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#61316
We don't need this tooling anymore because we are already validating
that there are no circular dependencies via the `ng-dev` tooling that
checks `.ts` files directly.
Also these tests never actually failed to my knowledge.
PR Close#61209
This commit updates scripts within `packages/platform-browser-dynamic` to relative imports as a prep work to the upcoming infra updates.
PR Close#60559
Previously, `platformBrowserTesting` did not include any `platformBrowser` providers, causing an inconsistency with `platformBrowserDynamicTesting`.
This update resolves the issue by restructuring platform inheritance to ensure proper provider inclusion:
- `platformCore → platformBrowser → platformBrowserTesting`
- `platformBrowser → platformBrowserDynamic → platformBrowserDynamicTesting`
Now, `platformBrowserTesting` correctly inherits from `platformBrowser`, aligning with the expected behavior.
PR Close#60480
This commit moves `DOMTestComponentRenderer` to `@angular/platform-browser/testing`, allowing the Angular CLI to eliminate its dependency on `@angular/platform-browser-dynamic`, which would no longer be required for new projects.
PR Close#60453
With the recent changes to the APF bundling rules, we turned on
tree-shaking in rollup to support proper code splitting for FESM bundles.
This resulted in Rollup re-ordering imports in the FESM bundles of
`@angular/platform-browser-dynamic`— highlighting that over the past
years, this package "accidentally" resulted in the side-effects of the
compiler registering itself globally.
This continues to be the case, and our changes generally didn't cause
any issues in CLI applications because the CLI explicitly wires up the
compiler (as expected) before `-dynamic` is even loaded. For custom
setup, like Analog, this order change surfaced a breakage because e.g.
`@angular/common` with its JIT decorators of e.g. directives/services
are triggered before the compiler is actually loaded/made available.
This commit fixes this. The explicit imports in practice are a noop
because our FESM bundling doesn't recognize compiler as side-effects
true; but marking the whole -dynamic package as having side-effects;
prevents rollup from swapping the import order. Long-term, we should
look into improving this by teaching `ng_package` that e.g. the compiler
has side-effects; so that the `import @angular/compiler` statement is
not dropped when constructing FESM bundles.
PR Close#60458
In order to investigate the performances of SSR, this commit introduces a benchmark suite which will measure several step of the rendering.
PR Close#57647
`DOCUMENT` instances retrieved from DI may not contain a necessary function to complete the cleanup. In tests that don't interact with DOM, the `DOCUMENT` might be mocked and some functions might be missing. For such tests, DOM cleanup is not required and we can skip DOM cleanup logic if there are missing functions. For tests that use DOM, TestBed would behave the same as before and rely on more complete `DOCUMENT` instances.
PR Close#56422
A lot of our tests are wrapped in `{}` which serves no purpose, aside from increasing the nesting level and, in some cases, causing confusion. The braces appear to be a leftover from a time when all tests were wrapped in a `function main() {}`. The function declaration was removed in #21053, but the braces remained, presumably because it was easier to search&replace for `function main()`, but not to remove the braces at the same time.
PR Close#52239
This adds `generate_api_docs` targets to all of the packages for which we publish api reference docs. One known issue here is that any type information that comes from another package (e.g. router depending on core) currently resolve to `any` because the other sources are not available in the program. This can be tackled in a follow-up commit.
This commit also updates the install patch for `@angular/build-tools` to use the local version of compiler-cli.
PR Close#52034
BREAKING CHANGE: Node.js v16 support has been removed and the minimum support version has been bumped to 18.13.0.
Node.js v16 is planned to be End-of-Life on 2023-09-11. Angular will stop supporting Node.js v16 in Angular v17. For Node.js release schedule details, please see: https://github.com/nodejs/release#release-schedule
PR Close#51755
JSDoc comments should start with 2 stars or the annotations would not be picked up by the AIO workflow.
With this fix, the internal methods are no longer visible in the doc.
PR Close#50893
This commit updates the minimum supported Node version across packages from 16.13.0 -> 16.14.0 to ensure compatibility with dependencies.
PR Close#49771
This commits updates the render to able to handle the slight differences between platform-server and platform-browser.
This is needed to eventually be able to remove `ServerRendererFactory2` and `EmulatedEncapsulationServerRenderer2` from platform-server.
PR Close#49630
BREAKING CHANGE: Node.js v14 support has been removed
Node.js v14 is planned to be End-of-Life on 2023-04-30. Angular will stop supporting Node.js v14 in Angular v16. Angular v16 will continue to officially support Node.js versions v16 and v18.
PR Close#49255
Since we generate a `.mjs` file as entry-point for jasmine tests,
a couple of issues prevented the transitive dependencies from
bootstrap targets to be brought in (causing resolution errors):
1. The `_files` (previously `_esm2015`) targets are no longer needed,
and they also miss all the information on runfiles.
2. The aspect for computing linker mappings does not respect the
`bootstrap` attribute from the `spec_entrypoint` so we manually
add the extract ESM output targets (this rule works with the aspect
and forwards linker mappings).
PR Close#48521
For every `ts_library` target we expose a shorthand that grants
access to the JS files because `DefaultInfo` of a ts library
only exposes the `.d.ts` files.
We rename this away from `es2015` since in practice it's a much
higher target these days. Additionally we no longer use the devmode
output but rather use the prodmode output which has the explicit
`.mjs` output- compatible with ESM.
PR Close#48521
This change aligns with the supported Node.js versions of the Angular CLI.
See: https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/pull/24026
BREAKING CHANGE: Angular no longer supports Node.js versions `14.[15-19].x` and `16.[10-12].x`. Current supported versions of Node.js are `14.20.x`, `16.13.x` and `18.10.x`.
PR Close#47730
This commits update `isDevMode` to rely on the `ngDevMode` which in the CLI is set by the bundler.
We also update `@angular/platform-dynamic-browser` and `@angular/compiler` to remove usage of `jitDevMode`, with this change we remove all internal usages of `isDevMode`.
PR Close#47475
Speeds up the dev-turnaround by only bundling types when packaging. Currently
bundling occurs for all the `ng_module` targets in devmode.
This has various positive benefits:
* Avoidance of this rather slower operation in development
* Makes APF-built packages also handle types for `ts_library` targets consistently.
* Allows us to ensure APF entry-points have `d.ts` _always_ bundled (working with ESM
module resolution in TypeScript -- currently experimental)
* Allows us to remove the secondary `package.json` files from APF (maybe APF v14? - seems
low-impact). This would clean-up the APF even more and fix resolution issues (like in Vite)
PR Close#45405
Node.js v12 will become EOL on 2022-04-30. As a result, Angular CLI v14 will no longer support Node.js v12.
BREAKING CHANGE:
Support for Node.js v12 has been removed as it will become EOL on 2022-04-30. Please use Node.js v14.15 or later.
PR Close#45286