Setting the angular_ivy_enabled environment variable to True will default Bazel builds to use the Ivy
compiler rather than defaulting to ViewEngine.
PR Close#43862
The package builder script should respect the `BAZEL` environment
variable for running Bazel. If not set, it can fallback to bazelisk
from the `node_modules`. Respecting this variable allows for users
with a global `bazel` binary. This is desirable in some situations,
like on Windows, where running Bazel inside of the Yarn environment
seems slower than running a global variant. This could appear like that
because projects might use different Bazel versions. In some cases,
developers would want to use a single (already-warmed-up) instance of
Bazel instead of launching different versions using bazelisk.
(e.g. when switching a lot between repos like COMP, FW or CLI..)
In any case, it doesn't hurt providing this flexibility for advanced
use-cases. It's low-effort to maintain and is respected in COMP as well.
PR Close#43431
Currently the ng-dev release tool always run `bazel clean` before
calling the configured build release function. The clean is necessary
to ensure the release output is actually built; and not restored
from previous builds which could have different bazel workspace
status variables (which provide the NPM package version).
Instead of doing this as part of the release tool, the
actual script running to build the release output should
run the `bazel clean`. The release tool does not intend to
know about details on how the release output is built. This
is necessary because the build setup could vary between version
branches (especially for older ones; such as LTS version branches).
PR Close#42101
This commit makes the build scripts for the various packages (framework,
`@angular/dev-infra-private`, `angular-in-memory-web-api`, `zone.js`)
consistent. This makes it easier to maintain them (e.g. make similar
changes across all build scripts).
PR Close#41429
The scripts that build the Angular and Zone.js NPM packages rely on
absolute paths in order to work correctly regardless of what the current
working directory is when the scripts are invoked. However, the
`npm pack` command executed in the `zone-js-builder.js` script outputs
the generated `.tgz` archive in the current working directory. This
causes the script to fail when invoked for any working directory other
than the project root directory.
This commit fixes this by ensuring the `npm pack` command is run with
the project root directory as the working directory. This allows the
build scripts to run correctly regardless of the working directory they
are invoked from.
PR Close#39455
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
In some cases, we want to test the AIO app or docs examples against the
locally built Angular packages (for example to ensure that the changes
in a commit do not introduce a breaking change). In order to achieve
this, we have the `ng-packages-installer` script that handles updating
a project's `package.json` file to use the locally built Angular
packages (and appropriate versions for their (dev-/peer-)dependencies).
Previously, `ng-packages-installer` would only consider the locally
built Angular packages (from `dist/packages-dist/`). However, given that
Zone.js is now part of the `angular/angular` repo, it makes sense to
also use the locally built Zone.js package (from `dist/zone.js-dist/`).
Otherwise, the tests might fail for commits that update both the Angular
packages (and related docs examples) and the Zone.js package. An example
of such a simultaneous change (that would have broken tests) is #33838.
This commit updates the script to install the locally built Zone.js
package (in addition to the Angular ones). The commit ensures that the
Zone.js package will always be available alongside the Angular packages
(i.e. that the Zone.js package will be built by the same script that
builds the Angular packages and that the `dist/zone.js-dist/` directory
will be cached on CI).
Note: This problem was discovered while enabling docs examples unit
tests in #34374.
PR Close#35858
This commit moves the build-related scripts
(`build-ivy-npm-packages.js`, `build-packages-dist.js` and
`package-builder.js`) to a dedicated directory to keep the `scripts/`
directory cleaner.
It also moves the logic for building the `zone.js` package to a separate
script, `zone-js-builder.js`, to make it re-usable. A subsequent commit
will use it to build the `zone.js` package when building the Ivy Angular
packages as well.
PR Close#35780
2020-03-04 08:35:26 -08:00
Renamed from scripts/package-builder.js (Browse further)