* [DevTools] add simple events for internal logging
* fix lint
* fix lint
* better event name
* fix flow
* better way to fix flow
* combine 'select-element'
* use same event name for selecting element by inspecting
We've recently had multiple reports where, if React DevTools was installed, unmounting large React subtrees would take a huge performance hit (ex. from 50ms to 7 seconds).
Digging in more, we realized for every fiber that unmounts, we called `untrackFibers`, which calls `clearTimeout` (and does some work manipulating a set, but this wasn't the bulk of the time). We ten call `recordUnmount`, which adds the timer back. Adding and removing the timer so many times was taking upwards of 50ms per timer add/remove call, which was resulting in exorbitant amounts of time spent in DevTools deleting subtrees.
It looks like we are calling `untrackFibers` so many times to avoid a race condition with Suspense children where we unmount them twice (first a "virtual" unmount when the suspense boundary is toggled from visible to invisible, and then an actual unmount when the new children are rendered) without modifying `fiberIDMap`. We can fix this race condition by using the `untrackFibersSet` as a lock and not calling `recordUnmount` if the fiber is in the set and hasn't been processed yet. This works because the only way fibers are added in the set is via `recordUnmount` anyway.
This PR also adds a test to make sure this change doesn't regress the previous behavior.
**Before**

**After**

This PR:
* Simplifies the code in `SidebarEventInfo` by passing it the actual clicked event rather than an index.
* Lightly refactored the `SidebarEventInfo` code so that it can be used for more than just `schedulingEvents`
* Fixes bug. Previously, whenever a state update event was clicked, we updated the `selectedCommitIndex` in the `ProfilerContext`. However, this index is used for the selected commit in the Flamegraph profiler, which caused a bug where if you would change the contents of the event sidebar, the commit sidebar in the Flamegraph profiler would change too. This PR replaces this with the actual event info instead
Add column number for `viewSourceLineFunction` and renamed the function to `viewUrlSourceFunction` to match the other source function naming conventions
* [DevTools] front-end for profiling event stack
Adds a side-bar to the profiling tab. Users can now select an update event, and are
shown the callstack from the originating component. When a source path is available
there is now UI to jump to source.
Add FB enabled feature flag: enableProfilerComponentTree for the side-bar.
resolves#24170
This PR cleans up the DevTools codebase by:
* Consolidating `normalizeCodeLocInfo` into one place
* Remove unused source argument in the DevTools component stacks code
This PR adds a component stack field to the `schedule-state-update` event. The algorithm is as follows:
* During profiling, whenever a state update happens collect the parents of the fiber that caused the state update and store it in a map
* After profiling finishes, post process the `schedule-state-update` event and using the parent fibers, generate the component stack by using`describeFiber`, a function that uses error throwing to get the location of the component by calling the component without props.
---
Co-authored-by: Blake Friedman <blake.friedman@gmail.com>
This PR:
* Increases test retry count to 2 so that flaky tests have more of a chance to pass
* Ideally most e2e tests will run for all React versions (and ensure DevTools elegantly fails if React doesn't support its features). However, some features aren't supported in older React versions at all (ex. Profiling) Add runOnlyForReactRange function in these cases to skip tests that don't satisfy the correct React semver range
* Fix should allow searching for component by name test, which was flaky because sometimes the Searchbox would be unfocused the second time we try to type in it
* Edited test Should allow elements to be inspected to check that element inspect gracefully fails in older React versions
* Updated config to add a config.use.url field and a config.use.react_version field, which change depending on the React Version (and whether it's specified)
We need the regression config moduleNameMapper to come before the current moduleNameMapper so when it tries to map "/^react-dom\/([^/]+)$/ it doesn't get confused. The reason is because order in which the mappings are defined matters. Patterns are checked one by one until one fits, and the most specific rule should be listed first.
Change storeStressTestSync to use inline snapshots instead of a snapshot file. We want to do this because some tests are gated and not called in regression tests, and if snapshot tests are not called when there is a corresponding .snap file, that test will fail.
Arguably inline snapshots are a better pattern anyway, so enforcing this in DevTools tests IMO makes sense
This PR adds the reactVersion pragma to tests.
Tests without the reactVersion pragma won't be run if the reactVersion pragma isn't specified.
Tested each React version manually with the pragma to make sure the tests pass
In DevTools tests, if the REACT_VERSION specified, we know this is a regression test (testing older React Versions). Because a lot of tests test the DevTools front end and we don't want to run them in the regression test scenario, we decided to only run tests that have the // @reactVersion pragma defined.
Because if there are no tests specified, jest will fail, we also opt to use jest.skip to skip all the tests that we don't want to run for a specific React version istead.
This PR makes this change.
This PR:
Adds a transform-react-version-pragma that transforms // @reactVersion SEMVER_VERSION into _test_react_version(...) and _test_react_version_focus(...) that lets us only run a test if it satisfies the right react version.
Adds _test_react_version and _test_react_version_focus to the devtools setupEnv file
Add a devtools preprocessor file for devtools specific plugins
When we delete fibers, we will call onCommitFiberUnmount on every deleted fiber to also remove them from the element tree. However, there are some cases where fibers aren't deleted but we still want to remove them from the element tree (ex. offscreen). In the second case, we recursively remove these children during handleCommitFiberRoot.
When we remove an element, we will untrack its corresponding fiber ID. However, because of fast refresh, we don't do this immediately, opting to instead add the value to a set to process later. However, before the set has been processed, we unmount that fiber again, we will get duplicate unmounts.
To fix this, handleCommitFiberRoot explicitly flushes all the fibers in the set before starting the deletion process. We also need to do this in handleCommitFiberUnmount in case handleCommitFiberRoot gets called first.
Resolves#24428
---
For fiber types that render user code, we check the PerformedWork flag rather than the props, ref, and state to see if the fiber rendered (rather than bailing out/etc.) so we know whether we need to do things like record profile durations. ForwardRef wasn't added to this list, which caused #24428.
The previous regex to detect string substitutions is not quite right, this PR fixes it by:
Check to make sure we are starting either at the beginning of the line or we match a character that's not % to make sure we capture all the % in a row.
Make sure there are an odd number of % (the first X pairs are escaped % characters. The odd % followed by a letter is the string substitution)
Fixes#24302 based on #24306.
---
The current implementation for strict mode double logging stringiness and dims the second log. However, because we stringify everything, including objects, this causes objects to be logged as `[object Object]` etc.
This PR creates a new function that formats console log arguments with a specified style. It does this by:
1. The first param is a string that contains %c: Bail out and return the args without modifying the styles. We don't want to affect styles that the developer deliberately set.
2. The first param is a string that doesn't contain %c but contains string formatting: `[`%c${args[0]}`, style, ...args.slice(1)]` Note: we assume that the string formatting that the developer uses is correct.
3. The first param is a string that doesn't contain string formatting OR is not a string: Create a formatting string where:
- boolean, string, symbol -> %s
- number -> %f OR %i depending on if it's an int or float
- default -> %o
---
Co-authored-by: Billy Janitsch <billy@kensho.com>
* Fix infinite loop if unmemoized val passed to uDV
The current implementation of useDeferredValue will spawn a new
render any time the input value is different from the previous one. So
if you pass an unmemoized value (like an inline object), it will never
stop spawning new renders.
The fix is to only defer during an urgent render. If we're already
inside a transition, retry, offscreen, or other non-urgen render, then
we can use the latest value.
* Temporarily disable "long nested update" warning
DevTools' timeline profiler warns if an update inside a layout effect
results in an expensive re-render. However, it misattributes renders
that are spawned from a sync render at lower priority. This affects the
new implementation of useDeferredValue but it would also apply to things
like Offscreen.
It's not obvious to me how to fix this given how DevTools models the
idea of a "nested update" so I'm disabling the warning for now to
unblock the bugfix for useDeferredValue.
The Profiler has an advanced feature that shows why a component re-rendered. In the case of props and (class) state, it shows the names of props/state values that changed between renders. For hooks, DevTools tries to detect which ones may been related to the update by comparing prev/next internal hook structures.
My initial implementation tried to detect all changed hooks. In hindsight this is confusing, because only stateful hooks (e.g. useState, useReducer, and useSyncExternalStore) can schedule an update. (Other types of hooks can change between renders, but in a reactive way.) This PR changes the behavior to only report hooks that scheduled the update.
We used to listen to at the document level for this event. That allowed us to listen to up/down arrow key events while another section
of DevTools (like the search input) was focused. This was a minor UX positive.
(We had to use ownerDocument rather than document for this, because the DevTools extension renders the Components and Profiler tabs into portals.)
This approach caused a problem though: it meant that a react-devtools-inline instance could steal (and prevent/block) keyboard events from other JavaScript on the page– which could even include other react-devtools-inline instances. This is a potential major UX negative.
Given the above trade offs, we now listen on the root of the Tree itself.
* 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
Fixes this issue, where inspecting components in nested renderers results in an error. The reason for this is because we have different fiberToIDMap instances for each renderer, and owners of a component could be in different renderers.
This fix moves the fiberToIDMap and idToArbitraryFiberMap out of the attach method so there's only one instance of each for all renderers.
Rationale: The only case where the unsupported dialog really matters is React Naive. That's the case where the frontend and backend versions are most likely to mismatch. In React Native, the backend is likely to send the bridge protocol version before sending operations– since the agent does this proactively during initialization.
I've tested the React Native starter app– after forcefully downgrading the backend version to 4.19.1 (see #23307 (comment)) and verified that this change "fixes" things. Not only does DevTools no longer throw an error that causes the UI to be hidden– it works (meaning that the Components tree can be inspected and interacted with).
I noticed while working on a different PR that this test was not
using hydrateRoot correctly. You're meant to pass the initial children
as the second argument.
* Flight side of server context
* 1 more test
* rm unused function
* flow+prettier
* flow again =)
* duplicate ReactServerContext across packages
* store default value when lazily initializing server context
* .
* better comment
* derp... missing import
* rm optional chaining
* missed feature flag
* React.__SECRET_INTERNALS_DO_NOT_USE_OR_YOU_WILL_BE_FIRED ??
* add warning if non ServerContext passed into useServerContext
* pass context in as array of arrays
* make importServerContext nott pollute the global context state
* merge main
* remove useServerContext
* dont rely on object getters in ReactServerContext and disallow JSX
* add symbols to devtools + rename globalServerContextRegistry to just ContextRegistry
* gate test case as experimental
* feedback
* remove unions
* Lint
* fix oopsies (tests/lint/mismatching arguments/signatures
* lint again
* replace-fork
* remove extraneous change
* rebase
* 1 more test
* rm unused function
* flow+prettier
* flow again =)
* duplicate ReactServerContext across packages
* store default value when lazily initializing server context
* .
* better comment
* derp... missing import
* rm optional chaining
* missed feature flag
* React.__SECRET_INTERNALS_DO_NOT_USE_OR_YOU_WILL_BE_FIRED ??
* add warning if non ServerContext passed into useServerContext
* pass context in as array of arrays
* make importServerContext nott pollute the global context state
* merge main
* remove useServerContext
* dont rely on object getters in ReactServerContext and disallow JSX
* add symbols to devtools + rename globalServerContextRegistry to just ContextRegistry
* gate test case as experimental
* feedback
* remove unions
* Lint
* fix oopsies (tests/lint/mismatching arguments/signatures
* lint again
* replace-fork
* remove extraneous change
* rebase
* reinline
* rebase
* add back changes lost due to rebase being hard
* emit chunk for provider
* remove case for React provider type
* update type for SomeChunk
* enable flag with experimental
* add missing types
* fix flow type
* missing type
* t: any
* revert extraneous type change
* better type
* better type
* feedback
* change import to type import
* test?
* test?
* remove react-dom
* remove react-native-renderer from react-server-native-relay/package.json
* gate change in FiberNewContext, getComponentNameFromType, use switch statement in FlightServer
* getComponentNameFromTpe: server context type gated and use displayName if available
* fallthrough
* lint....
* POP
* lint
This information can help with bug investigation for renderers (like React Native) that embed the DevTools backend into their source (separately from the DevTools frontend, which gets run by the user).
If the DevTools backend is too old to report a version, or if the version reported is the same as the frontend (as will be the case with the browser extension) then only a single version string will be shown, as before. If a different version is reported, then both will be shown separately.
* 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.