Use some clever git diffing to ignore lines that only change the
`@generated` header. We can't do this for the version string because the
version string can be embedded in lines with other changes, but this
header is always on one line.
RC releases are a special kind of prerelease build because unlike
canaries we shouldn't publish new RCs from any commit on `main`, only
when we intentionally bump the RC number. But they are still prerelases
— like canary and experimental releases, they should use exact version
numbers in their dependencies (no ^).
We only need to generate these builds during the RC phase, i.e. when the
canary channel label is set to "rc".
Example of resulting package.json output:
```json
{
"name": "react-dom",
"version": "19.0.0-rc.0",
"dependencies": {
"scheduler": "0.25.0-rc.0"
},
"peerDependencies": {
"react": "19.0.0-rc.0"
}
}
```
https://react-builds.vercel.app/prs/29736/files/oss-stable-rc/react-dom/package.json
Requires https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/29706
The strategy here is to:
- Checkout the builds/facebook-www branch
- Read the current sync'd VERSION
- Checkout out main and sync new build
- sed/{new version string}/{old version string}
- Run git status, skip sync if clean
- Otherwise, sed/{old version string}/{new version string} and push
commit
This means that:
- We're using the real version strings from the builds
- We are checking the last commit on the branch for the real last
version
- We're skipping any commits that won't result in changes
- ???
- Profit!
`disableDOMTestUtils` and the FB build `ReactTestUtilsFB` allowed us to
finish migrating internal callsites off of ReactTestUtils. Now that
usage is cleaned up, we can remove the flag, build artifact, and test
coverage for the deprecated utility methods.
In order to integrate the `react-reconciler` build created in #28880
with third party libraries, we need to have matching
`react-reconciler/constants` to go with it.
Bundle config: inline internal hook wrapper
Instead of reading this wrapper from 2 files for "start" and "end" and
then string modifying the templates, just inline them like the other
wrappers in this file.
This PR reorganizes the `react-dom` entrypoint to only pull in code that
is environment agnostic. Previously if you required anything from this
entrypoint in any environment the entire client reconciler was loaded.
In a prior release we added a server rendering stub which you could
alias in server environments to omit this unecessary code. After landing
this change this entrypoint should not load any environment specific
code.
While a few APIs are truly client (browser) only such as createRoot and
hydrateRoot many of the APIs you import from this package are only
useful in the browser but could concievably be imported in shared code
(components running in Fizz or shared components as part of an RSC app).
To avoid making these require opting into the client bundle we are
keeping them in the `react-dom` entrypoint and changing their
implementation so that in environments where they are not particularly
useful they do something benign and expected.
#### Removed APIs
The following APIs are being removed in the next major. Largely they
have all been deprecated already and are part of legacy rendering modes
where concurrent features of React are not available
* `render`
* `hydrate`
* `findDOMNode`
* `unmountComponentAtNode`
* `unstable_createEventHandle`
* `unstable_renderSubtreeIntoContainer`
* `unstable_runWithPrioirty`
#### moved Client APIs
These APIs were available on both `react-dom` (with a warning) and
`react-dom/client`. After this change they are only available on
`react-dom/client`
* `createRoot`
* `hydrateRoot`
#### retained APIs
These APIs still exist on the `react-dom` entrypoint but have normalized
behavior depending on which renderers are currently in scope
* `flushSync`: will execute the function (if provided) inside the
flushSync implemention of FlightServer, Fizz, and Fiber DOM renderers.
* `unstable_batchedUpdates`: This is a noop in concurrent mode because
it is now the only supported behavior because there is no legacy
rendering mode
* `createPortal`: This just produces an object. It can be called from
anywhere but since you will probably not have a handle on a DOM node to
pass to it it will likely warn in environments other than the browser
* preloading APIS such as `preload`: These methods will execute the
preload across all renderers currently in scope. Since we resolve the
Request object on the server using AsyncLocalStorage or the current
function stack in practice only one renderer should act upon the
preload.
In addition to these changes the server rendering stub now just rexports
everything from `react-dom`. In a future minor we will add a warning
when using the stub and in the next major we will remove the stub
altogether
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.
Meta uses various tools built on top of the "react-reconciler" package
but that package needs to match the version of the "react" package.
This means that it should be synced at the same time. However, more than
that the feature flags between the "react" package and the
"react-reconciler" package needs to line up. Since FB has custom feature
flags, it can't use the OSS version of react-reconciler.
In #26446 we started publishing non-minified versions of our production
build artifacts, along with source maps, for easier debugging of React
when running in production mode.
The way it's currently set up is that these builds are generated
*before* Closure compiler has run. Which means it's missing many of the
optimizations that are in the final build, like dead code elimination.
This PR changes the build process to run Closure on the non-minified
production builds, too, by moving the sourcemap generation to later in
the pipeline.
The non-minified builds will still preserve the original symbol names,
and we'll use Prettier to add back whitespace. This is the exact same
approach we've been using for years to generate production builds for
Meta.
The idea is that the only difference between the minified and non-
minified builds is whitespace and symbol mangling. The semantic
structure of the program should be identical.
To implement this, I disabled symbol mangling when running Closure
compiler. Then, in a later step, the symbols are mangled by Terser. This
is when the source maps are generated.
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.
When packaging we want to infer that a bundle exists for a
`react-server` file even if it isn't explicitly configured. This is
useful in particular for the react-server entrypoints that error on
import that were recently added to `react-dom`
This change also cleans up a wayward comment left behind in a prior PR
Follow up to #28783 and #28786.
Since we've changed the implementations of these we can rename them to
something a bit more descriptive while we're at it, since anyone
depending on them will need to upgrade their code anyway.
"react" with no condition:
`__CLIENT_INTERNALS_DO_NOT_USE_OR_WARN_USERS_THEY_CANNOT_UPGRADE`
"react" with "react-server" condition:
`__SERVER_INTERNALS_DO_NOT_USE_OR_WARN_USERS_THEY_CANNOT_UPGRADE`
"react-dom":
`__DOM_INTERNALS_DO_NOT_USE_OR_WARN_USERS_THEY_CANNOT_UPGRADE`
We have a different set of dispatchers that Flight uses. This also
includes the `jsx-runtime` which must also be aliased to use the right
version.
To ensure the right versions are used together we rename the export of
the SharedInternals from 'react' and alias it in relevant bundles.
Stacked on #28751
ReactDOMSharedInternals uses properties of considerable length to model
mutuable state. These properties are not mangled during minification and
contribute a not insigificant amount to the uncompressed bundle size and
to a lesser degree compressed bundle size.
This change rewrites the DOMInternals in a way that shortens property
names so we can have smaller builds.
It also treats the entire object as a mutable container rather than
having different mutable sub objects.
The same treatment should be given to ReactSharedInternals
Remove @providesModule remnants
Removes `@providesModule` from the generated RN modules and CI
validation that no `@providesModule` is added which should no longer be
needed as this has been the case for years now.
Make it more clear that these flags aren't used in RN OSS.
- Rename
`packages/shared/forks/ReactFeatureFlags.test-renderer.native.js` to
`packages/shared/forks/ReactFeatureFlags.test-renderer.native-fb.js`
- Remove RN OSS build cases consuming the feature flags since there is
no RN OSS RTR build.
Stacked on #28627.
This makes error logging configurable using these
`createRoot`/`hydrateRoot` options:
```
onUncaughtError(error: mixed, errorInfo: {componentStack?: ?string}) => void
onCaughtError(error: mixed, errorInfo: {componentStack?: ?string, errorBoundary?: ?React.Component<any, any>}) => void
onRecoverableError(error: mixed, errorInfo: {digest?: ?string, componentStack?: ?string}) => void
```
We already have the `onRecoverableError` option since before.
Overriding these can be used to implement custom error dialogs (with
access to the `componentStack`).
It can also be used to silence caught errors when testing an error
boundary or if you prefer not getting logs for caught errors that you've
already handled in an error boundary.
I currently expose the error boundary instance but I think we should
probably remove that since it doesn't make sense for non-class error
boundaries and isn't very useful anyway. It's also unclear what it
should do when an error is rethrown from one boundary to another.
Since these are public APIs now we can implement the
ReactFiberErrorDialog forks using these options at the roots of the
builds. So I unforked those files and instead passed a custom option for
the native and www builds.
To do this I had to fork the ReactDOMLegacy file into ReactDOMRootFB
which is a duplication but that will go away as soon as the FB fork is
the only legacy root.
Stacked on top of #28498 for test fixes.
### Don't Rethrow
When we started React it was 1:1 setState calls a series of renders and
if they error, it errors where the setState was called. Simple. However,
then batching came and the error actually got thrown somewhere else.
With concurrent mode, it's not even possible to get setState itself to
throw anymore.
In fact, all APIs that can rethrow out of React are executed either at
the root of the scheduler or inside a DOM event handler.
If you throw inside a React.startTransition callback that's sync, then
that will bubble out of the startTransition but if you throw inside an
async callback or a useTransition we now need to handle it at the hook
site. So in 19 we need to make all React.startTransition swallow the
error (and report them to reportError).
The only one remaining that can throw is flushSync but it doesn't really
make sense for it to throw at the callsite neither because batching.
Just because something rendered in this flush doesn't mean it was
rendered due to what was just scheduled and doesn't mean that it should
abort any of the remaining code afterwards. setState is fire and forget.
It's send an instruction elsewhere, it's not part of the current
imperative code.
Error boundaries never rethrow. Since you should really always have
error boundaries, most of the time, it wouldn't rethrow anyway.
Rethrowing also actually currently drops errors on the floor since we
can only rethrow the first error, so to avoid that we'd need to call
reportError anyway. This happens in RN events.
The other issue with rethrowing is that it logs an extra console.error.
Since we're not sure that user code will actually log it anywhere we
still log it too just like we do with errors inside error boundaries
which leads all of these to log twice.
The goal of this PR is to never rethrow out of React instead, errors
outside of error boundaries get logged to reportError. Event system
errors too.
### Breaking Changes
The main thing this affects is testing where you want to inspect the
errors thrown. To make it easier to port, if you're inside `act` we
track the error into act in an aggregate error and then rethrow it at
the root of `act`. Unlike before though, if you flush synchronously
inside of act it'll still continue until the end of act before
rethrowing.
I expect most user code breakages would be to migrate from `flushSync`
to `act` if you assert on throwing.
However, in the React repo we also have `internalAct` and the
`waitForThrow` helpers. Since these have to use public production
implementations we track these using the global onerror or process
uncaughtException. Unlike regular act, includes both event handler
errors and onRecoverableError by default too. Not just render/commit
errors. So I had to account for that in our tests.
We restore logging an extra log for uncaught errors after the main log
with the component stack in it. We use `console.warn`. This is not yet
ignorable if you preventDefault to the main error event. To avoid
confusion if you don't end up logging the error to console I just added
`An error occurred`.
### Polyfill
All browsers we support really supports `reportError` but not all test
and server environments do, so I implemented a polyfill for browser and
node in `shared/reportGlobalError`. I don't love that this is included
in all builds and gets duplicated into isomorphic even though it's not
actually needed in production. Maybe in the future we can require a
polyfill for this.
### Follow Ups
In a follow up, I'll make caught vs uncaught error handling be
configurable too.
---------
Co-authored-by: Ricky Hanlon <rickhanlonii@gmail.com>
Also apply content hash for experimental files
In #28582 I missed that experimental files have a copy of this build
function setting the version strings.
With this change, the different files in RN will have *different*
hashes. This replaces the git hash and means that the file content
(including version) is only updated when the rest of the file content
actually changes. This should remove "noop" changes that need to be
synced that only update the version string.
A difference to the www implementation here is (and I'd be looking at
updating www as well if this lands well) that each file has an
individual hash instead of a combined content hash. This further reduces
the number of updated files and I couldn't find a reason we need to have
these in sync. The best I can gather is that this hash is used so folks
don't directly compare version string and make future updates harder.
## Summary
We want to enable the new event loop in React Native
(https://github.com/react-native-community/discussions-and-proposals/pull/744)
for all users in the new architecture (determined by the use of
bridgeless, not by the use of Fabric). In order to leverage that, we
need to also set the flag for the React reconciler to use microtasks for
scheduling (so we'll execute them at the right time in the new event
loop).
This migrates from the previous approach using a dynamic flag (to be
used at Meta) with the check of a global set by React Native. The reason
for doing this is:
1) We still need to determine this dynamically in OSS (based on
Bridgeless, not on Fabric).
2) We still need the ability to configure the behavior at Meta, and for
internal build system reasons we cannot access the flag that enables
microtasks in
[`ReactNativeFeatureFlags`](6c28c87c4d/packages/react-native/src/private/featureflags/ReactNativeFeatureFlags.js (L121)).
## How did you test this change?
Manually synchronized the changes to React Native and ran all tests for
the new architecture on it. Also tested manually.
> [!NOTE]
> This change depends on
https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/43397 which has been
merged already
We broke the ability to "break on uncaught exceptions" by adding a
try/catch higher up in the scheduling. We're giving up on fixing that so
we can remove the replay trick inside an event handler.
The issue with that approach is that we end up double logging a lot of
errors in DEV since they get reported to the page.
It's also a lot of complexity around this feature.
The idea here is that host dispatchers are not bound to renders so we
need to be able to dispatch to them at any time. This updates the
implementation to chain these dispatchers so that each renderer can
respond to the dispatch. Semantically we don't always want every
renderer to do this for instance if Fizz handles a float method we don't
want Fiber to as well so each dispatcher implementation can decide if it
makes sense to forward the call or not. For float methods server
disaptchers will handle the call if they can resolve a Request otherwise
they will forward. For client dispatchers they will handle the call and
always forward. The choice needs to be made for each dispatcher method
and may have implications on correct renderer import order. For now we
just live with the restriction that if you want to use server and client
together (such as renderToString in the browser) you need to import the
server renderer after the client renderer.
All our sources are considered third party and should be hidden in stack
traces unless expanded. Our internals aren't actionable anyway.
This doesn't really do much without tooling that actually forwards this
to new generated source maps, in which case they probably just add them
to ignorelist anyway.
Adds a new entrypoint for the production jsx-runtime when using
react-server condition. Currently the entrypoints are the same but in
the future we will potentially change the implementation of the runtime
in ways that can only be optimized for react-server constraints and we
want to have the entrypoint already separated so environments using it
will be pulling in the right version
The internal file ReactSharedSubset is what the `react` module resolves
to when imported from a Server Component environment. We gave it this
name because, originally, the idea was that Server Components can access
a subset of the APIs available on the client.
However, since then, we've also added APIs that can _only_ by accessed
on the server and not the client. In other words, it's no longer a
subset, it's a slightly different overlapping set.
So this commit renames ReactSharedSubet to ReactServer and updates all
the references. This does not affect the public API, only our internal
implementation.
This wires up the use of `async_hooks` in the Node build (as well as the
Edge build when a global is available) in DEV mode only. This will be
used to track debug info about what suspended during an RSC pass.
Enabled behind a flag for now.
## Summary
Follow up from #27717 based on feedback to rename the fork module itself
## How did you test this change?
- `yarn build`
- `yarn test
packages/scheduler/src/__tests__/SchedulerUMDBundle-test.internal.js`
Co-authored-by: Jack Pope <jackpope@meta.com>
This PR adds a new FB-specific configuration of Flight. We also need to
bundle a version of ReactSharedSubset that will be used for running
Flight on the server.
This initial implementation does not support server actions yet.
The FB-Flight still uses the text protocol on the server (the flag
`enableBinaryFlight` is set to false). It looks like we need some
changes in Hermes to properly support this binary format.
## Summary
After changes in https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/27436, UMD
builds no longer expose Scheduler from ReactSharedInternals. This module
is forked in rollup for UMD builds and the path no longer matches. This
PR updates the path name to match the new module:
ReactSharedInternalsClient.
## How did you test this change?
- `yarn build`
- Inspect `react.development.js` UMD build, observe `Scheduler:
Scheduler` is set in `ReactSharedInternals`, matching
[18.2.0](https://unpkg.com/react@18.2.0/umd/react.development.js)
- ran attribute-behavior fixture app
- Observe no more error `Uncaught (in promise) TypeError: Cannot read
properties of undefined (reading 'unstable_cancelCallback')`
Co-authored-by: Jack Pope <jackpope@meta.com>
## Summary
I had to change the commands to be windows specific so that it doesn't
cause any crashes
## How did you test this change?
I successfully built the different types of devtools extenstions on my
personal computer. In future may need to add a github action with
windows config to test these errors
#27193
In order to make Haste work with React's artifacts, It is important to
keep headers in this format:
```
/**
* ...
...
* ...
*/
```
For optimization purposes, Closure compiler will actually modify these
headers by removing * prefixes, which is expected.
We should pass sources to the compiler without license headers, with
these changes the current flow will be:
1. Apply top-level definitions. For UMD-bundles, for example, or
DEV-only bundles (e. g. `if (__DEV__) { ...`)
2. Apply licence headers for artifacts with sourcemaps: oss-production
and oss-profiling bundles, they don't need to preserve the header format
to comply with Haste. We need to apply these headers before passing
sources to Closure, so it can build correct mappings for sourcemaps.
3. Pass these sources to closure compiler for minification and
sourcemaps building.
4. Apply licence headers for artifacts without sourcemaps: dev bundles,
fb bundles. This way the header style will be preserved and not changed
by Closure.
<!--
Thanks for submitting a pull request!
We appreciate you spending the time to work on these changes. Please
provide enough information so that others can review your pull request.
The three fields below are mandatory.
Before submitting a pull request, please make sure the following is
done:
1. Fork [the repository](https://github.com/facebook/react) and create
your branch from `main`.
2. Run `yarn` in the repository root.
3. If you've fixed a bug or added code that should be tested, add tests!
4. Ensure the test suite passes (`yarn test`). Tip: `yarn test --watch
TestName` is helpful in development.
5. Run `yarn test --prod` to test in the production environment. It
supports the same options as `yarn test`.
6. If you need a debugger, run `yarn test --debug --watch TestName`,
open `chrome://inspect`, and press "Inspect".
7. Format your code with
[prettier](https://github.com/prettier/prettier) (`yarn prettier`).
8. Make sure your code lints (`yarn lint`). Tip: `yarn linc` to only
check changed files.
9. Run the [Flow](https://flowtype.org/) type checks (`yarn flow`).
10. If you haven't already, complete the CLA.
Learn more about contributing:
https://reactjs.org/docs/how-to-contribute.html
-->
## Summary
This PR updates the Rollup build pipeline to generate sourcemaps for
production build artifacts like `react-dom.production.min.js`.
It requires the Rollup v3 changes that were just merged in #26442 .
Sourcemaps are currently _only_ generated for build artifacts that are
_truly_ "production" - no sourcemaps will be generated for development,
profiling, UMD, or `shouldStayReadable` artifacts.
The generated sourcemaps contain the bundled source contents right
before that chunk was minified by Closure, and _not_ the original source
files like `react-reconciler/src/*`. This better reflects the actual
code that is running as part of the bundle, with all the feature flags
and transformations that were applied to the source files to generate
that bundle. The sourcemaps _do_ still show comments and original
function names, thus improving debuggability for production usage.
Fixes#20186 .
<!--
Explain the **motivation** for making this change. What existing problem
does the pull request solve?
-->
This allows React users to actually debug a readable version of the
React bundle in production scenarios. It also allows other tools like
[Replay](https://replay.io) to do a better job inspecting the React
source when stepping through.
## How did you test this change?
- Generated numerous sourcemaps with various combinations of the React
bundle selections
- Viewed those sourcemaps in
https://evanw.github.io/source-map-visualization/ and confirmed via the
visualization that the generated mappings appear to be correct
I've attached a set of production files + their sourcemaps here:
[react-sourcemap-examples.zip](https://github.com/facebook/react/files/11023466/react-sourcemap-examples.zip)
You can drag JS+sourcemap file pairs into
https://evanw.github.io/source-map-visualization/ for viewing.
Examples:
- `react.production.min.js`:

- `react-dom.production.min.js`:

- `use-sync-external-store/with-selector.production.min.js`:

<!--
Demonstrate the code is solid. Example: The exact commands you ran and
their output, screenshots / videos if the pull request changes the user
interface.
How exactly did you verify that your PR solves the issue you wanted to
solve?
If you leave this empty, your PR will very likely be closed.
-->
Updates useFormState to allow a sync function to be passed as an action.
A form action is almost always async, because it needs to talk to the
server. But since we support client-side actions, too, there's no reason
we can't allow sync actions, too.
I originally chose not to allow them to keep the implementation simpler
but it's not really that much more complicated because we already
support this for actions passed to startTransition. So now it's
consistent: anywhere an action is accepted, a sync client function is a
valid input.
Reverts facebook/react#27577.
We also sync React Native OSS bundles which means this didn't work as
hoped unless we abandon the commit hash in OSS which seems useful.
Similar to #26734, this switches the RN builds for Meta to a content
hash instead of git commit number to make the builds reproducible and
avoid creating sync commits if the bundled content didn't change.
## Summary
When transpiling `react-native` with `swc` this file caused some trouble
as it mixes ESM and CJS import/export syntax. This PR addresses this by
converting CJS exports to ESM exports. As
`ReactNativeViewConfigRegistry` is synced from `react` to `react-native`
repository, it's required to make the change here. I've also aligned the
mock of `ReactNativeViewConfigRegistry` to reflect current
implementation.
Related PR in `react-native`:
https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/40787