Commit Graph

54 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sebastian Markbåge
c4595ca4c8 Add ViewTransitionComponent to Stacks and DevTools (#32034)
Just adding the name so it shows up.

(Note that no experimental ones are added to the list of filters atm.
Including SuspenseList etc.)
2025-01-09 11:33:34 -05:00
lauren
9806a4b0d4 [DevTools] Fix React Compiler badging (#31196)
In #31140 we switched over the uMC polyfill to use memo instead of state
since memo would FastRefresh properly. However this busted devtools'
badging of compiled components; this PR fixes it.

TODO: tests
Co-authored-by: Ruslan Lesiutin <rdlesyutin@gmail.com>

---------

Co-authored-by: Ruslan Lesiutin <rdlesyutin@gmail.com>
2024-10-15 12:53:45 +01:00
Ruslan Lesiutin
d5bba18b5d fix[react-devtools]: record timeline data only when supported (#31154)
Stacked on https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/31132. See last
commit.

There are 2 issues:
1. We've been recording timeline events, even if Timeline Profiler was
not supported by the Host. We've been doing this for React Native, for
example, which would significantly regress perf of recording a profiling
session, but we were not even using this data.
2. Currently, we are generating component stack for every state update
event. This is extremely expensive, and we should not be doing this.

We can't currently fix the second one, because we would still need to
generate all these stacks, and this would still take quite a lot of
time. As of right now, we can't generate a component stack lazily
without relying on the fact that reference to the Fiber is not stale.
With `enableOwnerStacks` we could populate component stacks in some
collection, which would be cached at the Backend, and then returned only
once Frontend asks for it. This approach also eliminates the need for
keeping a reference to a Fiber.
2024-10-09 15:27:04 +01:00
Ruslan Lesiutin
bfe91fbecf refactor[react-devtools]: flatten reload and profile config (#31132)
Stacked on https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/31131. See last
commit.

This is a clean-up and a pre-requisite for next changes:
1. `ReloadAndProfileConfig` is now split into boolean value and settings
object. This is mainly because I will add one more setting soon, and
also because settings might be persisted for a longer time than the flag
which signals if the Backend was reloaded for profiling. Ideally, this
settings should probably be moved to the global Hook object, same as we
did for console patching.
2. Host is now responsible for reseting the cached values, Backend will
execute provided `onReloadAndProfileFlagsReset` callback.
2024-10-09 13:57:02 +01:00
Ruslan Lesiutin
1d8d12005f fix[react-devtools]: remove all listeners when Agent is shutdown (#31151)
Based on https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/31049, credits to
@EdmondChuiHW.

What is happening here:
1. Once Agent is destroyed, unsubscribe own listeners and bridge
listeners.
2. [Browser extension only] Once Agent is destroyed, unsubscribe
listeners from BackendManager.
3. [Browser extension only] I've discovered that `backendManager.js`
content script can get injected multiple times by the browser. When
Frontend is initializing, it will create Store first, and then execute a
content script for bootstraping backend manager. If Frontend was
destroyed somewhere between these 2 steps, Backend won't be notified,
because it is not initialized yet, so it will not unsubscribe listeners
correctly. We might end up duplicating listeners, and the next time
Frontend is launched, it will report an issues "Cannot add / remove node
...", because same operations are emitted twice.

To reproduce 3 you can do the following:
1. Click reload-to-profile
2. Right after when both app and Chrome DevTools panel are reloaded,
close Chrome DevTools.
3. Open Chrome DevTools again, open Profiler panel and observe "Cannot
add / remove node ..." error in the UI.
2024-10-09 13:34:01 +01:00
Ruslan Lesiutin
389a2deebc refactor[react-devtools/fiber/renderer]: optimize durations resolution (#31118)
Stacked on https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/31117. 

No need for sending long float numbers and to have resolution less than
a microsecond, we end up formatting it on a Frontend side:

6c7b41da3d/packages/react-devtools-shared/src/devtools/views/Profiler/utils.js (L359-L360)
2024-10-09 13:26:16 +01:00
Sebastian Markbåge
654e387d7e [Flight] Serialize Server Components Props in DEV (#31105)
This allows us to show props in React DevTools when inspecting a Server
Component.

I currently drastically limit the object depth that's serialized since
this is very implicit and you can have heavy objects on the server.

We previously was using the general outlineModel to outline
ReactComponentInfo but we weren't consistently using it everywhere which
could cause some bugs with the parsing when it got deduped on the
client. It also lead to the weird feature detect of `isReactComponent`.
It also meant that this serialization was using the plain serialization
instead of `renderConsoleValue` which means we couldn't safely serialize
arbitrary debug info that isn't serializable there.

So the main change here is to call `outlineComponentInfo` and have that
always write every "Server Component" instance as outlined and in a way
that lets its props be serialized using `renderConsoleValue`.

<img width="1150" alt="Screenshot 2024-10-01 at 1 25 05 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/f6e7811d-51a3-46b9-bbe0-1b8276849ed4">
2024-10-01 01:39:20 -04:00
Edmond Chui
204a551eae Add: reload to profile for Fusebox (#31021)
## Summary

Add reload to profile for Fusebox 

Stacked on #31048. See
6be1977112

## How did you test this change?

Test E2E in [D63233256](https://www.internalfb.com/diff/D63233256)
2024-09-26 16:39:51 +01:00
Ruslan Lesiutin
d66fa02a30 fix: use public instance in Fiber renderer and expose it from getInspectorDataForViewAtPoint (#31068)
React DevTools no longer operates with just Fibers, it now builds its
own Shadow Tree, which represents the tree on the Host (Fabric on
Native, DOM on Web).

We have to keep track of public instances for a select-to-inspect
feature. We've recently changed this logic in
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/30831, and looks like we've been
incorrectly getting a public instance for Fabric case.

Not only this, turns out that all `getInspectorData...` APIs are
returning Fibers, and not public instances. I have to expose it, so that
React DevTools can correctly identify the element, which was selected.

Changes for React Native are in
[D63421463](https://www.internalfb.com/diff/D63421463)
2024-09-26 10:17:16 +01:00
Ruslan Lesiutin
fc4a33eaa9 fix: consider alternate as a key for componentLogsEntry when inspecting raw fiber instance (#31009)
Related - https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/30899.

Looks like this was missed. We actually do this when we record errors
and warnings before sending them via Bridge:

e4953922a9/packages/react-devtools-shared/src/backend/fiber/renderer.js (L2169-L2173)

So, what is happening in the end, errors or warnings are displayed in
the Tree, but when user clicks on the component, nothing is shown,
because `fiberToComponentLogsMap` has only `alternate` as a key.
2024-09-24 17:49:19 +01:00
Ruslan Lesiutin
3cac0875dc refactor[react-devtools]: move console patching to global hook (#30596)
Stacked on https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/30566 and whats under
it. See [this
commit](374fd737e4).

It is mostly copying code from one place to another and updating tests.
With these changes, for every console method that we patch, there is
going to be a single applied patch:
- For `error`, `warn`, and `trace` we are patching when hook is
installed. This guarantees that component stacks are going to be
appended even if browser DevTools are not opened. We pay some price for
it, though: if user has browser DevTools closed and if at this point
some warning or error is emitted (logged), the next time user opens
browser DevTools, they are going to see `hook.js` as the source frame.
Unfortunately, ignore listing from source maps is not applied
retroactively, and I don't know if its a bug or just a design
limitations. Once browser DevTools are opened, source maps will be
loaded and ignore listing will be applied for all emitted logs in the
future.
- For `log`, `info`, `group`, `groupCollapsed` we are only patching when
React notifies React DevTools about running in StrictMode. We unpatch
the methods right after it.
2024-09-18 18:12:18 +01:00
Ruslan Lesiutin
8cf64620c7 fix[rdt/fiber/renderer.js]: getCurrentFiber can be injected as null (#30968)
In production artifacts for `18.x.x` `getCurrentFiber` can actually be
injected as `null`. Updated `getComponentStack` and `onErrorOrWarning`
implementations to support this.

![Screenshot 2024-09-16 at 10 52
00](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/a0c773aa-ebbf-4fd5-95c4-cac3cc0c203f)
2024-09-16 14:47:57 +01:00
Ruslan Lesiutin
3dfd5d9efb refactor[RendererInterface]: expose onErrorOrWarning and getComponentStack (#30931)
Make `onErrorOrWarning` and `getComponentStack` part of
`rendererInterface`. By doing this, they will be available from the
global hook `rendererInterfaces` Map. This makes them available to be
used by Hook, which soon will be the only one who is doing console
patching.

This is also a pre-requisite for removing `registerRenderer`:

d160aa0fbb/packages/react-devtools-shared/src/backend/console.js (L113-L121)
2024-09-10 15:59:40 +01:00
Sebastian Markbåge
d160aa0fbb [DevTools] Use Unicode Atom Symbol instead of Atom Emoji (#30832)
This reverts #19603.

Before:
<img width="724" alt="Screenshot 2024-08-28 at 12 07 29 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/0613088f-c013-4f1c-92c3-fbdae8c1f109">

After:
<img width="771" alt="Screenshot 2024-08-28 at 12 08 13 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/eef21bee-d11f-4f0a-9147-053a163f720f">

Consensus seems to be that while the purple on is a bit clearer and
easier to read. The purple is not on brand so it doesn't look like
React. It looks ugly. It's distracting (too eye catching). Taking away
attention from other tabs in an unfair way.

It also gets worse with more tabs added. We plan on both adding another
tab and panes inside other tabs (elements/sources) soon. Each needs to
be marked somehow as part of React but spelling it out is too long.
Putting inside a second tab means two clicks and takes away real-estate
from our extension and doesn't solve the problem with extension panes in
other tabs. We also plan on adding multiple different tracks to the
Performance tab which also needs a name other than just React and
spelling out React as a prefix is too long. The Emoji is too
distracting. So it seems best to uniformly apply the symbol - albeit it
might just look like a dot to many.

Dark mode looks close to on brand:

<img width="1089" alt="Screenshot 2024-08-28 at 12 32 50 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/7175a540-4241-4c26-9e4d-4d367873af57">
2024-09-10 00:09:42 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
0dbacf2041 [DevTools] Improve Layering Between Console and Renderer (#30925)
The console instrumentation should not know about things like Fibers.
Only the renderer bindings should know about that stuff. We can improve
the layering by just moving all that stuff behind a `getComponentStack`
helper that gets injected by the renderer.

This sets us up for the Flight renderer #30906 to have its own
implementation of this function.
2024-09-09 15:33:30 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
fa3cf509a9 [DevTools] Add Map for Server Component Logs (#30905)
Stacked on #30899.

This adds another map to store Server Components logs. When they're
replayed with an owner we can associate them with a DevToolsInstance.
The replaying should happen before they can mount in Fiber so they'll
always have all logs when they mount. There can be more than one
Instance associated with any particular ReactComponentInfo. It can also
be unmounted and restored later.

One thing that's interesting about these is that when a Server Component
tree refreshes a new set of ReactComponentInfo will update through the
tree and the VirtualInstances will update with new instances. This means
that the old errors/warnings are no longer associated with the
VirtualInstance. I.e. it's not continually appended like updates do for
Fiber backed instances. On the client we dedupe errors/warnings for the
life time of the page. On the server that doesn't work well because it
would mean that when you refresh the page, you miss out on warnings so
we dedupe them per request instead. If we just appended on refresh it
would keep adding them.

If ever add a deduping mechanism that spans longer than a request, we
might need to do more of a merge when these updates.

Nothing actually adds logs to this map yet. That will need an
integration with Flight in a follow up.
2024-09-09 15:12:28 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
f4b3a1fea2 [DevTools] Delete fiberToFiberInstanceMap (#30900)
Stacked on #30899.

After the rest of the stack this is now unused so we can save time and
memory avoiding to maintain it. 🎉
2024-09-09 15:12:13 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
e07235b980 [DevTools] Refactor Error / Warning Count Tracking (#30899)
We can simplify this tracking by not having a separate pending set of
logs and the logs tracked per instance and instead we just track the
logs per Fiber. This avoids the need to move it back into the pending
set after unmounts in case a Fiber is reparented.

The main motivation for this is to unify with an upcoming tracking of
logs for Server Components. For those it doesn't make sense to move them
into a per instance set and because the same Server Component - and its
logs - may appear more than once. So no particular instance should steal
it.

The second part of this change is that instead of looking up the
instance from fiber, which requires the fiberToFiberInstanceMap, we
instead look up if a component has any new logs when we traverse it in
the commit phase. After all for a component to have had a log it must
have updated. This is a similar technique to #30897. This technique also
works for Server Components without having to maintain a one to many
relationship from ComponentInfo to VirtualInstance. So it unifies them.

Normally this look up would be fast since the `fiberToComponentsLogs`
set would be empty and so doesn't add any significant weight to the
commit phase. If there's a ton of logs on many different components then
it's not great since it would slow down the commit phase but that's not
what we expect to see so in typical usage, this is better.

There is an unfortunate consequence though which is that
`console.warn/error` in passive effects (i.e. `useEffect`) wouldn't be
picked up because currently we traverse the logs in
`handleCommitFiberRoot` which is too early. If we moved that to
`handlePostCommitFiberRoot` this wouldn't be a problem. In the meantime,
I just detect this and do a brute force flush by walking all mounted
instances if there's a `console.warn/error` inside a passive effect.

If we ever add "owners" to event handlers that are triggered outside the
render/commit phases (like `<div onClick={...}>`) and we want to
associate error/warnings in those, we'd need a different technique to
ensure those get flushed in time.
2024-09-09 15:10:04 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
99cba2b041 [DevTools] Build Updater List from the Commit instead of Map (#30897)
Stacked on #30896.

The problem with the `getUpdatersList` function is that it iterates over
Fibers and then looks up each of those Fibers in the
fiberToFiberInstanceMap which we ideally could get rid of.

However, every time an updater comes into play for a commit it must mean
that something below the updater itself updated and so the updater will
also be cloned which means we'll pass it on the way down when traversing
the tree in the commit.

When we do this traversal, we can just look if the Fiber is in the
updater set and if so add it to the updater list as we go.
2024-09-06 21:59:09 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
6292398241 [DevTools] Simplify Context Change Tracking in Profiler (#30896)
When Context change tracking was added to support modern Context it
relied on the "memoizedValue" to read the current value. This only works
in React 18+ when it was added to support Lazy Context Propagation.
However, the backend stored the old value the same way it used to work
for legacy Context in a global map. This was unnecessary since we *also*
have the old value on the previous Fiber.

This removes all the costly tracking of previous values for every Fiber
that uses Contexts slowing down profiling. Instead, we just compare the
Contexts from

The downside is that this no longer supports detecting changes due to
legacy Context because it doesn't have a similar "previous" value.
However, legacy Context has long been deprecated and is completely
removed in 19. So I don't think it's worth supporting since you have to
be on an old version *and* actually use legacy Context *and* trying to
profile something that updates it. Which btw, updating legacy contexts
only worked at all from 16 something when we made updates work. So it
was unusual even in the slight gap where you could and before you had
migrated to modern Context introduced in 16.3.
2024-09-06 21:58:20 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
baf47462d6 [DevTools] Remove use of .alternate in root and recordProfilingDurations (#30895)
Ideally we shouldn't use the `.alternate` to access previous state
because ideally Fibers shouldn't have alternates.

The only case it's ok to use it is when it is used to identity the
stateful part of a component's identity. In a non-alternate Fiber model
there would instead be another object that represents instance but in
the current model it's modeled by the pair.

It's not ok is to get the previous state of the tree since that would
not live on the stateful part.

We don't generally need this though because we have the previous state
on instance.data before updating it, or passed from above.
2024-09-06 21:46:09 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
d76a5651f4 [DevTools] Handle reordered contexts in Profiler (#30887)
While looking at the Context tracking implementation for other reasons I
noticed this bug.

Originally it wasn't allowed to have conditional `useContext(context)`
(although we did because it's technically possible). With `use(context)`
it is officially allowed to be conditional as long as it is within a
Hook/Component and not within a try/catch.

This means that this loop comparing previous and next contexts need to
consider that the Context objects might not line up and so it's possibly
comparing apples to oranges. We already bailed if one was longer than
the other.

If the order of contexts changes later in the component that means
something else must have already changed earlier so the reason for the
rerender isn't the context so we can just return false in that case.
2024-09-06 21:45:52 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
a06cd9e1d1 [DevTools] Refactor Forcing Fallback / Error of Suspense / Error Boundaries (#30870)
First, this basically reverts
1f3892ef8c
to use a Map/Set to track what is forced to suspend/error again instead
of flags on the Instance. The difference is that now the key in the
Fiber itself instead of the ID. Critically this avoids the
fiberToFiberInstance map to look up whether or not a Fiber should be
forced to suspend when asked by the renderer.

This also allows us to force suspend/error on filtered instances. It's a
bit unclear what should happen when you try to Suspend or Error a child
but its parent boundary is filtered. It was also inconsistent between
Suspense and Error due to how they were implemented.

I think conceptually you're trying to simulate what would happen if that
Component errored or suspended so it would be misleading if we triggered
a different boundary than would happen in real life. So I think we
should trigger the nearest unfiltered Fiber, not the nearest Instance.
The consequence of this however is that if this instance was filtered,
there's no way to undo it without refreshing or removing the filter.
This is an edge case though since it's unusual you'd filter these in the
first place.

It used to be that Suspense walked the store in the frontend and Error
walked the Fibers in the backend. They also did this somewhat eagerly.
This simplifies and unifies the model by passing the id of what you
clicked in the frontend and then we walk the Fiber tree from there in
the backend to lazily find the boundary. However I also eagerly walk the
tree at first to find whether we have any Suspense or Error boundary
parents at all so we can hide the buttons if not.

This also implements it to work with VirtualInstances using #30865. I
find the nearest Fiber Instance downwards filtered or otherwise. Then
from its parent we find the nearest Error or Suspense boundary. That's
because VirtualInstance will always have their inner Fiber as an
Instance but they might not have their parent since it might be
filtered. Which would potentially cause us to skip over a filtered
parent Suspense boundary.
2024-09-05 15:48:17 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
4c58fce777 [DevTools] Avoid getFiberIDUnsafe in debug() Helper (#30878)
Avoids looking up id from fiber and instead pass the instance to the
debug() helper.
2024-09-04 20:25:35 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
01ae2ddaa9 [DevTools] Include some Filtered Fiber Instances (#30865)
When we filter Fiber Instances where have no way to recover our position
in the Fiber tree. The extreme form of this is if you filter out all the
Fibers and keep only Server Components.

This affects operations that are performed against fibers such as
collecting Host Instances for highlighting or emulating
suspending/erroring.

Conceptually we don't need to add this into the DevToolsInstance tree
because we only need to get to some Fibers from a VirtualInstance. A
Virtual Instance can contain more than one conceptual child Fiber. It
would be easier if we didn't include them in the tree on one hand
because we could just traverse the tree and assume it looks like the one
on the frontend. But it's also tricky to manage the lifetime. So I went
with a special FilteredFiberInstance node in the tree.

Currently I only add it if its parent would've been a VirtualInstance
since we don't need it in any other cases. If the parent was another
FiberInstance it already has a Fiber.

There might be need for always tracking all Instances whether they're
filtered or not or just moving filtering to the frontend but for now I'm
keeping the general architecture as is.
2024-09-04 19:35:28 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
0123d7c19f [DevTools] Track root instances in a root Map (#30875)
The FiberRoot is a stateful node that can be tracked this way.

This is another step that will let us remove the
`fiberToFiberInstanceMap`.
2024-09-04 16:15:53 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
d1afcb43fd [DevTools] Track all public HostInstances in a Map (#30831)
This lets us get from a HostInstance to the nearest DevToolsInstance
without relying on `findFiberByHostInstance` and
`fiberToDevToolsInstanceMap`. We already did the equivalent of this for
Resources in HostHoistables.

One issue before was that we'd ideally get away from the
`fiberToDevToolsInstanceMap` map in general since we should ideally not
treat Fibers as stateful but they could be replaced by something else
stateful in principle.

This PR also addresses Virtual Instances. Now you can select a DOM node
and have it select a Virtual Instance if that's the nearest parent since
the parent doesn't have to be a Fiber anymore.

However, the other reason for this change is that I'd like to get rid of
the need for the `findFiberByHostInstance` from being injected. A
renderer should not need to store a reference back from its instance to
a Fiber. Without the Synthetic Event system this wouldn't be needed by
the renderer so we should be able to remove it. We also don't really
need it since we have all the information by just walking the commit to
collect the nodes if we just maintain our own Map.

There's one subtle nuance that the different renderers do. Typically a
HostInstance is the same thing as a PublicInstance in React but
technically in Fabric they're not the same. So we need to translate
between PublicInstance and HostInstance. I just hardcoded the Fabric
implementation of this since it's the only known one that does this but
could feature detect other ones too if necessary. On one hand it's more
resilient to refactors to not rely on injected helpers and on hand it
doesn't follow changes to things like this.

For the conflict resolution I added in #30494 I had to make that
specific to DOM so we can move the DOM traversal to the backend instead
of the injected helper.
2024-09-03 17:28:05 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
e0a07e9738 [DevTools] Support VirtualInstances in findAllCurrentHostInstances (#30853)
This lets us highlight Server Components.

However, there is a problem with this because if the actual nearest
Fiber is filtered, there's no FiberInstance and so we might skip past it
and maybe never find a child while walking the whole tree. This is very
common in the case where you have just Server Components and Host
Components which are filtered by default.

Note how the DOM nodes that are just plain host instances without client
component wrappers are not highlighted here:

<img width="1102" alt="Screenshot 2024-08-30 at 4 33 55 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/c9a7b91e-5faf-4c60-99a8-1195539ff8b5">

Fixing that needs a separate refactor though and related to several
other features that already have a similar issue without
VirtualInstances like Suspense/Error Boundaries (triggering
suspense/error on a filtered Suspense/ErrorBoundary doesn't work
correctly). So this first PR just adds the feature for the common case
where there's at least some Fibers.
2024-09-03 12:29:59 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
04ec50efa9 [DevTools] Add Filtering of Environment Names (#30850)
Stacked on #30842.

This adds a filter to be able to exclude Components from a certain
environment. Default to Client or Server.

The available options are computed into a dropdown based on the names
that are currently used on the page (or an option that were previously
used). In addition to the hardcoded "Client". Meaning that if you have
Server Components on the page you see "Server" or "Client" as possible
options but it can be anything if there are multiple RSC environments on
the page.

"Client" in this case means Function and Class Components in Fiber -
excluding built-ins.

If a Server Component has two environments (primary and secondary) then
both have to be filtered to exclude it.

We don't show the option at all if there are no Server Components used
in the page to avoid confusing existing users that are just using Client
Components and wouldn't know the difference between Server vs Client.

<img width="815" alt="Screenshot 2024-08-30 at 12 56 42 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/e06b225a-e85d-4cdc-8707-d4630fede19e">
2024-09-03 12:29:15 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
e56f4ae38d [DevTools] Support secondary environment name when it changes (#30842)
We currently support the Environment Name change within a Component.
#29867

If this happens, we give it two HoCs. The problem with this is that we
only show one followed by `+1` in the list.

Before:
<img width="529" alt="Screenshot 2024-08-28 at 6 50 31 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/c080be72-c254-4d4d-89b6-d1b7f9a9ada8">

After:
<img width="1101" alt="Screenshot 2024-08-28 at 7 16 21 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/04718674-164b-4255-9cf6-dec9198f12b7">

I could potentially instead badge this case as `A/B` in a single badge.
2024-08-30 10:05:19 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
61739a8a0f [DevTools] Filter Server Components (#30839)
Support filtering Virtual Instances with existing filters.

Server Components are considered "Functions".

In a follow up I'll a new filter for "Environment" which will let you
filter by Client vs Server (and more).
2024-08-29 12:49:30 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
e33a7233a7 [DevTools] Track virtual instances on the tracked path for selections (#30802)
This appends a (filtered) virtual instance path at the end of the fiber
path. If a virtual instance is selected inside the fiber.

The main part of the path is still just the fiber path since that's the
semantically stateful part. Then we just tack on a few virtual path
frames at the end if we're currently selecting a specific Server
Component within the nearest Fiber.

I also took the opportunity to fix a bug which caused selections inside
Suspense boundaries to not be tracked.
2024-08-29 12:45:03 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
18bf7bf500 [DevTools] Remove displayName from inspected data (#30841)
This just clarifies that this is actually unused in the front end. We
use the name from the original instance as the canonical name.
2024-08-29 12:44:48 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
f90a6bcc4c [DevTools] Reconcile Fibers Against Previous Children Instances (#30822)
This loops over the remainingReconcilingChildren to find existing
FiberInstances that match the updated Fiber. This is the same thing we
already do for virtual instances. This avoids the need for a
`fiberToFiberInstanceMap`.

This loop is fast but there is a downside when the children set is very
large and gets reordered with keys since we might have to loop over the
set multiple times to get to the instances in the bottom. If that
becomes a problem we can optimize it the same way ReactChildFiber does
which is to create a temporary Map only when the children don't line up
properly. That way everything except the first pass can use the Map but
there's no need to create it eagerly.

Now that we have the loop we don't need the previousSibling field so we
can save some memory there.
2024-08-27 12:05:47 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
9690b9ad74 [DevTools] Remove findCurrentFiberUsingSlowPathByFiberInstance (#30818)
We always track the last committed Fiber on `FiberInstance.data`.


dcae56f8b7/packages/react-devtools-shared/src/backend/fiber/renderer.js (L3068)

So we can now remove this complex slow path to get the current fiber.
2024-08-27 12:05:24 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
1a8f92a869 [DevTools] Track Tree Base Duration of Virtual Instances (#30817)
These don't have their own time since they don't take up any time to
render but they show up in the tree for context. However they never
render themselves. Their base tree time is the base time of their
children. This way they take up the same space as their combined
children in the Profiler tree. (Instead of leaving a blank line which
they did before this PR.)

The frontend doesn't track the difference between a virtual instance and
a Fiber that didn't render this update. This might be a bit confusing as
to why it didn't render. I add the word "client" to make it a bit
clearer and works for both. We should probably have different verbiage
here based on it is a Server Component or something else.

<img width="1103" alt="Screenshot 2024-08-26 at 5 00 47 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/87b811d4-7024-466a-845d-542493ed3ca2">

I also took the opportunity to remove idToTreeBaseDurationMap and
idToRootMap maps. Cloning the Map isn't really all that super fast
anyway and it means we have to maintain the map continuously as we
render. Instead, we can track it on the instances and then walk the
instances to create a snapshot when starting to profile. This isn't as
fast but really fast too and requires less bookkeeping while rendering
instead which is more sensitive than that one snapshot in the beginning.
2024-08-27 12:05:10 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
e44685e4f1 [DevTools] Use Owner Stacks to Implement View Source of a Server Component (#30798)
We don't have the source location of Server Components on the client
because we don't want to eagerly do the throw trick for all Server
Components just in case. Unfortunately Node.js doesn't expose V8's API
to get a source location of a function.

We do have the owner stacks of the JSX that created it though and at
some point we'll also show that location in DevTools.

However, the realization is that if a Server Component is the owner of
any child. The owner stack of that child will have the owner component's
source location as its bottom stack frame.

The technique I'm implementing here is to track whenever a child mounts
we already have its owner. We track the first discovered owned child's
stack on the owner. Then when we ask for a Source location of the owner
do we parse that stack and extract the location of the bottom frame.
This doesn't give us a location necessarily in the top of the function
but somewhere in the function.

In this case the first owned child is the Container:

<img width="1107" alt="Screenshot 2024-08-22 at 10 24 42 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/95f32850-24a5-4151-8ce6-b7b89db68aee">
<img width="648" alt="Screenshot 2024-08-22 at 10 24 20 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/4bcba033-866f-4684-9beb-de09d189deff">

We can even use this technique for Fibers too. Currently I use this as a
fallback in case the error technique didn't work. This covers a case
where nothing errors but you still render a child. This case is actually
quite common:

```
function Foo() {
  return <Bar />;
}
```

However, for Fibers we could really just use the `inspect(function)`
technique which works for all cases. At least in Chrome.

Unfortunately, this technique doesn't work if a Component doesn't create
any new JSX but just renders its children. It also currently doesn't
work if the child is filtered since I only look up the owner if an
instance is not filtered. This means that the container in the fixture
can't view source by default since the host component is filtered:

```
export default function Container({children}) {
  return <div>{children}</div>;
}
```

<img width="1107" alt="Screenshot 2024-08-22 at 10 24 35 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/c3f8f9c5-5add-4d35-9290-3a5079e82adc">
2024-08-26 20:50:43 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
f65ac7bd4a [DevTools] Make function inspection instant (#30786)
I noticed that there is a delay due to the inspection being split into
one part that gets the attribute and another eval that does the
inspection. This is a bit hacky and uses temporary global names that are
leaky. The timeout was presumably to ensure that the first step had
fully propagated but it's slow. As we've learned, it can be throttled,
and it isn't a guarantee either way.

Instead, we can just consolidate these into a single operation that
by-passes the bridge and goes straight to the renderer interface from
the eval.

I did the same for the viewElementSource helper even though that's not
currently in use since #28471 but I think we probably should return to
that technique when it's available since it's more reliable than the
throw - at least in Chrome. I'm not sure about the status of React
Native here. In Firefox, inspecting a function with source maps doesn't
seem to work. It doesn't jump to original code.
2024-08-26 11:53:17 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
13ddf1084b [DevTools] Find owners from the parent path that matches the Fiber or ReactComponentInfo (#30717)
This enables finding Server Components on the owner path. Server
Components aren't stateful so there's not actually one specific owner
that it necessarily matches. So it can't be a global look up. E.g. the
same Server Component can be rendered in two places or even nested
inside each other.

Therefore we need to find an appropriate instance using a heuristic. We
can do that by traversing the parent path since the owner is likely also
a parent. Not always but almost always.

To simplify things we can also do the same for Fibers. That brings us
one step closer to being able to get rid of the global
fiberToFiberInstance map since we can just use the shadow tree to find
this information.

This does mean that we can't find owners that aren't parents which is
usually ok. However, there is a test case that's interesting where you
have a React ART tree inside a DOM tree. In that case the owners
actually span multiple renderers and roots so the owner is not on the
parent stack. Usually this is fine since you'd just care about the
owners within React ART but ideally we'd support this. However, I think
that really the fix to this is that the React ART tree itself should
actually show up inside the DOM tree in DevTools and in the virtual
shadow tree because that's conceptually where it belongs. That would
then solve this particular issue. We'd just need some way to associate
the root with a DOM parent when it gets mounted.
2024-08-16 19:52:11 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
19bd26beb6 [Flight/DevTools] Pass the Server Component's "key" as Part of the ReactComponentInfo (#30703)
Supports showing the key in DevTools on the Server Component that the
key was applied to. We can also use this to reconcile to preserve
instance equality when they're reordered.

One thing that's a bit weird about this is that if you provide an
explicit key on a Server Component that alone doesn't have any
semantics. It's because we pass the key down and let the nearest child
inherit the key or get prefixed by the key.

So you might see the same key as a prefix on the child of the Server
Component too which might be a bit confusing. We could remove the prefix
from children but that might also be a bit confusing if they collide.

The div in this case doesn't have a key explicitly specified. It gets it
from the Server Component parent.

<img width="1107" alt="Screenshot 2024-08-14 at 10 06 36 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/cfc517cc-e737-44c3-a1be-050049267ee2">

Overall keys get a bit confusing when you apply filter. Especially since
it's so common to actually apply the key on a Host Instance. So you
often don't see the key.
2024-08-15 11:04:53 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
49496d4937 [DevTools] Support Server Components in Tree (#30684)
This adds VirtualInstances to the tree. Each Fiber has a list of its
parent Server Components in `_debugInfo`. The algorithm is that when we
enter a set of fibers, we actually traverse level 0 of all the
`_debugInfo` in each fiber. Then level 1 of each `_debugInfo` and so on.
It would be simpler if `_debugInfo` only contained Server Component
since then we could just look at the index in the array but it actually
contains other data as well which leads to multiple passes but we don't
expect it to have a lot of levels before hitting a reified fiber.
Finally when we hit the end a traverse the fiber itself.

This lets us match consecutive `ReactComponentInfo` that are all the
same at the same level. This creates a single VirtualInstance for each
sequence. This lets the same Server Component instance that's a parent
to multiple children appear as a single Instance instead of one per
Fiber.

Since a Server Component's result can be rendered in more than one place
there's not a 1:1 mapping though. If it is in different parents or if
the sequence is interrupted, then it gets split into two different
instances with the same `ReactComponentInfo` data.

The real interesting case is what happens during updates because this
algorithm means that a Fiber can become reparented during an update to
end up in a different VirtualInstance. The ideal would maybe be that the
frontend could deal with this reparenting but instead I basically just
unmount the previous instance (and its children) and mount a new
instance which leads to some interesting scenarios. This is inline with
the strategy I was intending to pursue anyway where instances are
reconciled against the previous children of the same parent instead of
the `fiberToFiberInstance` map - which would let us get rid of that map.
In that case the model is resilient to Fiber being in more than one
place at a time.

However this unmount/remount does mean that we can lose selection when
this happens. We could maybe do something like using the tracked path
like I did for component filters. Ideally it's a weird edge case though
because you'd typically not have it. The main case that it happens now
is for reorders of list of server components. In that case basically all
the children move between server components while the server components
themselves stay in place. We should really include the key in server
components so that we can reconcile them using the key to handle
reorders which would solve the common case anyway.

I convert the name to the `Env(Name)` pattern which allows the
Environment Name to be used as a badge.

<img width="1105" alt="Screenshot 2024-08-13 at 9 55 29 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/323c20ba-b655-4ee8-84fa-8233f55d2999">

(Screenshot is with #30667. I haven't tried it with the alternative
fix.)

---------

Co-authored-by: Ruslan Lesiutin <rdlesyutin@gmail.com>
2024-08-14 11:16:51 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
082a690cc3 [DevTools] Compute new reordered child set from the instance tree (#30668)
This is already filtered and simply just all the ids in the linked list.

Same principle as #30665.
2024-08-13 15:18:34 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
e865fe0722 [DevTools] Unmount instance by walking the instance tree instead of the fiber tree (#30665)
There was a comment that it's not safe to walk the unmounted fiber tree
which I'm not sure is correct or not but we need to walk the instance
tree to be able to clean up virtual instances anyway. We already walk
the instance tree to clean up "remaining instances".

This is also simpler because we don't need to special case Suspense
boundaries. We simply clean up whatever branch we had before.

The ultimate goal is to also walk the instance tree for updates so we
don't need a fiber to instance map.
2024-08-13 15:18:24 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
25c584f567 [DevTools] Further Refactoring of Unmounts (#30658)
Stacked on #30625 and #30657.

This ensures that we only create instances during the commit
reconciliation and that we don't create unnecessary instances for things
that are filtered or not mounted. This ensures that we also can rely on
the reconciliation to do all the clean up. Now everything is created and
deleted as a pair in the same pass.

Previously we were including unfiltered components in the owner stack
which probably doesn't make sense since you're intending to filter them
everywhere presumably. However, it also means that those links were
broken since you can't link into owners that don't exist in the parent
tree.

The main complication is the component filters. It relied on not
unmounting the old instances. I had to update some tests that asserted
on ids that are now shifted.

For warnings/errors tracking I now restore them back into the pending
set when they unmount. Basically it puts them back into their
"pre-commit" state. That way when they remount they’re still there.

For restoring the current selection I use the tracked path mechanism
instead of relying on the id being unchanged. This is better anyway
because if you filter out the currently selected item it's better to
select the nearest match instead of just losing the selection.
2024-08-12 12:41:29 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
68dbd84b61 [DevTools] Unmount by walking previous nodes no longer in the new tree (#30644)
This no longer uses the handleCommitFiberUnmount hook to track unmounts.
Instead, we can just unmount the DevToolsInstances that we didn't reuse.
This doesn't account for cleaning up instances that were unnecessarily
created when they weren't in the tree. I have a separate follow up for
that.

This also removes the queuing of untracking. This was added in #21523
but I don't believe it has been needed for a while because the mentioned
flushPendingErrorsAndWarningsAfterDelay hasn't called untrackFiberID for
a while so the race condition doesn't exist. It's hard to tell though
because from the issues there weren't really any repros submitted.
2024-08-12 00:35:42 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
587f03c922 [DevTools] Build up DevTools Instance Shadow Tree (#30625)
This is the beginning of a refactor of the DevTools Fiber backend. The
new approach is basically that we listen to each commit from Fiber and
traverse the tree - building up a filtered shadow tree. Then we send
diffs based on that tree and perform our own operations against that
instead of using Fibers as the source of truth.

Fiber diffs Elements -> Fibers. The backend diffs Fibers ->
DevToolsInstances as a side-effect it sends deltas to the front end.

This makes the algorithm resilient to a different Fiber implementation
that doesn't use pairs of Fibers (alternates) but instead stateless new
clones each time. In that world we can't treat Fibers as instances. They
can hold onto instances but they're not necessarily 1:1 themselves.

The same thing also applies to Server Components that don't have their
own instances.

The algorithm is more or less the same as React's reconciliation in
ReactChildFiber itself. However, we do a mutable update of the tree as
we go. We also cheat a bit here in the first version in that we still
have fiberToFiberInstance map and alternate which makes reorders easier.
Further down we could do the reorders by adding the previous set to a
temporary map like ChildFiber does but only if they're not already in
order.

This first bit is just about making sure that we produce correct trees.
We have fairly good test coverage already of that already.

In the next few follow ups I'll start simplifying the rest of the logic
by taking advantage of the new tree.
2024-08-08 12:44:35 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
8a70d31ba9 [DevTools] Track DOM nodes to Fiber map for HostHoistable Resources (#30590)
Follow up from #30584.

You can already select a singleton or hoistable (that's not a resource)
in the browser elements panel and it'll select the corresponding node in
the RDT Components panel. That works because it uses the same mechanism
as event dispatching and those need to be able to receive events.
However, you can't select a resource. Because that's conceptually one to
many.

This keeps track of which fiber is acquiring which resource so we can
find all the corresponding instances.

E.g. now you can select the `<link rel="stylesheet">` in the Flight
fixture in the Element panel and then the component that rendered it in
the Components panel will be selected.

If we had a concept multi-selection we could potentially select all of
them. This similar to how a Server Component can be rendered in more
than one place and if we want to select all matching ones. It's kind of
weird though and both cases are edge cases.

Notably imperative preloads do have elements that don't have any
corresponding component but that's ok. So they'll just select `<head>`.
Maybe in dev we could track the owners of those.
2024-08-02 19:22:39 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
aa8469fefb [DevTools] Rename mountFiberRecursively/updateFiberRecursively (#30586)
This is just for clarity at first.

Before: 
- mountFiberRecursively accepts a set of children and flag that says
whether to just do one
- updateFiberRecursively accepts a fiber and loops over its children
- unmountFiberChildrenRecursively accepts a fiber and loops over its
children

After:
- mountFiberRecursively accepts a Fiber and calls
mountChildrenRecursively
- updateFiberRecursively accepts a Fiber and calls
updateChildrenRecursively
- unmountFiberRecursively accepts a Fiber and calls
unmountChildrenRecursively
- mountChildrenRecursively accepts a set of children and loops over each
one
- updateChildrenRecursively accepts a set of children and loops over
each one
- unmountChildrenRecursively accepts a set of children and loops over
each one

So now there's one place where things happens for the single item and
one place where we do the loop.
2024-08-02 17:53:17 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
ed94ea146a [DevTools] Allow Highlighting/Inspect HostSingletons/Hoistables and Resources (#30584)
Basically the new Float types needs to be supported. Resources are a bit
special because they're a DOM specific type but we can expect any other
implementation using resources to provide and instance on this field if
needed.

There's a slightly related case for the reverse lookup. You can already
select a singleton or hoistable (that's not a resource) in the browser
elements panel and it'll select the corresponding node in the RDT
Components panel. That works because it uses the same mechanism as event
dispatching and those need to be able to receive events.

However, you can't select a resource. Because that's conceptually one to
many. We could in principle just search the tree for the first one or
keep a map of currently mounted resources and just pick the first fiber
that created it. So that you can select a resource and see what created
it. Particularly useful when there's only one Fiber which is most of the
time.

---------

Co-authored-by: Ruslan Lesiutin <rdlesyutin@gmail.com>
2024-08-02 17:04:27 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
2b00018347 [DevTools] Track the parent DevToolsInstance while mounting a tree (#30542)
This just tracks the `.parent` field properly and uses DevToolsInstances
in more places that used to use IDs or Fibers.

I also use this new parent path when looking up a DevToolsInstance from
a DOM node. This should ideally be simple because the `.parent` field
represents only the unfiltered parents and include any virtual parents.
So we should be able to just get one from nearest Fiber that has one.

However, because we don't currently always clean up the map of
DevToolsInstances (e.g. updateComponentFilters doesn't recursively clean
out everything) it can leave matches hanging that shouldn't be there. So
we need to run the shouldFilterFiber filter to ignore those.

Another interesting implication is that without a FiberInstance we don't
have a way to get to a VirtualInstance from a HostComponent. Which means
that even filtered Fibers need to have a FiberInstance if they have a
VirtualInstance parent. Even if we don't actually mount them into the
front-end.
2024-07-31 10:07:17 -04:00