## Summary
- yarn.lock diff +-6249, **small pr**
- use jest-environment-jsdom by default
- uncaught error from jsdom is an error object instead of strings
- abortSignal.reason is read-only in jsdom and node,
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/AbortSignal/reason
## How did you test this change?
ci green
---------
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Silbermann <silbermann.sebastian@gmail.com>
After the previous changes these upgrade are easy.
- removes config options that were removed
- object index access now requires an indexer key in the type, this
cause a handful of errors that were fixed
- undefined keys error in all places, this needed a few extra
suppressions for repeated undefined identifiers.
Flow's
[CHANGELOG.md](https://github.com/facebook/flow/blob/main/Changelog.md).
This enables the "exact_empty_objects" setting for Flow which makes
empty objects exact instead of building up the type as properties are
added in code below. This is in preparation to Flow 191 which makes this
the default and removes the config.
More about the change in the Flow blog
[here](https://medium.com/flow-type/improved-handling-of-the-empty-object-in-flow-ead91887e40c).
This setting is an incremental path to the next Flow version enforcing
type annotations on most functions (except some inline callbacks).
Used
```
node_modules/.bin/flow codemod annotate-functions-and-classes --write .
```
to add a majority of the types with some hand cleanup when for large
inferred objects that should just be `Fiber` or weird constructs
including `any`.
Suppressed the remaining issues.
Builds on #25918
- method unbinding is no longer supported in Flow for soundness, this added a bunch of suppressions
- Flow now prevents objects to be supertypes of interfaces/classes
ghstack-source-id: d7749cbad8
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/25412
This upgrade made more expressions invalidate refinements. In some
places this lead to a large number of suppressions that I automatically
suppressed and should be followed up on when the code is touched.
I think most of them might require either manual annotations or moving
a value into a const to allow refinement.
ghstack-source-id: a45b40abf0
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/25410
This was a large upgrade that removed "classic mode" and made "types first" the only option.
Most of the needed changes have been done in previous PRs, this just fixes up the last few instances.
ghstack-source-id: 9612d95ba4
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/25408
This contains one code change, renaming the local function `ChildReconciler` to `createChildReconciler` as it's called as a function, not a constructor and to free up the name for the return value.
This was added back in #17880 to make CI pass for an unrelated change.
This limits the max worker setting to CI environments as removing the setting completely still seems to break on CircleCI.
Enables well formed exports for /scheduler. Some of the modules there were missing `@flow` and were therefore completely unchecked (despite some spurious types sprinkled around).
This update range includes:
- `types_first` ([blog](https://flow.org/en/docs/lang/types-first/), all exports need annotated types) is default. I disabled this for now to make that change incremental.
- Generics that escape the scope they are defined in are an error. I fixed some with explicit type annotations and some are suppressed that I didn't easily figure out.
With this change, a simple object type `{ }` means an exact object `{| |}` which most people assume.
Opting for inexact requires the extra `{ a: number, ... }` syntax at the end.
A followup, someone could replace all the `{| |}` with `{ }`.
This removes all the remaining references to the `build2` directory
except for the CI job that stores the artifacts. We'll keep the
`build2` artifact until downstream scripts are migrated to `build`.
## Summary
Adds support for statically extracting names for hook calls from source code, and extending source maps with that information so that DevTools does not have to directly parse source code at runtime, which will speed up the Named Hooks feature and allow it to be enabled by default.
Specifically, this PR includes the following parts:
- [x] Adding logic to statically extract relevant hook names from the parsed source code (i.e. the babel ast). Note that this logic differs slightly from the existing logic in that the existing logic also uses runtime information from DevTools (such as whether given hooks are a custom hook) to extract names for hooks, whereas this code is meant to run entirely at build time, so it does not rely on that information.
- [x] Generating an encoded "hook map", which encodes the information about a hooks *original* source location, and it's corresponding name. This "hook map" will be used to generate extended source maps, included tentatively under an extra `x_react_hook_map` field. The map itself is formatted and encoded in a very similar way as how the `names` and `mappings` fields of a standard source map are encoded ( = Base64 VLQ delta coding representing offsets into a string array), and how the "function map" in Metro is encoded, as suggested in #21782. Note that this initial version uses a very basic format, and we are not implementing our own custom encoding, but reusing the `encode` function from `sourcemap-codec`.
- [x] Updating the logic in `parseHookNames` to check if the source maps have been extended with the hook map information, and if so use that information to extract the hook names without loading the original source code. In this PR we are manually generating extended source maps in our tests in order to test that this functionality works as expected, even though we are not actually generating the extended source maps in production.
The second stage of this work, which will likely need to occur outside this repo, is to update bundlers such as Metro to use these new primitives to actually generate source maps that DevTools can use.
### Follow-ups
- Enable named hooks by default when extended source maps are present
- Support looking up hook names when column numbers are not present in source map.
- Measure performance improvement of using extended source maps (manual testing suggests ~4 to 5x faster)
- Update relevant bundlers to generate extended source maps.
## Test Plan
- yarn flow
- Tests still pass
- yarn test
- yarn test-build-devtools
- Named hooks still work on manual test of browser extension on a few different apps (code sandbox, create-react-app, facebook).
- For new functionality:
- New tests for statically extracting hook names.
- New tests for using extended source maps to look up hook names at runtime.
* Re-add old Fabric Offscreen impl behind flag
There's a chance that #21960 will affect layout in a way that we don't
expect, so I'm adding back the old implementation so we can toggle the
feature with a flag.
The flag should read from the ReactNativeFeatureFlags shim so that we
can change it at runtime. I'll do that separately.
* Import dynamic RN flags from external module
Internal feature flags that we wish to control with a GK can now be
imported from an external module, which I've called
"ReactNativeInternalFeatureFlags".
We'll need to add this module to the downstream repo.
We can't yet use this in our tests, because we don't have a test
configuration that runs against the React Native feature flags fork. We
should set up that up the same way we did for www.
We typecheck the reconciler against each one of our host configs.
`yarn flow dom` checks it against the DOM renderer, `yarn flow native`
checks it against the native renderer, and so on.
To do this, we generate separate flowconfig files.
Currently, there is no root-level host config, so running Flow
directly via `flow` CLI doesn't work. You have to use the `yarn flow`
command and pick a specific renderer.
A drawback of this design, though, is that our Flow setup doesn't work
with other tooling. Namely, editor integrations.
I think the intent of this was maybe so you don't run Flow against a
renderer than you intended, see it pass, and wrongly think you fixed
all the errors. However, since they all run in CI, I don't think this
is a big deal. In practice, I nearly always run Flow against the same
renderer (DOM), and I'm guessing that's the most common workflow for
others, too.
So what I've done in this commit is modify the `yarn flow` command to
copy the generated `.flowconfig` file into the root directory. The
editor integration will pick this up and show Flow information for
whatever was the last renderer you checked.
Everything else about the setup is the same, and all the renderers will
continue to be checked by CI.
* Add ReactFlightServerConfig intermediate
This just forwards to the stream version of Flight which is itself forked
between Node and W3C streams.
The dom-relay goes directly to the Relay config though which allows it to
avoid the stream part of Flight.
* Separate streaming protocol into the Stream config
* Split streaming parts into the ReactFlightServerConfigStream
This decouples it so that the Relay implementation doesn't have to encode
the JSON to strings. Instead it can be fed the values as JSON objects and
do its own encoding.
* Split FlightClient into a basic part and a stream part
Same split as the server.
* Expose lower level async hooks to Relay
This requires an external helper file that we'll wire up internally.
* Require deep for reconcilers
* Delete inline* files
* Delete react-reconciler/persistent
This no longer makes any sense because it react-reconciler takes
supportsMutation or supportsPersistence as options. It's no longer based
on feature flags.
* Fix jest mocking
* Fix Flow strategy
We now explicitly list which paths we want to be checked by a renderer.
For every other renderer config we ignore those paths.
Nothing is "any" typed. So if some transitive dependency isn't reachable
it won't be accidentally "any" that leaks.