* 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>
* 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
Update all our local scripts to use `build` instead of `build2`.
There are still downstream scripts that depend on `build2`, though, so
we can't remove it yet.
lunaruan commented 3 days ago •
This PR adds separate DevTools feature flag configurations for react-devtools-core. It also breaks the builds down into facebook specific and open source flags so we can experiment in React Native.
Tested yarn build:standalone, yarn build:backend, yarn build:standalone:fb, and yarn build:backend:fb and inspected the output to make sure each package used the correct feature flags (the first two use core-oss and the latter two use fb-oss.
React currently suppress console logs in StrictMode during double rendering. However, this causes a lot of confusion. This PR moves the console suppression logic from React into React Devtools. Now by default, we no longer suppress console logs. Instead, we gray out the logs in console during double render. We also add a setting in React Devtools to allow developers to hide console logs during double render if they choose.
The following APIs have been added to the `react` stable entry point:
* `SuspenseList`
* `startTransition`
* `unstable_createMutableSource`
* `unstable_useMutableSource`
* `useDeferredValue`
* `useTransition`
The following APIs have been added or removed from the `react-dom` stable entry point:
* `createRoot`
* `unstable_createPortal` (removed)
The following APIs have been added to the `react-is` stable entry point:
* `SuspenseList`
* `isSuspenseList`
The following feature flags have been changed from experimental to true:
* `enableLazyElements`
* `enableSelectiveHydration`
* `enableSuspenseServerRenderer`
Add an explicit Bridge protocol version to the frontend and backend components as well as a check during initialization to ensure that both are compatible. If not, the frontend will display either upgrade or downgrade instructions.
Note that only the `react-devtools-core` (React Native) and `react-devtools-inline` (Code Sandbox) packages implement this check. Browser extensions inject their own backend and so the check is unnecessary. (Arguably the `react-devtools-inline` check is also unlikely to be necessary _but_ has been added as an extra guard for use cases such as Replay.io.)
React has its own component stack generation code that DevTools embeds a fork of, but both of them use a shared helper for disabling console logs. This shared helper is DEV only though, because it was intended for use with React DEV-only warnings and we didn't want to unnecessarily add bytes to production builds.
But DevTools itself always ships as a production build– even when it's used to debug DEV bundles of product apps (with third party DEV-only warnings). That means this helper was always a noop.
The resolveCurrentDispatcher method was changed recently to replace the thrown error with a call to console.error. This newly logged error ended up slipping through and being user visible because of the above issue.
This PR updates DevTools to also fork the console patching logic (to remove the DEV-only guard).
Note that I didn't spot this earlier because my test harness (react-devtools-shell) always runs in DEV mode. 🤡