-pr script assumes the existence of specific git
aliases. Instead this script should rely on the full written out
command instead.
PR Close#37050
Introduces infrastructure to validate configuration of the ng-dev
command at run time. Allowing for errors to be returned to the
user running the command.
PR Close#37049
In 420b9be1c14ec6900692b641a3d89b99eb9c6e5b all style-based sanitization code was
disabled because modern browsers no longer allow for javascript expressions within
CSS. This patch is a follow-up patch which removes all traces of style sanitization
code (both instructions and runtime logic) for the `[style]` and `[style.prop]` bindings.
PR Close#36965
This commit makes the leap from its own custom baked `FileUtils`
solution to the fully formed `FileSystem` that is used in the compiler-cli.
This makes testing more straightforward and helps to ensure that the tool
will work across operatings systems.
Also, going forward, it will allow the localize project access to other useful
code from the compiler-cli, such as source-map handling.
PR Close#36843
Adding `readFileBuffer()` method and allowing `writeFile()` to accept a
Buffer object will be useful when reading and writing non-text files,
such as is done in the `@angular/localize` package.
PR Close#36843
The `FormStyle` enum offers two options, and the explanation of the difference between the two can be found on the CLDR official website. Sadly, the link changed and the one currently referenced is a dead-end. This commit fixes the link.
PR Close#37069
The deprecation notice for platform-webworker
APIs is too prescriptive and notes that we will
remove the package in version 10. Since we are
not planning to do this for version 10, this
commit updates the notice to read "a future
version of Angular".
PR Close#37052
This reverts commit 078b0be4dc69ef4a8cdf4eb15caedde1114950c7.
The original commit was a work around for a bug in CLI. That bug was fixed in the CLI, as a result this change is no longer needed and is being reverted.
PR Close#37074
As per our discussion in the dev-infra sync meeting, we don't want
to have all dependencies show up as peer dependencies. Instead, we
only want to have larger dependencies such as `typescript` or buildifier
as peer dependencies. Tslib is also included for the sake of it being
generally a peer dependency of all Angular framework packages.
The rationale is that Yarn is smart enough to collapse packages
if all satisfy a given range. This means that we don't necessarily
need to have all dependencies as peer dependencies. The initial
idea was to keep all dependencies as peer dependencies so that
we have control over duplication of packages as downloading multiple
packages w/ different versions impacts local dev, CI and caches.
At the same time though, we don't want to bother with setting
up peer dependencies all the time. Not every consumer of the
shared dev-infra package would like to manually specify `yaml`
or `multimatch` etc. in the project `package.json`. Hence we
decided to go with a hybrid approach where only more impactful
dependencies are peer dependencies, and other smaller ones can
be standard depdencies that are usually collapsed by Yarn anyway.
Also this commit removes tslib from build targets that don't
rely on it.
PR Close#36980
In the code example of the AsyncValidator example there was an aliased
import for the rxjs operator `of`. To align with the RxJS docs it should
just use a plain import of `of`
PR Close#36856
The message can be improved by removing the unneeded ‘the’ (x2).
Before:
Angular is running in the development mode. Call enableProdMode() to enable the production mode.
After:
Angular is running in development mode. Call enableProdMode() to enable production mode.
Closes#36570
PR Close#36571
It makes sense that the lead technical writer should be allowed
to approve changes to DOCS: Marketing. The inspriration for this
change came to the current lead technical writer in a vision, or
perhaps it was a fugue state caused by too little caffeine. No
one knows. It's still a good idea though.
PR Close#37014
This commit refactors TS-only utility functions to a separate file so
that they could be shared with Ivy language service.
A separate ts_library rule is created so that there is no dependency on
`compiler` and `compiler-cli` to make the compilation fast and
light-weight.
The method `getPropertyAssignmentFromValue` is modified slightly to
improve the ergonomics of the function.
PR Close#36984
Prior to this change, the `template` instruction logic was located in the `instructions/container.ts` file alongside embedded view instructions. Since unused embedded view instructions are removed in a previous commit, this commit renames `container.ts` -> `template.ts`, since only template-related instructions were retained.
PR Close#34715
All migration guides did not have a direct link to access them so added them to the side nav in the section updating to version 9 for direct access, it also helps to add right side nav to these migration guides
Fixes#33582
PR Close#34979
Clicking on a link may take us to an extenal source, which may lead to user leaving angular.io unintentionally.
Added visual cues on external links so that user knows which links are external and which are intenal to angular.io.
Fixes#17620
PR Close#36601
ASTs for property read and method calls contain information about
the entire span of the expression, including its receiver. Use cases
like a language service and compile error messages may be more
interested in the span of the direct identifier for which the
expression is constructed (i.e. an accessed property). To support this,
this commit adds a `nameSpan` property on
- `PropertyRead`s
- `SafePropertyRead`s
- `PropertyWrite`s
- `MethodCall`s
- `SafeMethodCall`s
The `nameSpan` property already existed for `BindingPipe`s.
This commit also updates usages of these expressions' `sourceSpan`s in
Ngtsc and the langauge service to use `nameSpan`s where appropriate.
PR Close#36826
This commit adds a Compiler interface that wraps the actual ngtsc
compiler. The language-service specific compiler manages multiple
typecheck files using the Project interface, creating and adding
ScriptInfos as necessary.
This commit also adds `overrideInlineTemplate()` method to the mock
service so that we could test the Compiler diagnostics feature.
PR Close#36930
With a previous change we add FireFox Extended Support Release (ESR) to the list of supported browsers.
With this change we now add this above mentioned browser to list of tested browsers and also update several other browsers.
Removed browsers because they are no longer supported:
- iOS 10 and 11
- Safari 10 and 11
Added
- Firefox 68 (Current ESR version)
- Safari 12 and 13
- iOS Safari 12 and 13
Updated
- Update Chrome to 81
- Updated Firefox to 76
PR Close#36973
With this change we add FireFox Extended Support Release (ESR) to the list of supported browsers. The ESR latest version is used mainly in corporate environments (intranet applications, etc.) due to its support and stability guarantees.
PR Close#36973
Migrate to use a typescript file rather than a javascript file for
defining the ng-dev config file. This will allow long term for the
config to rely on the types while writing the config, avoiding
errors.
PR Close#37017
Previously ng-dev loaded the config through a javascript file, this
change allows for the loaded file to be either javascript or
typescript. This enables configurations to be written with type
safety.
PR Close#37017
In resource.model.ts the interfaces of the resources were defined as classes, these do not use any class properties and are only used for type checking. So, changed them from class to interface.
PR Close#36958
While creating the new tutorial section, I hit o instead of i when
typing the word 'tooltip.' This is understandable, as they are right
next to each other on the keyboard. I might move to the Dvorak
keyboard layout to avoid such errors in the future.
PR Close#36955
web worker platform. Minor grammar/stylistic changes.
Inline documentation for the PlatformLocation service instead mentions @angular/platform-server.
Typos corrected, minor grammar and stylistic changes.
PR Close#36953
change to aot docs to include changes after angular 9
aot is true for new applications created, also it will
be updated to aot true once app is updated using ng update
PR Close#35487
Migrate to the new .ng-dev-config.js file for providing a configuration
to ng-dev. This is being done as a result of the previous commit which
updated the ng-dev command to expect this new file.
PR Close#36918
Migrating to a js file for providing a configuration allows for more
extensive configuration at run time. This allows for configs to include
logic and move beyond static values found in JSON files.
PR Close#36918
Some projects include .js source files (via the TypeScript allowJs option).
Previously, the compiler would attempt to tag these files for shims, which
caused errors as the regex used to create shim filenames assumes a .ts file.
This commit fixes the bug by filtering out non-ts files during tagging.
PR Close#36987
In past versions of the View Engine compiler, we added a warning that is
printed whenever the compiler comes across an Angular declaration with a
constructor that does not match suitable DI tokens. The warning mentioned
that in `v6.x` it will turn into an actual error.
This actually happened as expected for most cases. e.g. the constructor
of `@NgModule`, `@Component`'s, `@Pipe`'s etc will be checked and an error
will be reported if constructor is not DI compatible.
The warning has never been removed though as it was still relevant for
unprovided injectables, or injectables serialized into summaries of the
Angular compiler.
As of version 10, classes that use Angular features need an Angular decorator.
This includes base classes of services that use the lifecycles Angular feature.
Due to this being a common pattern now, we can remove the warning in
View Engine. The warning is not correct, and also quite confusing as it
mentions the planned removal in `v6.x`.
Resolves FW-2147.
PR Close#36985
Prior to this commit, number input fields would to fire valueChanges twice: once for `input` events when typing and second for the `change` event when the field lost focus (both events happen at once when using the increment and decrement buttons on the number field).
Fixes#12540
BREAKING CHANGE: Number inputs no longer listen to the `change` event.
* Tests which trigger `change` events need to be updated to trigger `input` events instead.
* The `change` event was in place to support IE9, as we found that `input` events were not fired with backspace or cut actions. If you need to maintain IE9 support, you will need to add a change event listener to number inputs and call the `onChange` method of `NumberValueAccessor` manually.
* Lastly, old versions of WebDriver would synthetically trigger the `change` event on `WebElement.clear` and `WebElement.sendKeys`. If you are using an old version of WebDriver, you may need to update tests to ensure `input` events are triggered. For example, you could use `element.sendKeys(Keys.chord(Keys.CONTROL, "a"), Keys.BACK_SPACE);` in place of `element.clear()`.
PR Close#12540
PR Close#36087
These tests were matching file-paths against what is retrieved from the
TS compiler. But the TS compiler paths have been canonicalised, so the
tests were brittle on case-insensitive file-systems.
PR Close#36859
These tests were matching file-paths against what is retrieved from the
TS compiler. But the TS compiler paths have been canonicalised, so the
tests were brittle on case-insensitive file-systems.
PR Close#36859
These tests were matching file-paths against what is retrieved from the
TS compiler. But the TS compiler paths have been canonicalised, so the
tests were brittle on case-insensitive file-systems.
PR Close#36859
The type checking infrastrure uses file-paths that may come from the
TS compiler. Such paths will have been canonicalized, and so the type
checking classes must also canonicalize paths when matching.
PR Close#36859
Since the `MockFileSystemWindows` is case-insensitive, any
drive path that must be added to a normalized path should be lower
case to make the path canonical.
PR Close#36859
Previously this class used the file passed in directly to look up files in the
in-memory mock file-system. But this doesn't match the behaviour of
case-insensitive file-systems. Now the look up is done on the canonical
file paths.
PR Close#36859
Previously this method was returning the exact opposite value
than the correct one.
Also, calling `this.exists()` causes an infinite recursions,
so the actual file-system `fs.existsSync()` method is used
to ascertain the case-sensitivity of the file-system.
PR Close#36859
Previously the `getRootDirs()` function was not converting
the root directory paths to their canonical form, which can
cause problems on case-insensitive file-systems.
PR Close#36859
The `getCanonicalFileName()` method was not actually
calling the `useCaseSensitiveFileNames()` method. So
it always returned a case-sensitive canonical filename.
PR Close#36859
Updates the `components-repo-unit-tests` job to
d3a9ac67d2.
We need to update since we added a new diagnostic in ngtsc, and
the given commit in the components repo fixes failures caused by
the new diagnostic.
Note: This commit currently points to a PR as it's unlikely that
this fix lands soon, but we want to move forward. There is no
downside to doing that as the PR is based on top of the latest
components repo `master`.
PR Close#36921
Abstract directives cannot be part of a `@NgModule`, but the AIO dgeni
setup currently enforces this. This commit updates the logic so that
abstract directives are skipped.
PR Close#36921
Enables the `ng update` migrations for v10. Status for individual
migrations:
**undecorated-classes-with-di**.
This migration dealt exlusively with inherited constructors and
cases where a derived component was undecorated. In those cases,
the migration added `@Directive()` or copied the inherited decorator
to the derived class.
We don't need to run this migration again because ngtsc throws if
constructor is inherited from an undecorated class. Also ngtsc will
throw if a NgModule references an undecorated class in the declarations.
***undecorated-classes-with-decorated-fields***
This migration exclusively deals with undecorated classes that use
Angular features but are not decorated. Angular features include
the use of lifecycle hooks or class fields with Angular decorators,
such as `@Input()`.
We want to re-run this migration in v10 as we will disable the
compatibility code in ngtsc that detects such undecorated classes
as `@Directive`.
**module-with-providers**:
This migration adds an explicit generic type to `ModuleWithProviders`.
As of v10, the generic type is required, so we need to re-run the
migration again.
**renderer-to-renderer2**:
We don't need to re-run that migration again as the
renderer has been already removed in v9.
**missing-injectable**:
This migration is exclusively concerned with undecorated
providers referenced in an `NgModule`. We should re-run
that migration again as we don't have proper backsliding
prevention for this yet. We can consider adding an error
in ngtsc for v10, or v11. In either way, we should re-run
the migration.
**dynamic-queries**:
We ran this one in v9 to reduce code complexity in projects. Instead
of explicitly passing `static: false`, not passing any object literal
has the same semantics. We don't need to re-run the migration again
since there is no good way to prevent backsliding and we cannot always
run this migration for future versions (as some apps might actually
intentionally use the explicit `static: false` option).
PR Close#36921
Previously in v9, we deprecated the pattern of undecorated base classes
that rely on Angular features. We ran a migration for this in version 9
and will run the same on in version 10 again.
To ensure that projects do not regress and start using the unsupported
pattern again, we report an error in ngtsc if such undecorated classes
are discovered.
We keep the compatibility code enabled in ngcc so that libraries
can be still be consumed, even if they have not been migrated yet.
Resolves FW-2130.
PR Close#36921
As of v10, undecorated classes using Angular features are no longer
supported. In v10, we plan on removing the undecorated classes
compatibility code in ngtsc. This means that old patterns for
undecorated classes will result in compilation errors.
We had a migration for this in v9 already, but it looks like
the migration does not handle cases where classes uses lifecycle
hooks. This is handled in the ngtsc compatibility code, and we
should handle it similarly in migrations too.
This has not been outlined in the migration plan initially,
but an appendix has been added for v10 to the plan document.
https://hackmd.io/vuQfavzfRG6KUCtU7oK_EA?both.
Note: The migration is unable to determine whether a given undecorated
class that only defines `ngOnDestroy` is a directive or an actual
service. This means that in some cases the migration cannot do
more than adding a TODO and printing an failure.
Certainly there are more ways to determine the type of such classes,
but it would involve metadata and NgModule analysis. This is out of
scope for this migration.
PR Close#36921
In v9, we deprecated the use of ModuleWithProviders
without a generic. In v10, we will be requiring the
generic when using ModuleWithProviders. You can read
more about the reasoning behind this change in the
migration guide:
http://v9.angular.io/guide/migration-module-with-providers
PR Close#36892
This patch is the first of many commits to disable sanitization for
[stlye.prop] and [style] bindings in Angular.
Historically, style-based sanitization has only been required for old
IE browsers (IE6 and IE7). Since Angular does not support these old
browsers at all, there is no reason for the framework to support
style-based sanitization.
PR Close#35621
We stopped publishing @angular/http to npm a while back (v7?), so from the perspective of our
customer @angular/http has been removed a long time ago and mentioninig it now that we actually
removed the code from our repo is just confusing.
PR Close#36944
Since we no longer hardcode the `package.json` for
entry-points, a bug has appeared for `ng_package` in Ivy.
The `package.json` files are populated incorrectly with Ivy
as the flat module bundle name is not propagated from `ng_module`
to the `ng_package` rule. The rule then guesses the index file
to `index.js` and does not respect the flat module bundle shim.
PR Close#36944
As mentioned in previous commits, as of v10 the release output
does no longer contain ESM5 output due to an update to the APF.
This means that the side-effect integration test needs to be
updated as it currently expects/tests esm5 output.
PR Close#36944
As of version 10, libraries following the APF will no longer contain
ESM5 output. Hence, tests in ngcc need to be updated as they currently
rely on the release output of `@angular/core`.
Additionally, we'd need to support in ngcc that the `module`
property of entry-points no longer necessarily refers to
`esm5` output, but instead can also target `esm2015`.
We currently achieve this by checking the path the `module`
property points to. We can do this because as per APF, the
folder name is known for the esm2015 output. Long-term for
more coverage, we want to sniff the format by looking for
known ES2015 constructs in the file `module` refers to.
PR Close#36944
In the past we added support for `ts_library` to `ng_package`. For those
targets we never can determine the "index" file. Unlike `ng_module`,
there is no provider data for flat module bundles, so the `ng_package`
rule assumes that the index file is simply called `index`.
This works as expected, but we also added logic in the past that doesn't
allow `ng_package` to add format properties (e.g. `main`, `module`) to a
`package.json` if a package json is handwritten for such a `ts_library` target.
This has been done that way because we assumed that such `package.json` files
might want to set format properties explicitly to different paths due to a
faulty "index" guess.
We want to change this behavior as most of the time a `package.json`
file already exists with just the module name. In those cases, the
packager should still set the format properties. We should only warn
and skip automatic insertion of the format properties if such a
`package.json` explicitly sets format properties.
PR Close#36944
We can remove all of the entry point resolution configuration from the package.json
in our source code as ng_package rule adds the properties automatically and correctly
configures them.
This change simplifies our code base but doesn't have any impact on the package.json
in the distributed npm_packages.
PR Close#36944
esm5 and fesm5 are no longer needed and have been deprecated in the past.
https://v9.angular.io/guide/deprecations#esm5-and-fesm5-code-formats-in-angular-npm-packages
This commit modifies ng_package to no longer distribute these two formats in npm packages
built by ng_package (e.g. @angular/core).
This commit intentionally doesn't fully clean up the ng_package rule to remove all traces of esm5 and fems5
build artifacts as that is a bigger cleanup and currently we are narrowing down the scope of this change
to the MVP needed for v10, which in this case is 'do not put esm5 and fesm5' into the npm packages.
More cleanup to follow: https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-2143
BREAKING CHANGE: esm5 and fesm5 format is no longer distributed in
Angular's npm packages e.g. @angular/core
If you are not using Angular CLI to build your application or library,
and you need to be able to build es5 artifacts, then you will need to
downlevel the distributed Angular code to es5 on your own.
Angular CLI will automatically downlevel the code to es5 if differential
loading is enabled in the Angular project, so no action is required from
Angular CLI users.
PR Close#36944
In #36892 the `ModuleWithProviders` type parameter becomes required.
This exposes a bug in ngcc, where it can only handle functions that have a
specific form:
```
function forRoot() {
return { ... };
}
```
In other words, it only accepts functions that return an object literal.
In some libraries, the function instead returns a call to another function.
For example in `angular-in-memory-web-api`:
```
InMemoryWebApiModule.forFeature = function (dbCreator, options) {
return InMemoryWebApiModule_1.forRoot(dbCreator, options);
};
```
This commit changes the parsing of such functions to use the
`PartialEvaluator`, which can evaluate these more complex function
bodies.
PR Close#36948
Previously this method was implemented on the `NgccReflectionHost`,
but really it is asking too much of the host, since it actually needs to do
some static evaluation of the code to be able to support a wider range
of function shapes. Also there was only one implementation of the method
in the `Esm2015ReflectionHost` since it has no format specific code in
in.
This commit moves the whole function (and supporting helpers) into the
`ModuleWithProvidersAnalyzer`, which is the only place it was being used.
This class will be able to do further static evaluation of the function bodies
in order to support more function shapes than the host can do on its own.
The commit removes a whole set of reflection host tests but these are
already covered by the tests of the analyzer.
PR Close#36948
The purpose of the `WrappedValue` is to allow same object instance to be treated as different for the purposes of change detection. It is currently used with `async` pipe and only with `Observables`. The use case which it covers is if the `Observable` produces the same instance of the value but it is desirable to still try to mark it as changed for the purposes of change detection.
We believe tha the above use case is too rare to warrant special handling in the framework. (Having special handling causes application slowdown for the users and mental load for the developers.) No replacement is planned for this deprecation.
PR Close#36819
This optimization builds on a lot of prior work to finally make type-
checking of templates incremental.
Incrementality requires two main components:
- the ability to reuse work from a prior compilation.
- the ability to know when changes in the current program invalidate that
prior work.
Prior to this commit, on every type-checking pass the compiler would
generate new .ngtypecheck files for each original input file in the program.
1. (Build #1 main program): empty .ngtypecheck files generated for each
original input file.
2. (Build #1 type-check program): .ngtypecheck contents overridden for those
which have corresponding components that need type-checked.
3. (Build #2 main program): throw away old .ngtypecheck files and generate
new empty ones.
4. (Build #2 type-check program): same as step 2.
With this commit, the `IncrementalDriver` now tracks template type-checking
_metadata_ for each input file. The metadata contains information about
source mappings for generated type-checking code, as well as some
diagnostics which were discovered at type-check analysis time. The actual
type-checking code is stored in the TypeScript AST for type-checking files,
which is now re-used between programs as follows:
1. (Build #1 main program): empty .ngtypecheck files generated for each
original input file.
2. (Build #1 type-check program): .ngtypecheck contents overridden for those
which have corresponding components that need type-checked, and the
metadata registered in the `IncrementalDriver`.
3. (Build #2 main program): The `TypeCheckShimGenerator` now reuses _all_
.ngtypecheck `ts.SourceFile` shims from build #1's type-check program in
the construction of build #2's main program. Some of the contents of
these files might be stale (if a component's template changed, for
example), but wholesale reuse here prevents unnecessary changes in the
contents of the program at this point and makes TypeScript's job a lot
easier.
4. (Build #2 type-check program): For those input files which have not
"logically changed" (meaning components within are semantically the same
as they were before), the compiler will re-use the type-check file
metadata from build #1, and _not_ generate a new .ngtypecheck shim.
For components which have logically changed or where the previous
.ngtypecheck contents cannot otherwise be reused, code generation happens
as before.
PR Close#36211
As a performance optimization, this commit splits the single
__ngtypecheck__.ts file which was previously added to the user's program as
a container for all template type-checking code into multiple .ngtypecheck
shim files, one for each original file in the user's program.
In larger applications, the generation, parsing, and checking of this single
type-checking file was a huge performance bottleneck, with the file often
exceeding 1 MB in text content. Particularly in incremental builds,
regenerating this single file for the entire application proved especially
expensive.
This commit introduces a new strategy for template type-checking code which
makes use of a new interface, the `TypeCheckingProgramStrategy`. This
interface abstracts the process of creating a new `ts.Program` to type-check
a particular compilation, and allows the mechanism there to be kept separate
from the more complex logic around dealing with multiple .ngtypecheck files.
A new `TemplateTypeChecker` hosts that logic and interacts with the
`TypeCheckingProgramStrategy` to actually generate and return diagnostics.
The `TypeCheckContext` class, previously the workhorse of template type-
checking, is now solely focused on collecting and generating type-checking
file contents.
A side effect of implementing the new `TypeCheckingProgramStrategy` in this
way is that the API is designed to be suitable for use by the Angular
Language Service as well. The LS also needs to type-check components, but
has its own method for constructing a `ts.Program` with type-checking code.
Note that this commit does not make the actual checking of templates at all
_incremental_ just yet. That will happen in a future commit.
PR Close#36211
Shim generation was built on a lie.
Shims are files added to the program which aren't original files authored by
the user, but files authored effectively by the compiler. These fall into
two categories: files which will be generated (like the .ngfactory shims we
generate for View Engine compatibility) as well as files used internally in
compilation (like the __ng_typecheck__.ts file).
Previously, shim generation was driven by the `rootFiles` passed to the
compiler as input. These are effectively the `files` listed in the
`tsconfig.json`. Each shim generator (e.g. the `FactoryGenerator`) would
examine the `rootFiles` and produce a list of shim file names which it would
be responsible for generating. These names would then be added to the
`rootFiles` when the program was created.
The fatal flaw here is that `rootFiles` does not always account for all of
the files in the program. In fact, it's quite rare that it does. Users don't
typically specify every file directly in `files`. Instead, they rely on
TypeScript, during program creation, starting with a few root files and
transitively discovering all of the files in the program.
This happens, however, during `ts.createProgram`, which is too late to add
new files to the `rootFiles` list.
As a result, shim generation was only including shims for files actually
listed in the `tsconfig.json` file, and not for the transitive set of files
in the user's program as it should.
This commit completely rewrites shim generation to use a different technique
for adding files to the program, inspired by View Engine's shim generator.
In this new technique, as the program is being created and `ts.SourceFile`s
are being requested from the `NgCompilerHost`, shims for those files are
generated and a reference to them is patched onto the original file's
`ts.SourceFile.referencedFiles`. This causes TS to think that the original
file references the shim, and causes the shim to be included in the program.
The original `referencedFiles` array is saved and restored after program
creation, hiding this little hack from the rest of the system.
The new shim generation engine differentiates between two kinds of shims:
top-level shims (such as the flat module entrypoint file and
__ng_typecheck__.ts) and per-file shims such as ngfactory or ngsummary
files. The former are included via `rootFiles` as before, the latter are
included via the `referencedFiles` of their corresponding original files.
As a result of this change, shims are now correctly generated for all files
in the program, not just the ones named in `tsconfig.json`.
A few mitigating factors prevented this bug from being realized until now:
* in g3, `files` does include the transitive closure of files in the program
* in CLI apps, shims are not really used
This change also makes use of a novel technique for associating information
with source files: the use of an `NgExtension` `Symbol` to patch the
information directly onto the AST object. This is used in several
circumstances:
* For shims, metadata about a `ts.SourceFile`'s status as a shim and its
origins are held in the extension data.
* For original files, the original `referencedFiles` are stashed in the
extension data for later restoration.
The main benefit of this technique is a lot less bookkeeping around `Map`s
of `ts.SourceFile`s to various kinds of data, which need to be tracked/
invalidated as part of incremental builds.
This technique is based on designs used internally in the TypeScript
compiler and is serving as a prototype of this design in ngtsc. If it works
well, it could have benefits across the rest of the compiler.
PR Close#36211
The compiler needs to track the dependencies of a component, including any
NgModules which happen to be present in a component's scope. If an upstream
NgModule changes, any downstream components need to have their templates
re-compiled and re-typechecked.
Previously, the compiler handled this well for the A -> B -> C case where
module A imports module B which re-exports module C. However, it fell apart
in the A -> B -> C -> D case, because previously tracking focused on changes
to components/directives in the scope, and not NgModules specifically.
This commit introduces logic to track which NgModules contributed to a given
scope, and treat them as dependencies of any components within.
This logic also contains a bug, which is intentional for now. It
purposefully does not track transitive dependencies of the NgModules which
contribute to a scope. If it did, using the current dependency system, this
would treat all components and directives (even those not exported into the
scope) as dependencies, causing a major performance bottleneck. Only those
dependencies which contributed to the module's export scope should be
considered, but the current system is incapable of making this distinction.
This will be fixed at a later date.
PR Close#36211
Add a mechanism to replace file contents for a specific file. This
allows us to write custom test scenarios in code without modifying the
test project.
Since we are no longer mocking the language service host, the file
overwrite needs to happen via the project service.
Project service manages a set of script infos, and overwriting the files
is a matter of updating the relevant script infos.
Note that the actual project service is wrapped inside a Mock Service.
Tests should not have direct access to the project service. All
manipulations should take place via the Mock Service.
The MockService provides a `reset()` method to undo temporary overwrites
after each test.
PR Close#36923
Previously, some preview server tests were only running for public
builds. In the past, these tests were run for both public and non-public
builds. The non-public builds tests were disabled in #23576, probably
during debugging some failure.
This commit fixes it by ensuring the tests are run for both public and
non-public builds.
PR Close#36837
The test was introduced in #23576, but the behavior the test was
verifying does not match the actual behavior of
`BuildCleaner#getOpenPrNumbers()`.
The reason that the test did not fail is that the verification happened
asynchronously, but the test completed synchronously (by accident).
PR Close#36837
Previously, when the preview server `build-cleanup` script failed, the
error was logged but not reflected to the commands exit code. This seems
to have been accidentally broken in #23576.
This commit fixes it by ensuring the error is re-thrown from the
`BuildCleaner#cleanUp()` method to allow the process to exit with an
error exit code.
PR Close#36837
Previously, the `dev` npm script in `aio/aio-builds-setup/scripts-js/`
(the PR preview server implementation) would run both linting and unit
tests. This was slow and delayed the feedback loop on each change.
Since the `dev` script should be run during development and give
feedback as fast as possible, this commit removes the linting from the
`dev` script and only keeps the unit tests. Linting is still run in the
`test` npm script (which is more comprehensive). Also, in most cases the
developer's IDE will show linting errors in real time in the editor.
PR Close#36837
Update the order in which the `update-preview-server.sh` script expects
its arguments (and the associated docs) to be consistent with the order
of arguments in other commands/docs (such as
`vm-setup--start-docker-container.md`).
PR Close#36837
I recently went through the process of setting up a preview server VM
again and updated the instructions and references based on the latest
docs for Debian, Docker, Google Compute Engine, etc.
PR Close#36837
Previously, in order to remain as deterministic as possible, the
Dockerfile for the preview server Docker image had all dependencies
pinned to specific versions. It turns out that some packages (such as
`nginx`, `nodejs`, and `openssl` - potentially others too) make older
versions unavailable on the repositories once a newer version is
available.
See for example:
- https://github.com/nodesource/distributions/issues/33
- https://askubuntu.com/questions/715104/how-can-i-downgrade-openssl-via-apt-get
This commit, therefore, removes the exact versions for these packages.
The latest versions will be installed everytime the Docker image is
built (subject to Docker caching).
PR Close#36837
In order to ease local development, self-signed SSL/TLS certificates are
created when building the preview server Docker image. These
certificates are valid for 365 days. Thus, it is possible for an old
certificate to be re-used past its expiration date due to Docker's
caching intermediate layers.
Previously, this would lead to hard-to-debug failures in the
`aio-health-check` and `aio-verify-setup` checks. Even after finding out
that the failures were caused by an expired certificate, it was not
obvious why that would be the case.
This commit adds an additional check to the `aio-health-check` command
that checks the certificates' expiration dates. This helps surface such
errors. It also prints a more helpful message, prompting the user to
build the Docker image with the `--no-cache` option to fix the problem
with self-signed certificates.
PR Close#36837
Previously, the preview server Docker image was based on Debian 9
(stretch).
This commit upgrades the preview server Docker image to Debian 10
(buster) and also upgrades all dependencies to latest versions
(including upgrading Node.js from v10 to v12).
(The GCE VM running the preview server Docker container was also
upgraded from Debian 9 to 10 on 2020-04-27.)
---
Other changes:
- Pinned the installed version of `curl` to make the `aio-health-check`
and `aio-verify-setup` checks (which use `curl`) more deterministic.
- Dropped the `*-backports` Debian repositories, since they are no
longer needed. The `*-backports` repositories were introduced in
593fe5ed259d5b118d41e2b961b462e922762700 to install `nginx` from, but
became obsolete in 2f1a862b831f44b9b923dcc52f94af69d3b40aa6, which
switched to installing `nginx` from the regular repositories again.
- Added `vim` to the list of installed dependencies (for convenience
during debugging).
PR Close#36837
This commit upgrades all dependencies in `scripts-js/` to latest
versions and also includes all necessary code changes to ensure the
tests are passing with the new dependency versions.
PR Close#36837
The legacy HTTP package was deprecated in v5 with the launch of
@angular/common/http. The legacy package hasn't been published
since v7, and will therefore not include a migration.
PR Close#27038
Remove TypeScript 3.6 and 3.7 support from Angular along with tests that
ensure those TS versions work.
BREAKING CHANGE: typescript 3.6 and 3.7 are no longer supported, please
update to typescript 3.8
PR Close#36329
The current benchmark for transplanted views only exercises the path
when the declaration location is dirty and the insertion is not. This
test adds a benchmark for when both insertion and declaration are dirty.
PR Close#36722
This commit fixes 2 separate issues related to root nodes retrieval from
embedded views with `<ng-content>`:
1) we did not account for the case where there were no projectable nodes
for a given `<ng-content>`;
2) we did not account for the case where projectable nodes for a given
`<ng-content>` were represented as an array of native nodes (happens in
the case of dynamically created components with projectable nodes);
Fixes#35967
PR Close#36051
A caching mechanism was put in place to prevent repeated calls to
the Github API. As the CI setup no longer relies on calls to the
Github API, this caching is no longer necessary.
It was discovered that this caching was causing a contention issue
for saucelabs testing as the same tunnel was being reused for
multiple jobs simultaneously. With this caching mechanism removed
the jobs will once again run via separate tunnels.
PR Close#36936
The `elements` tests were disabled on Saucelabs, because they were failing on IE10. The problem was that we were loading an es2015 file from npm directly, causing a syntax error. These changes transpile the file to es5.
PR Close#36929
Parse Angular compiler options in Angular language service.
In View Engine, only TypeScript compiler options are read, Angular
compiler options are not. With Ivy, there could be different modes of
compilation, most notably how strict the templates should be checked.
This commit makes the behavior of language service consistent with the
Ivy compiler.
PR Close#36922
Disables Bazel runfile tree creation. Only if a given
execution strategy relies on runfile tree creation, the
runfile tree is created lazily. This helps as currently
Bazel spends unnecessary time on CI building runfile trees
for tests which are cached and aren't re-run.
The goal is to spend less time on CI for cached test/build
targets. We can't measure impact yet as there are targets
for the integration tests that hide the potential benefits.
on the components repo a 80% time reduction could be observed.
PR Close#36914
Previously we were passing a string form of the value to pluralize
to the `getLocalePluralCase()` function that is extracted from the
locale data. But some locales have functions that rely upon this
value being a number not a string.
Now we convert the value to a number before passing it to the
locale data function.
Fixes#36888
PR Close#36901
Previously, using undecorated base classes and using
ModuleWithProviders without a generic were listed
as deprecated features.
In v10, these features will be removed and an error
will be thrown instead. This commit updates the
deprecation guide to reflect this change.
PR Close#36891
The index of the deprecation guide contains a list
of deprecated APIs and when they can be removed.
This commit updates the likely removal version for
APIs that were previously listed as v10, as we are
not removing them in this version.
PR Close#36891
Add documentation in the deprecations markdown file about the deprecation of IE 9 and 10.
Additionally, add note in browser support document about deprecation.
PR Close#36887
The `getLocation()` method was not working as there were typos in the
properties it was reading. This was not picked up because there were
neither typings for these properties nor unit tests to check it worked.
PR Close#36853
This commit also updates the projects to more closely match what a newly
generated app would look like with the exception of `tslint.json` files,
which would create too many linting failures. These will be updated in a
follow-up PR.
PR Close#36145
Previously, in the `test_aio` CI job, we ran ngcc before building the
app with `yarn build`. This was supposed to have the benefit of taking
advantage of the parallel capabilities of standalone ngcc (vs implicitly
running it via `ng build`).
It turns out that the work done by the standalone ngcc was thrown away
before the `ng build`, resulting in `ng build` having to run ngcc all
over again. This happened because the `yarn build` script (run after the
standalone ngcc step) also runs `yarn install`, which essentially cleans
up `node_modules/`, thus discarding all the work already done by ngcc.
Here is an [example CI job][1], where this can be seen in action:
One can see the "Compiling <some-package> : es2015 as esm2015" logs in
the `yarn --cwd aio ngcc --properties es2015` step (as the standalone
ngcc processes the various entry-points) and then see the same logs in
the `yarn --cwd aio build --progress=false` step (as ngcc has to process
the entry-points all over again).
This commit removes the redundant standalone ngcc run and lets the CLI
handle ngcc via `ng build`. It is possible to instrument the build
process in a way that we can run the standalone ngcc after
`yarn install` and thus take advantage of the performance gains in
parallel mode, but the latest version of the CLI can already run ngcc in
parallel mode as a pre-build step, so this is unnecessary.
[1]: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/658691
PR Close#36145
Update the Angular CLI and Angular framework packages to latest `@next`
versions. Also, update the app to look more closely to how a newly
generated app with the latest CLI would look like.
PR Close#36145
This commit updates all payload sizes for angular.io to make it easier
to compare payload size changes as a result of upgrading Angular
packages and other dependencies in subsequent commits.
PR Close#36145
Previously, the behavior of the `minLength` and `maxLength` validators
caused confusion, as they appeared to work with numeric values but
did not in fact produce consistent results. This commit fixes the issue
by skipping validation altogether when a numeric value is used.
BREAKING CHANGES:
* The `minLength` and `maxLength` validators now verify that a value has
numeric `length` property and invoke validation only if that's the case.
Previously, falsey values without the length property (such as `0` or
`false` values) were triggering validation errors. If your code relies on
the old behavior, you can include other validators such as [min][1] or
[requiredTrue][2] to the list of validators for a particular field.
[1]: https://angular.io/api/forms/Validators#min
[2]: https://angular.io/api/forms/Validators#requiredTrueCloses#35591
PR Close#36157
This commit adds a method `overrideInlineTemplate` to the
`MockTypescriptHost`. This allows us to override an inline template
in a Component without changing the TypeScript parts. This methods works
in a similar way as `MockTypescriptHost.override()`, which is used for
overriding external template.
PR Close#36890
This function needs to deduplicate the paths that are found from the
paths mappings. Previously this deduplication was not linear and also
called the expensive `relative()` function many times.
This commit, suggested by @JoostK, reduces the complexity of the deduplication
by using a tree structure built from the segments of each path.
PR Close#36881
Previously the `basePaths` were computed when the finder was instantiated.
This was a waste of effort in the case that the targeted entry-point is already
processed.
This change makes the computation of `basePaths` lazy, so that the work is
only done if they are actually needed.
Fixes#36874
PR Close#36881
In TS 3.9 the compiler will start to wrap ES2015 classes in an IIFE to help with
tree-shaking when the class has "associated" statements.
E.g.
```ts
let PlatformLocation = /** @class */ (() => {
...
class PlatformLocation {
}
...
return PlatformLocation;
})();
```
This commit updates `Esm2015ReflectionHost` to support this format.
PR Close#36884
This commit adds a new mock host for testing the ivy language service.
Unlike the existing mock_host which mocks the LanguageServiceHost, the
Ivy mock host mocks just the filesystem interface, aka ts.ServerHost.
This is because Ivy language service requires an actual Project to
perform operations like adding synthetic typecheck files to the project,
and by extension, to the ts.Program. These requirements make the existing
mock host unsuitable to be reused.
This new testing structure also improves test performance, because the
old mock host copies (it actually creates symlinks, but still that's
relatively expensive due to the sheer number of files involved) all
@angular/* packages along with the typescript package to a temporary
node_modules directory. This is done every time setup() is called.
Instead, this new mock host just loads them from a pre-determined path
in Bazel runfiles.
PR Close#36879
Previously the setup-rbe.sh script did not allow accounts that did
have domains of angular.io or google.com. Since we add emails from
other domains into everyone@angular.io, we are unable to be certain
in the script that the account is not actually a member of the
required group. This change adds the option to choose to continue
with an email account logged in which we cannot verify by domain.
PR Close#36846
Migrates away from inline searching for files and running buildifier
directly, instead using ng-dev for formatting. Additionally, provides
a deprecation message for any usages of the previous commands.
PR Close#36842
In an effort to centralize formatting and linting enforcement into one
location, buildifier is being added as a formatter for ng-dev's format
command. Allowing for format enforcement for all .bzl, .bazel, WORKSPACE
and BUILD files.
PR Close#36842
For testing on IE, shims must be served in es5. Because the shims
served in these tests come from node_modules and are not part of
the angular/angular source code, they must be transpiled to es5 if
they are published as es6. This macro allows for a uniform method
for running this transpilation during the build process.
PR Close#36802
Changes the Ivy unknown element/property messages from being logged with `console.warn` to `console.error`. This should make them a bit more visible without breaking existing apps. Furthermore, a lot of folks filter out warning messages in the dev tools' console, whereas errors are usually still shown.
BREAKING CHANGE:
Warnings about unknown elements are now logged as errors. This won't break your app, but it may trip up tools that expect nothing to be logged via `console.error`.
Fixes#35699.
PR Close#36399
This change aligns behavior for resolvers which return EMPTY. Currently EMPTY resolvers have inconsistent behavior:
- One resolver that returns EMPTY => won't navigate and just ends on ResolveStart router event.
- Two resolvers where both return EMPTY => throws "Error: Uncaught (in promise): EmptyError: no elements in sequence"
- Two resolvers where one returns a value and the other one returns EMPTY => Navigates successfully.
With this change any EMPTY resolver will cancel navigation.
BREAKING CHANGE: Any resolver which return EMPTY will cancel navigation.
If you want to allow the navigation to continue, you will need to update the resolvers to emit
some value, (i.e. defaultIfEmpty(...), of(...), etc).
PR Close#24195
PR Close#24621
This commit makes the test project a filegroup so that it could be
shared with the Ivy tests.
Also removed `project/foo.ts` since it is no longer used.
PR Close#36865
This commit adds a new entry point for the Ivy version of language
service. The entry point is just a shell for now, implementation will be
added in subsequent PRs.
The Ivy version of language service could be loaded from the NPM package
via `require(@angular/language-service/bundles/ivy.umd.js)`
PR Close#36864
Create a common environment stamping script in the ng-dev tooling
as to be used in common release tasks. This is the first step in
consolidating pieces of the release scripting process into a single
location to develop a release tool.
PR Close#36844
Previously the `AsyncLocker` was configured to only wait
50x500ms before timing out. This is 25secs, which is often
less than a normal run of ngcc, so the chance of a timeout
flake was quite high.
The default is now 500x500ms, which is 250secs. If this is
too high for some projects then it can be changed via the
`ngcc.config.js` project file.
PR Close#36838
The commit adds support to the ngcc.config.js file for setting the
`retryAttempts` and `retryDelay` options for the `AsyncLocker`.
An integration test adds a new check for a timeout and actually uses the
ngcc.config.js to reduce the timeout time to prevent the test from taking
too long to complete.
PR Close#36838
Strictly this method only returns config for packages. So this commit
renames it to `getPackageConfig()`, which frees us up to add other
"getXxxxConfig()` methods later.
PR Close#36838
This test is basically duplicated (and slightly enhanced) in the
following test. So it is superfluous. (I suspect it was the result
of a broken rebase.)
PR Close#36838
When ngcc fails due to a timeout waiting for another process
to complete, it was not failing with a unique exit code, so that it
was not possible to know if the process can be restarted; compared to
ngcc failing for some more fatal reason.
Now if ngcc exits because of a timeout, the exit code will be 177.
PR Close#36838
When ngcc is having to pause and wait for another process
it provides a message to the user. This commit adds the extra
information about how to remove the lockfile if desired, since
this message is not shown if you Ctrl-C out of the process before
the timeout period ends.
PR Close#36838
Previously only one translation file per locale could be loaded.
Now the user can specify multiple files per locale, and the translations
from each of these files will be merged together by message id.
The merging is on a first-wins approach. So if to you have three files
to be merged:
```
['a.xlf', 'b.xmb', 'c.json']
```
Then any message from `a.xlf` will be used rather than a message from `b.xmb`
or `c.json` and so on. In practice this means that you should put the files
in order of most important first, with "fallback" translations later.
PR Close#36792
This commit introduces `Diagnostics.merge(other)` which will take the messages from
`other` and append them to the messages of `this`.
The translation loader is updated to use this new method.
PR Close#36792
Previously the `missingTranslation` option had to be checked before calling
`warn` or `error` on the `diagnostics` object.
Now this boilerplate is hidden inside the `Diagnostics.add()` method, which
will open it up to being used for other conditional diagnostics.
PR Close#36792
The Angular ServiceWorker always uses a copy of the request without
headers for caching assets (in order to avoid issues with opaque
responses). Therefore, it was previously not possible to retrieve
resources from the cache if the response contained [Vary](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Vary) headers.
In addition to that, `Vary` headers do not work in all browsers (or work
differently) and may not work as intended with ServiceWorker caches. See
[this article](https://www.smashingmagazine.com/2017/11/understanding-vary-header) and the linked resources for more info.
This commit avoids the aforementioned issues by making sure the Angular
ServiceWorker always sets the `ignoreVary` option passed to
[Cache#match()](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Cache/match) to `true`. This allows the ServiceWorker to correctly
retrieve cached responses with `Vary` headers, which was previously not
possible.
Fixes#36638
BREAKING CHANGE:
Previously, [Vary](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Headers/Vary)
headers would be taken into account when retrieving resources from the
cache, completely preventing the retrieval of cached assets (due to
ServiceWorker implementation details) and leading to unpredictable
behavior due to inconsistent/buggy implementations in different
browsers.
Now, `Vary` headers are ignored when retrieving resources from the
ServiceWorker caches, which can result in resources being retrieved even
when their headers are different. If your application needs to
differentiate its responses based on request headers, please make sure
the Angular ServiceWorker is [configured](https://angular.io/guide/service-worker-config)
to avoid caching the affected resources.
PR Close#34663
Previously it was not possible to provide `CacheQueryOptions` ([MDN](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Cache)) for querying the Cache.
This commit introduces a new parameter called `cacheQueryOptions` for `DataGroup` and `AssetGroup`.
Currently only `ignoreSearch` is supported as `ignoreVary` and `ignoreMethod` would require using
the complete Request object for matching which is not possible with the current implementation.
Closes#28443
PR Close#34663
`AsyncPipe` only uses `WrappedValue` when the latest value from the `Promise` or `Observable` is different from the previous one. This is already enough to trigger change detection so the `WrappedValue` is not necessary.
Fixes#29927
BREAKING CHANGE:
This change could result in ExpressionChangedAfterItHasBeenChecked errors that
were not detected before. The error could previously have gone undetected
because two WrappedValues are considered "equal" in all cases for the purposes
of the check, even if their respective unwrapped values are not.
Additionally, `[val]=(observable | async).someProperty` will no longer
trigger change detection if the value of `someProperty` is identical to
the value in the previous emit. If you need to force change detection,
either update the binding to use an object whose reference changes or
subscribe to the observable and call markForCheck as needed.
PR Close#36633
Only refresh transplanted views at the insertion location in Ivy.
Previously, Ivy would check transplanted views at both the insertion and
declaration points. This is achieved by adding a marker to the insertion
tree when we encounter a transplanted view that needs to be refreshed at
its declaration. We use this marker as an extra indication that we still
need to descend and refresh those transplanted views at their insertion
locations even if the insertion view and/or its parents are not dirty.
This change fixes several issues:
* Transplanted views refreshed twice if both insertion and declaration
are dirty. This could be an error if the insertion component changes
result in data not being available to the transplanted view because it
is slated to be removed.
* CheckAlways transplanted views not refreshed if shielded by
non-dirty OnPush (fixes#35400)
* Transplanted views still refreshed when insertion tree is detached
(fixes#21324)
PR Close#35968
Now that `ngcc/src/ngcc_options` imports `FileWriter` type, there is a
circular dependency detected by the `ts-circular-deps:check` lint check:
```
ngcc/src/ngcc_options.ts
→ ngcc/src/writing/file_writer.ts
→ ngcc/src/packages/entry_point_bundle.ts
→ ngcc/src/ngcc_options.ts
```
This commit moves the `PathMappings` type (and related helpers) to a
separate file to avoid the circular dependency.
NOTE:
The circular dependency was only with taking types into account. There
was no circular dependency for the actual (JS) code.
PR Close#36626
When running in parallel mode, worker processes forward errors thrown
during task processing to the master process, which in turn exits with
an error.
However, there are cases where the error is not directly related to
processing the entry-point. One such case is when there is not enough
memory (for example, due to all the other tasks being processed
simultaneously).
Previously, an `ENOMEM` error thrown on a worker process would propagate
to the master process, eventually causing ngcc to exit with an error.
Example failure: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/682198
This commit improves handling of these low-memory situations by
detecting `ENOMEM` errors and killing the worker process, thus allowing
the master process to decide how to handle that. The master process will
put the task back into the tasks queue and continue processing tasks
with the rest of the worker processes (and thus with lower memory
pressure).
PR Close#36626
Previously, when the last worker process crashed, the master process
would try to re-spawn it indefinitely. This could lead to an infinite
loop (if for some reason the worker process kept crashing).
This commit avoids this by limiting the number of re-spawn attempts to
3, after which ngcc will exit with an error.
PR Close#36626
Previously, when running in parallel mode and a worker process crashed
while processing a task, it was not possible for ngcc to continue
without risking ending up with a corrupted entry-point and therefore it
exited with an error. This, for example, could happen when a worker
process received a `SIGKILL` signal, which was frequently observed in CI
environments. This was probably the result of Docker killing processes
due to increased memory pressure.
One factor that amplifies the problem under Docker (which is often used
in CI) is that it is not possible to distinguish between the available
CPU cores on the host machine and the ones made available to Docker
containers, thus resulting in ngcc spawning too many worker processes.
This commit addresses these issues in the following ways:
1. We take advantage of the fact that files are written to disk only
after an entry-point has been fully analyzed/compiled. The master
process can now determine whether a worker process has not yet
started writing files to disk (even if it was in the middle of
processing a task) and just put the task back into the tasks queue if
the worker process crashes.
2. The master process keeps track of the transformed files that a worker
process will attempt to write to disk. If the worker process crashes
while writing files, the master process can revert any changes and
put the task back into the tasks queue (without risking corruption).
3. When a worker process crashes while processing a task (which can be a
result of increased memory pressure or too many worker processes),
the master process will not try to re-spawn it. This way the number
or worker processes is gradually adjusted to a level that can be
accomodated by the system's resources.
Examples of ngcc being able to recover after a worker process crashed:
- While idling: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/682197
- While compiling: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/682209
- While writing files: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/682267
Jira issue: [FW-2008](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-2008)
Fixes#36278
PR Close#36626
This commit adds a `revertFile()` method to `FileWriter`, which can
revert a transformed file (and its backup - if any) written by the
`FileWriter`.
In a subsequent commit, this will be used to allow ngcc to recover
when a worker process crashes in the middle of processing a task.
PR Close#36626
With this commit, the master process will keep track of the transformed
files that each worker process is intending to write to disk.
In a subsequent commit, this info will be used to allow ngcc to recover
when a worker process crashes in the middle of processing a task.
PR Close#36626
With this commit, worker processes will notify the master process about
the transformed files they are about to write to disk before starting
writing them.
In a subsequent commit, this will be used to allow ngcc to recover when
a worker process crashes in the middle of processing a task.
PR Close#36626
This commit enhances the `CompileFn`, which is used to process each
entry-point, to support running a passed-in callback (and wait for it to
complete) before proceeding with writing the transformed files to disk.
This functionality is currently not used. In a subsequent commit, it
will be used for passing info from worker processes to the master
process that will allow ngcc to recover when a worker process crashes in
the middle of processing a task.
PR Close#36626
Rename the `markTaskCompleted()` method to be consistent with the other
similar methods of `TaskQueue` (`markAsFailed()` and
`markAsUnprocessed()`).
PR Close#36626
This commit adds support for stopping processing an in-progress task
and moving it back to the list of pending tasks.
In a subsequent commit, this will be used to allow ngcc to recover when
a worker process crashes in the middle of processing a task.
PR Close#36626
Previously, ngcc would run in parallel mode (using the
`ClusterExecutor`) when there were at least 2 CPU cores (and all other
requirements where met). On systems with just 2 CPU cores, this meant
there would only be one worker process (since one CPU core is always
reserved for the master process). In these cases, the tasks would still
be processed serially (on the one worker process), but we would also pay
the overhead of communicating between the master and worker processes.
This commit fixes this by only running in parallel mode if there are
more than 2 CPU cores (i.e. at least 2 worker processes).
PR Close#36626
Previously, the "Compiling <entryPoint>" log message was printed before
starting to analyze and transform files, but after creating the
`EntryPointBundle` (which includes creating the TS program).
Since creating the `EntryPointBundle` involves some work, it is more
accurate to move the log message before creating the bundle.
PR Close#36626
Previously the exec command was used, however the exec command would
exit the original calling script regardless of the whether exit was
called. This caused the release script to always exit after the
pre-check phase.
PR Close#36862
If there's an error during the first creation pass of a `TView`, the data structure may be corrupted which will cause framework assertion failures downstream which can mask the user's error. These changes add a new flag to the `TView` that indicates whether the first creation pass was successful, and if it wasn't we try re-create the `TView`.
Fixes#31221.
PR Close#36381
An enum declaration in TypeScript code will be emitted into JavaScript
as a regular variable declaration, with the enum members being declared
inside an IIFE. For ngcc to support interpreting such variable
declarations as enum declarations with its members, ngcc needs to
recognize the enum declaration emit structure and extract all member
from the statements in the IIFE.
This commit extends the `ConcreteDeclaration` structure in the
`ReflectionHost` abstraction to be able to capture the enum members
on a variable declaration, as a substitute for the original
`ts.EnumDeclaration` as it existed in TypeScript code. The static
interpreter has been extended to handle the extracted enum members
as it would have done for `ts.EnumDeclaration`.
Fixes#35584
Resolves FW-2069
PR Close#36550
Enables some passing `platform-browser` tests on Saucelabs. The reason they were disabled was an error log which doesn't actually fail the test run and has been there for a long time.
PR Close#36797
The html parser already normalizes line endings (converting `\r\n` to `\n`)
for most text in templates but it was missing the expressions of ICU expansions.
In ViewEngine backticked literal strings, used to define inline templates,
were already normalized by the TypeScript parser.
In Ivy we are parsing the raw text of the source file directly so the line
endings need to be manually normalized.
This change ensures that inline templates have the line endings of ICU
expression normalized correctly, which matches the ViewEngine.
In ViewEngine external templates, defined in HTML files, the behavior was
different, since TypeScript was not normalizing the line endings.
Specifically, ICU expansion "expressions" are not being normalized.
This is a problem because it means that i18n message ids can be different on
different machines that are setup with different line ending handling,
or if the developer moves a template from inline to external or vice versa.
The goal is always to normalize line endings, whether inline or external.
But this would be a breaking change since it would change i18n message ids
that have been previously computed. Therefore this commit aligns the ivy
template parsing to have the same "buggy" behavior for external templates.
There is now a compiler option `i18nNormalizeLineEndingsInICUs`, which
if set to `true` will ensure the correct non-buggy behavior. For the time
being this option defaults to `false` to ensure backward compatibility while
allowing opt-in to the desired behavior. This option's default will be
flipped in a future breaking change release.
Further, when this option is set to `false`, any ICU expression tokens,
which have not been normalized, are added to the `ParseResult` from the
`HtmlParser.parse()` method. In the future, this collection of tokens could
be used to diagnose and encourage developers to migrate their i18n message
ids. See FW-2106.
Closes#36725
PR Close#36741
The `I18nComponent` was using `!` for some of its properties
because it had not initialized them. This is now resolved by explictly
marking them as optional.
PR Close#36741
Move the creation of the results objects into the wrapper functions.
This makes it easier to reason about what the parser and lexer classes
are responsible for - you create a new object for each tokenization or
parsing activity and they hold the state of the activity.
PR Close#36741
This property can actually be `null` when called from the language-service.
This change allows us to remove the use of `!` to subvert the type system.
PR Close#36741
Prior to this change, animations-related runtime logic assumed that the @HostBinding and @HostListener with synthetic (animations) props are used for Components only. However having @HostBinding and @HostListener with synthetic props on Directives is also supported by View Engine. This commit updates the logic to select correct renderer to execute instructions (current renderer for Directives and sub-component renderer for Components).
This PR resolves#35501.
PR Close#35568
A CanLoad guard returning UrlTree cancels current navigation and redirects.
This matches the behavior available to `CanActivate` guards added in #26521.
Note that this does not affect preloading. A `CanLoad` guard blocks any
preloading. That is, any route with a `CanLoad` guard is not preloaded
and the guards are not executed as part of preloading.
fixes#28306
PR Close#36610
Correct typo in the router docs, changing "as your app growns" to "as your app grows". Previously the wrong spelling was used and this commit rectifies this.
PR Close#36786
Migrates away from gulp to ng-dev for running our formatter.
Additionally, provides a deprecation warning for any attempted
usage of the previous `gulp format:*` tasks.
PR Close#36726
Previously we used gulp to run our formatter, currently clang-format,
across our repository. This new tool within ng-dev allows us to
migrate away from our gulp based solution as our gulp solution had
issue with memory pressure and would cause OOM errors with too large
of change sets.
PR Close#36726
This change is part of a larger effort to migrate all golden type
tracking files to a single location. Additionally, this makes it
a bit easier to manage file ownership in pullapprove.
PR Close#36455
After the user edits the file `core.d.ts`, the symbol from the core module will be invalided, which only is created when init the language service. Then the language-service will crash.
PR Close#36783
This change demonstrates how to use the newly created
rule in one of our performance tests.
Future commits and PRs will migrate the remaining tests to this new bazel rule.
PR Close#36434
* Set up dev-infra's :npm_package to also contain benchmarking suite
* Add benchmarking deps to dev-infra's package.json
* Add a bazel workspace to dev-infra's package.json. This is so that when a
project wants to use dev-infra's code and macros, they can just import the
macros from their node_modules instead of loading it separately
PR Close#36434
* Move tools/brotli-cli, tools/browsers, tools/components,
tools/ng_rollup_bundle, and modules/e2e_util to dev-infra/benchmarking
* Fix imports and references to moved folders and files
* Set up BUILD.bazel files for moved folders so they can be packaged with
dev-infra's :npm_package
PR Close#36434
Enforces a requirement that all PR commit messages contain a body
of at least 100 characters. This is meant to encourage commits
within the repo to be more descriptive of each change.
PR Close#36632
Previously, the commit message body regex only matched the first line
of the body. This change corrects the regex to match the entire line.
PR Close#36632
Currently, if changes are made to `compiler-cli/ngcc` and to other
compiler-related files, then only the `fw-ngcc` group is requested
for review. This is because the `not contains_any_globs` condition
will be false for `fw-compiler` and the group will never become active.
We fix this by removing the incorrect condition and filtering out ngcc
files before checking `contains_any_globs` in the primary fw-compiler
condition.
PR Close#36661
Currently, when verifying our pullapprove configuration, we don't
respect modifications to the set of files in a condition.
e.g. It's not possible to do the following:
```
contains_any_globs(files.exclude(...), [
```
This prevents us from having codeowner groups which match a directory,
but want to filter out specific sub directories. For example, `fw-core`
matches all files in the core package. We want to exclude the schematics
from that glob. Usually we do this by another exclude condition.
This has a *significant* downside though. It means that fw-core will not
be requested if a PR changes schematic code, _and_ actual fw-core code.
To support these conditions, the pullapprove verification tool is
refactored, so that it no longer uses Regular expressions for parsing,
but rather evaluates the code through a dynamic function. This is
possible since the conditions are written in simple Python that can
be run in NodeJS too (with small modifications/transformations).
PR Close#36661
This was originally fixed in #35976, but one of the window.scrollY
assertions was missed. Also updated tests to use toBeGreater/LessThan
to improve failure messages.
PR Close#36742
This PR adds test case to cover a failure that was detected after
merging #36302. That commit will be reverted and will need a new PR that
does not cause this test to fail.
PR Close#36699
This commit update the PullApprove config to add AndrewKushnir to the `fw-testing` group. The reason for this change is that I was involved into TestBed rewrite (for Ivy) and it belongs to the `fw-testing` group ownership.
PR Close#36744
Moves the circular deps golden for packages into a subfolder of goldens,
`/goldens/circular-deps/` to more easily target the files for
ownership.
PR Close#36630
Bumping the version of benchpress as a new version needs to be released
as part of the effort to set up more benchmarking accross the
angular/angular and angular/components repos.
PR Close#36457
Previously, our process included running the pre-check script before
releasing. With our new publishing process this was dropped. This
change adds in automatically executing this check before publish for
both next and latest
PR Close#36527
Previously, we only displayed the new `$localize` id, which is not
currently what most people have in their translation files.
Until people migrate to the new message id system it is confusing
not to display the legacy ids.
PR Close#36761
Upgrading @bazel/bazelisk to version 1.4.0 as this introduces the
bazel binary. This prevents the need to have a `bazel` script defined
in package.json to point to `bazelisk`, instead it is just available
on install.
PR Close#36729
Currently the commit message and corresponding version are flipped, which makes it hard to review the changes. This commit updates the script to properly recognize the order of arguments.
PR Close#36749
Updating `REQUIRED_BASE_SHA` for master and patch branches to make sure PRs that we merge are rebased after `commit-message` validation script update (to make sure the `lint` CI job fails in case a PR contains commits with invalid commit messages).
PR Close#36750
When module overrides (via `TestBed.overrideModule`) are present, it might affect all modules that import (even transitively) an overridden one. For all affected modules we need to recalculate their scopes for a given test run and restore original scopes at the end. Prior to this change, we were recalculating module scopes only for components that are used in a test, without taking into account module hierarchy. This commit updates Ivy TestBed logic to calculate all potentially affected modules are reset cached scopes information for them (so that scopes are recalculated as needed).
Resolves#36619.
PR Close#36649
Prior to this commit unbound attributes were treated as possible inputs to structural directives. Since structural directives can only accepts inputs defined using microsyntax expression (e.g. `<div *dir="exp">`), such unbound attributes should not be considered as inputs. This commit aligns Ivy and View Engine behavior and avoids using unbound attributes as inputs to structural directives.
PR Close#36441
Based on the migration guide, provided classes which don't have
either `@Injectable`, `@Directive`, `@Component` or `@Pipe` need
to be migrated.
This is not correct as provided classes with an `@NgModule` also
have a factory function that can be read by the r3 injector. It's
unclear in which cases the `@NgModule` decorator is used for
provided classes, but this scenario has been reported.
Either we fix this in the migration, or we make sure to report
this as unsupported in the Ivy compiler.
Fixes#35700.
PR Close#36369
link is very deep down on architecture page this commit is part of a larger effort to standardise ownload sections on angular.io
This commit partially addresses #35459
PR Close#36565
This commit fixes an issue where adding `fixup` commits was triggering a lint error. The problem was caused by the fact that we used the entire message body while checking whether `fixup` commit has a corresponding "parent" commit in a range. This issue was found after enforcing a check that exits the process if there is an invalid commit message found (4341743b4a).
PR Close#36733
link is very deep down on acessibility page this commit is part of a larger effort to standardise ownload sections on angular.io
This commit partially addresses #35459
PR Close#36561
Currently the `commit-message` validation script does not exit
with a non-zero exit code if the commit message validation failed.
This means that invalid commit messages are currently not
causing CI to be red. See: https://circleci.com/gh/angular/angular/686008
PR Close#36723
Version 7.0.0 is under LTS until 18-4-2020 removed it from the table which showed it as LTS and added to versions that are no longer under support.
PR Close#36708
The cached file-system was implemented to speed up ngcc
processing, but in reality most files are not accessed many times
and there is no noticeable degradation in speed by removing it.
Benchmarking `ngcc -l debug` for AIO on a local machine
gave a range of 196-236 seconds with the cache and 197-224
seconds without the cache.
Moreover, when running in parallel mode, ngcc has a separate
file cache for each process. This results in excess memory usage.
Notably the master process, which only does analysis of entry-points
holds on to up to 500Mb for AIO when using the cache compared to
only around 30Mb when not using the cache.
Finally, the file-system cache being incorrectly primed with file
contents before being processed has been the cause of a number
of bugs. For example https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/16860#issuecomment-614694269.
PR Close#36687
The flag that determines whether something should be able to inject from `viewProviders` is opt-out and the pipes weren't opted out, resulting in them being able to see the viewProviders if they're placed on a component host node.
Fixes#36146.
PR Close#36512
Previously, when a document included `_`, the autoLinker will try to
generate a link, e.g from `core/ɵComponentDef._`. This commit adds it
to the ignored words to prevent that.
PR Close#36316
Previously, the auto linker generated links without an `href` when the
API was private. This commit fixes this by making sure that the `path`
of the document is not empty.
Closes#36260
PR Close#36316
Previously our CI during the setup process has made requests
to the Github API to determine the target branch and shas.
With this change, this information is now determined via git
commands using pipeline parameters from CircleCI.
PR Close#36500
In "Getting started" guide pipes are not intoduced anywhere but are used in the guide.
Added refrence to pipes for better consistency in the tutorial.
Fixes#36375
PR Close#36584
This commit fixes how the language service evaluates the compatibility
of types to work with arbitrary union types. As a result, compatibility
checks are now more strict and can catch similarities or differences
more clearly.
```
number|string == string|null // OK
number|string == number // OK
number|string == null // not comparable
number == string // not comparable
```
Using Ivy as a backend should provide these diagnoses for free, but we
can backfill them for now.
Closes https://github.com/angular/vscode-ng-language-service/issues/723
PR Close#36529
The change in e041ac6f0d8c519d104601b2b49c008721c074b7
to support sending unlocker process output to the main ngcc
console output prevents messages require that the main process
relinquishes the event-loop to allow the `stdout.on()` handler to
run. This results in none of the messages being written when ngcc
is run in `--no-async` mode, and some messages failing to be
written if the main process is killed (e.g. ctrl-C).
It appears that the problem with Windows and detached processes
is known - see https://github.com/nodejs/node/issues/3596#issuecomment-250890218.
But in the meantime, this commit is a workaround, where non-Windows
`inherit` the main process `stdout` while on Windows it reverts
to the async handler approach, which is better than nothing.
PR Close#36637
This rewrite changes headings to focus on user tasks rather than features,
verifies that content is up-to-date and complete, removes colloquial phrases,
adds prerequisites, and expands on a task-based section in the beginning
(a quick reference).
PR Close#35566
Prior to this commit, the unknown property check was unnecessarily invoked for AOT-compiled components (for these components, the check happens at compile time). This commit updates the code to avoid unknown property verification for AOT-compiled components by checking whether schemas information is present (as a way to detect whether this is JIT or AOT compiled component).
Resolves#35945.
PR Close#36072
Prior to this change, there was a problem while matching template attributes, which mistakenly took i18n attributes (that might be present in attrs array after template ones) into account. This commit updates the logic to avoid template attribute matching logic from entering the i18n section and as a result this also allows generating proper i18n attributes sections instead of keeping these attribute in plain form (with their values) in attribute arrays.
PR Close#36422
In the past, server-side rendered apps needed to convert URLs used in
API requests to absolute when rendering on the server. Originally, this
was handled in the `universal` guide and corresponding example app by
modifying the `HeroService` to use `APP_BASE_HREF` to derive the
absolute URL.
In #28956, the guide was updated to show an improved method: Specifying
an `HttpInterceptor` that took care of converting the URLs to absolute.
That interceptor was only provided when rendering the app on the server.
By mistake, the corresponding example app was not updated along with the
guide.
Since `@nguniversal/*` v7.1.0, it is no longer necessary to convert the
URLs to absolute inside the app. This is handled in the `@nguniversal`
libs (see angular/universal#897).
This commit updates the example app to remove unnecessary code and
modifies the guide to mention the issue with absolute URLs, but explain
that developers only need to worry about it when not using one of the
`@nguniversal/*-engine` packages.
PR Close#36483
Previously, there were no tests for the `universal` docs example. This
meant that the project was not tested at all (not even ensuring that it
can be built successfully).
This commit adds e2e tests for the `universal` example (ported from
`toh-pt6` and cleaned up) and also verifies that the project can be
built successfully (including the server).
PR Close#36483
Previously, building the `universal` example failed with:
```
node_modules/@types/express/index.d.ts(90,50): error TS2694: Namespace '".../@types/express-serve-static-core/index"' has no exported member 'Params'.
node_modules/@types/express/index.d.ts(90,64): error TS2694: Namespace '".../@types/express-serve-static-core/index"' has no exported member 'ParamsDictionary'.
```
This commit fixes the error by upgrading
`@types/express-serve-static-core` to a newer version.
See DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped#40905 for more details.
PR Close#36483
As mentioned in the `universal` guide, the `toh-pt6` examples is the
starting poitn for the `universal` example. However, the two examples
had become out-of-sync, because some fixes/changes were made to the
Tour-of-Heroes examples.
This commit ports these changes to the `universal` example.
PR Close#36483
Previously, the `package.json` template used in the ZIP archive of the
`universal` example that we offer for download missed the `build` npm
script.
This commit updates the template for the `universal` docs example to
include the `build` npm script.
NOTE:
The `build` npm script is already included in
`aio/tools/examples/shared/boilerplate/universal/package.json`, but it
was removed by the example zipper.
PR Close#36483
In certain use-cases it's useful to have an ability to use empty strings as translations. Currently Ivy fails at runtime if empty string is used as a translation, since some parts of internal data structures are not created properly. This commit updates runtime i18n logic to handle empty translations and avoid unnecessary extra processing for such cases.
Fixes#36476.
PR Close#36499
When formatting a time with the `b` or `B` format codes, the rendered
string was not correctly handling day periods that spanned midnight.
Instead the logic was falling back to the default case of `AM`.
Now the logic has been updated so that it matches times that are within
a day period that spans midnight, so it will now render the correct
output, such as `at night` in the case of English.
Applications that are using either `formatDate()` or `DatePipe` and any
of the `b` or `B` format codes will be affected by this change.
Fixes#36566
PR Close#36611
On Windows, the output of a detached process (such as the unlocker
process used by `LockFileWithChildProcess`) is not shown in the parent
process' stdout.
This commit addresses this by piping the spawned process' stdin/stdout
and manually writing to the parent process' stdout.
PR Close#36569
The current ngcc lock-file strategy spawns a new process in order to
capture a potential `SIGINT` and remove the lock-file. For more
information see #35861.
Previously, this unlocker process was spawned as soon as the `LockFile`
was instantiated in order to have it available as soon as possible
(given that spawning a process is an asynchronous operation). Since the
`LockFile` was instantiated and passed to the `Executor`, this meant
that an unlocker process was spawned for each cluster worker, when
running ngcc in parallel mode. These processes were not needed, since
the `LockFile` was not used in cluster workers, but we still had to pay
the overhead of each process' own memory and V8 instance.
(NOTE: This overhead was small compared to the memory consumed by ngcc's
normal operations, but still unnecessary.)
This commit avoids the extra processes by only spawning an unlocker
process when running on the cluster master process and not on worker
processes.
PR Close#36569
For some reason (possibly related to async/await promises)
the ngcc process is not exiting when spawned from the CLI
when there has been an error (such as when it timesout waiting
for a lockfile to become free).
Calling `process.exit()` directly fixes this.
Fixes#36616
PR Close#36622
With the large scale refactoring of the repo to the new version of clang-format, some import orders were changed.
Specifically the imports found in this range.
The file previously read:
import {TestBed} from './test_bed';
import {ComponentFixtureAutoDetect, ComponentFixtureNoNgZone, TestBedStatic, TestComponentRenderer, TestModuleMetadata} from './test_bed_common';
import {R3TestBedCompiler} from './r3_test_bed_compiler';
and now reads:
import {R3TestBedCompiler} from './r3_test_bed_compiler';
import {TestBed} from './test_bed';
import {ComponentFixtureAutoDetect, ComponentFixtureNoNgZone, TestBedStatic, TestComponentRenderer, TestModuleMetadata} from './test_bed_common';
This change in order cause the circular dependency to be entered earlier and changed the golden file for our circular deps discovery.
PR Close#36629
Updates the $locationShim to receive the most recent Location change
made, even if it happened before initialize() is called. This is
important when AngularJS bootstrapping is deferred and there is a delay
between when $locationShim is constructed and when it is initialized.
With this change, the $locationShim will correctly reflect any redirects
that occurred between construction and initialization.
Closes#36492
PR Close#36498
On small screens (e.g. on mobile), the text on some of the buttons in
the About page was truncated. Changed the text size, margin and
padding so that the the whole text is visible on such screens (320px to
480px).
PR Close#36576
The undecorated-classes-with-decorated-fields migration relies on
the type checker to resolve base classes of individual classes.
It could happen that resolved base classes have no value declaration.
e.g. if they are declared through an interface in the default types.
Currently the migration will throw in such situations because it assumes
that `ts.Symbol#valueDeclaration` is always present. This is not the
case, but we don't get good type-checking here due to a bug in the
TypeScript types. See:
https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/24706.
Fixes#36522.
PR Close#36543
Previously, when we needed to detect whether a file is external to a
package, we only checked whether the relative path to the file from the
package's root started with `..`. This would detect external imports
when the packages were siblings (e.g. peer dependencies or hoisted to
the top of `node_modules/` by the package manager), but would fail to
detect imports from packages located in nested `node_modules/` as
external. For example, importing `node_modules/foo/node_modules/bar`
from a file in `node_modules/foo/` would be considered internal to the
`foo` package.
This could result in processing/analyzing more files than necessary.
More importantly it could lead to errors due to trying to analyze
non-Angular packages that were direct dependencies of Angular packages.
This commit fixes it by also verifying that the relative path to a file
does not start with `node_modules/`.
Jira issue: [FW-2068](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-2068)
Fixes#36526
PR Close#36559
Previously, the `elements` docs example only worked in browsers that
natively supported Custom Elements and ES2015 modules. Furthermore, it
didn't work on StackBlitz, because StackBlitz ignores the specified
`target` in `tsconfig.json` and uses the UMD bundles (i.e. ES5 code)
even on browsers that do support ES2015.
(NOTE: In the past, this was not a problem, because we explicitly did
not provide a StackBlitz example. This has changed in #36067.)
This commit ensures the example works on all browsers and also on
StackBlitz by providing the necessary Custom Elements polyfills.
Fixes#36532
PR Close#36536
The base path for package and entry-points is known so there is
no need to store these in the file. Also this commit avoids storing
empty arrays unnecessarily.
PR Close#36486
Previously, even if an entry-point did not need to be processed,
ngcc would always parse the files of the entry-point to compute
its dependencies. This can take a lot of time for large node_modules.
Now these dependencies are cached in the entry-point manifest,
and read from there rather than computing them every time.
See https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/36414\#issuecomment-608401834
FW-2047
PR Close#36486
When the compiler needs to convert a type reference to a value
expression, it may encounter a type that refers to a namespaced symbol.
Such namespaces need to be handled specially as there's various forms
available. Consider a namespace named "ns":
1. One can refer to a namespace by itself: `ns`. A namespace is only
allowed to be used in a type position if it has been merged with a
class, but even if this is the case it may not be possible to convert
that type into a value expression depending on the import form. More
on this later (case a below)
2. One can refer to a type within the namespace: `ns.Foo`. An import
needs to be generated to `ns`, from which the `Foo` property can then
be read.
3. One can refer to a type in a nested namespace within `ns`:
`ns.Foo.Bar` and possibly even deeper nested. The value
representation is similar to case 2, but includes additional property
accesses.
The exact strategy of how to deal with these cases depends on the type
of import used. There's two flavors available:
a. A namespaced import like `import * as ns from 'ns';` that creates
a local namespace that is irrelevant to the import that needs to be
generated (as said import would be used instead of the original
import).
If the local namespace "ns" itself is referred to in a type position,
it is invalid to convert it into a value expression. Some JavaScript
libraries publish a value as default export using `export = MyClass;`
syntax, however it is illegal to refer to that value using "ns".
Consequently, such usage in a type position *must* be accompanied by
an `@Inject` decorator to provide an explicit token.
b. An explicit namespace declaration within a module, that can be
imported using a named import like `import {ns} from 'ns';` where the
"ns" module declares a namespace using `declare namespace ns {}`.
In this case, it's the namespace itself that needs to be imported,
after which any qualified references into the namespace are converted
into property accesses.
Before this change, support for namespaces in the type-to-value
conversion was limited and only worked correctly for a single qualified
name using a namespace import (case 2a). All other cases were either
producing incorrect code or would crash the compiler (case 1a).
Crashing the compiler is not desirable as it does not indicate where
the issue is. Moreover, the result of a type-to-value conversion is
irrelevant when an explicit injection token is provided using `@Inject`,
so referring to a namespace in a type position (case 1) could still be
valid.
This commit introduces logic to the type-to-value conversion to be able
to properly deal with all type references to namespaced symbols.
Fixes#36006
Resolves FW-1995
PR Close#36106
Although this code has been part of Angular 9.x I only noticed this
error when upgrading to Angular 9.1.x because historically the source
locale data was not injected when localizing, but as of
angular/angular-cli#16394 (9.1.0) it is now included. This tipped me off
that my other bundles were not being built properly, and this change
allows me to build a valid ES5 bundle (I have also added a verification
step to my build pipeline to alert me if this error appears again in any
of my bundles).
I found the `locales/global/*.js` file paths being referenced by the
`I18nOptions` in
@angular-devkit/build-angular/src/utils/i18n-options.ts,
and following that it looks like it is actually loaded and used in
@angular-devkit/build-angular/src/utils/process-bundle.ts. I saw the
function `terserMangle` does appear that it is likely aware of the build
being ES5, but I'm not sure why this is not producing a valid ES5
bundle.
This change updates `tools/gulp-tasks/cldr/extract.js` to produce ES5
compliant `locales/global/*.js` and that fixes my issue. However, I am
not sure if @angular-devkit/build-angular should be modified to produce
a valid ES5 bundle instead or if the files could be TypeScript rather
than JavaScript files.
A test that a valid ES5 bundle is produced would be helpful, and I hope
this is reproducible and not some issue with my config.
PR Close#36342
Previously, it was not clear that the `minLength` and `maxLength` validators
can only be used with objects that contain a `length` property. This commit
clarifies this.
PR Close#36297
fixes#34614
There's an edge case where if I use two (or more) sibling <router-outlet>s in two (or more) child routes where their parent route doesn't have a component then preactivation will trigger all canDeactivate checks with the same component because it will use wrong OutletContext.
PR Close#36302
Previously, the `pre-commit-validate` command (used in the `commit-msg`
git hook) assumed that the commit message was stored in
`.git/COMMIT_EDITMSG` file. This is usually true, but not when using
[git worktrees](https://git-scm.com/docs/git-worktree), where `.git` is
a file containing the path to the actual git directory.
This commit fixes it by taking advantage of the fact that git passes the
actual path of the file holding the commit message to the `commit-msg`
hook and husky exposes the arguments passed by git as
`$HUSKY_GIT_PARAMS`.
NOTE:
We cannot use the environment variable directly in the `commit-msg` hook
command, because environment variables need to be referenced differently
on Windows (`%VAR_NAME%`) vs macOS/Linux (`$VAR_NAME`). Instead, we pass
the name of the environment variable and the validation script reads the
variable's value off of `process.env`.
PR Close#36507
Previously we had a singleton `ROOT_SCOPE` object, from
which all `BindingScope`s derived. But this caused ngcc to
produce non-deterministic output when running multiple workers
in parallel, since each process had its own `ROOT_SCOPE`.
In reality there is no need for `BindingScope` reference names
to be unique across an entire application (or in the case of ngcc
across all the libraries). Instead we just need uniqueness within
a template.
This commit changes the compiler to create a new root `BindingScope`
each time it compiles a component's template.
Resolves#35180
PR Close#36362
In cc4b813e759f16fb0f4dfa92a0e6464ed768a629 the `getBasePaths()`
function was changed to log a warning if a `basePath()` computed from
the `paths` mappings did not exist. It turns out this is a common and
accepted scenario, so we should not log warnings in this case.
Fixes#36518
PR Close#36525
Currently the golden output of the circular-deps tool is purely
based on the order of source files passed to the tool, and on the
amount of imports inside source files.
This is actually resulting in deterministic output as running
the tool multiple times without any changes to source files,
results in the same output.
Though it seems like the tool is too strict and we can avoid
unnecessary golden changes if:
1. A source file that is part of a cycle is imported earlier (in terms
of how the analyzer visits them). This could result in the cycle path
starting with a different source file.
2. Source files which are not part of a cycle are imported earlier
(in terms of how the analyzer visits them). This could result in moved
items in the golden if re-approved (even though the cycles remain the same)
To fix this, we normalize the cycle path array that serves as
serializable data structure for the text-based goldens. Since
the paths represents a cycle, the path can be shifted in a
deterministic way so that cycles don't change unnecessarily
in the golden, and to simplify comparison of cycles.
Additionally, we sort the cycles in a deterministic way so
that the golden doesn't change unnecessarily (as explained above).
PR Close#36505
`fullTemplateTypeCheck` is no longer required since we now use `strictTemplates` which is a superset of the former option.
Follow-up on: 04f61c0c3e (r38354112)
PR Close#36502
This commit removes individual components from parsing-cases.ts and
colocate them with the actual tests. This makes the tests more readable.
PR Close#36495
1. update jasmine to 3.5
2. update @types/jasmine to 3.5
3. update @types/jasminewd2 to 2.0.8
Also fix several cases, the new jasmine 3 will help to create test cases correctly,
such as in the `jasmine 2.x` version, the following case will pass
```
expect(1 == 2);
```
But in jsamine 3, the case will need to be
```
expect(1 == 2).toBeTrue();
```
PR Close#34625
Previously, the bazel stamping regex only matched on versions
0-9 for major and minor numbers, this update allows for matching
on any number for major, minor or patch.
PR Close#36523
`zone.js` supports jest `test.each()` methods, but it
introduces a bug, which is the `done()` function will not be handled correctly.
```
it('should work with done', done => {
// done will be undefined.
});
```
The reason is the logic of monkey patching `test` method is different from `jasmine` patch
// jasmine patch
```
return testBody.length === 0
? () => testProxyZone.run(testBody, null)
: done => testProxyZone.run(testBody, null, [done]);
```
// jest patch
```
return function(...args) {
return testProxyZone.run(testBody, null, args);
};
```
the purpose of this change is to handle the following cases.
```
test.each([1, 2])('test.each', (arg1, arg2) => {
expect(arg1).toBe(1);
expect(arg2).toBe(2);
});
```
so in jest, it is a little complex, because the `testBody`'s parameter may be bigger than 1, so the
logic in `jasmine`
```
return testBody.length === 0
? () => testProxyZone.run(testBody, null)
: done => testProxyZone.run(testBody, null, [done]);
```
will not work for `test.each` in jest.
So in this PR, I created a dynamic `Function` to return the correct length of paramters (which is required by jest core), to handle
1. normal `test` with or without `done`.
2. each with parameters with or without done.
PR Close#36022
During static evaluation of expressions, the partial evaluator
may come across a binary + operator for which it needs to
evaluate its operands. Any of these operands may be a reference
to an enum member, in which case the enum member's value needs
to be used as literal value, not the enum member reference
itself. This commit fixes the behavior by resolving an
`EnumValue` when used as a literal value.
Fixes#35584
Resolves FW-1951
PR Close#36461
Previously, `isRelativePath()` assumed paths are *nix-style. This caused
Windows-style paths (such as `C:\foo\some-package\some-file.js`) to not
be recognized as "relative" imports.
This commit fixes this by using the OS-agnostic `isRooted()` helper and
also accounting for both styles of path delimiters: `/` and `\`
PR Close#36372
there was a typo in _resourcess.scss file there was an extra comma added some spaces too that were needed for proper styling of the code
PR Close#35935
on small mobile screens the top tab bar contains text which was not visible on small screens changed text size, margin and padding so that the text could be contained in these screens (320px to 480px)
PR Close#35935
Currently destroy hooks are stored in memory as `[1, hook, 5, hook]` where
the numbers represent the index at which to find the context and `hook` is
the function to be invoked. This breaks down for `multi` providers,
because the value at the index will be an array of providers, resulting in
the hook being invoked with an array of all the multi provider values,
rather than the provider that was destroyed. In ViewEngine `ngOnDestroy`
wasn't being called for `multi` providers at all.
These changes fix the issue by changing the structure of the destroy hooks to `[1, hook, 5, [0, hook, 3, hook]]` where the indexes inside the inner array point to the provider inside of the multi provider array. Note that this is slightly different from the original design which called for the structure to be `[1, hook, 5, [hook, hook]`, because in the process of implementing it, I realized that we wouldn't get passing the correct context if only some of the `multi` providers have `ngOnDestroy` and others don't.
I've run the newly-added `view_destroy_hooks` benchmark against these changes and compared it to master. The difference seems to be insignificant (between 1% and 2% slower).
Fixes#35231.
PR Close#35840
When TypeScript downlevels ES2015+ code to ES5, it uses some helper
functions to emulate some ES2015+ features, such as spread syntax. The
TypeScript compiler can be configured to emit these helpers into the
transpiled code (which is controlled by the `noEmitHelpers` option -
false by default). It can also be configured to import these helpers
from the `tslib` module (which is controlled by the `importHelpers`
option - false by default).
While most of the time the helpers will be either emitted or imported,
it is possible that one configures their app to neither emit nor import
them. In that case, the helpers could, for example, be made available on
the global object. This is what `@nativescript/angular`
v9.0.0-next-2019-11-12-155500-01 does. See, for example, [common.js][1].
Ngcc must be able to detect and statically evaluate these helpers.
Previously, it was only able to detect emitted or imported helpers.
This commit adds support for detecting these helpers if they are neither
emitted nor imported. It does this by checking identifiers for which no
declaration (either concrete or inline) can be found against a list of
known TypeScript helper function names.
[1]: https://unpkg.com/browse/@nativescript/angular@9.0.0-next-2019-11-12-155500-01/common.js
PR Close#36418
This commit refactors the process for determining the type of an Angular
attribute to be use a function that takes an attribute name and returns
the Angular attribute kind and name, rather than requiring the user to
query match the attribute name with the regex and query the matching
array.
This refactor prepares for a future change that will improve the
experience of completing attributes in `()`, `[]`, or `[()]` contexts.
PR Close#36301
Recent ZoneJS-related commit (416c786774) update the `promise.ts` file, but it looks like original PR was not rebased after clang update. As a result, the `lint` CircleCI job started to fail in master after merging that PR (https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/36311). This commit updates the format of the `promise.ts` script according to the new clang rules.
PR Close#36487
Close#36142
In Firefox extensions, the `window.fetch` is not configurable, that means
```
const desc = Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor(window, 'fetch');
desc.writable === false;
```
So in this case, we should not try to patch `fetch`, otherwise, it will
throw error ('fetch is ReadOnly`)
PR Close#36311
Each docs example has an `example-config.json` configuration file. Among
other things, this file can be used to specify what commands to run in
order to test the example. (If not specified, the `run-example-e2e.js`
script will run a default `yarn e2e` command.)
Previously, the property specifying the test commands was called `e2e`.
This is because in the past only e2e tests were run for docs examples.
Since recently, some examples may specify commands for other types of
tests (such as unit tests). Therefore, calling the property that holds
the list of test commands `e2e` no longer makes sense and can be
misleading to people looking at the configuration files.
This commit renamed the property to the more generic `tests`. In the
future, the `run-example-e2e.js` script (and corresponding npm script)
should be renamed and refactored to also avoid giving the impression
that only e2e tests are run.
Discussed in:
https://github.com/angular/angular/pull/36143#discussion_r395148379
PR Close#36143
The `core-js` dependency is no longer included in `package.json` for
`cli`-type examples, but only for the `systemjs` ones. This commit
updates the `package.json` templates to reflect that (and also updates
the `npm-packages` guide accordingly).
PR Close#36143
Previously, only e2e tests were run for docs examples on CI. As a
result, unit tests (which are included in the zipped archives we provide
for users to download and play with the examples locally) were often
outdated and broken.
This commit configures specific docs examples that have meaningful unit
tests to run them on CI (via the `run-example-e2e.js` script). Where
necessary, the unit tests are fixed to ensure they pass and reflect the
changes in the corresponding component/service.
This commit also removes some auto-generated unit tests that are not
meaningful (e.g. make trivial assertions, such that a component instance
is truthy) and are often broken anyway (e.g. because the corresponding
component has been changed in ways that make the tests fail).
PR Close#36143
In rare cases a project with configured `rootDirs` that has imports to
non-existent identifiers could fail in the migration.
This happens because based on the application code, the migration could
end up trying to resolve the `ts.Symbol` of such non-existent
identifiers. This isn't a problem usually, but due to a upstream bug
in the TypeScript compiler, a runtime error is thrown.
This is because TypeScript is unable to compute a relative path from the
originating source file to the imported source file which _should_
provide the non-existent identifier. An issue for this has been reported
upstream: https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/issues/37731. The
issue only surfaces since our migrations don't provide an absolute base
path that is used for resolving the root directories.
To fix this, we ensure that we never use relative paths when parsing
tsconfig files. More details can be found in the TS issue.
Fixes#36346.
PR Close#36367
The source-map flattening was throwing an error when there
is a cyclic dependency between source files and source-maps.
The error was either a custom one describing the cycle, or a
"Maximum call stack size exceeded" one.
Now this is handled more leniently, resulting in a partially loaded
source file (or source-map) and a warning logged.
Fixes#35727Fixes#35757
Fixes https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/17106
Fixes https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/17115
PR Close#36452
Recently we added support for ignoring specified deep-import
warnings by providing sets of regular expressions within the
`ngcc.config.js` file. But this was only working for the project
level configuration.
This commit fixes ngcc so that it will also read these regular
expressions from package level configuration too.
Fixes#35750
PR Close#36423
The `browser` package.json property is now supported to the same
level as `main` - i.e. it is sniffed for UMD, ESM5 and CommonJS.
The `browser` property can also contain an object with file overrides
but this is not supported by ngcc.
Fixes#36062
PR Close#36396
Previously, `main` was only checked for `umd` or `commonjs`
formats. Now if there are `import` or `export` statements in the
source file it will be deemed to be in `esm5` format.
Fixes#35788
PR Close#36396
clang-format was recently updated and any PRs that touch files in the
language service will have to reformat all the files.
Instead of changing the formatting in those PRs, this PR formats all
files in language-service package once and for all.
PR Close#36426
Prior to this change we manage a local version of commit message validation
in addition to the commit message validation tool contained in the ng-dev
tooling. By adding the ability to validate a range of commit messages
together, the remaining piece of commit message validation that is in the
local version is replicated.
We use both commands provided by the `ng-dev commit-message` tooling:
- pre-commit-validate: Set to automatically run on an git hook to validate
commits as they are created locally.
- validate-range: Run by CI for every PR, testing that all of the commits
added by the PR are valid when considered together. Ensuring that all
fixups are matched to another commit in the change.
PR Close#36172
The matcher is allowed to return null per
https://angular.io/api/router/UrlMatcher#usage-notes
And run `yarn gulp format` to pick up recent clang format changes.
Closes#29824
BREAKING CHANGE: UrlMatcher's type now reflects that it could always return
null.
If you implemented your own Router or Recognizer class, please update it to
handle matcher returning null.
PR Close#36402
Beginning with this change, global approvals will now require the approver
to include `Reviewed-for: global-approvers`, and a docs global approval
requires `Reviewed-for: global-docs-approvers`.
Historically, providing a review by any member of the global reviewer
groups would automatically be considered a global review. This change
enforces that global approval should be an intentional, explicit action.
The global-approvers and global-docs-approvers group will not be
requested as reviews by pullapprove.
PR Close#36384
Rebuild the yarn lock file from scratch to collapse instances where
one package is able to satisfy multiple dependencies. Currently we
have some situations where we have multiple versions when one would
work.
Example:
```
"@babel/code-frame@^7.0.0":
version "7.0.0"
resolved "https://registry.yarnpkg.com/@babel/cod
integrity sha512-OfC2uemaknXr87bdLUkWog7nYuliM9Ij
dependencies:
"@babel/highlight" "^7.0.0"
"@babel/code-frame@^7.5.5":
version "7.5.5"
resolved "https://registry.yarnpkg.com/@babel/cod
integrity sha512-27d4lZoomVyo51VegxI20xZPuSHusqbQ
dependencies:
"@babel/highlight" "^7.0.0"
"@babel/code-frame@^7.8.3":
version "7.8.3"
resolved "https://registry.yarnpkg.com/@babel/cod
integrity sha512-a9gxpmdXtZEInkCSHUJDLHZVBgb1QS0j
dependencies:
"@babel/highlight" "^7.8.3"
```
becomes
```
"@babel/code-frame@^7.0.0", "@babel/code-frame@^7.5.5", "@babel/code-frame@^7.8.3":
version "7.8.3"
resolved "https://registry.yarnpkg.com/@babel/cod
integrity sha512-a9gxpmdXtZEInkCSHUJDLHZVBgb1QS0j
dependencies:
"@babel/highlight" "^7.8.3"
```
PR Close#36377
The `NgccReflectionHost`s have logic for detecting certain known
declarations (such as `Object.assign()` and TypeScript helpers), which
allows the `PartialEvaluator` to evaluate expressions it would not be
able to statically evaluate otherwise.
In #36089, `DelegatingReflectionHost` was introduced, which delegates to
a TypeScript `ReflectionHost` when reflecting on TypeScript files, which
for ngcc's case means `.d.ts` files of dependencies. As a result, ngcc
lost the ability to detect TypeScript helpers imported from `tslib`,
because `DelegatingReflectionHost` was not able to apply the known
declaration detection logic while reflecting on `tslib`'s `.d.ts` files.
This commit fixes this by ensuring `DelegatingReflectionHost` calls the
`NgccReflectionHost`'s `detectKnownDeclaration()` method as necessary,
even when using the TypeScript `ReflectionHost`.
NOTE:
The previous commit exposed a bug in ngcc that was hidden due to the
tests' being inconsistent with how the `ReflectionHost`s are used in the
actual program. The changes in this commit are verified by ensuring the
failing tests are now passing (hence no new tests are added).
PR Close#36284
In #36089, `DelegatingReflectionHost` was introduced. Under the hood, it
delegates another `NgccReflectionHost` in order to reflect over the
program's source files, while using a different TypeScript
`ReflectionHost` to reflect over `.d.ts` files (which is how external
dependencies are represented in the program).
Previously, the `NgccReflectionHost`s were used directly in tests. This
does not exercise them in the way they are exercised in the actual
program, because (when used directly) they will also reflect on `.d.ts`
files too (instead of delegating to the TypeScript `ReflectionHost`).
This could hide bugs that would happen on the actual program.
This commit fixes this by using the `DelegatingReflectionHost` in the
various `NgccReflectionHost` tests.
NOTE:
This change will cause some of the existing tests to start failing.
These failures demonstrate pre-existing bugs in ngcc, that were hidden
due to the tests' being inconsistent with how the `ReflectionHost`s are
used in the actual program. They will be fixed in the next commit.
PR Close#36284
The `NgccReflectionHost`s have logic for detecting certain known
declarations (such as `Object.assign()` and TypeScript helpers), which
allows the `PartialEvaluator` to evaluate expressions it would not be
able to statically evaluate otherwise.
This commit moves the logic for identifying these known declarations to
dedicated methods. This is in preparation of allowing ngcc's
`DelegatingReflectionHost` (introduced in #36089) to also apply the
known declaration detection logic when reflecting on TypeScript sources.
PR Close#36284
Previously, the download link to the example for the angular element
guide was in the middle of the page. To make it easier for the user to
find the download link, it has been placed to the top of the page.
This commit partially addresses #35459
PR Close#36067
For better overview of modules that cannot be resolved in the
`ts-circular-deps` tool, the warnings are now sorted.
Additionally, an empty line between fixed and new circular dependencies
is now printed. That should slightly help with distinguishing.
PR Close#36361
In version 10, undecorated base classes that use Angular features need
to be decorated explicitly with `@Directive()`. Additionally, derived
classes of abstract directives need to be decorated.
The migration already handles this for undecorated classes that are
not explicitly decorated, but since in V9, abstract directives can be
used, we also need to handle this for explicitly decorated abstract
directives. e.g.
```
@Directive()
export class Base {...}
// needs to be decorated by migration when updating from v9 to v10
export class Wrapped extends Base {}
@Component(...)
export class Cmp extends Wrapped {}
```
PR Close#35339
We don't have an integration test for the `undecorated-classes-with-decorated-fields
migration. For consistency and to cover for the latest changes, we add
it to the `ng update` integration test.
PR Close#35339
The `undecorated-classes-with-decorated-fields` migration has been
introduced with 904a2018e0d3394ad91ffb6472f8271af7845295, but misses
logic for decorating derived classes of undecorated classes which use
Angular features. Example scenario:
```ts
export abstract class MyBaseClass {
@Input() someInput = true;
}
export abstract class BaseClassTwo extends MyBaseClass {}
@Component(...)
export class MyButton extends BaseClassTwo {}
```
Both abstract classes would need to be migrated. Previously, the migration
only added `@Directive()` to `MyBaseClass`, but with this change, it
also decorates `BaseClassTwo`.
This is necessary because the Angular Compiler requires `BaseClassTwo` to
have a directive definition when it flattens the directive metadata for
`MyButton` in order to perform type checking. Technically, not decorating
`BaseClassTwo` does not break at runtime.
We basically want to enforce consistent use of `@Directive` to simplify the
mental model. [See the migration guide](https://angular.io/guide/migration-undecorated-classes#migrating-classes-that-use-field-decorators).
Fixes#34376.
PR Close#35339
The import manager has been created for both the `missing-injectable`
and `undecorated-classes-with-di` migration. Both initial PRs brought
in the manager class, so the manager is duplicated in the schematics.
In order to reduce this duplication, and to expose the manager to other
schematics/migrations, we move it into the shared schematic utils.
PR Close#35339
Moves the `findBaseClassDeclarations` method into the shared
schematic utilities. This method will be useful for future
migrations, and for planned changes to the
`undecorated-classes-with-decorated-fields` migration.
PR Close#35339
Enables the `service-worker` tests on Saucelabs and fixes some issues that were preventing them from running on IE. The issues were:
1. We were serving es2017 code during tests. I've set it to es5.
2. The check which was verifying whether the environment is supported ended up hitting a `require` call in the browser which caused it to fail on browsers that don't support the `URL` API.
PR Close#36129
In Ivy, Angular decorators are compiled into static fields that are
inserted into a class declaration in a TypeScript transform. When
targeting Closure compiler such fields need to be annotated with
`@nocollapse` to prevent them from being lifted from a static field into
a variable, as that would prevent the Ivy runtime from being able to
find the compiled definitions.
Previously, there was a bug in TypeScript where synthetic comments added
in a transform would not be emitted at all, so as a workaround a global
regex-replace was done in the emit's `writeFile` callback that would add
the `@nocollapse` annotation to all static Ivy definition fields. This
approach is no longer possible when ngtsc is running as TypeScript
plugin, as a plugin cannot control emit behavior.
The workaround is no longer necessary, as synthetic comments are now
properly emitted, likely as of
https://github.com/microsoft/TypeScript/pull/22141 which has been
released with TypeScript 2.8.
This change is required for running ngtsc as TypeScript plugin in
Bazel's `ts_library` rule, to move away from the custom `ngc_wrapped`
approach.
Resolves FW-1952
PR Close#35932
Creates a standard model for CLI commands provided by ng-dev.
Allows for us to have any of the tools/scripts extend to be
included in the ng-dev command, or be standalone using the same
yargs parser.
PR Close#36326
Ngcc supports providing a project-level configuration to affect how
certain dependencies are processed and also has a built-in fallback
configuration for some unmaintained packages. Each entry in these
configurations could be scoped to specific versions of a package by
providing a version range. If no version range is provided for a
package, it defaults to `*` (with the intention of matching any
version).
Previously, the installed version of a package was tested against the
version range using the [semver][1] package's `satisfies()` function
with the default options. By default, `satisfies()` does not match
pre-releases (see [here][2] for more details on reasoning). While this
makes sense when determining what version of a dependency to install
(trying to avoid unexpected breaking changes), it is not desired in the
case of ngcc.
This commit fixes it by explicitly specifying that pre-release versions
should be matched normally.
[1]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/semver
[2]: https://github.com/npm/node-semver#prerelease-tags
PR Close#36370
From G3 bug ID: 116443331
The View Engine compiler crashes when it tries to compile a test in JIT mode
that includes the d3-scale-chromatic library [1]. The d3 package initializes
some arrays using the following pattern:
```js
export var scheme = new Array(3).concat(
"d8b365f5f5f55ab4ac",
// ... more entries
).map(colors);
```
The stack trace from the crash is as follows:
```
TypeError: Cannot read property 'visitExpression' of undefined
at ../../../third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts:505:39
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractEmitterVisitor.visitAllObjects third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts?l=526
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractEmitterVisitor.visitAllExpressions third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts?l=505
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractEmitterVisitor.visitLiteralArrayExpr third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts?l=484
at LiteralArrayExpr.visitExpression third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/output_ast.ts?l=791
at ../../../third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts:492:19
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractEmitterVisitor.visitAllObjects third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts?l=526
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractEmitterVisitor.visitLiteralMapExpr third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts?l=490
at LiteralMapExpr.visitExpression third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/output_ast.ts?l=819
at ../../../third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts:505:39
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractEmitterVisitor.visitAllObjects third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts?l=526
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractEmitterVisitor.visitAllExpressions third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts?l=505
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractEmitterVisitor.visitInvokeFunctionExpr third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_emitter.ts?l=318
at JitEmitterVisitor.AbstractJsEmitterVisitor.visitInvokeFunctionExpr third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/abstract_js_emitter.ts?l=112
at InvokeFunctionExpr.visitExpression third_party/javascript/angular2/rc/packages/compiler/src/output/output_ast.ts?l=440
```
This is because the corresponding output AST for the array is of the form
```ts
[
undefined,
undefined,
undefined,
o.LiteralExpr,
// ...
]
```
The output AST is clearly malformed and breaks the type representation of
`LiteralArrayExpr` in which every entry is expected to be of type `Expression`.
This commit fixes the bug by using a plain `for` loop to iterate over the
entire length of the holey array and convert undefined elements to
`LiteralExpr`.
[1]: https://github.com/d3/d3-scale-chromatic/blob/master/src/diverging/BrBG.js
PR Close#36343
Previously, a bad baseUrl or path mapping passed to an `EntryPointFinder`
could cause the original `sourceDirectory` to be superceded by a higher
directory. This could result in none of the sourceDirectory entry-points being
processed.
Now missing basePaths computed from path-mappings are discarded with
a warning. Further, if the `baseUrl` is the root directory then a warning is
given as this is most likely an error in the tsconfig.json.
Resolves#36313Resolves#36283
PR Close#36331
Pullapprove as added a few new features to allow for us to better
execute our expectation for global approvals. We need to allow for
an expectation that our global approver groups are not in the list
of approved groups. Additionally, since approval groups apply to
all files in the repo, the global approval groups also do not have
conditions defined for them, which means pullapprove verification
need to allow for no conditions need to be defined.
PR Close#36324
Currently the language service only provides support for determining the
type of array-like members when the array-like object is an `Array`.
However, there are other kinds of array-like objects, including
`ReadonlyArray`s and `readonly`-property arrays. This commit adds
support for retrieving the element type of arbitrary array-like objects.
Closes#36191
PR Close#36312
The previous optimizations in #35756 to the
`DirectoryWalkerEntryPointFinder` were over zealous
with regard to packages that have entry-points stored
in "container" directories in the package, where the
container directory was not an entry-point itself.
Now we will also walk such "container" folders as long
as they do not contain `.js` files, which we regard as an
indicator that the directory will not contain entry-points.
Fixes#36216
PR Close#36305
This commit simplifies the `DirectoryWalkerEntryPointFinder` inter-method
calling to make it easier to follow, and also to support controlling
walking of a directory based on its children.
PR Close#36305
__zone_symbol__UNPATCHED_EVENTS and __zone_symbol__PASSIVE_EVENTS should be string[] type not boolean.
For example:
```
const config = window as ZoneGlobalConfigurations;
config.__zone_symbol__UNPATCHED_EVENTS = ['scroll'];
config.__zone_symbol__PASSIVE_EVENTS = ['scroll'];
```
PR Close#36258
Update to clang@1.4.0 to gain support for optional changing and nullish
coalescing. Because this would trigger a change on >1800 files in the
repository, also changes our format enforcement to only be run against
changed files. This will allow us to incramentally roll out the value
add of the upgraded clang format.
PR Close#36203
Since the livestream for ng-conf is not public this year,
(and is only available to ng-conf attendees), we are
removing the link from the angular.io homepage.
Instead, we are now pointing to the ng-conf homepage for
more information.
PR Close#36382
$(location) is not recommended in the bazel docs as depending on context it will either return the value of $(execpath) or $(rootpath). rules_nodejs now supports $(rootpath) and $(execpath) in templated_args of nodejs_binary.
PR Close#36308
`Bluebird.each` and `Bluebird.mapSeries` will accept a callback with `value` parameter,
the `value` should be the item in the array, not array itself.
For example:
```
const arr = [1, 2];
Bluebird.each(arr, function(value, idx) {
console.log(`value: ${value}, idx: ${idx}`);
})
```
the output will be
```
value: 1, idx: 0
value: 2, idx: 1
```
This PR fix the test cases for `each` and `mapSeries` APIs.
PR Close#36295
Prior to this commit, the `packages/core/src/render3/interfaces/query.ts` file used to import `QueryList` using `../../linker`, which contains a lot of re-exports and as a result, this one import caused a lot of circular deps cycles reported by the tool that checks such deps. In other places in the code the `QueryList` is imported using more narrow import (`linker/query_list`), so this commit uses the same pattern. This change allowed to reduce the number of known cycles from 343 to 207, the golden file was updated accordingly.
PR Close#36286
Co-Authored-By: Igor Minar <iminar@google.com>
Updating the recommended defaults for template typechecking strictness to the most strict in order
to catch most of the errors at compile time.
See https://angular.io/guide/template-typecheck for more info.
PR Close#35628
The `dev-infra` scripts were added to the list of sources that should be verified with clang (b07b6edc2a), but the Pullapprove-related scripts that were merged before (83e4a76afa) doesn't pass these checks. This commit updates a couple scripts to have a proper formatting.
PR Close#36287
Previously we only searched for package paths below the set of `basePaths`
that were computed from the `basePath` provided to ngcc and the set of
`pathMappings`.
In some scenarios, such as hoisted packages, the entry-point is not within
any of the `basePaths` identified above. For example:
```
project
packages
app
node_modules
app-lib (depends on lib1)
node_modules
lib1 (depends on lib2)
node_modules
lib2 (depends on lib3/entry-point)
lib3
entry-point
```
When CLI is compiling `app-lib` ngcc will be given
`project/packages/app/node_modules` as the `basePath.
If ngcc is asked to target `lib2`, the `targetPath` will be
`project/node_modules/lib1/node_modules/lib2`.
Since `lib2` depends upon `lib3/entry-point`, ngcc will need to compute
the package path for `project/node_modules/lib3/entry-point`.
Since `project/node_modules/lib3/entry-point` is not contained in the `basePath`
`project/packages/app/node_modules`, ngcc failed to compute the `packagePath`
correctly, instead assuming that it was the same as the entry-point path.
Now we also consider the nearest `node_modules` folder to the entry-point
path as an additional `basePath`. If one is found then we use the first
directory directly below that `node_modules` directory as the package path.
In the case of our example this extra `basePath` would be `project/node_modules`
which allows us to compute the `packagePath` of `project/node_modules/lib3`.
Fixes#35747
PR Close#36249
Prior to this commit, Ivy TestBed was accessing locale ID before `APP_INITIALIZER` functions were called. This execution order is not consistent with the app bootstrap logic in `application_ref.ts`. This commit updates Ivy TestBed execution order to call initializers first (since they might affect `LOCALE_ID` token value) and accessing and setting locale ID after that.
Fixes#36230.
PR Close#36237
The dev-infra pull approve group contained a condition with
the glob having a string concatenation rather than a comma
separated list. This corrects this error, and in another PR
we will correct the verification scripts failure to catch
this.
PR Close#36232
Currently the `ts-circular-deps` tool uses a hard-coded module resolver
that only works in the `angular/angular` repository.
If the tool is consumed in other repositories through the shared
dev-infra package, the module resolution won't work, and a few
resolvable imports (usually cross-entry-points) are accidentally
skipped. For each test, the resolution might differ, so tests can
now configure their module resolution in a configuration file.
Note that we intentionally don't rely on tsconfig's for module
resolution as parsing their mappings rather complicates the
circular dependency tool. Additionally, not every test has a
corresponding tsconfig file.
Also, hard-coding mappings to `@angular/*` while accepting a
path to the packages folder would work, but it would mean
that the circular deps tool is no longer self-contained. Rather,
and also for better flexibility, a custom resolver should be
specified.
PR Close#36226
In #35381, a new Protractor config file was introduced in docs examples,
`protractor-puppeteer.conf.js`, that was only supposed to be used on CI
and not be shipped with the ZIP archives provided for users to download
and experiment with the docs examples locally.
The logic to ignore the `protractor-puppeteer.conf.js` file was
incorrect, resulting in the file being retained in some examples (e.g.
[universal][1]). The problem was not immediately obvious, because most
examples explicitly specify all `**/*.js` files as ignored, but for
other examples the file was retained in the ZIP archive.
This commit fixes the logic to ensure the file is excluded from all docs
examples ZIP archives.
[1]: https://v9.angular.io/generated/zips/universal/universal.zip
PR Close#36018
The `removeSystemJsConfig` and `type` properties (present in some
`zipper.json` files) are now obsolete and are not taken into account by
the example zipper:
- `removeSystemJsConfig` is no longer relevant since most examples have
been migrated to use the CLI.
- `type` is no longer relevant, because the project type is determined
based on the `projectType` property in `example-config.json` files.
This commit removes these properties from `zipper.json` files and
updates the `example-zipper` docs to not mention them.
PR Close#36018
Previously, some of the built-in ServiceWorker registration strategies,
namely `registerWithDelay:<timeout>` and `registerWhenStable:<timeout>`,
would register potentially long-running timeout, thus preventing the app
from stabilizing before the timeouts expired. This was especially
problematic for the `registerWhenStable:<timeout>` strategy, which waits
for the app to stabilize, because the strategy itself would prevent the
app from stabilizing and thus the ServiceWorker would always be
registered after the timeout.
This commit fixes this by subscribing to the registration strategy
observable outside the Angular zone, thus not affecting the app's
stabilization.
PR Close#35870
Previously, when using the default ServiceWorker registration strategy
Angular would wait indefinitely for the [app to stabilize][1], before
registering the ServiceWorker script. This could lead to a situation
where the ServiceWorker would never be registered when there was a
long-running task (such as an interval or recurring timeout).
Such tasks can often be started by a 3rd-party dependency (beyond the
developer's control or even without them realizing). In addition, this
situation is particularly hard to detect, because the ServiceWorker is
typically not used during development and on production builds a
previous ServiceWorker instance might be already active.
This commit fixes this by changing the default registration strategy
from `registerWhenStable` to `registerWhenStable:30000`, which will
ensure that the ServiceWorker will be registered after 30s at the
latest, even if the app has not stabilized by then.
Fixes#34464
PR Close#35870
Previously, when using the `registerWhenStable` ServiceWorker
registration strategy (which is also the default) Angular would wait
indefinitely for the [app to stabilize][1], before registering the
ServiceWorker script. This could lead to a situation where the
ServiceWorker would never be registered when there was a long-running
task (such as an interval or recurring timeout).
Such tasks can often be started by a 3rd-party dependency (beyond the
developer's control or even without them realizing). In addition, this
situation is particularly hard to detect, because the ServiceWorker is
typically not used during development and on production builds a
previous ServiceWorker instance might be already active.
This commit enhances the `registerWhenStable` registration strategy by
adding support for an optional `<timeout>` argument, which guarantees
that the ServiceWorker will be registered when the timeout expires, even
if the app has not stabilized yet.
For example, with `registerWhenStable:5000` the ServiceWorker will be
registered as soon as the app stabilizes or after 5 seconds if the app
has not stabilized by then.
Related to #34464.
[1]: https://angular.io/api/core/ApplicationRef#is-stable-examples
PR Close#35870
This is done by requesting the refs and shas for the PR when the
env.sh script is run. Additionally, the env.sh script is now setup
to write all of the environment variables created to a cache file
and subsequent loads of the environment load the values from there.
The get-refs-and-shas-for-target.js script now also first attempts
to load the refs and shas from an environment variable before
falling back to requesting from github via the API.
PR Close#36207
`KeyValuePipe` currently accepts `null` values as well as `Map`s and a
few others. However, due to the way in which TS overloads work, a type
of `T|null` will not be accepted by `KeyValuePipe`'s signatures, even
though both `T` and `null` individually would be.
To make this work, each signature that accepts some type `T` has been
duplicated with a second one below it that accepts a `T|null` and
includes `null` in its return type.
Fixes#35743
PR Close#36093
Previously ngcc never preserved whitespaces but this is at odds
with how the ViewEngine compiler works. In ViewEngine, library
templates are recompiled with the current application's tsconfig
settings, which meant that whitespace preservation could be set
in the application tsconfig file.
This commit allows ngcc to use the `preserveWhitespaces` setting
from tsconfig when compiling library templates. One should be aware
that this disallows different projects with different tsconfig settings
to share the same node_modules folder, with regard to whitespace
preservation. But this is already the case in the current ngcc since
this configuration is hard coded right now.
Fixes#35871
PR Close#36189
This commit augments the `FactoryDef` declaration of Angular decorated
classes to contain information about the parameter decorators used in
the constructor. If no constructor is present, or none of the parameters
have any Angular decorators, then this will be represented using the
`null` type. Otherwise, a tuple type is used where the entry at index `i`
corresponds with parameter `i`. Each tuple entry can be one of two types:
1. If the associated parameter does not have any Angular decorators,
the tuple entry will be the `null` type.
2. Otherwise, a type literal is used that may declare at least one of
the following properties:
- "attribute": if `@Attribute` is present. The injected attribute's
name is used as string literal type, or the `unknown` type if the
attribute name is not a string literal.
- "self": if `@Self` is present, always of type `true`.
- "skipSelf": if `@SkipSelf` is present, always of type `true`.
- "host": if `@Host` is present, always of type `true`.
- "optional": if `@Optional` is present, always of type `true`.
A property is only present if the corresponding decorator is used.
Note that the `@Inject` decorator is currently not included, as it's
non-trivial to properly convert the token's value expression to a
type that is valid in a declaration file.
Additionally, the `ComponentDefWithMeta` declaration that is created for
Angular components has been extended to include all selectors on
`ng-content` elements within the component's template.
This additional metadata is useful for tooling such as the Angular
Language Service, as it provides the ability to offer suggestions for
directives/components defined in libraries. At the moment, such
tooling extracts the necessary information from the _metadata.json_
manifest file as generated by ngc, however this metadata representation
is being replaced by the information emitted into the declaration files.
Resolves FW-1870
PR Close#35695
Previously, when an input property was initially set to `undefined` it
would not be correctly recognized as a change (and trigger
`ngOnChanges()`).
This commit ensures that explicitly setting an input to `undefined` is
correctly handled the same as setting the property to any other value.
This aligns the behavior of Angular custom elements with that of the
corresponding components when used directly (not as custom elements).
PR Close#36140
Previously, when an input property was set on an `NgElement` before
instantiating the underlying component, the `SimpleChange` object passed
to `ngOnChanges()` would have `firstChange` set to false, even if this
was the first change (as far as the component instance was concerned).
This commit fixes this by ensuring `SimpleChange#firstChange` is set to
true on first change, regardless if the property was set before or after
instantiating the component. This alignthe behavior of Angular custom
elements with that of the corresponding components when used directly
(not as custom elements).
Jira issue: [FW-2007](https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-2007)
Fixes#36130
PR Close#36140
When computing the dependencies between packages which are not in
node_modules, we may need to rely upon path-mappings to find the path
to the imported entry-point.
This commit allows ngcc to use the path-mappings from a tsconfig
file to find dependencies. By default any tsconfig.json file in the directory
above the `basePath` is loaded but it is possible to use a path to a
specific file by providing the `tsConfigPath` property to mainNgcc,
or to turn off loading any tsconfig file by setting `tsConfigPath` to `null`.
At the command line this is controlled via the `--tsconfig` option.
Fixes#36119
PR Close#36180
I was not able to reproduce IE 10/11 failrue of the disabled
tests on SauceLabs any more. I did some cleanup of the test
in question but I doubt it was the root cause of the problem.
PR Close#35962
The `app-list-item` component sounds like it is used for a single
item, however it renders a list of items. There were also
several changes in the documentation, where it was becoming
confusing if the `app-list-item` is using a single item or multiple
items. This commit fixes this issue. It renames the component and its
respective properties to make sure that the intention is very clear.
Closes#35598
PR Close#35601
Previously, an expansion case could only start with an alpha numeric character.
This commit fixes this by allowing an expansion case to start with any character
except `}`.
The [ICU spec](http://userguide.icu-project.org/formatparse/messages) is pretty vague:
> Use a "select" argument to select sub-messages via a fixed set of keywords.
It does not specify what can be a "keyword" but from looking at the surrounding syntax it
appears that it can indeed be any string that does not contain a `}` character.
Closes#31586
PR Close#36123
Changes the positional params for the circular deps tooling to
use camelCase as it requires being defined in camelCase while
in strict mode. Additionally, remove the `version()` call as
the boolean arguement does not exist in current versions and
throws errors on execution.
PR Close#36165
to run ts-circular-deps via installed node_modules, we needed to set
the hashbang of the script to be a node environment, and discover the
project directory based on where the script is run rather than the
scripts file location.
PR Close#36165
1. During reading the documentation I found some code examples that were refering to the class properties via methods, but without specifying the context `this`.
2. The 'onInvoke' hook was duplicated
3. A minor typo on `Zones and execution contexts` section
4. A minor typo on `Zones and async lifecycle hooks` section
PR Close#36138
Previously, all StackBlitz examples included the default dependencies
for `cli`-type projects. However, different example types may have
different `package.json` files with different dependencies.
For example, the [boilerplate `package.json`][1] for `elements` examples
includes an extra dependency on `@angular/elements`.
This commit changes `StackblitzBuilder` to use the dependencies that
correspond to each example type.
(NOTE: Manually verified the changes.)
Jira issue: [FW-2002][2]
[1]: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/05d058622/aio/tools/examples/shared/boilerplate/elements/package.json
[2]: https://angular-team.atlassian.net/browse/FW-2002
PR Close#36071
This commit propagates the correct value span in an ExpressionBinding of
a microsyntax expression to ParsedProperty, which in turn porpagates the
span to the template ASTs (both VE and Ivy).
PR Close#36133
# Workspace initially persisted by the `setup` job, and then enhanced by `build-npm-packages` and
# `build-ivy-npm-packages`.
@ -67,9 +62,6 @@ var_10: &only_on_master
# **NOTE 1**: Pin to exact images using an ID (SHA). See https://circleci.com/docs/2.0/circleci-images/#using-a-docker-image-id-to-pin-an-image-to-a-fixed-version.
# (Using the tag in not necessary when pinning by ID, but include it anyway for documentation purposes.)
# **NOTE 2**: If you change the version of the docker images, also change the `cache_key` suffix.
# **NOTE 3**: If you change the version of the `*-browsers` docker image, make sure the
# `--versions.chrome` arg in `integration/bazel-schematics/test.sh` specifies a
# ChromeDriver version that is compatible with the Chrome version in the image.
executors:
default-executor:
parameters:
@ -120,7 +112,7 @@ commands:
sudo apt-get update
# Install GTK+ graphical user interface (libgtk-3-0), advanced linux sound architecture (libasound2)
# and network security service libraries (libnss3) & X11 Screen Saver extension library (libssx1)
# which are dependendies of chrome & needed for karma & protractor headless chrome tests.
# which are dependencies of chrome & needed for karma & protractor headless chrome tests.
# This is a very small install which takes around 7s in comparing to using the full
Please check if your PR fulfills the following requirements:
## Lista de Verificación del PR
Comprueba si tu PR cumple los siguientes requisitos:
- [ ] The commit message follows our guidelines: https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#commit
- [ ] Tests for the changes have been added (for bug fixes / features)
- [ ] Docs have been added / updated (for bug fixes / features)
- [ ] El mensaje de commit esta conforme con [nuestras reglas](https://github.com/angular-hispano/angular/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#-formato-para-el-mensaje-de-los-commits)
- [ ] Probe los cambios que agregué (arreglo de bugs / funcionalidades)
- [ ] Revisé previamente las traducciones o cambios de contenido
- [ ] Consulté el [diccionario de términos](https://github.com/angular-hispano/angular/blob/master/aio/diccionario-de-términos.md) en español
- [ ] He creado dos archivos con la extensión correspondiente(.en.md para el archivo en inglés y .md para el Archivo en español)
- [ ] He enlazado el commit con el issue correspondiente <!-- ejemplo Fixes #X -->
## PR Type
What kind of change does this PR introduce?
## Tipo de PR
¿Qué tipo de cambio introduce este PR?
<!--Please check the one that applies to this PR using "x". -->
<!--Marca con una "x" las opciones que aplican. -->
- [ ] Bugfix
- [ ] Feature
- [ ] Code style update (formatting, local variables)
- [ ] Refactoring (no functional changes, no api changes)
As contributors and maintainers of the Angular project, we pledge to respect everyone who contributes by posting issues, updating documentation, submitting pull requests, providing feedback in comments, and any other activities.
## 1. Propósito
Communication through any of Angular's channels (GitHub, Gitter, IRC, mailing lists, Google+, Twitter, etc.) must be constructive and never resort to personal attacks, trolling, public or private harassment, insults, or other unprofessional conduct.
“Prometemos brindar cortesía y respeto a cualquier persona involucrada en esta comunidad, sin importar el género con el que se identifique, su orientación sexual, limitación física, edad, raza, etnia, religión o nivel de conocimiento. Esperamos que cualquiera que desee contribuir en este proyecto brinde el mismo comportamiento”
We promise to extend courtesy and respect to everyone involved in this project regardless of gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, disability, age, race, ethnicity, religion, or level of experience. We expect anyone contributing to the Angular project to do the same.
Bajo ese principio queremos enfocar esta comunidad, una comunidad de respeto por el otro, donde cualquiera que sienta pasión por Angular y desee involucrarse con cualquier tipo de actividad deberá ayudar a mantener una atmósfera de cortesía por el otro, respetando los pensamientos, acciones, ideales y propuestas del otro.
If any member of the community violates this code of conduct, the maintainers of the Angular project may take action, removing issues, comments, and PRs or blocking accounts as deemed appropriate.
## 2. Comportamiento esperado
If you are subject to or witness unacceptable behavior, or have any other concerns, please email us at [conduct@angular.io](mailto:conduct@angular.io).
- Evitar usar expresiones o gestos insultantes, humillantes o intimidatorios para referirnos a otros.
- Ejercita la consideración y el respeto en tus comunicaciones y acciones.
- Absténte de adoptar una conducta y un lenguaje degradantes, discriminatorios, abusivos o acosadores.
- Evitar comportamientos que agredan las expresiones de identidad, género, creencias religiosas, acciones que lastimen o los aíslen a otros.
- Evitar comentarios sobre ideas políticas.
- No se toleran conductas físicas y actitudes dirigidas al descrédito personal, físico o emocional de cualquier persona.
- No se toleran chistes y comentarios excluyentes, sexistas y racistas.
- Se rechaza actitudes de hostigamiento.
- Se rechaza el acoso: este se entiende como cualquier tipo de comentario verbal que refuerce discriminación por género, identidad y expresión de género, orientación sexual, discapacidad, apariencia física, tamaño corporal, raza, edad o religión en contextos laborales o sociales.
- No se tolera el contacto físico y/o la atención sexual no deseada.
- Promover la igualdad de oportunidades de formación, educación, intercambio y retroalimentación antes, durante y después de los eventos.
- Intenta colaborar en lugar de generar conflicto.
- Sé consciente de tu entorno y de tus compañeros participantes. Alerta a líderes de la comunidad si notas una situación peligrosa, alguien en apuros, o violaciones de este Código de Conducta, incluso si parecen intrascendentes.
## 3. Comportamiento inaceptable
Comportamientos inaceptables incluyen: intimidación, acoso, abuso, discriminación, comunicación despectiva o degradante o acciones por cualquier participante en nuestra comunidad ya sea virtual, o en las comunicaciones uno-a-uno que se realizan en el contexto de la comunidad. Por favor ser respetuoso con todos.
El acoso incluye: comentarios nocivos o perjudiciales, verbales o escritos relacionados con el género, la orientación sexual, raza, religión, discapacidad; uso inadecuado de desnudos y / o imágenes sexuales en espacios públicos (incluyendo la presentación diapositivas); intimidación deliberada, acecho o seguimiento; fotografías o grabaciones acosadoras; interrupción sostenida de charlas y otros eventos; contacto físico inapropiado, y atención sexual no deseada.
## 4. Consecuencias de comportamiento inaceptable
Se espera que personas a quienes se les solicite que detengan su comportamiento inaceptable lo hagan de manera inmediata esto será válido para cualquier miembro de la comunidad.
En caso de presentarse una violación al código de conducta de manera repetida se tendrá cero tolerancia a este comportamiento por parte de los organizadores.
Si un miembro de la comunidad participa en una conducta inaceptable, los organizadores pueden tomar cualquier acción que consideren apropiada, hasta e incluyendo una prohibición temporal o expulsión permanente de la comunidad, sin previo aviso.
Priorizamos la seguridad de las personas marginadas sobre la comodidad de las personas privilegiadas. Nos reservamos el derecho de no actuar sobre las quejas relacionadas con:
- El "racismo inverso", "sexismo inverso" y "cisfobia".
- Comunicación razonable de límites, como "déjame en paz", "vete" o "no estoy discutiendo esto contigo".
- Al comunicarse en un "tono", no se encuentra agradable.
- Identificando comportamientos o suposiciones racistas, sexistas, cissexistas u opresivas.
## 5. ¿Qué hacer si se incumple el código de conducta?
Si eres víctima o testigo de una conducta inaceptable, o tienes cualquier inquietud, por favor comunícate con el equipo organizador lo antes posible:
- Mensaje directo: Michael Prentice (@splaktar)
- Mensaje directo: Jorge Cano (@jorgeucano)
- Mensaje directo: Andrés Villanueva (@villanuevand)
- Una vez haya sido notificada el no cumplimiento de la norma, el equipo de liderazgo se reunirán y analizarán el caso.
- Los incidentes presentados se manejarán con discreción.
- Los organizadores se comunicarán con la persona que incumplió la norma y tomarán las medidas respectivas.
- Se realizará un acompañamiento a la persona agredida y se apoyará.
- Si el incidente se hace público, Angular Hispano no se hace responsable de los perjuicios que esto pueda ocasionar en el agresor o el agredido.
## 6. Alcance
Esperamos que todos los participantes de la comunidad (organizadores, voluntarios, contribuyentes pagados o de otro modo; patrocinadores; y otros invitados) se atengan a este Código de Conducta en todos los espacios virtuales y presenciales, así como en todas las comunicaciones de uno-a-uno pertinentes la comunidad.
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)
- [Issues and Bugs](#issue)
- [Feature Requests](#feature)
- [Submission Guidelines](#submit)
- [Coding Rules](#rules)
- [Commit Message Guidelines](#commit)
- [Signing the CLA](#cla)
## <aname="coc"></a> Code of Conduct
Help us keep Angular open and inclusive.
Please read and follow our [Code of Conduct][coc].
## <aname="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.
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
- 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].
## <aname="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.
## <aname="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 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.
* **Small Features** can be crafted and directly [submitted as a Pull Request](#submit-pr).
## <aname="submit"></a> Submission Guidelines
### <aname="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 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 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.
You can file new issues by selecting from our [new issue templates](https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/new/choose) and filling out the issue template.
### <aname="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 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.
The `<type>` and `<summary>` fields are mandatory, the `(<scope>)` field is optional.
##### Type
Must be one of the following:
* **build**: Changes that affect the build system or external dependencies (example scopes: gulp, broccoli, npm)
* **ci**: Changes to our CI configuration files and scripts (example scopes: Circle, BrowserStack, SauceLabs)
* **docs**: Documentation only changes
* **feat**: A new feature
* **fix**: A bug fix
* **perf**: A code change that improves performance
* **refactor**: A code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature
* **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
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`
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
* `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
#### Commit Message Body
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: <breakingchangesummary>
<BLANKLINE>
<breakingchangedescription+migrationinstructions>
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
Fixes #<issuenumber>
```
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.
## <aname="cla"></a> Signing the CLA
Please sign our Contributor License Agreement (CLA) before sending pull requests. For any code
changes to be accepted, the CLA must be signed. It's a quick process, we promise!
* For individuals, we have a [simple click-through form][individual-cla].
* For corporations, we'll need you to
[print, sign and one of scan+email, fax or mail the form][corporate-cla].
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.
The following documents can help you sort out issues with GitHub accounts and multiple email addresses:
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:
¡Nos encantaría que contribuyeras a Angular y que ayudaras a hacerlo aún mejor de lo que es hoy!
Como colaborador, estos son los lineamientos que nos gustaría que siguieras:
- [Code of Conduct](#coc)
- [Question or Problem?](#question)
- [Issues and Bugs](#issue)
- [Feature Requests](#feature)
- [Submission Guidelines](#submit)
- [Coding Rules](#rules)
- [Commit Message Guidelines](#commit)
- [Signing the CLA](#cla)
## <aname="coc"></a> Code of Conduct
Help us keep Angular open and inclusive. Please read and follow our [Code of Conduct][coc].
## <aname="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`.
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
- 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].
## <aname="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.
## <aname="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:
* 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.
* **Small Features** can be crafted and directly [submitted as a Pull Request](#submit-pr).
## <aname="submit"></a> Submission Guidelines
### <aname="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.
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.
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.
You can file new issues by selecting from our [new issue templates](https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/new/choose) and filling out the issue template.
- [Código de conducta](#coc)
- [¿Preguntas o problemas?](#question)
- [_Issues_ y _bugs_](#issue)
- [Solicitud de funcionalidades](#feature)
- [Guía para la creación de issues y PRs](#submit)
- [Reglas del código](#rules)
- [Convención para el mensaje de los _commits_](#commit)
- [Firma del Acuerdo de Licencia de Colaborador (CLA)](#cla)
### <aname="submit-pr"></a> Submitting a Pull Request (PR)
Before you submit your Pull Request (PR) consider the following guidelines:
## <aname="coc"></a> Código de conducta
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:
Ayúdanos a mantener Angular abierto e inclusivo.
Por favor lee y sigue nuestro [Código de conducta][coc].
## <aname="question"></a> ¿Tienes alguna pregunta o problema?
No abras *issues* para preguntas de soporte general ya que queremos mantener los *issues* de GitHub para reporte de *bugs* y solicitud de funcionalidades.
En su lugar, recomendamos utilizar [Stack Overflow](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/angular) para hacer preguntas relacionadas con soporte. Al crear una nueva pregunta en Stack Overflow, asegúrate de agregar el etiqueta (tag) de `angular`.
Stack Overflow es mucho mejor para hacer preguntas ya que:
- Hay miles de personas dispuestas a ayudar en preguntas y respuestas de Stack Overflow
que permanecen disponibles para el público, por lo que tu pregunta o respuesta podría ayudar a otra persona.
- El sistema de votación de Stack Overflow asegura que las mejores respuestas sobresalgan y sean visibles.
Para ahorrar tu tiempo y el nuestro, cerraremos sistemáticamente todos los *issues* que sean solicitudes de soporte general y redirigiremos a las personas a Stack Overflow.
Si deseas chatear sobre alguna pregunta en tiempo real, puedes hacerlo a través de nuestro [canal de Gitter][gitter].
## <aname="issue"></a> ¿Encontraste un Bug?
Si encontraste un error en el código fuente, puedes ayudarnos [creando un *issue*](#submit-issue) en nuestro [repositorio de GitHub][github].
O incluso mejor, puedes [crear un *Pull Request*](#submit-pr) con la solución.
Puedes solicitar una nueva funcionalidad [creando un *issue*](#submit-issue) en nuestro repositorio de GitHub.
Si deseas implementar una nueva funcionalidad, por favor considera el tamaño del cambio para determinar los pasos correctos para continuar:
* Para un **cambio significativo**, primero abre un *issue* y describe tu propuesta para que pueda ser discutida.
Este proceso nos permite coordinar mejor nuestros esfuerzos, evitar trabajo duplicado y ayudarte a diseñar el cambio para que sea aceptado con éxito en el proyecto.
**Nota**: Agregar un nuevo tema a la documentación o reescribir significativamente un tema, también cuenta como *cambio significativo*.
* **Cambios pequeños** pueden ser elaborados y directamente [creados como un _pull request_](#submit-pr).
## <aname="submit"></a> Guía para la creación de issues y PRs
### <aname="submit-issue"></a> Creación de _issues_
Antes de crear un *issue*, por favor busca en el el *issue tracker*, quizá un *issue* para tu problema ya existe y la discusión puede informarte sobre soluciones alternativas disponibles.
Queremos solucionar todos los problemas lo antes posible, pero antes de corregir un bug necesitamos reproducirlo y confirmarlo.
Para reproducir errores, requerimos que proporciones una reproducción mínima.
Tener un escenario reproducible mínimo nos brinda una gran cantidad de información importante sin tener que ir y venir con preguntas adicionales.
Una reproducción mínima nos permite confirmar rápidamente un bug (o señalar un problema de código), así también confirmar que estamos solucionando el problema correcto.
Requerimos una reproducción mínima para ahorrar tiempo a los encargados del mantenimiento y en última instancia, poder corregir más bugs.
A menudo los desarrolladores encuentran problemas de código mientras preparan una reproducción mínima.
Entendemos que a veces puede ser difícil extraer porciones esenciales de código de un código más grande, pero realmente necesitamos aislar el problema antes de poder solucionarlo.
Desafortunadamente no podemos investigar/corregir errores sin una reproducción mínima, por lo que si no tenemos tu retroalimentación del bug, vamos a cerrar el *issue* ya que no tiene suficiente información para reproducirse.
Puedes presentar nuevos *issues* seleccionando nuestra [plantilla de _issues_](https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/new/choose) y complentando la plantilla.
### <aname="submit-pr"></a> Creación de un Pull Requests (PR)
Antes de crear tu Pull Request (PR) considera los siguientes lineamientos:
1. Busca en [GitHub](https://github.com/angular/angular/pulls) PRs que estén abiertos o cerrados y que estén relacionados con el que vas a crear.
No deseas duplicar los esfuerzos existentes.
2. Asegúrate de que el PR describa el problema que estás solucionando o que documente el diseño de la funcionalidad que deseas agregar.
Discutir el diseño por adelantado ayuda a garantizar que estemos listos para aceptar tu trabajo.
3. Por favor firma nuestro [Acuerdo de Licencia de Colaborador (CLA)](#cla) antes de crear PRs.
No podemos aceptar el código sin el Acuerdo de Licencia de Colaborador (CLA) firmado.
Asegúrate de crear todas las contribuciones de Git con la dirección de correo electrónico asociada con tu firma del Acuerdo de Licencia de Colaborador (CLA).
4. Haz *fork* del repositorio angular/angular.
5. Haz tus cambios en una nueva rama de Git:
```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. Crea tu correción, **incluyendo casos de prueba apropiados**.
7. Sigue nuestras [Reglas de código](#rules).
8. Ejecuta todo el conjunto de pruebas de Angular, tal como está descrito en la [documentación del desarrollador][dev-doc], y asegúrate de que todas las pruebas pasen.
9. Crea un commit de tus cambios utilizando un mensaje de commit descriptivo que siga nuestra [convención para el mensaje de los commits](#commit).
Es necesario cumplir con estas convenciones porque las notas de las versiones se generan automáticamente a partir de estos mensajes.
```shell
git commit -a
```
Note: the optional commit `-a` command line option will automatically "add" and "rm" edited files.
Nota: la opción de la línea de comandos de Git `-a` automaticamente hará "add" y "rm" a los archivos editados.
1. Push your branch to GitHub:
10. Haz push de tu rama a 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. En GitHub, crea un pull request a `angular:master`.
Si solicitamos cambios a través de revisiones de código, sigue las siguientes indicaciones:
* Haz los cambios requeridos.
* Ejecuta nuevamente el conjunto de pruebas de Angular para asegurar que todas las pruebas aún están pasando.
* Haz rebase de tu rama a la rama master y haz push con la opción `-f` a tu repositorio de Github (esto actualizará tu Pull Request):
```shell
git rebase master -i
git push -f
```
That's it! Thank you for your contribution!
¡Es todo! ¡Muchas gracias por tu contribución!
#### 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:
#### Después del merge de tu pull request
* Delete the remote branch on GitHub either through the GitHub web UI or your local shell as follows:
Después de que se hizo merge de tu pull request, puedes eliminar de forma segura tu rama y hacer pull de los cambios del repositorio principal (upstream):
* Elimina la rama remota en GitHub a través de la interfaz de usuario web de GitHub o en tu línea de comandos de la siguiente manera:
```shell
git push origin --delete my-fix-branch
```
* Check out the master branch:
* Muévete a la rama master:
```shell
git checkout master -f
```
* Delete the local branch:
* Elimina tu rama local:
```shell
git branch -D my-fix-branch
```
* Update your master with the latest upstream version:
* Actualiza tu rama master con la última versión del fork (upstream):
```shell
git pull --ff upstream master
```
## <aname="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).
## <aname="rules"></a> Reglas del código
Para garantizar la coherencia en todo el código fuente, ten en cuenta estas reglas mientras trabajas:
## <aname="commit"></a> Commit Message Guidelines
* Todas las funcionalidades o solución de bugs **deben ser probadas** por una o más pruebas (pruebas unitarias).
* Todos los métodos públicos del API **deben ser documentados**.
* Seguimos la [guía de estilo JavaScript de Google][js-style-guide], pero cada línea no debe exceder **100 caracteres**.
We have very precise rules over how our git commit messages can be formatted. This leads to **more
readable messages** that are easy to follow when looking through the **project history**. But also,
we use the git commit messages to **generate the Angular change log**.
Un formateador automatizado está disponible, revisar [DEVELOPER.md](docs/DEVELOPER.md#clang-format).
## <aname="commit"></a> Formato para el mensaje de los commits
*Esta especificación está inspirada y reemplaza el [Formato de mensaje de commits de AngularJS][commit-message-format].*
Tenemos reglas muy precisas sobre cómo deben formatearse nuestros mensajes de los commits de Git.
Este formato permite tener **un historial de commits más facil de leer**.
Cada mensaje de un commit consta del **header**, el **body**, y el **footer**.
### Commit Message Format
Each commit message consists of a **header**, a **body** and a **footer**. The header has a special
format that includes a **type**, a **scope** and a **subject**:
```
<type>(<scope>): <subject>
<BLANKLINE>
<header>
<LINEA VACIA>
<body>
<BLANK LINE>
<LINEA VACIA>
<footer>
```
The **header** is mandatory and the **scope** of the header is optional.
El `header` es obligatorio y debe ajustarse al formato del [mensaje del header del commit](#commit-header).
Any line of the commit message cannot be longer than 100 characters! This allows the message to be easier
to read on GitHub as well as in various git tools.
El `body` es obligatorio para todos los commits excepto los que tenga scope "docs".
Cuando el body es requerido debe tener al menos 20 caracteres.
The footer should contain a [closing reference to an issue](https://help.github.com/articles/closing-issues-via-commit-messages/) if any.
El `footer` es opcional.
Samples: (even more [samples](https://github.com/angular/angular/commits/master))
Cualquier línea del mensaje del commit no puede tener más de 100 caracteres.
#### <ahref="commit-header"></a>Mensaje del header del commit
```
docs(changelog): update changelog to beta.5
```
```
fix(release): need to depend on latest rxjs and zone.js
The version in our package.json gets copied to the one we publish, and users need the latest of these.
<tipo>(<alcance>): <resumen>
│ │ │
│ │ └─⫸ Resumen corto escrito en modo imperativo, tiempo presente. Sin mayúsculas. Sin punto final.
│ │
│ └─⫸ Alcance del commit: animations|bazel|benchpress|common|compiler|compiler-cli|core|
└─⫸ Tipo de commit: build|ci|docs|feat|fix|perf|refactor|style|test
```
### Revert
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.
El `<tipo>` y `<resumen>` son obligatorios, el `(<alcance>)` es opcional.
### Type
Must be one of the following:
* **build**: Changes that affect the build system or external dependencies (example scopes: gulp, broccoli, npm)
* **ci**: Changes to our CI configuration files and scripts (example scopes: Circle, BrowserStack, SauceLabs)
* **docs**: Documentation only changes
* **feat**: A new feature
* **fix**: A bug fix
* **perf**: A code change that improves performance
* **refactor**: A code change that neither fixes a bug nor adds a feature
* **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
##### Tipo
### Scope
The scope should be the name of the npm package affected (as perceived by the person reading the changelog generated from commit messages).
El tipo debe ser uno de los siguientes:
The following is the list of supported scopes:
* **build**: cambios que afectan el sistema de compilación o dependencias externas (ejemplos de scopes: gulp, broccoli, npm)
* **ci**: cambios en nuestros archivos y scripts de configuración de CI (ejemplos de scopes: Circle, BrowserStack, SauceLabs)
* **docs**: cambios en la documentación
* **feat**: una nueva funcionalidad
* **fix**: una solución de un bug
* **perf**: un cambio de código que mejora el rendimiento.
* **refactor**: un cambio de código que no corrige ningún error ni agrega ninguna funcionalidad
* **style**: cambios que no afectan el significado del código (espacios en blanco, formato, falta de punto y coma, etc.)
* **test**: se agregan pruebas faltantes o se corrigen pruebas existentes
* **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:
##### Alcance
El alcance debe ser el nombre del paquete npm afectado (tal como lo percibe la persona que lee el registro de cambios generado a partir de los mensajes de commit).
* **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
* **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`).
La siguiente es la lista de alcances permitidos:
### Subject
The subject contains a succinct description of the change:
* `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`
* use the imperative, present tense: "change" not "changed" nor "changes"
* don't capitalize the first letter
* no dot (.) at the end
Actualmente hay algunas excepciones a la regla "usar el nombre de paquete":
### 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.
* `packaging`: usado para cambios que cambian el diseño de los paquetes de npm en todos nuestros paquetes. Ejemplos: cambios de la ruta públic, package.json cambios hechos a todos los paquetes, cambios a archivos o formatos d.ts, cambios a bundles, etc.
### Footer
The footer should contain any information about **Breaking Changes** and is also the place to
reference GitHub issues that this commit **Closes**.
* `changelog`: utilizado para actualizar las notas de la versión en CHANGELOG.md
**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.
* `dev-infra`: utilizado para cambios relacionados con dev-infra dentro de los directorios /scripts, /tools y /dev-infra
A detailed explanation can be found in this [document][commit-message-format].
* `docs-infra`: utilizado para cambios relacionados con la documentación (angular.io) dentro del directorio /aio del repositorio
## <aname="cla"></a> Signing the CLA
* `migrations`: utilizado para los cambios en las migraciones `ng update`.
Please sign our Contributor License Agreement (CLA) before sending pull requests. For any code
changes to be accepted, the CLA must be signed. It's a quick process, we promise!
* `ngcc`: usado para los cambios del [Compilador de compatibilidad de Angular](./packages/compiler-cli/ngcc/README.md)
* For individuals, we have a [simple click-through form][individual-cla].
* For corporations, we'll need you to
[print, sign and one of scan+email, fax or mail the form][corporate-cla].
* `ve`: utilizado para cambios específicos de ViewEngine (legacy compiler/renderer).
<hr>
* alcance vacío: útil para cambios de `style`, `test` y `refactor` que se realizan en todos los paquetes (ejemplo: `style: add missing semicolons`) y para cambios de la documentación que no están relacionados a un paquete en específico(ejemplo: `docs: corrige error gramatical en el tutorial`).
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:
##### Resumen
Usa el campo resumen para proporcionar una descripción breve del cambio:
* usa el modo imperativo, tiempo presente: "cambia" no "cambió" o "cambios"
* no debe de contener ninguna letra mayúscula
* no debe de conter punto (.) al final
#### Mensaje del cuerpo del commit
Tal como en el resumen, usa el modo imperativo, tiempo presente: "cambia" no "cambió" o "cambios".
Explica la razón del cambio en el el mensaje del cuerpo del commit. Este mensaje de confirmación debe explicar _por qué_ está realizando el cambio.
Puedes incluir una comparación del comportamiento anterior con el nuevo comportamiento para ilustrar el impacto del cambio.
#### Mensaje del footer del commit
El footer puede contener información sobre cambios significativos y también es el lugar para hacer referencia a issues de GitHub, tickets de Jira y otros PRs que están relacionados con el commit.
La sección de cambios significativos debería comenzar con la frase "CAMBIO SIGNIFICATIVO: " seguido de un resumen del cambio significativo, una línea en blanco y una descripción detallada del cambio significativo que también incluya instrucciones de migración.
### Revirtiendo commits
Si el commit revierte un commit previo, el commit debería comenzar con `revert: `, seguido por el header del commit revertido.
El contenido del mensaje del commit debería contener:
- Información sobre el SHA del commit que se revierte en el siguiente formato: `Esto revierte el commit <SHA>`,
- Una descripción clara de la razón para revertir el mensaje del _commit_.
## <aname="cla"></a> Firma del Acuerdo de Licencia de Colaborador (CLA)
Por favor firma nuestro Acuerdo de Licencia de Colaborador (CLA) cuando creas tu primer pull request. Para que cualquier cambio de código sea aceptado, el Acuerdo de Licencia de Colaborador (CLA) debe ser firmado. Es un proceso rápido con nuestro CLA assistant que está integrado con nuestro CI.
Los siguientes documentos pueden ayudarte a resolver problemas con cuentas de GitHub y múltiples direcciones de correo electrónico:
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.
[](https://gitter.im/angular/angular?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=badge&utm_campaign=pr-badge&utm_content=badge)
Angular is a development platform for building mobile and desktop web applications using TypeScript/JavaScript and other languages.
## Quickstart
[Get started in 5 minutes][quickstart].
## Changelog
[Learn about the latest improvements][changelog].
## Want to help?
Want to file a bug, contribute some code, or improve documentation? Excellent! Read up on our
guidelines for [contributing][contributing] and then check out one of our issues in the [hotlist: community-help](https://github.com/angular/angular/labels/hotlist%3A%20community-help).
[](https://gitter.im/angular/angular?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=badge&utm_campaign=pr-badge&utm_content=badge)
La colaboración para corregir errores y agregar funciones en el framework debe realizarse en inglés a través
del repositorio [angular/angular](https://github.com/angular/angular) upstream.
[Learn about the latest improvements][changelog].
## Guía rápida
## Want to help?
[Comienza a usarlo en 5 minutos](https://docs.angular.lat/start).
Want to file a bug, contribute some code, or improve documentation? Excellent! Read up on our
guidelines for [contributing][contributing] and then check out one of our issues in the [hotlist: community-help](https://github.com/angular/angular/labels/hotlist%3A%20community-help).
# Proyecto de documentación Angular (https://docs.angular.lat)
Everything in this folder is part of the documentation project. This includes
Todo en esta carpeta es parte del proyecto de documentación. Esto incluye:
* the web site for displaying the documentation
* the dgeni configuration for converting source files to rendered files that can be viewed in the web site.
* the tooling for setting up examples for development; and generating live-example and zip files from the examples.
* El sitio web para mostrar la documentación
* La configuración de dgeni para convertir los archivos de origen a archivos renderizados que se pueden vizualizar en el sitio web.
* Las herramientas para establecer ejemplos para el desarrollo; y generar archivos en tiempo real y archivos zip desde los ejemplos.
## Developer tasks
## Tareas de desarrollador
We use [Yarn](https://yarnpkg.com) to manage the dependencies and to run build tasks.
You should run all these tasks from the `angular/aio` folder.
Here are the most important tasks you might need to use:
Nosotros usamos [Yarn](https://yarnpkg.com) para gestionar las dependencias y crear tareas de compilación.
Debes ejecutar todas estas tareas desde la carpeta `angular/aio`.
Aquí están las tareas más importantes que podrías necesitar usar:
* `yarn` - install all the dependencies.
* `yarn setup` - install all the dependencies, boilerplate, stackblitz, zips and run dgeni on the docs.
* `yarn setup-local` - same as `setup`, but build the Angular packages from the source code and use these locally built versions (instead of the ones fetched from npm) for aio and docs examples boilerplate.
* `yarn` - instalar todas las dependencias.
* `yarn setup` - instalar todas las dependencias, boilerplate, stackblitz, zips y ejecuta dgeni en los documentos.
* `yarn setup-local` - igual que `setup`, pero crea los paquetes de Angular a partir del código y usa estas versiones construidas localmente (en lugar de las recuperadas desde npm) para aio y ejemplos de documentos boilerplate.
* `yarn build` - create a production build of the application (after installing dependencies, boilerplate, etc).
* `yarn build-local` - same as `build`, but use `setup-local` instead of`setup`.
* `yarn build-local-with-viewengine` - same as `build-local`, but in addition also turns on `ViewEngine` mode in aio.
(Note: Docs examples run in `ViewEngine` mode by default. To turn on `ivy` mode in examples, see `yarn boilerplate:add` below.)
* `yarn build` - crear una compilación de producción de la aplicación (después de instalar dependencias, boilerplate, etc).
* `yarn build-local` - igual que `build`, pero usa `setup-local` en lugar de`setup`.
* `yarn build-local-with-viewengine` - igual que `build-local`, pero además también enciende el modo `ViewEngine` (pre-Ivy) en aio.
(Nota: Encender el modo `ViewEngine` en ejemplos de documentos, ver `yarn boilerplate:add:viewengine` abajo.)
* `yarn start` - run a development web server that watches the files; then builds the doc-viewer and reloads the page, as necessary.
* `yarn serve-and-sync` - run both the `docs-watch` and `start` in the same console.
* `yarn lint` - check that the doc-viewer code follows our style rules.
* `yarn test` - watch all the source files, for the doc-viewer, and run all the unit tests when any change.
* `yarn test --watch=false` - run all the unit tests once.
* `yarn e2e` - run all the e2e tests for the doc-viewer.
* `yarn start` - ejecutar un servidor web de desarrollo que observa los archivos; luego crea el doc-viewer y vuelve a cargar la página, según sea necesario.
* `yarn serve-and-sync` - ejecutar ambos, el `docs-watch` y `start` en la misma consola.
* `yarn lint` - comprobar que el código del doc-viewer sigue nuestras reglas de estilo.
* `yarn test` - observar todos los archivos de origen, para el doc-viewer, y ejecuta todas las pruebas unitarias cuando haya algún cambio.
* `yarn test --watch=false` -ejecutar todas las pruebas unitarias una sola vez.
* `yarn e2e` - ejecutar todas las pruebas de e2e para el doc-viewer.
* `yarn docs` - generate all the docs from the source files.
* `yarn docs-watch` - watch the Angular source and the docs files and run a short-circuited doc-gen for the docs that changed.
* `yarn docs-lint` - check that the doc gen code follows our style rules.
* `yarn docs-test` - run the unit tests for the doc generation code.
* `yarn docs` - generar toda la documentación desde los archivos fuente.
* `yarn docs-watch` - observar el código Angular, los archivos de documentación y ejecutar un 'doc-gen' en corto circuito para los documentos que fueron cambiados.
* `yarn docs-lint` - comprobar que el código del documento generado sigue nuestras reglas de estilo.
* `yarn docs-test` - ejecutar las pruebas unitarias para el código de generación de doc.
* `yarn boilerplate:add` - generate all the boilerplate code for the examples, so that they can be run locally.
* `yarn boilerplate:add:ivy` - same as `boilerplate:add` but also turns on `ivy` mode.
* `yarn boilerplate:add` - generar todo el código boilerplate para los ejemplos, para que puedan ejecutarse localmente.
* `yarn boilerplate:add:viewengine` - igual que `boilerplate:add` pero también enciende el modo `ViewEngine` (pre-Ivy).
* `yarn boilerplate:remove` - remove all the boilerplate code that was added via `yarn boilerplate:add`.
* `yarn generate-stackblitz` - generate the stackblitz files that are used by the `live-example` tags in the docs.
* `yarn generate-zips` - generate the zip files from the examples. Zip available via the `live-example` tags in the docs.
* `yarn boilerplate:remove` - eliminar todo el código boilerplate que fue añadido a través`yarn boilerplate:add`.
* `yarn generate-stackblitz` - generar los archivos stackblitz que están usados por la etiqueta `live-example` en documentos.
* `yarn generate-zips` - generar los archivos zip desde los ejemplos. Zip está disponible a través de la etiqueta `live-example` en los documentos.
* `yarn example-e2e` - run all e2e tests for examples. Available options:
- `--setup`: generate boilerplate, force webdriver update & other setup, then run tests.
- `--local`: run e2e tests with the local version of Angular contained in the "dist" folder.
_Requires `--setup` in order to take effect._
- `--ivy`: run e2e tests in `ivy` mode.
- `--filter=foo`: limit e2e tests to those containing the word "foo".
* `yarn example-e2e` - ejecutar todas las pruebas e2e para ejemplos. Opciones disponibles:
- `--setup`: generar boilerplate, forzar la actualización del controlador web y otras configuraciones, luego ejecutar las pruebas.
- `--local`: ejecutar pruebas e2e con la versión local de Angular contenida en la carpeta "dist".
_Requiere `--setup` para que surta efecto._
- `--viewengine`: ejecutar pruebas e2e en modo `ViewEngine` (pre-Ivy).
- `--filter=foo`: limitar pruebas e2e a las que contienen la palabra "foo".
> **Note for Windows users**
> **Nota para usuarios Windows**
>
> Setting up the examples involves creating some [symbolic links](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbolic_link) (see [here](./tools/examples/README.md#symlinked-node_modules) for details). On Windows, this requires to either have [Developer Mode enabled](https://blogs.windows.com/windowsdeveloper/2016/12/02/symlinks-windows-10) (supported on Windows 10 or newer) or run the setup commands as administrator.
> Configurar los ejemplos implica crear algunos [enlaces simbólicos](https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enlace_simb%C3%B3lico) (ver [Aquí](./tools/examples/README.md#symlinked-node_modules) para más detalles). En Windows, esto requiere tener [Habilitado el Modo de desarrollador ](https://blogs.windows.com/windowsdeveloper/2016/12/02/symlinks-windows-10) (compatible con Windows 10 o más reciente) o ejecutar los comandos de configuración cómo administrador.
>
> The affected commands are:
> Los comandos afectados son:
> - `yarn setup` / `yarn setup-*`
> - `yarn build` / `yarn build-*`
> - `yarn boilerplate:add`
> - `yarn example-e2e --setup`
## Using ServiceWorker locally
## Usando ServiceWorker localmente
Running `yarn start` (even when explicitly targeting production mode) does not set up the
ServiceWorker. If you want to test the ServiceWorker locally, you can use `yarn build` and then
serve the files in `dist/` with`yarn http-server dist -p 4200`.
Ejecutando `yarn start` (incluso cuando se apunta explícitamente al modo de producción) no configura el
ServiceWorker. Si quieres probar el ServiceWorker localmente, puedes usar `yarn build` y luego
ejecutar los archivos en `dist/` con`yarn http-server dist -p 4200`.
## Guide to authoring
## Guía de autoría
Existen dos tipos de contenido en la documentación:
There are two types of content in the documentation:
* **Documentación de API**: descripciones de los módulos, clases, interfaces, decoradores, etc que son parte de la plataforma Angular.
La documentacion de API está generada directamente desde el código fuente.
El código fuente está contenido en archivos TypeScript , almacenados en la carpeta `angular/packages`.
Cada elemento de la API puede tener un comentario anterior, el cual contiene etiquetas y contenido de estilos JSDoc.
El contenido está escrito en markdown.
* **API docs**: descriptions of the modules, classes, interfaces, decorators, etc that make up the Angular platform.
API docs are generated directly from the source code.
The source code is contained in TypeScript files, located in the `angular/packages` folder.
Each API item may have a preceding comment, which contains JSDoc style tags and content.
The content is written in markdown.
* **Otro contenido**: guias, tutoriales, y otro material de marketing.
Todos los demás contenidos se escriben utilizando markdown en archivos de texto, ubicados en la carpeta `angular/aio/content`.
Más específicamente, hay subcarpetas que contienen tipos particulares de contenido: guías, tutoriales y marketing.
* **Other content**: guides, tutorials, and other marketing material.
All other content is written using markdown in text files, located in the `angular/aio/content` folder.
More specifically, there are sub-folders that contain particular types of content: guides, tutorial and marketing.
* **Ejempos de código**: los ejemplos de código deben ser comprobables para garantizar su precisión.
Además, nuestros ejemplos tienen un aspecto específico y permiten al usuario copiar el código fuente. Para mayor
ejemplos se representan en una interfaz con pestañas (e.g. template, HTML, y TypeScript en pestañas separadas). Adicionalmente, algunos son ejemplos en acción, que proporcionan enlaces donde se puede editar el código, ejecutar, y/o descargar. Para obtener más detalles sobre cómo trabajar con ejemplos de código, lea los [fragmentos de código](https://docs.angular.lat/guide/docs-style-guide#code-snippets), [código fuente de marcado ](https://docs.angular.lat/guide/docs-style-guide#source-code-markup), y [ ejemplos en acción ](https://docs.angular.lat/guide/docs-style-guide#live-examples) paginas de los [ autores de guías de estilo ](https://docs.angular.lat/guide/docs-style-guide).
* **Code examples**: code examples need to be testable to ensure their accuracy.
Also, our examples have a specific look and feel and allow the user to copy the source code. For larger
examples they are rendered in a tabbed interface (e.g. template, HTML, and TypeScript on separate
tabs). Additionally, some are live examples, which provide links where the code can be edited, executed, and/or downloaded. For details on working with code examples, please read the [Code snippets](https://angular.io/guide/docs-style-guide#code-snippets), [Source code markup](https://angular.io/guide/docs-style-guide#source-code-markup), and [Live examples](https://angular.io/guide/docs-style-guide#live-examples) pages of the [Authors Style Guide](https://angular.io/guide/docs-style-guide).
Usamos la herramienta [dgeni](https://github.com/angular/dgeni) para convertir estos archivos en docs que se pueden ver en el doc-viewer.
Las [guías de estilo para Autores](https://docs.angular.lat/guide/docs-style-guide) prescriben pautas para
escribir páginas de guía, explica cómo usar la documentación de clases y componentes, y cómo marcar el código fuente para producir fragmentos de código.
We use the [dgeni](https://github.com/angular/dgeni) tool to convert these files into docs that can be viewed in the doc-viewer.
### Generando documentos completos
The [Authors Style Guide](https://angular.io/guide/docs-style-guide) prescribes guidelines for
writing guide pages, explains how to use the documentation classes and components, and how to markup sample source code to produce code snippets.
La principal tarea para generar los documentos es `yarn docs`. Esto procesará todos los archivos fuente (API y otros), extrayendo la documentación y generando archivos JSON que pueden ser consumidos por el doc-viewer.
### Generating the complete docs
### Generación parcial de doc para editores
The main task for generating the docs is `yarn docs`. This will process all the source files (API and other),
extracting the documentation and generating JSON files that can be consumed by the doc-viewer.
La generación completa de documentos puede llevar hasta un minuto. Eso es demasiado lento para la creación y edición eficiente de documentos.
### Partial doc generation for editors
Puedes ealizar pequeños cambios en un editor inteligente que muestre un markdown con formato:
>En VS Code, _Cmd-K, V_ abre la vista previa de markdown en el panel lateral; _Cmd-B_ alterna la barra izquierda
Full doc generation can take up to one minute. That's too slow for efficient document creation and editing.
Puedes también mirar los cambios que se muestran correctamente en el doc-viewer
con un tiempo de ciclo rápido de edición / visualización.
You can make small changes in a smart editor that displays formatted markdown:
>In VS Code, _Cmd-K, V_ opens markdown preview in side pane; _Cmd-B_ toggles left sidebar
Para este propósito, usa la tarea `yarn docs-watch`, que observa los cambios en los archivos de origen y solo vuelve a procesar los archivos necesarios para generar los documentos relacionados con el archivo que ha cambiado.
Dado que esta tarea tiene accesos directos, es mucho más rápido (a menudo menos de 1 segundo) pero no producirá contenido de fidelidad completa. Por ejemplo, los enlaces a otros documentoss y ejemplos de código pueden no mostrarse correctamente. Esto se nota especialmente en los enlaces a otros documentos y en los ejemplos incrustados, que no siempre se representan correctamente.
You also want to see those changes displayed properly in the doc viewer
with a quick, edit/view cycle time.
La configuración general es la siguiente:
For this purpose, use the `yarn docs-watch` task, which watches for changes to source files and only
re-processes the files necessary to generate the docs that are related to the file that has changed.
Since this task takes shortcuts, it is much faster (often less than 1 second) but it won't produce full
fidelity content. For example, links to other docs and code examples may not render correctly. This is
most particularly noticed in links to other docs and in the embedded examples, which may not always render
correctly.
The general setup is as follows:
* Open a terminal, ensure the dependencies are installed; run an initial doc generation; then start the doc-viewer:
* Abrir una terminal, estar seguro que las dependencias están instaladas; ejecutar una generación inicial del doc; luego iniciar el doc-viewer:
```bash
yarn setup
yarn start
```
* Open a second terminal and start watching the docs
* Abrir una segunda terminal e iniciar el observador de documentos.
```bash
yarn docs-watch
```
>Alternatively, try the consolidated `serve-and-sync` command that builds, watches and serves in the same terminal window
>Alternativamente, prueba el comando fusionado `serve-and-sync` que crea, observa y ejecuta en la misma ventana de la terminal
```bash
yarn serve-and-sync
```
* Open a browser at https://localhost:4200/ and navigate to the document on which you want to work.
You can automatically open the browser by using `yarn start -o` in the first terminal.
* Abre un navegador con la siguiente dirección https://localhost:4200/ y navega hasta el documento en el que quieras trabajar.
Puedes automáticamente abrir el navegador utilizando `yarn start -o` en la primera terminal.
* Make changes to the page's associated doc or example files. Every time a file is saved, the doc will
be regenerated, the app will rebuild and the page will reload.
* Realiza cambios en la página de documentación asociada o en los archivos de ejemplo. Cada vez que un archivo es guardado, la documentación se regenerará, la aplicación se reconstruirá y la página se volverá a cargar.
* If you get a build error complaining about examples or any other odd behavior, be sure to consult
the [Authors Style Guide](https://angular.io/guide/docs-style-guide).
*Si recibes un error de compilación acerca de los ejemplos o cualquier otro error, asegúrate de consultar las
[guías de estilo para Autores](https://angular.io/guide/docs-style-guide) para más información.
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.
## Installing Angular CLI
@ -109,9 +109,3 @@ Options that specify files can be given as absolute paths, or as paths relative
The [ng generate](cli/generate) and [ng add](cli/add) commands take as an argument the artifact or library to be generated or added to the current project.
In addition to any general options, each artifact or library defines its own options in a *schematic*.
Schematic options are supplied to the command in the same format as immediate command options.
### Building with Bazel
Optionally, you can configure the Angular CLI to use [Bazel](https://docs.bazel.build) as the build tool. For more information, see [Building with Bazel](guide/bazel).
Blocking a user prevents them from interacting with repositories, such as opening or commenting on pull requests or issues. Learn more about blocking a user.