* Move createRoot/hydrateRoot to /client
We want these APIs ideally to be imported separately from things you
might use in arbitrary components (like flushSync). Those other methods
are "isomorphic" to how the ReactDOM tree is rendered. Similar to hooks.
E.g. importing flushSync into a component that only uses it on the client
should ideally not also pull in the entry client implementation on the
server.
This also creates a nicer parity with /server where the roots are in a
separate entry point.
Unfortunately, I can't quite do this yet because we have some legacy APIs
that we plan on removing (like findDOMNode) and we also haven't implemented
flushSync using a flag like startTransition does yet.
Another problem is that we currently encourage these APIs to be aliased by
/profiling (or unstable_testing). In the future you don't have to alias
them because you can just change your roots to just import those APIs and
they'll still work with the isomorphic forms. Although we might also just
use export conditions for them.
For that all to work, I went with a different strategy for now where the
real API is in / but it comes with a warning if you use it. If you instead
import /client it disables the warning in a wrapper. That means that if you
alias / then import /client that will inturn import the alias and it'll
just work.
In a future breaking changes (likely when we switch to ESM) we can just
remove createRoot/hydrateRoot from / and move away from the aliasing
strategy.
* Update tests to import from react-dom/client
* Fix fixtures
* Update warnings
* Add test for the warning
* Update devtools
* Change order of react-dom, react-dom/client alias
I think the order matters here. The first one takes precedence.
* Require react-dom through client so it can be aliased
Co-authored-by: Andrew Clark <git@andrewclark.io>
* Remove object-assign polyfill
We really rely on a more modern environment where this is typically
polyfilled anyway and we don't officially support IE with more extensive
polyfilling anyway. So all environments should have the native version
by now.
* Use shared/assign instead of Object.assign in code
This is so that we have one cached local instance in the bundle.
Ideally we should have a compile do this for us but we already follow
this pattern with hasOwnProperty, isArray, Object.is etc.
* Transform Object.assign to now use shared/assign
We need this to use the shared instance when Object.spread is used.
* Remove deprecated folder mapping
Node v16 deprecated the use of trailing "/" to define subpath folder
mappings in the "exports" field of package.json.
The recommendation is to explicitly list all our exports. We already do
that for all our public modules. I believe the only reason we have a
wildcard pattern is because our package.json files are also used at
build time (by Rollup) to resolve internal source modules that don't
appear in the final npm artifact.
Changing trailing "/" to "/*" fixes the warnings. See
https://nodejs.org/api/packages.html#subpath-patterns for more info.
Since the wildcard pattern only exists so our build script has access to
internal at build time, I've scoped the wildcard to "/src/*". Because
our public modules are located outside the "src" directory, this means
deep imports of our modules will no longer work: only packages that are
listed in the "exports" field.
The only two affected packages are react-dom and react. We need to be
sure that all our public modules are still reachable. I audited the
exports by comparing the entries to the "files" field in package.json,
which represents a complete list of the files that are included in the
final release artifact.
At some point, we should add an e2e packaging test to prevent
regressions; for now, we should have decent coverage because in CI we
run our Jest test suite against the release artifacts.
* Remove umd from exports
Our expectation is that if you're using the UMD builds, you're not
loading them through a normal module system like require or import.
Instead you're probably copying the files directly or loading them from
a CDN like unpkg.
* Add .browser and .node explicit entry points
This can be useful when the automatic selection doesn't work properly.
* Remove react/index
I'm not sure why I added this in the first place. Perhaps due to how our
builds work somehow.
* Remove build-info.json from files field
This configures the exports field for react-dom.
Notably there are some conditions for the /server entry point where we pick
the export based on environments. Most environments now support Web Streams
which is preferred in those environments.
We already do this using the "browser" field so the "browser" condition
applies here too.
I don't think it's necessary, but I also specified "worker" explicitly
since this is for Service Workers and those are often targeted with
Web Pack's "webworker" target, which is also what Cloudflare currently
recommends.
I also added "deno" but deno is a bit special because this only works if
you run with the node compatibility since otherwise you have to specify
absolute URLs for the imports.
This change adds a new "react-dom/unstable_testing" entry point but I believe its contents will exactly match "react-dom/index" for the stable build. (The experimental build will have the added new selector APIs.)
* Bump version number
* Remove Scheduler indirection
I originally kept the React PriorityLevel and Scheduler PriorityLevel
types separate in case there was a versioning mismatch between the two
modules. However, it looks like we're going to keep the Scheduler module
private in the short to medium term, and longer term the public
interface will match postTask. So, I've removed the extra indirection
(the switch statements that convert between the two types).
* Fixed invalid DevTools work tags
Work tags changed recently (PR #13902) but we didn't bump React versions. This meant that DevTools has valid work tags only for master (and FB www sync) but invalid work tags for the latest open source releases. To fix this, I incremneted React's version in Git (without an actual release) and added a new fork to the work tags detection branch.
This commit also adds tags for the experimental Scope and Fundamental APIs to DevTools so component names will at least display correctly. Technically these new APIs were first introduced to experimental builds ~16.9 but I didn't add a new branch to the work tags fork because I don't they're used commonly. I've just added them to the 17+ branches.
* Removed FundamentalComponent from DevTools tag defs
The publish script was written before we switched to running patch
releases out-of-band, so when updating the local package.json version
numbers, it accidentally reverted other changes that have landed to
master since 16.13 was released.
* Move Flight DOM to Webpack Specific Packagee
We'll have Webpack specific coupling so we need to ensure that it can be
versioned separately from various Webpack versions. We'll also have builds
for other bundlers in the future.
* Move to peerDep
* Move DOM Flight Tests
* Merge ReactFlightIntegration into ReactFlightDOM
This was an integration test. We can add to it.
* Fix fixture paths
* Change demo to server
* Expose client in package.json
* Reorganize tests
We don't want unit tests but instead test how both server and clients work
together. So this merges server/client test files.
* Fill in the client implementation a bit
* Use new client in fixture
* Add Promise/Uint8Array to lint rule
I'll probably end up deleting these deps later but they're here for now.
* Add Flight Build and Unify HostFormat Config between Flight and Fizz
* Add basic resolution of models
* Add basic Flight fixture
Demonstrates the streaming protocol.
* Rename to flight-server to distinguish from the client parts
* Add Flight Client package and entry point
* Fix fixture
Specifying the directory as part of the `repository` field in a `package.json`
allows third party tools to provide better support when working with monorepos.
For example, it allows them to correctly construct a commit diff for a specific
package.
This format was accepted by npm in https://github.com/npm/rfcs/pull/19.
* [Fizz] Add Flow/Jest/Rollup build infra
Add a new package for react-stream which allows for custom server renderer
outputs. I picked the name because it's a reasonable name but also
because the npm name is currently owned by a friend of the project.
The react-dom build has its own inlined server renderer under the
name `react-dom/fizz`.
There is also a noop renderer to be used for testing. At some point
we might add a public one to test-renderer but for now I don't want to have
to think about public API design for the tests.
* Add FormatConfig too
We need to separate the format (DOM, React Native, etc) from the host
running the server (Node, Browser, etc).
* Basic wiring between Node, Noop and DOM configs
The Node DOM API is pipeToNodeStream which accepts a writable stream.
* Merge host and format config in dynamic react-stream entry point
Simpler API this way but also avoids having to fork the wrapper config.
Fixes noop builds.
* Add setImmediate/Buffer globals to lint config
Used by the server renderer
* Properly include fizz.node.js
Also use forwarding to it from fizz.js in builds so that tests covers
this.
* Make react-stream private since we're not ready to publish
or even name it yet
* Rename Renderer -> Streamer
* Prefix react-dom/fizz with react-dom/unstable-fizz
* Add Fizz Browser host config
This lets Fizz render to WHATWG streams. E.g. for rendering in a
Service Worker.
I added react-dom/unstable-fizz.browser as the entry point for this.
Since we now have two configurations of DOM. I had to add another
inlinedHostConfigs configuration called `dom-browser`. The reconciler
treats this configuration the same as `dom`. For stream it checks
against the ReactFizzHostConfigBrowser instead of the Node one.
* Add Fizz Browser Fixture
This is for testing server rendering - on the client.
* Lower version number to detach it from react-reconciler version