`Resource.error` used to return `unknown`. Now it's `Error | undefined`.
For non-`Error` types they are encapsulated with the `Error` type.
PR Close#61441
The observable terminates immediately when `error` is called, and no further emissions or completion notifications occur. Thus, we have to remove the `abort` listener in both the `error` and `complete` notifications.
PR Close#58306
Streams left in a pending state (due to `break` without cancel) may continue consuming or holding onto data behind the scenes. Calling `reader.cancel()` allows the browser or the underlying system to release any network or memory resources associated with the stream.
PR Close#61528
In other parts of the code, calls to the `assertInInjectionContext` function are guarded with `ngDevMode`. This change aligns these parts of the code with other implementations that drop such assertions in production.
PR Close#61564
These helpers are often imported by various tests throughout the
repository, but the helpers aren't exported/exposed from the public
entry-point; even though they confusingly reside in there.
This commit fixes this, and moves the helpers into
`packages/private/testing`. This is a preparation for the `ts_project`
migration where we don't want to leverage deep imports between packages.
PR Close#61472
Migrates `packages/core/schematics` to `ts_project`. As part of this,
this commit cleans up some of the mixed module types and tsconfigs in
the folder. A single tsconfig (and it's test variant) are now used.
For the shipped schematics, we explicitly use the `.cjs` extension, so
that the bundles are properly recognized as CommonJS; even if they are
part of the `type: module` `@angular/core` package.
The `package.json` with `type: commonjs` is removed from
`packages/core/schematics` as it's no longer needed given the explicit
extension & caused issues as schematics are compiled with ESM but are
only later bundled for shipping & some tests as ESM.
PR Close#61370
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
This aligns with how angular/components marks their hidden APIs.
`@nodoc` has been broken since the switch to adev, this change should
properly hide the APIs again.
PR Close#61194
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#61156
There is nothing in the Router that requires ZoneJS and we do not need
`fakeAsync` as a mock clock. We can instead use any mock clock implementation
to speed up test execution.
This removes ZoneJS completely from the bundle of the Router tests.
ZoneJS causes the stacks to be unreadable when combined with the massive
rxjs stack in the router transition.
PR Close#61078
According to the promise specification, promises are not cancellable by default.
Once a promise is created, it will either resolve or reject, and it doesn't
provide a built-in mechanism to cancel it.
There may be situations where a promise is provided, and it either resolves after
the pipe has been destroyed or never resolves at all. If the promise never
resolves — potentially due to factors beyond our control, such as third-party
libraries — this can lead to a memory leak.
When we use `async.then(updateLatestValue)`, the engine captures a reference to the
`updateLatestValue` function. This allows the promise to invoke that function when it
resolves. In this case, the promise directly captures a reference to the
`updateLatestValue` function. If the promise resolves later, it retains a reference
to the original `updateLatestValue`, meaning that even if the context where
`updateLatestValue` was defined has been destroyed, the function reference remains in memory.
This can lead to memory leaks if `updateLatestValue` is no longer needed or if it holds
onto resources that should be released.
When we do `async.then(v => ...)` the promise captures a reference to the lambda
function (the arrow function).
When we assign `updateLatestValue = null` within the context of an `unsubscribe` function,
we're changing the reference of `updateLatestValue` in the current scope to `null`.
The lambda will no longer have access to it after the assignment, effectively
preventing any further calls to the original function and allowing it to be garbage collected.
If Chrome is built with additional flags and run with `--allow-natives-syntax --track-retaining-path`,
we could use `%DebugTrackRetainingPath` to see the distance from the root for `updateLatestValue`
if it's passed directly to async.then, e.g.:
```js
%DebugTrackRetainingPath(updateLatestValue);
// Distance from root 4: 0x123456789abc <JSPromise (sfi = 0x1fbb02e2d7f1)>
```
PR Close#58041
Replaces `PLATFORM_ID` checks with `ngServerMode` within the `HttpXsrfCookieExtractor`. It is not part of the public API, and thus this change should not affect consumers who may have called the constructor directly.
PR Close#59810
As the function in the factory was named `httpResourceRef`, error NG0203 had with the following message:
```
Error: NG0203: httpResourceRef() can only be used within an injection context such as a constructor, a factory function, a field initializer, or a function used with `runInInjectionContext`. Find more at https://angular.dev/errors/NG0203
```
PR Close#60022
This commit adds support for the Fetch API's keepalive option when using HttpClient with the withFetch provider.
The change includes:
- Added keepalive to HttpRequestInit interface
- Modified FetchBackend to pass the option
- Added some unit test
PR Close#60621
As decided in the resource RFC, this commit renames the `request` option of
a resource to `params`, including the subsequent argument passed to the
loader. It also corrects the type in the process to properly allow narrowing
of the `undefined` value.
Fixes#58871
PR Close#60919
An outcome of the Resource RFC was that we should use string constants for
communicating the resource status instead of an enum. This commit converts
`ResourceStatus` accordingly.
PR Close#60919
Remove the code related to exposing the response of an HTTP request as a
`Resource` itself, as the final API will not go in this direction.
PR Close#60919
Instead of stabilizing the TestBed.flushEffects() API we intend to
replace it with the tick() method (equivalent of ApplicationRef.tick().
The reasoning here is that we prefer tests running the entire
synchronization process (as in production apps) instead of invoking
parts of the synchronization process in a way that would naver happen
in a running application.
PR Close#60959
Currently the HTTP status code and headers are only included if the request succeeded. Given status codes convey more information in case of a request error vs. success, this makes it more useful than inspecting what is contained in `.error()`.
PR Close#60802
This commit updates the `HttpClient` internals to use the public
`PendingTasks` API which delays stability until the next
`ApplicationRef.tick` instead of causing the application to become
stable synchronously. This is helpful to resolve unexpected issues where
computations happen as follow-up work to the value coming out of the
response.
fixes https://github.com/angular/angular/issues/59352
PR Close#60656
In this commit, we unsubscribe the `hasPendingTasks` subject to remove all active observers and enable granular garbage collection, as users may forget to unsubscribe manually when subscribing to `isStable`.
PR Close#59723
The non reactive usage ``httpResource(\`http://test/${myId()}\`` gave the false impression that it was reactive when the signal was invoked. We prevent any possibility of oversight by removing the non reactive signature.
PR Close#60537
Moves the `DOCUMENT` token from `common` into `core` since it's relevant for lots of SSR use cases and users shouldn't have to install `common` for it. The token is still exported through `common` for backwards compatibility.
PR Close#60663