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
The `DowngradeComponentAdapter` adapter was assuming that all outputs are observables, but they can also be `OutputEmitterRef`.
Fixes#60366.
PR Close#60369
`@angular/upgrade` writes to inputs when downgrading an Angular 2+ component
into an Angular.JS adapter. Previously, it wrote directly to the input
property, which isn't compatible with input signals. It also handles
`ngOnChanges` directly.
The correct way to support input signals would be to refactor upgrade to use
`ComponentRef.setInput`, which also handles `ngOnChanges` internally.
However, this refactoring might be more breaking since it would change the
timing of certain operations. Instead, this commit updates the code to
recognize `InputSignal` and write it through the `InputSignalNode`. This
avoids the above breaking changes for now, until a bigger refactoring can be
tested.
Fixes#56860.
PR Close#57020
Angular applications that are AngularJS hybrids are currently unable to
adopt Trusted Types due to violations eminating from an innerHTML
assignment in the @angular/upgrade package. This commit allows
developers of such applications to optionally ignore this class of
violations by configuring the Trusted Types header to allow the new
angular#unsafe-upgrade policy.
Note that the policy is explicitly labeled as unsafe as it does not in
any way mitigate the security risk of using AngularJS in an Angular
application, but does unblock Trusted Types adoption enabling XSS
protection for other parts of the application.
The implementation follows the approach taken in @angular/core;
see packages/core/src/util/security.
PR Close#57454
These changes replace most usages of `removeChild` with `remove`. The latter has the advantage of not having to look up the `parentNode` and ensure that the child being removed actually belongs to the specific parent.
The refactor should be fairly safe since all the browsers we cover support `remove`. [Something similar was done in Components](https://github.com/angular/components/pull/23592) some time ago and there haven't been any bug reports as a result.
PR Close#57203
This commit removes the long-deprecated Testability methods that track
pending tasks. This is done by NgZone today and will be done by other
APIs in zoneless.
BREAKING CHANGE: Testability methods `increasePendingRequestCount`,
`decreasePendingRequestCount` and `getPendingRequestCount` have been
removed. This information is tracked with zones.
PR Close#53768
The `inject` global augmentation from upgrade tests, leak into
all source files for IDEs, making it easy to run into issues
when actually trying to deal with `inject` from Angular core for DI.
PR Close#54650
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
Currently internally Angular has some customized tsconfig files, because we don't align with the tsconfig of the rest of g3. These changes enable `noImplicitReturns` and `noPropertyAccessFromIndexSignature` to align better with the internal config.
PR Close#51728
In the past, we had an implementation of the "Angular 2" router that
also worked with AngularJS. Published as `@angular/router`. We continued
to expose that router implementation in G3 and some applications still
use it. Now, when upgrading, they are seeing issues where the router
throws because it cannot find a route config/ or `$canActivate` on the
controller- simply because there is no `controller` function for
downgraded components.
We can fix this and unblock the update by simply ensuring a controller
function is defined.
PR Close#50871
`entryComponents` have been deprecated since version 9, because with Ivy they weren't necessary. These changes remove any remaining references.
BREAKING CHANGE:
* `entryComponents` has been deleted from the `@NgModule` and `@Component` public APIs. Any usages can be removed since they weren't doing anyting.
* `ANALYZE_FOR_ENTRY_COMPONENTS` injection token has been deleted. Any references can be removed.
PR Close#49484
To remove the non-null assertions linked to #24571, DowngradeComponentAdapter has been refactored and the public methods have been simplifed.
PR Close#48715
The `Directive` and `Component` decorators support `inputs` and `outputs` fields which accept an array in the format of `"someInput"` or `"someInput: someAlias"`, however the parsing during JIT compilation was splitting on commas, not on colons, which resulted in incorrect parsing. E.g. `inputs: ["someInput: someAlias"]` was being parsed into `{"someInput: someAlias": "someInput: someAlias"}` instead of `{someInput: "someAlias"}`.
The feature was working by accident, because there's some logic further down in the compiler pipeline that was splitting the strings again.
PR Close#46813
.substr() is deprecated so we replace it with functions which work similarily but aren't deprecated
Signed-off-by: Tobias Speicher <rootcommander@gmail.com>
PR Close#45397
Fixes a couple of tests that have been flaking our test runs. The two tests actually failed consistently when run in isolation, but they passed if at least one test ran before them. My understanding was that they failed, because they were running outside of the `NgZone` which meant that the errors being thrown inside of a `Promise` weren't being flushed.
PR Close#44597
This commit extends the logic of the `downgradeModule` function to support NgModule class as an argument. This is needed to simplify the API surface to avoid the need to resolve NgModule factory before invoking the `downgradeModule` method.
PR Close#43973
Rollup just prints a warning if an import cannot be resolved and ends up
being treated as an external dependency. This in combination with the
`silent = True` attribute for `rollup_bundle` means that bundles might
end up being extremely small without people noticing that it misses
actual imports.
To improve this situation, the warning is replaced by an error if
an import cannot be resolved.
This unveiles an issue with the `ng_rollup_bundle` macro from
dev-infra where imports in View Engine were not resolved but ended
up being treated as external. This did not prevent benchmarks using
this macro from working because the ConcatJS devserver had builtin
resolution for workspace manifest paths. Though given the new check
for no unresolved imports, this will now cause errors within Rollup, and
we need to fix the resolution. We can fix the issue by temporarily
enabling workspace linking. This does not have any performance
downsides.
To enable workspace linking (which we might need more often in the
future given the linker taking over patched module resolution), we
had to rename the `angular` dependency to a more specific one so
that the Angular linker could link into `node_modules/angular`.
PR Close#42760
This commit moves the code for cleaning jqLite/jQuery data on an element
to a re-usable helper function. This way it is easier to keep the code
consistent across all places where we need to clean data (now and in the
future).
PR Close#40045
Previously, due to the way the AngularJS and Angular clean-up processes
interfere with each other when removing an AngularJS element that
contains a downgraded Angular component, the data associated with the
host element of the downgraded component was not removed. This data was
kept in an internal AngularJS cache, which prevented the element and
component instance from being garbage-collected, leading to memory
leaks.
This commit fixes this by ensuring the element data is explicitly
removed when cleaning up a downgraded component.
NOTE:
This is essentially the equivalent of #26209 but for downgraded (instead
of upgraded) components.
Fixes#39911Closes#39921
PR Close#39965
We intend to run the `@angular/upgrade` tests against all supported
versions of AngularJS (v1.5+). Previously, we only ran them against
v1.5, v1.6 and v1.7.
Since AngularJS v1.8 was released recently, this commit adds it to the
list of AngularJS versions we test against.
PR Close#39972