This commit is only useful to Google. It fixes that some code relies on
`readConfiguration`, but doesn't properly parse Angular compiler options
as those are part of `bazelOptions.angularCompilerOptions` if the
1P-generated tsconfig's are used.
PR Close#58637
Whenever the `ngc` binary is used directly to parse configurations, we
should try to respect the configured file system like we do in all other
places. Right now one spot where we escape the FS is for reading
directories to e.g. support tsconfig#includes.
This commit fixes this, implementing TypeScript's read directory method
leveraging the configured FS. The approach taken here was used for a
couple of months/years for Angular Material migrations and no issues
were found.
PR Close#57805
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
Currently `ngc-wrapped` mostly relies on any casts/or disabled
strictness checks to be able to use `tsickle`'s emit callback and
emit result merging for ngtsc. We should change this so that supertypes
of `ts.EmitResult` can be used in these optional callbacks- allowing us
to enable strictness checks in `packages/bazel/...` too.
PR Close#47893
This option has no longer any effect as Ivy is the only rendering engine.
BREAKING CHANGE: Angular compiler option `enableIvy` has been removed as Ivy is the only rendering engine.
PR Close#47346
In Bazel worker-land, workers which use incremental compilation must still
emit all declared outputs and cannot rely on these outputs persisting from
previous builds.
This commit adds a flag to `performCompilation` which can be used by the
worker infrastructure to instruct the compiler to always emit all possible
output files, regardless of any incremental build optimizations.
PR Close#46355
This commit finishes the removal of View Engine from the codebase, deleting
those pieces of @angular/compiler which were only used for VE.
Co-Authored-By: JoostK <joost.koehoorn@gmail.com>
PR Close#44368
Refs #42966.
Previously, a build when emitted one warning and no errors would fail with a non-zero exit code. This is not what users would expect, but had not been an issue before since the compiler did not actually emit any warnings. With upcoming extended template diagnostics and other warnings, this is now a case that needs to be supported. Warnings are printed to `stderr` as before, but `ngc` now exits with code `0` and the build is considered successful.
Implemented this by adding a new `expectedExitCode` parameter to `driveDiagnostics()` which asserts against the real exit code. Most importantly, it does not **require** the the build to pass since any exit code can be given, so it is up to the test to assert this as well as many messages printed to make sure they are acceptable. This is useful for testing warnings and ensuring the build still passes.
PR Close#43673
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
Now that `ReadonlyFileSystem` and `PathManipulation` interfaces are
available, this commit updates the compiler-cli to use these more
focussed interfaces.
PR Close#40281
Currently `readConfiguration` relies on the file system to perform disk
utilities needed to read determine a project configuration file and read
it. This poses a challenge for the language service, which would like to
use `readConfiguration` to watch and read configurations dependent on
extended tsconfigs (#39134). Challenges are at least twofold:
1. To test this, the langauge service would need to provide to the
compiler a mock file system.
2. The language service uses file system utilities primarily through
TypeScript's `Project` abstraction. In general this should correspond
to the underlying file system, but it may differ and it is better to
go through one channel when possible.
This patch alleviates the concern by directly providing to the compiler
a "ParseConfigurationHost" with read-only "file system"-like utilties.
For the language service, this host is derived from the project owned by
the language service.
For more discussion see
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1TrbT-m7bqyYZICmZYHjnJ7NG9Vzt5Rd967h43Qx8jw0/edit?usp=sharing
PR Close#39619
In CLI v10 there was a move to use the new solution-style tsconfig
which became available in TS 3.9.
The result of this is that the standard tsconfig.json no longer contains
important information such as "paths" mappings, which ngcc might need to
correctly compute dependencies.
ngcc (and ngc and tsc) infer the path to tsconfig.json if not given an
explicit tsconfig file-path. But now that means it infers the solution
tsconfig rather than one that contains the useful information it used to
get.
This commit logs a warning in this case to inform the developer
that they might not have meant to load this tsconfig and offer
alternative options.
Fixes#36386
PR Close#38003
The compiler exports a `formatDiagnostics` function which consumers can use
to print both ts and ng diagnostics. However, this function was previously
using the "old" style TypeScript diagnostics, as opposed to the modern
diagnostic printer which uses terminal colors and prints additional context
information.
This commit updates `formatDiagnostics` to use the modern formatter, plus to
update Ivy's negative error codes to Angular 'NG' errors.
The Angular CLI needs a little more work to use this function for printing
TS diagnostics, but this commit alone should fix Bazel builds as ngc-wrapped
goes through `formatDiagnostics`.
PR Close#34234
Prior to this change, the template source mapping details were always
built during the analysis phase, under the assumption that pre-analysed
templates would always correspond with external templates. This has
turned out to be a false assumption, as inline templates are also
pre-analyzed to be able to preload any stylesheets included in the
template.
This commit fixes the bug by capturing the template source mapping
details at the moment the template is parsed, which is either during the
preanalysis phase when preloading is available, or during the analysis
phase when preloading is not supported.
Tests have been added to exercise the template error mapping in
asynchronous compilations where preloading is enabled, similar to how
the CLI performs compilations.
Fixes#32538
PR Close#32544
Versions of CLI prior to angular/angular-cli@0e339ee did not expose the host.getModifiedResourceFiles() method.
This meant that null was being passed through to the IncrementalState.reconcile() method
to indicate that there were either no changes or the host didn't support that method.
This commit fixes a bug where we were checking for undefined rather than null when
deciding whether any resource files had changed, causing a null reference error to be thrown.
This bug was not caught by the unit testing because the tests set up the changed files
via a slightly different process, not having access to the CompilerHost, and these test
were making the erroneous assumption that undefined indicated that there were no
changed files.
PR Close#31322
To improve cross platform support, all file access (and path manipulation)
is now done through a well known interface (`FileSystem`).
For testing a number of `MockFileSystem` implementations are provided.
These provide an in-memory file-system which emulates operating systems
like OS/X, Unix and Windows.
The current file system is always available via the static method,
`FileSystem.getFileSystem()`. This is also used by a number of static
methods on `AbsoluteFsPath` and `PathSegment`, to avoid having to pass
`FileSystem` objects around all the time. The result of this is that one
must be careful to ensure that the file-system has been initialized before
using any of these static methods. To prevent this happening accidentally
the current file system always starts out as an instance of `InvalidFileSystem`,
which will throw an error if any of its methods are called.
You can set the current file-system by calling `FileSystem.setFileSystem()`.
During testing you can call the helper function `initMockFileSystem(os)`
which takes a string name of the OS to emulate, and will also monkey-patch
aspects of the TypeScript library to ensure that TS is also using the
current file-system.
Finally there is the `NgtscCompilerHost` to be used for any TypeScript
compilation, which uses a given file-system.
All tests that interact with the file-system should be tested against each
of the mock file-systems. A series of helpers have been provided to support
such tests:
* `runInEachFileSystem()` - wrap your tests in this helper to run all the
wrapped tests in each of the mock file-systems.
* `addTestFilesToFileSystem()` - use this to add files and their contents
to the mock file system for testing.
* `loadTestFilesFromDisk()` - use this to load a mirror image of files on
disk into the in-memory mock file-system.
* `loadFakeCore()` - use this to load a fake version of `@angular/core`
into the mock file-system.
All ngcc and ngtsc source and tests now use this virtual file-system setup.
PR Close#30921
Optimizations to skip compiling source files that had not changed
did not account for the case where only a resource file changes,
such as an external template or style file.
Now we track such dependencies and trigger a recompilation
if any of the previously tracked resources have changed.
This will require a change on the CLI side to provide the list of
resource files that changed to trigger the current compilation by
implementing `CompilerHost.getModifiedResourceFiles()`.
Closes#30947
PR Close#30954
The config path is an optional argument to `ts.parseJsonConfigFileContent`. When passed, it is added to the returned object as `options.configFilePath`, and `tsc` itself passes it in.
The new TS 3.4 [incremental](https://www.typescriptlang.org/docs/handbook/release-notes/typescript-3-4.html) build functionality relies on this property being present: 025d826339/src/compiler/emitter.ts (L56-L57)
When using The compiler-cli `readConfiguration` the config path option isn't passed, preventing consumers (like @ngtools/webpack) from obtaining a complete config object.
This PR fixes this omission and should allow JIT users of @ngtools/webpack to set the `incremental` option in their tsconfig and have it be used by the TS program.
I tested this in JIT and saw a small decrease in build times in a small project. In AOT the incremental option didn't seem to be used at all, due to how `ngc` uses the TS APIs.
Related to https://github.com/angular/angular-cli/issues/13941.
PR Close#29872
Currently setting `enableIvy` to true runs a hybrid mode of `ngc` and `ngtsc`. This is counterintuitive given the name of the flag itself.
This PR makes the `true` value equivalent to the previous `ngtsc`, and `ngtsc` becomes an alias for `true`. Effectively this removes the hybrid mode as well since there's no other way to enable it.
PR Close#28616
`TypeScript` only supports merging and extending of `compilerOptions`. This is an implementation to support extending and inheriting of `angularCompilerOptions` from multiple files.
Closes: #22684
PR Close#22717
ngc knows to filter out d.ts inputs, but the logic accidentally
depended on whether it had a previous Program lying around.
Fixing that logic puts ngc on the fast code path, but in that code
path it must be able to merge tsickle EmitResults, so we need to
plumb the tsickle.mergeEmitResults function through all the intervening
APIs. The bulk of this change is that plumbing.
PR Close#22899
The errors produced when error were encountered while interpreting the
content of a directive was often incomprehencible. With this change
these kind of error messages should be easier to understand and diagnose.
PR Close#20459
If no user files changed:
- only type check the changed generated files
Never emit non changed generated files
- we still calculate them, but don’t send them through
TypeScript to emit them but cache the written files instead.
PR Close#19646
For now, we always create all generated files, but diff them
before we pass them to TypeScript.
For the user files, we compare the programs and only emit changed
TypeScript files.
This also adds more diagnostic messages if the `—diagnostics` flag
is passed to the command line.
This flag controls whether the compiler emits generated files.
It is initially calculated via `skipTemplateCodegen` from the
compiler options.
Also:
- adds a small performance improvement to not generate the files
at all if we don’t emit generated code.
- removes `EmitFlags.Summaries` as we never used it.
PR Close#19275
We now create 2 programs with exactly the same fileNames and
exactly the same `import` / `export` declarations,
allowing TS to reuse the structure of first program
completely. When passing in an oldProgram and the files didn’t change,
TS can also reuse the old program completely.
This is possible buy adding generated files to TS
in `host.geSourceFile` via `ts.SourceFile.referencedFiles`.
This commit also:
- has a minor side effect on how we generate shared stylesheets:
- previously every import in a stylesheet would generate a new
`.ngstyles.ts` file.
- now, we only generate 1 `.ngstyles.ts` file per entry in `@Component.styleUrls`.
This was required as we need to be able to determine the program files
without loading the resources (which can be async).
- makes all angular related methods in `CompilerHost`
optional, allowing to just use a regular `ts.CompilerHost` as `CompilerHost`.
- simplifies the logic around `Compiler.analyzeNgModules` by introducing `NgAnalyzedFile`.
Perf impact: 1.5s improvement in compiling angular io
PR Close#19275
This speeds up the compilation process significantly.
Also introduces a new option `fullTemplateTypeCheck` to do more checks in templates:
- check expressions inside of templatized content (e.g. inside of `<div *ngIf>`).
- check the arguments of calls to the `transform` function of pipes
- check references to directives that were exposed as variables via `exportAs`
PR Close#19152
- temporarily keeps the old sources under packages/tsc-wrapped
until the build scripts are changed to use compiler-cli everywhere.
- removes the compiler options `disableTransformerPipeline` that was introduced
in a previous beta of Angular 5, i.e. the transformer based compiler
is now always enabled.
PR Close#18966