Commit Graph

41 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jan Kassens
346c7d4c43 straightford explicit types (#25253) 2022-09-13 17:57:38 -04:00
Jan Kassens
a473d08fce Update to Flow from 0.97 to 0.122 (#25204)
* flow 0.122
* update ReactModel type
2022-09-08 11:46:07 -04:00
Ricky
0de3ddf56e Remove Symbol Polyfill (again) (#25144) 2022-08-25 17:01:30 -04:00
Ricky
4175f05934 Temporarily feature flag numeric fallback for symbols (#24401) 2022-04-19 17:34:49 -04:00
David McCabe
577f2de46c enableCacheElement flag (#24131)
* enableCacheElement flag

* Update packages/shared/forks/ReactFeatureFlags.testing.js

Co-authored-by: Ricky <rickhanlonii@gmail.com>

* Update packages/shared/forks/ReactFeatureFlags.test-renderer.js

Co-authored-by: Ricky <rickhanlonii@gmail.com>

* Update packages/shared/forks/ReactFeatureFlags.native-oss.js

Co-authored-by: Ricky <rickhanlonii@gmail.com>

* Update packages/shared/ReactFeatureFlags.js

Co-authored-by: Ricky <rickhanlonii@gmail.com>

Co-authored-by: Dave McCabe <davemccabe@fb.com>
Co-authored-by: Ricky <rickhanlonii@gmail.com>
2022-03-20 20:41:02 -07:00
Sebastian Markbåge
72a933d289 Gate legacy hidden (#24047)
* Gate legacy hidden

* Gate tests

* Remove export from experimental
2022-03-09 11:48:03 -05:00
Sebastian Markbåge
57799b912d Add more feature flag checks (#24037) 2022-03-08 00:13:22 -05:00
Sebastian Markbåge
587e759302 Remove Numeric Fallback of Symbols (#23348)
This was already defeating the XSS issue that Symbols was meant to protect
against. So you were already supposed to use a polyfill for security.

We rely on real Symbol.for in Flight for Server Components so those require
real symbols anyway.

We also don't really support IE without additional polyfills anyway.
2022-02-23 18:08:30 -05:00
Luna Ruan
a6987bee73 add <TracingMarker> component boilerplate (#23275)
- Add Tracing Marker component type to React exports
- Add reconciler work tag
- Add devtools work tag
- Add boilerplate for the cache to render children

No functionality yet
2022-02-11 08:42:55 -08:00
Andrew Clark
e16d61c300 [Offscreen] Mount/unmount layout effects (#21386)
* [Offscreen] Mount/unmount layout effects

Exposes the Offscreen component type and implements basic support for
mount/unmounting layout effects when the visibility is toggled.

Mostly it works the same way as hidden Suspense trees, which use the
same internal fiber type. I had to add an extra bailout, though, that
doesn't apply to the Suspense case but does apply to Offscreen
components: a hidden Offscreen tree will eventually render at low
priority, and when we it does, its `subtreeTag` will have effects
scheduled on it. So I added a check to the layout phase where, if the
subtree is hidden, we skip over the subtree entirely. An alternate
design would be to clear the subtree flags in the render phase, but I
prefer doing it this way since it's harder to mess up.

We also need an API to enable the same thing for passive effects. This
is not yet implemented.

* Add test starting from hidden

Co-authored-by: Rick Hanlon <rickhanlonii@gmail.com>
2021-06-01 12:46:08 -07:00
Dan Abramov
4ecf11977c Remove the Fundamental internals (#20745) 2021-02-05 20:36:55 +00:00
Andrew Clark
efc57e5cbb Add built-in Suspense cache with support for invalidation (refreshing) (#20456) 2020-12-18 10:57:24 -08:00
Sebastian Markbåge
56e9feead0 Remove Blocks (#20138)
* Remove Blocks

* Remove Flight Server Runtime

There's no need for this now that the JSResource is part of the bundler
protocol. Might need something for Webpack plugin specifically later.

* Devtools
2020-10-30 23:03:45 -07:00
Sebastian Markbåge
39eb6d1765 Rename (#20134) 2020-10-29 18:58:32 -07:00
Sebastian Markbåge
ffd8423356 [Flight] Add support for Module References in transport protocol (#20121)
* Refactor Flight to require a module reference to be brand checked

This exposes a host environment (bundler) specific hook to check if an
object is a module reference. This will be used so that they can be passed
directly into Flight without needing additional wrapper objects.

* Emit module references as a special type of value

We already have JSON and errors as special types of "rows". This encodes
module references as a special type of row value. This was always the
intention because it allows those values to be emitted first in the stream
so that as a large models stream down, we can start preloading as early
as possible.

We preload the module when they resolve but we lazily require them as they
are referenced.

* Emit module references where ever they occur

This emits module references where ever they occur. In blocks or even
directly in elements.

* Don't special case the root row

I originally did this so that a simple stream is also just plain JSON.

However, since we might want to emit things like modules before the root
module in the stream, this gets unnecessarily complicated. We could add
this back as a special case if it's the first byte written but meh.

* Update the protocol

* Add test for using a module reference as a client component

* Relax element type check

Since Flight now accepts a module reference as returned by any bundler
system, depending on the renderer running. We need to drastically relax
the check to include all of them. We can add more as we discover them.

* Move flow annotation

Seems like our compiler is not happy with stripping this.

* Some bookkeeping bug

* Can't use the private field to check
2020-10-29 17:57:31 -07:00
Dominic Gannaway
b61174fb7b Remove the deprecated React Flare event system (#19520) 2020-08-05 15:13:29 +01:00
Dominic Gannaway
9102719baa Tidy up React Scope API (#19352) 2020-07-16 16:21:21 +01:00
Behnam Mohammadi
77e872217c Improve readability of isValidElementType (#19251)
* improve readability

* replace condition by switch/case

* replace condition by switch/case

* remove unnecessary braces

* replace switch/case to ifs

* replace switch/case to ifs

* fix by multiline if statements

* fix multiple if statements
2020-07-08 19:25:24 +01:00
Andrew Clark
8b9c4d1688 Expose LegacyHidden type and disable <div hidden /> API in new fork (#18891)
* Expose LegacyHidden type

I will use this internally at Facebook to migrate away from
<div hidden />. The end goal is to migrate to the Offscreen type, but
that has different semantics. This is an incremental step.

* Disable <div hidden /> API in new fork

Migrates to the unstable_LegacyHidden type instead. The old fork does
not support the new component type, so I updated the tests to use an
indirection that picks the correct API. I will remove this once the
LegacyHidden (and/or Offscreen) type has landed in both implementations.

* Add gated warning for `<div hidden />` API

Only exists so we can detect callers in www and migrate them to the new
API. Should not visible to anyone outside React Core team.
2020-05-11 20:02:08 -07:00
Brian Vaughn
22dc2e42bd Add experimental DebugTracing logger for internal use (#18531) 2020-04-15 19:10:15 -07:00
Sebastian Markbåge
e2c6702fca Remove ConcurrentMode and AsyncMode symbols (#18450)
This API was never released.
2020-04-01 10:18:52 -07:00
Sebastian Markbåge
a56309fb88 [Flight] Integrate Blocks into Flight (#18371)
* Resolve Server-side Blocks instead of Components

React elements should no longer be used to extract arbitrary data but only
for prerendering trees.

Blocks are used to create asynchronous behavior.

* Resolve Blocks in the Client

* Tests

* Bug fix relay JSON traversal

It's supposed to pass the original object and not the new one.

* Lint

* Move Noop Module Test Helpers to top level entry points

This module has shared state. It needs to be external from builds.

This lets us test the built versions of the Noop renderer.
2020-03-23 17:53:45 -07:00
Sebastian Markbåge
65bbda7f16 Rename Chunks API to Blocks (#18086)
Sounds like this is the name we're going with. This also helps us
distinguish it from other "chunking" implementation details.
2020-02-20 23:56:40 -08:00
Sebastian Markbåge
7dc9745427 [Flight] Chunks API (#17398)
* Add feature flags

* Add Chunk type and constructor

* Wire up Chunk support in the reconciler

* Update reconciler to reconcile Chunks against the render method

This allows the query and args to be updated.

* Drop the ref. Chunks cannot have refs anyway.

* Add Chunk checks in more missing cases

* Rename secondArg

* Add test and fix lazy chunks

Not really a supported use case but for consistency I guess.

* Fix fragment test
2019-12-18 18:25:43 +00:00
Dominic Gannaway
bd79be9b68 [react-core] Add experimental React Scope component API (#16587) 2019-08-29 12:06:51 +01:00
Dominic Gannaway
5098891193 [Flare] Redesign core event system (#16163) 2019-07-23 23:46:44 +01:00
Dominic Gannaway
2c4d61e102 Adds experimental fundamental interface (#16049) 2019-07-19 22:20:28 +01:00
Dominic Gannaway
8b88ac2592 [Flare] Remove event targets including TouchHitTarget (#16011) 2019-06-27 23:58:48 +01:00
Sebastian Markbåge
76864f7ff7 Add SuspenseList Component (#15902)
* Add SuspenseList component type

* Push SuspenseContext for SuspenseList

* Force Suspense boundaries into their fallback state

In the "together" mode, we do a second render pass that forces the
fallbacks to stay in place, if not all can unsuspend at once.

* Add test

* Transfer thennables to the SuspenseList

This way, we end up retrying the SuspenseList in case the nested boundary
that just suspended doesn't actually get mounted with this set of
thennables. This happens when the second pass renders the fallback
directly without first attempting to render the content.

* Add warning for unsupported displayOrder

* Add tests for nested sibling boundaries and nested lists

* Fix nested SuspenseList forwarding thennables

* Rename displayOrder to revealOrder

Display order has some "display list" connotations making it sound like
a z-index thing.

Reveal indicates that this isn't really about when something gets rendered
or is ready to be rendered. It's about when content that is already there
gets to be revealed.

* Add test for avoided boundaries

* Make SuspenseList a noop in legacy mode

* Use an explicit suspense list state object

This will be used for more things in the directional case.
2019-06-19 19:34:28 -07:00
Dominic Gannaway
0c03a47436 Adds experimental event API scaffolding (#15108)
* Adds experimental event API scaffolding
2019-03-14 17:02:42 +00:00
Dan Abramov
769b1f270e pure -> memo (#13905) 2018-10-20 12:46:23 -04:00
Andrew Clark
d9659e499e Lazy components must use React.lazy (#13885)
Removes support for using arbitrary promises as the type of a React
element. Instead, promises must be wrapped in React.lazy. This gives us
flexibility later if we need to change the protocol.

The reason is that promises do not provide a way to call their
constructor multiple times. For example:

const promiseForA = new Promise(resolve => {
  fetchA(a => resolve(a));
});

Given a reference to `promiseForA`, there's no way to call `fetchA`
again. Calling `then` on the promise doesn't run the constructor again;
it only attaches another listener.

In the future we will likely introduce an API like `React.eager` that
is similar to `lazy` but eagerly calls the constructor. That gives us
the ability to call the constructor multiple times. E.g. to increase
the priority, or to retry if the first operation failed.
2018-10-18 19:57:12 -07:00
Dan Abramov
8af6728c6f Enable Suspense + rename Placeholder (#13799)
* Enable Suspense

* <unstable_Placeholder delayMs> => <unstable_Suspense maxDuration>

* Update suspense fixture
2018-10-10 17:02:04 +01:00
Andrew Clark
a0733fe13d pure (#13748)
* pure

A higher-order component version of the `React.PureComponent` class.
During an update, the previous props are compared to the new props. If
they are the same, React will skip rendering the component and
its children.

Unlike userspace implementations, `pure` will not add an additional
fiber to the tree.

The first argument must be a functional component; it does not work
with classes.

`pure` uses shallow comparison by default, like `React.PureComponent`.
A custom comparison can be passed as the second argument.

Co-authored-by: Andrew Clark <acdlite@fb.com>
Co-authored-by: Sophie Alpert <sophiebits@fb.com>

* Warn if first argument is not a functional component
2018-09-27 15:25:38 -07:00
Dominic Gannaway
0dc0ddc1ef Rename AsyncMode -> ConcurrentMode (#13732)
* Rename AsyncMode -> ConcurrentMode
2018-09-26 17:13:02 +01:00
Héctor Ramos
b87aabdfe1 Drop the year from Facebook copyright headers and the LICENSE file. (#13593) 2018-09-07 15:11:23 -07:00
Andrew Clark
5031ebf6be Accept promise as element type (#13397)
* Accept promise as element type

On the initial render, the element will suspend as if a promise were
thrown from inside the body of the unresolved component. Siblings should
continue rendering and if the parent is a Placeholder, the promise
should be captured by that Placeholder.

When the promise resolves, rendering resumes. If the resolved value
has a `default` property, it is assumed to be the default export of
an ES module, and we use that as the component type. If it does not have
a `default` property, we use the resolved value itself.

The resolved value is stored as an expando on the promise/thenable.

* Use special types of work for lazy components

Because reconciliation is a hot path, this adds ClassComponentLazy,
FunctionalComponentLazy, and ForwardRefLazy as special types of work.
The other types are not supported, but wouldn't be placed into a
separate module regardless.

* Resolve defaultProps for lazy types

* Remove some calls to isContextProvider

isContextProvider checks the fiber tag, but it's typically called after
we've already refined the type of work. We should get rid of it. I
removed some of them in the previous commit, and deleted a few more
in this one. I left a few behind because the remaining ones would
require additional refactoring that feels outside the scope of this PR.

* Remove getLazyComponentTypeIfResolved

* Return baseProps instead of null

The caller compares the result to baseProps to see if anything changed.

* Avoid redundant checks by inlining getFiberTagFromObjectType

* Move tag resolution to ReactFiber module

* Pass next props to update* functions

We should do this with all types of work in the future.

* Refine component type before pushing/popping context

Removes unnecessary checks.

* Replace all occurrences of _reactResult with helper

* Move shared thenable logic to `shared` package

* Check type of wrapper object before resolving to `default` export

* Return resolved tag instead of reassigning
2018-08-16 09:21:59 -07:00
Andrew Clark
88d7ed8bfb React.Timeout -> React.Placeholder (#13105)
Changed the API to match what we've been using in our latest discussions.

Our tentative plans are for <Placeholder> to automatically hide the timed-out
children, instead of removing them, so their state is not lost. This part is
not yet implemented. We'll likely have a lower level API that does not include
the hiding behavior. This is also not yet implemented.
2018-07-03 19:47:00 -07:00
Andrew Clark
6565795377 Suspense (#12279)
* Timeout component

Adds Timeout component. If a promise is thrown from inside a Timeout component,
React will suspend the in-progress render from committing. When the promise
resolves, React will retry. If the render is suspended for longer than the
maximum threshold, the Timeout switches to a placeholder state.

The timeout threshold is defined as the minimum of:
- The expiration time of the current render
- The `ms` prop given to each Timeout component in the ancestor path of the
thrown promise.

* Add a test for nested fallbacks

Co-authored-by: Andrew Clark <acdlite@fb.com>

* Resume on promise rejection

React should resume rendering regardless of whether it resolves
or rejects.

* Wrap Suspense code in feature flag

* Children of a Timeout must be strict mode compatible

Async is not required for Suspense, but strict mode is.

* Simplify list of pending work

Some of this was added with "soft expiration" in mind, but now with our revised
model for how soft expiration will work, this isn't necessary.

It would be nice to remove more of this, but I think the list itself is inherent
because we need a way to track the start times, for <Timeout ms={ms} />.

* Only use the Timeout update queue to store promises, not for state

It already worked this way in practice.

* Wrap more Suspense-only paths in the feature flag

* Attach promise listener immediately on suspend

Instead of waiting for commit phase.

* Infer approximate start time using expiration time

* Remove list of pending priority levels

We can replicate almost all the functionality by tracking just five
separate levels: the highest/lowest priority pending levels, the
highest/lowest priority suspended levels, and the lowest pinged level.

We lose a bit of granularity, in that if there are multiple levels of
pending updates, only the first and last ones are known. But in practice
this likely isn't a big deal.

These heuristics are almost entirely isolated to a single module and
can be adjusted later, without API changes, if necessary.

Non-IO-bound work is not affected at all.

* ReactFiberPendingWork -> ReactFiberPendingPriority

* Renaming method names from "pending work" to "pending priority"

* Get rid of SuspenseThenable module

Idk why I thought this was neccessary

* Nits based on Sebastian's feedback

* More naming nits + comments

* Add test for hiding a suspended tree to unblock

* Revert change to expiration time rounding

This means you have to account for the start time approximation
heuristic when writing Suspense tests, but that's going to be
true regardless.

When updating the tests, I also made a fix related to offscreen
priority. We should never timeout inside a hidden tree.

* palceholder -> placeholder
2018-05-10 18:09:10 -07:00
Brian Vaughn
fc3777b1fe Add Profiler component for collecting new render timing info (#12745)
Add a new component type, Profiler, that can be used to collect new render time metrics. Since this is a new, experimental API, it will be exported as React.unstable_Profiler initially.

Most of the functionality for this component has been added behind a feature flag, enableProfileModeMetrics. When the feature flag is disabled, the component will just render its children with no additional behavior. When the flag is enabled, React will also collect timing information and pass it to the onRender function (as described below).
2018-05-10 15:25:32 -07:00
James Reggio
96fe3b1be2 Add React.isValidElementType() (#12483)
* Add React.isValidElementType()

Per the conversation on #12453, there are a number of third-party
libraries (particularly those that generate higher-order components)
that are performing suboptimal validation of element types.

This commit exposes a function that can perform the desired check
without depending upon React internals.

* Move isValidElementType to shared/
2018-03-29 11:45:41 -07:00