The getters and setters for jsDocParsingMode in `host.ts` and
`ts_create_program_driver.ts` were suppressed with @ts-ignore to
support TypeScript 5.2, which lacked the property on `ts.CompilerHost`.
The minimum supported TypeScript is now 6.0, and `jsDocParsingMode`
is part of the public TypeScript API, so the suppressions can go.
(cherry picked from commit 7a146238ba)
As part of the Bazel toolchain migration we noticed that implicit types
generated by the TypeScript compiler sometimes end up referencing types
from other packages (i.e. cross-package imports).
These imports currently work just because the Bazel `ts_library` and
`ng_module` rules automatically inserted a `<amd-module
name="@angular/x" />` into `.d.ts` of packages. This helped TS figure
out how to import a given file. Notably this is custom logic that is not
occuring in vanilla TS or Angular compilations—so we will drop this
magic as part of the toolchain cleanup!
To improve code quality and keep the existing behavior working, we are
doing the following:
- adding a lint rule that reduces the risk of such imports breaking. The
failure scenario without the rule is that API goldens show unexpected
diffs, and types might be duplicated in a different package!
- keeping the `<amd-module` headers, but we manually insert them into
the package entry-points. This should ensure we don't regress
anywhere; while we also improved general safety around this above.
Long-term, isolated declarations or a lint rule from eslint-typescript
can make this even more robust.
PR Close#61312
When the AOT compiler creates a delegated host for a provided TypeScript CompilerHost,
it delegates functionality back to the original via a series of internal method delegations.
However, unlike other members of the CompilerHost, `jsDocParsingMode` is not a method
and cannot be delegated in this way. Attempting to call bind on the property will result
in a runtime error. Instead, `jsDocParsingMode` is now delegated via get/set accessors.
Additionally, the override of `getSourceFile` now has an updated type signature to reflect
the additional of the `jsDocParsingMode` option for the method.
This is a followup to #53126 which updates the other DelegatingCompilerHost.
PR Close#53292
Updates the repo to support TypeScript 5.3 and resolve any issues. Fixes include:
* Updating usages of TS compiler APIs to match their new signatures.
* In TS 5.3 negative numbers are represented as `PrefixUnaryExpression` instead of `NumericExpression`. These changes update all usages to account for it since passing a negative number into the old APIs results in a runtime error.
PR Close#52572
This commit updates parts of the FW to be ES2022 complaint.
These changes are needed to fix the following problems problems with using properties before they are initialized.
Example
```ts
class Foo {
bar = this.buz;
constructor(private buz: unknown){}
}
```
PR Close#49559
This commit updates parts of the FW to be ES2022 complaint.
These changes are needed to fix the following problems problems with using properties before they are initialized.
Example
```ts
class Foo {
bar = this.buz;
constructor(private buz: unknown){}
}
```
PR Close#49332
The previous commit 2e1dddec45 used `@ts-expect-error` to suppress the
current error, with the intent of being informed once that's no longer
an error, ie. when we updated to an upstream TS version that includes
this change.
However this unfortunately means the change is incompatible with the
fixed version, which prevents it from working with an updated TS version
in google3.
This change reverts back to the original `@ts-ignore` which is forwards
and backwards compatible, avoiding that problem (but unfortunately
losing the benefit of being notified once fixed).
PR Close#47636
The latest TypeScript compiler exposes the previously private field
`hasInvalidatedResolutions`. That breaks Angular in the newer TS,
because the new field would be required on DelegatingCompilerHost.
However we cannot just add the field here, because it's not present in
the older compiler.
This change adds the field for delegation, which works at runtime
because the field is present. It suppresses the compiler error using a
`// @ts-expect-error`, which should be removed once Angular moves to a
TSC version that includes this change.
PR Close#47585
Cleans up some of the temporary workarounds that were necessary in order to land support for TypeScript 4.5 since they're no longer necessary.
PR Close#44477
Adds support for TypeScript 4.5. Includes the following changes:
* Bumping the package versions.
* Fixing a few calls to `createExportSpecifier` and `createImportSpecifier` that require an extra parameter.
* Adding some missing methods to the TS compiler hosts.
* Fixing an issue in the TS mocks for the ngcc tests where a regex was too agressive and was trying to match a path like `/node_modules/@typescript/lib-es5`.
* Accounting for type-only import specifiers when reporting DI errors (see #43620).
Fixes#43620.
PR Close#44164
As outlined in the previous commit which enabled the `esModuleInterop`
TypeScript compiler option, we need to update all namespace imports
for `typescript` to default imports. This is needed to allow for
TypeScript to be imported at runtime from an ES module.
Similar changes are needed for modules like `semver` where the types incorrectly
suggest named exports that will not exist at runtime when imported from ESM.
This commit refactors all imports to match with the lint rule we have
configured in the previous commit. See the previous commit for more
details on why certain imports have been changed.
A special case are the imports to `@babel/core` and `@babel/types`. For
these a special interop is needed as both default imports, or named
imports break the other module format. e.g default imports would work
well for ESM, but it breaks for CJS. For CJS, the named imports would
only work, but in ESM, only the default export exist. We work around
this for now until the devmode is using ESM as well (which would be
consistent with prodmode and gives us more valuable test results). More
details on the interop can be found in the `babel_core.ts` files (two
interops are needed for both localize/or the compiler-cli).
PR Close#43431
Source files that contain directives or components that need an inline
type constructor or inline template type-check block would always be
considered as affected in incremental rebuilds. The inline operations
cause the source file to be updated in the TypeScript program that is
created for template type-checking, which becomes the reuse program
in a subsequent incremental rebuild.
In an incremental rebuild, the source files from the new user program
are compared to those from the reuse program. The updated source files
are not the same as the original source file from the user program, so
the incremental engine would mark the file which needed inline
operations as affected. This prevents incremental reuse for these files,
causing sub-optimal rebuild performance.
This commit attaches the original source file for source files that have
been updated with inline operations, such that the incremental engine
is able to compare source files using the original source file.
Fixes#42543
PR Close#42759
Generally, the compiler assumes that `ts.SourceFile`s are immutable objects.
If a new `ts.Program` is compared to an old one, and a `ts.SourceFile`
within that program has not changed its object identity, the compiler will
assume that its prior analysis and understanding of that source file is
still valid.
However, not all TypeScript workflows uphold this assumption. For
`ts.Program`s that originate from the `ts.LanguageService`, some source
files may be re-parsed or otherwise undergo mutations without changing their
object identity. This breaks the compiler's incremental workflow.
Within such environments, it's necessary to track source file changes
differently. In addition to object identity, it's necessary to compare a
"version" string associated with each source file, between when that file is
analyzed originally and when a new program is presented that still contains
it. It's possible for the object identity of the source file to be the same,
but the version string to have changed, indicating that the source file
should be treated as changed.
This commit adds an optional method `getSourceFileVersion` to the
`ProgramDriver`, to provide access to version information if available. When
this method is present, the compiler will build a map of source file version
strings, and use this map to augment identity comparison during incremental
compilation.
PR Close#41475
When multiple occurrences of the same package exist within a single
TypeScript compilation unit, TypeScript deduplicates the source files
by introducing redirected source file proxies. Such proxies are
recreated during an incremental compilation even if the original
declaration file did not change, which caused the compiler not to reuse
any work from the prior compilation.
This commit changes the incremental driver to recognize a redirected
source file and treat them as their unredirected source file.
PR Close#41448
`NgCompiler` previously had a notion of the "next" `ts.Program`, which
served two purposes:
* it allowed a client using the `ts.createProgram` API to query for the
latest program produced by the previous `NgCompiler`, as a starting
point for building the _next_ program that incorporated any new user
changes.
* it allowed the old `NgCompiler` to be queried for the `ts.Program` on
which all prior state is based, which is needed to compute the delta
from the new program to ultimately determine how much of the prior
state can be reused.
This system contained a flaw: it relied on the `NgCompiler` knowing when
the `ts.Program` would be changed. This works fine for changes that
originate in `NgCompiler` APIs, but a client of the `TemplateTypeChecker`
may use that API in ways that create new `ts.Program`s without the
`NgCompiler`'s knowledge. This caused the `NgCompiler`'s concept of the
"next" program to get out of sync, causing incorrectness in future
incremental analysis.
This refactoring cleans up the compiler's `ts.Program` management in
several ways:
* `TypeCheckingProgramStrategy`, the API which controls `ts.Program`
updating, is renamed to the `ProgramDriver` and extracted to a separate
ngtsc package.
* It loses its responsibility of determining component shim filenames. That
functionality now lives exclusively in the template type-checking package.
* The "next" `ts.Program` concept is renamed to the "current" program, as
the "next" name was misleading in several ways.
* `NgCompiler` now wraps the `ProgramDriver` used in the
`TemplateTypeChecker` to know when a new `ts.Program` is created,
regardless of which API drove the creation, which actually fixes the bug.
PR Close#41291