We use static dependency injection. We shouldn't use this dynamic
dependency injection we do for DevTools internals. There's also meta
programming like spreading and stuff that isn't needed.
This moves the config from `injectIntoDevTools` to the FiberConfig so it
can be statically resolved.
Closure Compiler has some trouble generating optimal code for this
anyway so ideally we'd refactor this further but at least this is better
and saves a few bytes and avoids some code paths (when minified).
Concurrent by default has been unshipped! Let's clean it up.
Here we remove `forceConcurrentByDefaultForTesting`, which allows us to
run tests against both concurrent strategies. In the next PR, we'll
remove the actual concurrent by default code path.
This disables symbol renaming in production builds. The original
variable and function names are preserved. All other forms of
compression applied by Closure (dead code elimination, inlining, etc)
are unchanged — the final program is identical to what we were producing
before, just in a more readable form.
The motivation is to make it easier to debug React issues that only
occur in production — the same reason we decided to start shipping
sourcemaps in #28827 and #28827.
However, because most apps run their own minification step on their npm
dependencies, it's not necessary for us to minify the symbols before
publishing — it'll be handled the app, if desired.
This is the same strategy Meta has used to ship React for years. The
React build itself has unminified symbols, but they get minified as part
of Meta's regular build pipeline.
Even if an app does not minify their npm dependencies, gzip covers most
of the cost of symbol renaming anyway.
This saves us from having to ship sourcemaps, which means even apps that
don't have sourcemaps configured will be able to debug the React build
as easily as they would any other npm dependency.
In React 19 React will finally stop publishing UMD builds. This is
motivated primarily by the lack of use of UMD format and the added
complexity of maintaining build infra for these releases. Additionally
with ESM becoming more prevalent in browsers and services like esm.sh
which can host React as an ESM module there are other options for doing
script tag based react loading.
This PR removes all the UMD build configs and forks.
There are some fixtures that still have references to UMD builds however
many of them already do not work (for instance they are using legacy
features like ReactDOM.render) and rather than block the removal on
these fixtures being brought up to date we'll just move forward and fix
or removes fixtures as necessary in the future.
This updates the behavior of form actions to automatically reset the
form's uncontrolled inputs after the action finishes.
This is a frequent feature request for people using actions and it
aligns the behavior of client-side form submissions more closely with
MPA form submissions.
It has no impact on controlled form inputs. It's the same as if you
called `form.reset()` manually, except React handles the timing of when
the reset happens, which is tricky/impossible to get exactly right in
userspace.
The reset shouldn't happen until the UI has updated with the result of
the action. So, resetting inside the action is too early.
Resetting in `useEffect` is better, but it's later than ideal because
any effects that run before it will observe the state of the form before
it's been reset.
It needs to happen in the mutation phase of the transition. More
specifically, after all the DOM mutations caused by the transition have
been applied. That way the `defaultValue` of the inputs are updated
before the values are reset. The idea is that the `defaultValue`
represents the current, canonical value sent by the server.
Note: this change has no effect on form submissions that aren't
triggered by an action.
This PR moves `flushSync` out of the reconciler. there is still an
internal implementation that is used when these semantics are needed for
React methods such as `unmount` on roots.
This new isomorphic `flushSync` is only used in builds that no longer
support legacy mode.
Additionally all the internal uses of flushSync in the reconciler have
been replaced with more direct methods. There is a new
`updateContainerSync` method which updates a container but forces it to
the Sync lane and flushes passive effects if necessary. This combined
with flushSyncWork can be used to replace flushSync for all instances of
internal usage.
We still maintain the original flushSync implementation as
`flushSyncFromReconciler` because it will be used as the flushSync
implementation for FB builds. This is because it has special legacy mode
handling that the new isomorphic implementation does not need to
consider. It will be removed from production OSS builds by closure
though
Currently updatePriority is tracked in the reconciler. `flushSync` is
going to be implemented reconciler agnostic soon and we need to move the
tracking of this state to the renderer and out of reconciler. This
change implements new renderer bin dings for getCurrentUpdatePriority
and setCurrentUpdatePriority.
I was originally going to have the getter also do the event priority
defaulting using window.event so we eliminate getCur rentEventPriority
but this makes all the callsites where we store the true current
updatePriority on the stack harder to work with so for now they remain
separate.
I also moved runWithPriority to the renderer since it really belongs
whereever the state is being managed and it is only currently exposed in
the DOM renderer.
Additionally the current update priority is not stored on
ReactDOMSharedInternals. While not particularly meaningful in this
change it opens the door to implementing `flushSync` outside of the
reconciler
Pulling this out of #28657.
This runs react-art in concurrent mode if disableLegacyMode is true.
Effectively this means that the OSS version will be in concurrent mode
and the `.modern.js` version for Meta will be in concurrent mode, once
the flag flips for modern, but the `.classic.js` version for Meta will
be in legacy mode.
Updates flowing in from above flush synchronously so that they commit as
a unit. This also ensures that refs are resolved before the parent life
cycles. setStates deep in the tree will now be batched using "discrete"
priority but should still happen same task.
This bumps the canary versions to v19 to communicate that the next
release will be a major. Once this lands, we can start merging breaking
changes into `main`.
## Summary
We need to unblock flipping the default for RTR to be concurrent
rendering. Update ReactART-test to use `unstable_isConcurrent` in place.
## How did you test this change?
`yarn test packages/react-art/src/__tests__/ReactART-test.js`
This removes the remaining `propTypes` validation calls, making
declaring `propTypes` a no-op. In other words, React itself will no
longer validate the `propTypes` that you declare on your components.
In general, our recommendation is to use static type checking (e.g.
TypeScript). If you'd like to still run propTypes checks, you can do so
manually, same as you'd do outside React:
```js
import checkPropTypes from 'prop-types/checkPropTypes';
function Button(props) {
checkPropTypes(Button.propTypes, prop, 'prop', Button.name)
// ...
}
```
This could be automated as a Babel plugin if you want to keep these
checks implicit. (We will not be providing such a plugin, but someone in
community might be interested in building or maintaining one.)
## Overview
Does a few things:
- Renames `enableSyncDefaultUpdates` to
`forceConcurrentByDefaultForTesting`
- Changes the way it's used so it's dead-code eliminated separate from
`allowConcurrentByDefault`
- Deletes a bunch of the gated code
The gates that are deleted are unnecessary now. We were keeping them
when we originally thought we would come back to being concurrent by
default. But we've shifted and now sync-by default is the desired
behavior long term, so there's no need to keep all these forked tests
around.
I'll follow up to delete more of the forked behavior if possible.
Ideally we wouldn't need this flag even if we're still using
`allowConcurrentByDefault`.
This hook reads the status of its ancestor form component, if it exists.
```js
const {pending, data, action, method} = useFormStatus();
```
It can be used to implement a loading indicator, for example. You can
think of it as a shortcut for implementing a loading state with the
useTransition hook.
For now, it's only available in the experimental channel. We'll share
docs once its closer to being stable. There are additional APIs that
will ship alongside it.
Internally it's implemented using startTransition + a context object.
That's a good way to think about its behavior, but the actual
implementation details may change in the future.
Because form elements cannot be nested, the implementation in the
reconciler does not bother to keep track of multiple nested "transition
providers". So although it's implemented using generic Fiber config
methods, it does currently make some assumptions based on React DOM's
requirements.
Stacked on #26570
Previously we restricted Float methods to only being callable while
rendering. This allowed us to make associations between calls and their
position in the DOM tree, for instance hoisting preinitialized styles
into a ShadowRoot or an iframe Document.
When considering how we are going to support Flight support in Float
however it became clear that this restriction would lead to compromises
on the implementation because the Flight client does not execute within
the context of a client render. We want to be able to disaptch Float
directives coming from Flight as soon as possible and this requires
being able to call them outside of render.
this patch modifies Float so that its methods are callable anywhere. The
main consequence of this change is Float will always use the Document
the renderer script is running within as the HoistableRoot. This means
if you preinit as style inside a component render targeting a ShadowRoot
the style will load in the ownerDocument not the ShadowRoot. Practially
speaking it means that preinit is not useful inside ShadowRoots and
iframes.
This tradeoff was deemed acceptable because these methods are
optimistic, not critical. Additionally, the other methods, preconntect,
prefetchDNS, and preload, are not impacted because they already operated
at the level of the ownerDocument and really only interface with the
Network cache layer.
I added a couple additional fixes that were necessary for getting tests
to pass that are worth considering separately.
The first commit improves the diff for `waitForThrow` so it compares
strings if possible.
The second commit makes invokeGuardedCallback not use metaprogramming
pattern and swallows any novel errors produced from trying to run the
guarded callback. Swallowing may not be the best we can do but it at
least protects React against rapid failure when something causes the
dispatchEvent to throw.
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## Summary
Browsers restore state like forms and scroll position right after the
popstate event. To make sure the page work as expected on back or
forward button, we need to flush transitions scheduled in a popstate
synchronously, and only yields if it suspends.
This PR adds a new HostConfig method to check if `window.event ===
'popstate'`, and `scheduleMicrotask` if a transition is scheduled in a
`PopStateEvent`.
## How did you test this change?
yarn test
part of https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/26571
merging separately to improve tracking of files renames in git
Rename HostConfig files to FiberConfig to clarify they are configs for
Fiber and not Fizz/Flight. This better conforms to the naming used in
Flight and now Fizz of `ReactFlightServerConfig` and `ReactFizzConfig`
This reverts commit b2ae9ddb3b.
While the feature flag is fully rolled out, these tests are also testing
behavior set with an unstable flag on root, which for now we want to
preserve.
Not sure if there's a better way then adding a dynamic feature flag to
the www build?
When rendering a suspensey resource that we haven't seen before, it may
have loaded in the background while we were rendering. We should yield
to the main thread to see if the load event fires in an immediate task.
For example, if the resource for a link element has already loaded, its
load event will fire in a task right after React yields to the main
thread. Because the continuation task is not scheduled until right
before React yields, the load event will ping React before it resumes.
If this happens, we can resume rendering without showing a fallback.
I don't think this matters much for images, because the `completed`
property tells us whether the image has loaded, and during a non-urgent
render, we never block the main thread for more than 5ms at a time (for
now — we might increase this in the future). It matters more for
stylesheets because the only way to check if it has loaded is by
listening for the load event.
This is essentially the same trick that `use` does for userspace
promises, but a bit simpler because we don't need to replay the host
component's begin phase; the work-in-progress fiber already completed,
so we can just continue onto the next sibling without any additional
work.
As part of this change, I split the `shouldSuspendCommit` host config
method into separate `maySuspendCommit` and `preloadInstance` methods.
Previously `shouldSuspendCommit` was used for both.
This raised a question of whether we should preload resources during a
synchronous render. My initial instinct was that we shouldn't, because
we're going to synchronously block the main thread until the resource is
inserted into the DOM, anyway. But I wonder if the browser is able to
initiate the preload even while the main thread is blocked. It's
probably a micro-optimization either way because most resources will be
loaded during transitions, not urgent renders.
This adds a new capability for renderers (React DOM, React Native):
prevent a tree from being displayed until it is ready, showing a
fallback if necessary, but without blocking the React components from
being evaluated in the meantime.
A concrete example is CSS loading: React DOM can block a commit from
being applied until the stylesheet has loaded. This allows us to load
the CSS asynchronously, while also preventing a flash of unstyled
content. Images and fonts are some of the other use cases.
You can think of this as "Suspense for the commit phase". Traditional
Suspense, i.e. with `use`, blocking during the render phase: React
cannot proceed with rendering until the data is available. But in the
case of things like stylesheets, you don't need the CSS in order to
evaluate the component. It just needs to be loaded before the tree is
committed. Because React buffers its side effects and mutations, it can
do work in parallel while the stylesheets load in the background.
Like regular Suspense, a "suspensey" stylesheet or image will trigger
the nearest Suspense fallback if it hasn't loaded yet. For now, though,
we only do this for non-urgent updates, like with startTransition. If
you render a suspensey resource during an urgent update, it will revert
to today's behavior. (We may or may not add a way to suspend the commit
during an urgent update in the future.)
In this PR, I have implemented this capability in the reconciler via new
methods added to the host config. I've used our internal React "no-op"
renderer to write tests that demonstrate the feature. I have not yet
implemented Suspensey CSS, images, etc in React DOM. @gnoff and I will
work on that in subsequent PRs.
The old version of prettier we were using didn't support the Flow syntax
to access properties in a type using `SomeType['prop']`. This updates
`prettier` and `rollup-plugin-prettier` to the latest versions.
I added the prettier config `arrowParens: "avoid"` to reduce the diff
size as the default has changed in Prettier 2.0. The largest amount of
changes comes from function expressions now having a space. This doesn't
have an option to preserve the old behavior, so we have to update this.
Hermes parser is the preferred parser for Flow code going forward. We
need to upgrade to this parser to support new Flow syntax like function
`this` context type annotations or `ObjectType['prop']` syntax.
Unfortunately, there's quite a few upgrades here to make it work somehow
(dependencies between the changes)
- ~Upgrade `eslint` to `8.*`~ reverted this as the React eslint plugin
tests depend on the older version and there's a [yarn
bug](https://github.com/yarnpkg/yarn/issues/6285) that prevents
`devDependencies` and `peerDependencies` to different versions.
- Remove `eslint-config-fbjs` preset dependency and inline the rules,
imho this makes it a lot clearer what the rules are.
- Remove the turned off `jsx-a11y/*` rules and it's dependency instead
of inlining those from the `fbjs` config.
- Update parser and dependency from `babel-eslint` to `hermes-eslint`.
- `ft-flow/no-unused-expressions` rule replaces `no-unused-expressions`
which now allows standalone type asserts, e.g. `(foo: number);`
- Bunch of globals added to the eslint config
- Disabled `no-redeclare`, seems like the eslint upgrade started making
this more precise and warn against re-defined globals like
`__EXPERIMENTAL__` (in rollup scripts) or `fetch` (when importing fetch
from node-fetch).
- Minor lint fixes like duplicate keys in objects.
We've heard from multiple contributors that the Reconciler forking
mechanism was confusing and/or annoying to deal with. Since it's
currently unused and there's no immediate plans to start using it again,
this removes the forking.
Fully removing the fork is split into 2 steps to preserve file history:
**#25774 previous PR that did the bulk of the work:**
- remove `enableNewReconciler` feature flag.
- remove `unstable_isNewReconciler` export
- remove eslint rules for cross fork imports
- remove `*.new.js` files and update imports
- merge non-suffixed files into `*.old` files where both exist
(sometimes types were defined there)
**This PR**
- rename `*.old` files
We've heard from multiple contributors that the Reconciler forking
mechanism was confusing and/or annoying to deal with. Since it's
currently unused and there's no immediate plans to start using it again,
this removes the forking.
Fully removing the fork is split into 2 steps to preserve file history:
**This PR**
- remove `enableNewReconciler` feature flag.
- remove `unstable_isNewReconciler` export
- remove eslint rules for cross fork imports
- remove `*.new.js` files and update imports
- merge non-suffixed files into `*.old` files where both exist
(sometimes types were defined there)
**#25775**
- rename `*.old` files
* Facebook -> Meta in copyright
rg --files | xargs sed -i 's#Copyright (c) Facebook, Inc. and its affiliates.#Copyright (c) Meta Platforms, Inc. and affiliates.#g'
* Manual tweaks
* [Fizz/Float] Float for stylesheet resources
This commit implements Float in Fizz and on the Client. The initial set of supported APIs is roughly
1. Convert certain stylesheets into style Resources when opting in with precedence prop
2. Emit preloads for stylesheets and explicit preload tags
3. Dedupe all Resources by href
4. Implement ReactDOM.preload() to allow for imperative preloading
5. Implement ReactDOM.preinit() to allow for imperative preinitialization
Currently supports
1. style Resources (link rel "stylesheet")
2. font Resources (preload as "font")
later updates will include support for scripts and modules
add more accurate end time for transitions and update host configs with `requestPostPaintCallback` function and move post paint logic to another module and use it in the work loop
* Pass children to hydration root constructor
I already made this change for the concurrent root API in #23309. This
does the same thing for the legacy API.
Doesn't change any behavior, but I will use this in the next steps.
* Add isRootDehydrated function
Currently this does nothing except read a boolean field, but I'm about
to change this logic.
Since this is accessed by React DOM, too, I put the function in a
separate module that can be deep imported. Previously, it was accessing
the FiberRoot directly. The reason it's a separate module is to break a
circular dependency between React DOM and the reconciler.
* Allow updates at lower pri without forcing client render
Currently, if a root is updated before the shell has finished hydrating
(for example, due to a top-level navigation), we immediately revert to
client rendering. This is rare because the root is expected is finish
quickly, but not exceedingly rare because the root may be suspended.
This adds support for updating the root without forcing a client render
as long as the update has lower priority than the initial hydration,
i.e. if the update is wrapped in startTransition.
To implement this, I had to do some refactoring. The main idea here is
to make it closer to how we implement hydration in Suspense boundaries:
- I moved isDehydrated from the shared FiberRoot object to the
HostRoot's state object.
- In the begin phase, I check if the root has received an by comparing
the new children to the initial children. If they are different, we
revert to client rendering, and set isDehydrated to false using a
derived state update (a la getDerivedStateFromProps).
- There are a few places where we used to set root.isDehydrated to false
as a way to force a client render. Instead, I set the ForceClientRender
flag on the root work-in-progress fiber.
- Whenever we fall back to client rendering, I log a recoverable error.
The overall code structure is almost identical to the corresponding
logic for Suspense components.
The reason this works is because if the update has lower priority than
the initial hydration, it won't be processed during the hydration
render, so the children will be the same.
We can go even further and allow updates at _higher_ priority (though
not sync) by implementing selective hydration at the root, like we do
for Suspense boundaries: interrupt the current render, attempt hydration
at slightly higher priority than the update, then continue rendering the
update. I haven't implemented this yet, but I've structured the code in
anticipation of adding this later.
* Wrap useMutableSource logic in feature flag
I already made this change for the concurrent root API in #23309. This
does the same thing for the legacy API.
Doesn't change any behavior, but I will use this in the next steps.
* 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.
Minor follow up to initial onRecoverableError PR.
When onRecoverableError is not provided to `createRoot`, the
renderer falls back to a default implementation. Originally I
implemented this with a host config method, but what we can do instead
is pass the default implementation the root constructor as if it were
a user provided one.
* 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
* [RFC] Add onHydrationError option to hydrateRoot
This is not the final API but I'm pushing it for discussion purposes.
When an error is thrown during hydration, we fallback to client
rendering, without triggering an error boundary. This is good because,
in many cases, the UI will recover and the user won't even notice that
something has gone wrong behind the scenes.
However, we shouldn't recover from these errors silently, because the
underlying cause might be pretty serious. Server-client mismatches are
not supposed to happen, even if UI doesn't break from the users
perspective. Ignoring them could lead to worse problems later. De-opting
from server to client rendering could also be a significant performance
regression, depending on the scope of the UI it affects.
So we need a way to log when hydration errors occur.
This adds a new option for `hydrateRoot` called `onHydrationError`. It's
symmetrical to the server renderer's `onError` option, and serves the
same purpose.
When no option is provided, the default behavior is to schedule a
browser task and rethrow the error. This will trigger the normal browser
behavior for errors, including dispatching an error event. If the app
already has error monitoring, this likely will just work as expected
without additional configuration.
However, we can also expose additional metadata about these errors, like
which Suspense boundaries were affected by the de-opt to client
rendering. (I have not exposed any metadata in this commit; API needs
more design work.)
There are other situations besides hydration where we recover from an
error without surfacing it to the user, or notifying an error boundary.
For example, if an error occurs during a concurrent render, it could be
due to a data race, so we try again synchronously in case that fixes it.
We should probably expose a way to log these types of errors, too. (Also
not implemented in this commit.)
* Log all recoverable errors
This expands the scope of onHydrationError to include all errors that
are not surfaced to the UI (an error boundary). In addition to errors
that occur during hydration, this also includes errors that recoverable
by de-opting to synchronous rendering. Typically (or really, by
definition) these errors are the result of a concurrent data race;
blocking the main thread fixes them by prevents subsequent races.
The logic for de-opting to synchronous rendering already existed. The
only thing that has changed is that we now log the errors instead of
silently proceeding.
The logging API has been renamed from onHydrationError
to onRecoverableError.
* Don't log recoverable errors until commit phase
If the render is interrupted and restarts, we don't want to log the
errors multiple times.
This change only affects errors that are recovered by de-opting to
synchronous rendering; we'll have to do something else for errors
during hydration, since they use a different recovery path.
* Only log hydration error if client render succeeds
Similar to previous step.
When an error occurs during hydration, we only want to log it if falling
back to client rendering _succeeds_. If client rendering fails,
the error will get reported to the nearest error boundary, so there's
no need for a duplicate log.
To implement this, I added a list of errors to the hydration context.
If the Suspense boundary successfully completes, they are added to
the main recoverable errors queue (the one I added in the
previous step.)
* Log error with queueMicrotask instead of Scheduler
If onRecoverableError is not provided, we default to rethrowing the
error in a separate task. Originally, I scheduled the task with
idle priority, but @sebmarkbage made the good point that if there are
multiple errors logs, we want to preserve the original order. So I've
switched it to a microtask. The priority can be lowered in userspace
by scheduling an additional task inside onRecoverableError.
* Only use host config method for default behavior
Redefines the contract of the host config's logRecoverableError method
to be a default implementation for onRecoverableError if a user-provided
one is not provided when the root is created.
* Log with reportError instead of rethrowing
In modern browsers, reportError will dispatch an error event, emulating
an uncaught JavaScript error. We can do this instead of rethrowing
recoverable errors in a microtask, which is nice because it avoids any
subtle ordering issues.
In older browsers and test environments, we'll fall back
to console.error.
* Naming nits
queueRecoverableHydrationErrors -> upgradeHydrationErrorsToRecoverable