* Rename lowPriorityWarning to lowPriorityWarningWithoutStack
This maintains parity with the other warning-like functions.
* Duplicate the toWarnDev tests to test toLowPriorityWarnDev
* Make a lowPriorityWarning version of warning.js
* Extract both variants in print-warning
Avoids parsing lowPriorityWarning.js itself as the way it forwards the
call to lowPriorityWarningWithoutStack is not analyzable.
This implements 'usePress' in user-space as a combination of 'useKeyboard' and 'useTap'. The existing 'usePress' API is preserved for now. The previous 'usePress' implementation is moved to 'PressLegacy'.
* Add trusted types to react on client side
* Implement changes according to review
* Remove support for trusted URLs, change TrustedTypes to trustedTypes
* Add support for deprecated trusted URLs
* Apply PR suggesstions
* Warn only once, remove forgotten check, put it behind a flag
* Move comment
* Fix PR comments
* Fix html toString concatenation
* Fix forgotten else branch
* Fix PR comments
This is a partial replacement for the 'Press' responder:
1. `useTap` is scoped to pointers (no keyboard support). Our current thinking is
that "responders" should be limited to working with pointers, and that they can
be combined with 'useKeyboard' in user-space. For example, we might create a
'usePress' hook in user-space that combines 'useTap' with 'useKeyboard' to react
to both pointers and keyboard interactions.
2. `useTap` cancels the gesture once the pointer moves over an element that is
not within the responder target's subtree. This differs from `usePress` (and
React Native), where the gesture remains active after the pointer exits the
target's subtree and is restarted once the pointer reenters. One of the
drawbacks with the `usePress` behavior is that it requires repeatedly measuring
DOM elements (which can cause jank) to perform hit region tests. `useTap` avoids
doing this and relies on `document.elementFromPoint` only to support the
TouchEvent fallbacks.
3. `useTap` calls `onTapUpdate` when the active gesture's state changes,
`onTapEnd` when the gesture successfully completes. and `onTapCancel` when it
fails. There is no `onTap` callback. `usePress` did not explicitly report back
when the gesture failed, and product developers were confused about the
difference between `onPress` and `onPressEnd`.
4. `useTap` explicitly separates the PointerEvent implementation from the
MouseEvent/TouchEvent fallback.
5. `useTap` has better unit test coverage . All pointer types and the fallback
environment are tested. The shape of the gesture state object is also defined
and tested.
* Revert "Revert "[Scheduler] Profiling features (#16145)" (#16392)"
This reverts commit 4ba1412305.
* Fix copy paste mistake
* Remove init path dependency on ArrayBuffer
* Add a regression test for cancelling multiple tasks
* Prevent deopt from adding isQueued later
* Remove pop() calls that were added for profiling
* Verify that Suspend/Unsuspend events match up in tests
This currently breaks tests.
* Treat Suspend and Resume as exiting and entering work loop
Their definitions used to be more fuzzy. For example, Suspend didn't always fire on exit, and sometimes fired when we did _not_ exit (such as at task enqueue).
I chatted to Boone, and he's saying treating Suspend and Resume as strictly exiting and entering the loop is fine for their use case.
* Revert "Prevent deopt from adding isQueued later"
This reverts commit 9c30b0b695.
Unnecessary because GCC
* Start counter with 1
* Group exports into unstable_Profiling namespace
* No catch in PROD codepath
* No label TODO
* No null checks
* [Scheduler] Mark user-timing events
Marks when Scheduler starts and stops running a task. Also marks when
a task is initially scheduled, and when Scheduler is waiting for a
callback, which can't be inferred from a sample-based JavaScript CPU
profile alone.
The plan is to use the user-timing events to build a Scheduler profiler
that shows how the lifetime of tasks interact with each other and
with unscheduled main thread work.
The test suite works by printing an text representation of a
Scheduler flamegraph.
* Expose shared array buffer with profiling info
Array contains
- the priority Scheduler is currently running
- the size of the queue
- the id of the currently running task
* Replace user-timing calls with event log
Events are written to an array buffer using a custom instruction format.
For now, this is only meant to be used during page start up, before the
profiler worker has a chance to start up. Once the worker is ready, call
`stopLoggingProfilerEvents` to return the log up to that point, then
send the array buffer to the worker.
Then switch to the sampling based approach.
* Record the current run ID
Each synchronous block of Scheduler work is given a unique run ID. This
is different than a task ID because a single task will have more than
one run if it yields with a continuation.
Upgraded from Babel 6 to Babel 7.
The only significant change seems to be the way `@babel/plugin-transform-classes` handles classes differently from `babel-plugin-transform-es2015-classes`. In regular mode, the former injects a `_createClass` function that increases the bundle size, and in the latter it removes the safeguard checks. However, this is okay because we don't all classes in new features, and we want to deprecate class usage in the future in the react repo.
Co-authored-by: Luna Ruan <luna@fb.com>
Co-authored-by: Abdul Rauf <abdulraufmujahid@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Maksim Markelov <maks-markel@mail.ru>
This commit is a follow-up to https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/15604, which explains more of the rationale behind moving React Native to path-based imports and the work needed in the React repository. In that linked PR, the generated renderers were updated but not the shims; this commit updates the shims.
The problem is that FB needs a different copy of the built renderers than the OSS versions so we need a way for FB code to import different modules than in OSS. This was previously done with Haste, but with the removal of Haste from RN, we need another mechanism. Talking with cpojer, we are using a `.fb.js` extension that Metro can be configured to prioritize over `.js`.
This commit generates FB's renderers with the `.fb.js` extension and OSS renderers with just `.js`. This way, FB can internally configure Metro to use the `.fb.js` implementations and OSS will use the `.js` ones, letting us swap out which implementation gets bundled.
Test Plan: Generated the renderers and shims with `yarn build` and then verified that the generated shims don't contain any Haste-style imports. Copied the renderers and shims into RN manually and launched the RNTester app to verify it loads end-to-end. Added `.fb.js` to the extensions in `metro.config.js` and verified that the FB-specific bundles loaded.
The previous naming scheme used the name of the resulting bundle file.
However, there are cases where multiple bundles have the same filename.
This meant whichever bundle finishes last overwrites the previous ones
with the same name.
The updated naming scheme is `bundle-sizes-<CI_NODE_INDEX>.json`.
Instead of generating a separate info file per bundle, it now creates
one per process.
* Write size info to separate file per bundle
`bundle-sizes.json` contains the combined size information for every
build. This makes it easier to store and process, but it prevents us
from parallelizing the build script, because each process would need to
write to the same file.
So I've updated the Rollup script to output individual files per build.
A downstream CI job consolidates them into a single file.
I have not parallelized the Rollup script yet. I'll do that next.
* Parallelize the build script
Uses CircleCI's `parallelism` config option to spin up multiple build
processes.
* Lint rule for unminified errors
Add a lint rule that fails if an invariant message is not part of the
error code map.
The goal is to be more disciplined about adding and modifiying
production error codes. Error codes should be consistent across releases
even if their wording changes, for continuity in logs.
Currently, error codes are added to the error code map via an automated
script that runs right before release. The problem with this approach is
that if someone modifies an error message in the source, but neglects to
modify the corresponding message in the error code map, then the message
will be assigned a new error code, instead of reusing the existing one.
Because the error extraction script only runs before a release, people
rarely modify the error code map in practice. By moving the extraction
step to the PR stage, it forces the author to consider whether the
message should be assigned a new error code. It also allows the reviewer
to review the changes.
The trade off is that it requires more effort and context to land new
error messages, or to modify existing ones, particular for new
contributors who are not familiar with our processes.
Since we already expect users to lint their code, I would argue the
additional burden is marginal. Even if they forget to run the lint
command locally, they will get quick feedback from the CI lint job,
which typically finishes within 2-3 minutes.
* Add unreleased error messages to map
* [react-native] Use path-based imports instead of Haste for the RN renderer
To move React Native to standard path-based imports instead of Haste, the RN renderer that is generated from the code in this repo needs to use path-based imports as well since the generated code is vendored by RN. This commit makes it so the interface between the generated renderers and RN does not rely on Haste and instead uses a private interface explicitly defined by RN. This inverts control of the abstraction so that RN decides the internals to export rather than React deciding what to import.
On RN's side, a new module named `react-native/Libraries/ReactPrivate/ReactNativePrivateInterface` explicitly exports the modules used by the renderers in this repo. (There is also a private module for InitializeCore so that we can import it just for the side effects.) On React's side, the various renderer modules access RN internals through the explicit private interface.
The Rollup configuration becomes slimmer since the only external package is now `react-native`, and the individual modules are instead listed out in `ReactNativePrivateInterface`.
Task description: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/issues/24770
Sister RN PR (needs to land before this one): https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/24782
Test Plan: Ran unit tests and Flow in this repo. Generated the renderers and manually copied them over to the RN repo. Ran the RN tests and launched the RNTester app.
* Access natively defined "nativeFabricUIManager" instead of importing it
Some places in the Fabric renderers access `nativeFabricUIManager` (a natively defined global) instead of importing UIManager. While this is coupling across repos that depends on the timing of events, it is necessary until we have a way to defer top-level imports to run after `nativeFabricUIManager` is defined. So for consistency we use `nativeFabricUIManager` everywhere (see the comment in https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/15604#pullrequestreview-236842223 for more context).
* Add a stub for React Fresh Babel plugin package
* Move ReactFresh-test into ReactFresh top level directory
* Add a stub for React Fresh Runtime entry point
* Extract Fresh runtime from tests into its entry point
* s/flushPassiveEffects/unstable_flushWithoutYielding
a first crack at flushing the scheduler manually from inside act(). uses unstable_flushWithoutYielding(). The tests that changed, mostly replaced toFlushAndYield(...) with toHaveYielded(). For some tests that tested the state of the tree before flushing effects (but still after updates), I replaced act() with bacthedUpdates().
* ugh lint
* pass build, flushPassiveEffects returns nothing now
* pass test-fire
* flush all work (not just effects), add a compatibility mode
of note, unstable_flushWithoutYielding now returns a boolean much like flushPassiveEffects
* umd build for scheduler/unstable_mock, pass the fixture with it
* add a comment to Shcduler.umd.js for why we're exporting unstable_flushWithoutYielding
* run testsutilsact tests in both sync/concurrent modes
* augh lint
* use a feature flag for the missing mock scheduler warning
I also tried writing a test for it, but couldn't get the scheduler to unmock. included the failing test.
* Update ReactTestUtilsAct-test.js
- pass the mock scheduler warning test,
- rewrite some tests to use Scheduler.yieldValue
- structure concurrent/legacy suites neatly
* pass failing tests in batchedmode-test
* fix pretty/lint/import errors
* pass test-build
* nit: pull .create(null) out of the act() call
* [React Native] Inline calls to FabricUIManager in shared code
* Call global.nativeFabricUIManager directly as short term fix
* Add flow types
* Add nativeFabricUIManager global to eslint config
* Adding eslint global to bundle validation script