Commit Graph

52 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sebastian Markbåge
3b551c8284 Rename the react.element symbol to react.transitional.element (#28813)
We have changed the shape (and the runtime) of React Elements. To help
avoid precompiled or inlined JSX having subtle breakages or deopting
hidden classes, I renamed the symbol so that we can early error if
private implementation details are used or mismatching versions are
used.

Why "transitional"? Well, because this is not the last time we'll change
the shape. This is just a stepping stone to removing the `ref` field on
the elements in the next version so we'll likely have to do it again.
2024-04-22 12:39:56 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
89021fb4ec Remove invokeGuardedCallback and replay trick (#28515)
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.
2024-03-11 20:17:07 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
c0274063f0 [Flight] Prefix Replayed Console Logs with a Badge (#28403)
Builds on top of #28384.

This prefixes each log with a badge similar to how we badge built-ins
like "ForwardRef" and "Memo" in the React DevTools. The idea is that we
can add such badges in DevTools for Server Components too to carry on
the consistency.

This puts the "environment" name in the badge which defaults to
"Server". So you know which source it is coming from.

We try to use the same styling as the React DevTools. We use light-dark
mode where available to support the two different color styles, but if
it's not available I use a fixed background so that it's always readable
even in dark mode.

In Terminals, instead of hard coding colors that might not look good
with some themes, I use the ANSI color code to flip
background/foreground colors in that case.

In earlier commits I had it on the end of the line similar to the
DevTools badges but for multiline I found it better to prefix it. We
could try various options tough.

In most cases we can use both ANSI and the `%c` CSS color specifier,
because node will only use ANSI and hide the other. Chrome supports both
but the color overrides ANSI if it comes later (and Chrome doesn't
support color inverting anyway). Safari/Firefox prints the ANSI, so it
can only use CSS colors.

Therefore in browser builds I exclude ANSI.

On the server I support both so if you use Chrome inspector on the
server, you get nice colors on both terminal and in the inspector.

Since Bun uses WebKit inspector and it prints the ANSI we can't safely
emit both there. However, we also can't emit just the color specifier
because then it prints in the terminal.
https://github.com/oven-sh/bun/issues/9021 So we just use a plain string
prefix for now with a bracket until that's fixed.

Screen shots:

<img width="758" alt="Screenshot 2024-02-21 at 12 56 02 AM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/4f887ffe-fffe-4402-bf2a-b7890986d60c">
<img width="759" alt="Screenshot 2024-02-21 at 12 56 24 AM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/f32d432f-f738-4872-a700-ea0a78e6c745">
<img width="514" alt="Screenshot 2024-02-21 at 12 57 10 AM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/205d2e82-75b7-4e2b-9d9c-aa9e2cbedf39">
<img width="489" alt="Screenshot 2024-02-21 at 12 57 34 AM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/ea52d1e4-b9fa-431d-ae9e-ccb87631f399">
<img width="516" alt="Screenshot 2024-02-21 at 12 58 23 AM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/52b50fac-bec0-471d-a457-1a10d8df9172">
<img width="956" alt="Screenshot 2024-02-21 at 12 58 56 AM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/0096ed61-5eff-4aa9-8a8a-2204e754bd1f">
2024-02-21 14:59:08 -05:00
Andrew Clark
015ff2ed66 Revert "[Tests] Reset modules by default" (#28318)
This was causing a slowdown in one of the tests
ESLintRuleExhaustiveDeps-test.js. Reverting until we figure out why.
2024-02-13 11:39:45 -05:00
Ricky
30e2938e04 [Tests] Reset modules by default (#28254)
## Overview

Sets `resetModules: true` in the base Jest config, and deletes all the
`jest.resetModule()` calls we don't need.
2024-02-06 12:43:27 -05:00
Andrew Clark
952aa74f8e Upgrade tests to use react/jsx-runtime (#28252)
Instead of createElement.

We should have done this when we initially released jsx-runtime but
better late than never. The general principle is that our tests should
be written using the most up-to-date idioms that we recommend for users,
except when explicitly testing an edge case or legacy behavior, like for
backwards compatibility.

Most of the diff is related to tweaking test output and isn't very
interesting.

I did have to workaround an issue related to component stacks. The
component stack logic depends on shared state that lives in the React
module. The problem is that most of our tests reset the React module
state and re-require a fresh instance of React, React DOM, etc. However,
the JSX runtime is not re-required because it's injected by the compiler
as a static import. This means its copy of the shared state is no longer
the same as the one used by React, causing any warning logged by the JSX
runtime to not include a component stack. (This same issue also breaks
string refs, but since we're removing those soon I'm not so concerned
about that.) The solution I went with for now is to mock the JSX runtime
with a proxy that re-requires the module on every function invocation. I
don't love this but it will have to do for now. What we should really do
is migrate our tests away from manually resetting the module state and
use import syntax instead.
2024-02-05 23:07:41 -05:00
Sebastian Silbermann
e1d20fc0c0 Convert describeComponentFrame to createRoot (#28001) 2024-01-22 15:08:39 +01:00
Ricky
29fbf6f626 Convert ReactError-test to createRoot (#27995) 2024-01-19 14:35:56 -05:00
Ricky
b300304710 Update error decoder URL (#27240)
Updates the error decoder to the URL for the new docs site.

- Switches the domain from reactjs.org to react.dev
- Switches to put the error code in the URL for SSG
- All params are still in the query

Example without args:

- Before: `https://reactjs.org/docs/error-decoder.html?invariant=200`
- After: ` https://react.dev/errors/200`

Example with args:
- Before:
`https://reactjs.org/docs/error-decoder.html?invariant=124?args[]=foo&args[]=bar
`
- After: ` https://react.dev/errors/124?args[]=foo&args[]=bar`


Requires: https://github.com/reactjs/react.dev/pull/6214

---------

Co-authored-by: Jan Kassens <jkassens@meta.com>
2024-01-17 21:41:07 -05:00
Ming Ye
71cace4d32 Migrate testRunner from jasmine2 to jest-circus (#26144)
## Summary

In jest v27, jest-circus as default test runner
(https://github.com/facebook/jest/pull/10686)

## How did you test this change?

ci green
2023-02-10 13:39:14 -05:00
Jan Kassens
6b30832666 Upgrade prettier (#26081)
The old version of prettier we were using didn't support the Flow syntax
to access properties in a type using `SomeType['prop']`. This updates
`prettier` and `rollup-plugin-prettier` to the latest versions.

I added the prettier config `arrowParens: "avoid"` to reduce the diff
size as the default has changed in Prettier 2.0. The largest amount of
changes comes from function expressions now having a space. This doesn't
have an option to preserve the old behavior, so we have to update this.
2023-01-31 08:25:05 -05:00
Andrew Clark
9cdf8a99ed [Codemod] Update copyright header to Meta (#25315)
* Facebook -> Meta in copyright

rg --files | xargs sed -i 's#Copyright (c) Facebook, Inc. and its affiliates.#Copyright (c) Meta Platforms, Inc. and affiliates.#g'

* Manual tweaks
2022-10-18 11:19:24 -04:00
Ricky
0de3ddf56e Remove Symbol Polyfill (again) (#25144) 2022-08-25 17:01:30 -04:00
Ricky
6cbf0f7fac Fork ReactSymbols (#24484)
* Fork ReactSymbols

* Fix tests

* Update jest config
2022-05-03 17:12:23 -04:00
Ricky
4175f05934 Temporarily feature flag numeric fallback for symbols (#24401) 2022-04-19 17:34:49 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
587e759302 Remove Numeric Fallback of Symbols (#23348)
This was already defeating the XSS issue that Symbols was meant to protect
against. So you were already supposed to use a polyfill for security.

We rely on real Symbol.for in Flight for Server Components so those require
real symbols anyway.

We also don't really support IE without additional polyfills anyway.
2022-02-23 18:08:30 -05:00
Andrew Clark
7034408ff7 Follow-up improvements to error code extraction infra (#22516)
* Output FIXME during build for unminified errors

The invariant Babel transform used to output a FIXME comment if it
could not find a matching error code. This could happen if there were
a configuration mistake that caused an unminified message to
slip through.

Linting the compiled bundles is the most reliable way to do it because
there's not a one-to-one mapping between source modules and bundles. For
example, the same source module may appear in multiple bundles, some
which are minified and others which aren't.

This updates the transform to output the same messages for Error calls.

The source lint rule is still useful for catching mistakes during
development, to prompt you to update the error codes map before pushing
the PR to CI.

* Don't run error transform in development

We used to run the error transform in both production and development,
because in development it was used to convert `invariant` calls into
throw statements.

Now that don't use `invariant` anymore, we only have to run the
transform for production builds.

* Add ! to FIXME comment so Closure doesn't strip it

Don't love this solution because Closure could change this heuristic,
or we could switch to a differnt compiler that doesn't support it. But
it works.

Could add a bundle that contains an unminified error solely for the
purpose of testing it, but that seems like overkill.

* Alternate extract-errors that scrapes artifacts

The build script outputs a special FIXME comment when it fails to minify
an error message. CI will detect these comments and fail the workflow.

The comments also include the expected error message. So I added an
alternate extract-errors that scrapes unminified messages from the
build artifacts and updates `codes.json`.

This is nice because it works on partial builds. And you can also run it
after the fact, instead of needing build all over again.

* Disable error minification in more bundles

Not worth it because the number of errors does not outweight the size
of the formatProdErrorMessage runtime.

* Run extract-errors script in CI

The lint_build job already checks for unminified errors, but the output
isn't super helpful.

Instead I've added a new job that runs the extract-errors script and
fails the build if `codes.json` changes. It also outputs the expected
diff so you can easily see which messages were missing from the map.

* Replace old extract-errors script with new one

Deletes the old extract-errors in favor of extract-errors2
2021-10-31 15:37:32 -07:00
Ricky
14bac6193a Allow components to render undefined (#21869) 2021-07-13 15:48:11 -04:00
Ricky
e0f89aa056 Clean up Scheduler forks (#20915)
* Clean up Scheduler forks

* Un-shadow variables

* Use timer globals directly, add a test for overrides

* Remove more window references

* Don't crash for undefined globals + tests

* Update lint config globals

* Fix test by using async act

* Add test fixture

* Delete test fixture
2021-05-17 16:53:58 -04:00
Ricky
454c2211c0 Refactor SchedulerHostConfigs (#20025)
* Remove SchedulerHostConfigs

* Fix builds

* Fix forks

* Move SchedulerNoDom check to npm/index.js

* Fix tests

* Add @gate source

* Gate build-only test to build test runs
2020-11-02 12:46:58 -05:00
Paul Doyle
cc77be957e Remove unnecessary error overriding in (#19949) 2020-10-02 22:10:46 +01:00
Sebastian Markbåge
b0cb137bcb Don't dedupe using the stack (#18693)
We currently use the stack to dedupe warnings in a couple of places.
This is a very heavy weight way of computing that a warning doesn't need
to be fired.

This uses parent component name as a heuristic for deduping. It's not
perfect but as soon as you fix one you'll uncover the next. It might be a
little annoying but having many logs is also annoying.

We now have no special cases for stacks. The only thing that uses stacks in
dev is the console.error and dev tools. This means that we could
externalize this completely to an console.error patching module and drop
it from being built-in to react.

The only prod/dev behavior is the one we pass to error boundaries or the
error we throw if you don't have an error boundary.
2020-04-22 19:02:11 -07:00
Andrew Clark
bec7599067 Migrate conditional tests to gate pragma (#18585)
* Migrate conditional tests to gate pragma

I searched through the codebase for this pattern:

```js
describe('test suite', () => {
  if (!__EXPERIMENTAL__) { // or some other condition
    test("empty test so Jest doesn't complain", () => {});
    return;
  }

  // Unless we're in experimental mode, none of the tests in this block
  // will run.
})
```

and converted them to the `@gate` pragma instead.

The reason this pattern isn't preferred is because you end up disabling
more tests than you need to.

* Add flag for www release channels

Using a heuristic where I check a flag that is known to only be enabled
in www. I left a TODO to instead set the release channel explicitly in
each test config.
2020-04-13 14:45:52 -07:00
Sebastian Markbåge
98d410f500 Build Component Stacks from Native Stack Frames (#18561)
* Implement component stack extraction hack

* Normalize errors in tests

This drops the requirement to include owner to pass the test.

* Special case tests

* Add destructuring to force toObject which throws before the side-effects

This ensures that we don't double call yieldValue or advanceTime in tests.

Ideally we could use empty destructuring but ES lint doesn't like it.

* Cache the result in DEV

In DEV it's somewhat likely that we'll see many logs that add component
stacks. This could be slow so we cache the results of previous components.

* Fixture

* Add Reflect to lint

* Log if out of range.

* Fix special case when the function call throws in V8

In V8 we need to ignore the first line. Normally we would never get there
because the stacks would differ before that, but the stacks are the same if
we end up throwing at the same place as the control.
2020-04-10 13:32:12 -07:00
Sebastian Markbåge
3e94bce765 Enable prefer-const lint rules (#18451)
* Enable prefer-const rule

Stylistically I don't like this but Closure Compiler takes advantage of
this information.

* Auto-fix lints

* Manually fix the remaining callsites
2020-04-01 12:35:52 -07:00
Andrew Clark
75955bf1d7 Pass prod error messages directly to constructor (#17063)
* Remove "Invariant Violation" from dev errors

When I made the change to compile `invariant` to throw expressions, I
left a small runtime to set the error's `name` property to "Invariant
Violation" to maintain the existing behavior.

I think we can remove it. The argument for keeping it is to preserve
continuity in error logs, but this only affects development errors,
anyway: production error messages are replaced with error codes.

* Pass prod error messages directly to constructor

Updates the `invariant` transform to pass an error message string
directly to the Error constructor, instead of mutating the
message property.

Turns this code:

```js
invariant(condition, 'A %s message that contains %s', adj, noun);
```

into this:

```js
if (!condition) {
  throw Error(
    __DEV__
      ? `A ${adj} message that contains ${noun}`
      : formatProdErrorMessage(ERR_CODE, adj, noun)
  );
}
```
2019-10-11 09:10:40 -07:00
Moti Zilberman
98454371a9 Construct Error at invariant call site for clearer stack traces (#15877) 2019-06-18 11:38:33 -07:00
Andrew Clark
edfedf3ae9 Fork ReactSharedInternals for UMD builds (#15617) 2019-05-10 13:51:39 -07:00
Andrew Clark
39ef609e7c Update test to fix CI 2019-05-10 11:12:24 -07:00
Andrew Clark
42c3c967d1 Compile invariant directly to throw expressions (#15071)
* Transform invariant to custom error type

This transforms calls to the invariant module:

```js
invariant(condition, 'A %s message that contains %s', adj, noun);
```

Into throw statements:

```js
if (!condition) {
  if (__DEV__) {
    throw ReactError(`A ${adj} message that contains ${noun}`);
  } else {
    throw ReactErrorProd(ERR_CODE, adj, noun);
  }
}
```

The only thing ReactError does is return an error whose name is set
to "Invariant Violation" to match the existing behavior.

ReactErrorProd is a special version used in production that throws
a minified error code, with a link to see to expanded form. This
replaces the reactProdInvariant module.

As a next step, I would like to replace our use of the invariant module
for user facing errors by transforming normal Error constructors to
ReactError and ReactErrorProd. (We can continue using invariant for
internal React errors that are meant to be unreachable, which was the
original purpose of invariant.)

* Use numbers instead of strings for error codes

* Use arguments instead of an array

I wasn't sure about this part so I asked Sebastian, and his rationale
was that using arguments will make ReactErrorProd slightly slower, but
using an array will likely make all the functions that throw slightly
slower to compile, so it's hard to say which way is better. But since
ReactErrorProd is in an error path, and fewer bytes is generally better,
no array is good.

* Casing nit
2019-03-18 13:58:03 -07:00
Andrew Clark
00748c53e1 Add new mock build of Scheduler with flush, yield API (#14964)
* Add new mock build of Scheduler with flush, yield API

Test environments need a way to take control of the Scheduler queue and
incrementally flush work. Our current tests accomplish this either using
dynamic injection, or by using Jest's fake timers feature. Both of these
options are fragile and rely too much on implementation details.

In this new approach, we have a separate build of Scheduler that is
specifically designed for test environments. We mock the default
implementation like we would any other module; in our case, via Jest.
This special build has methods like `flushAll` and `yieldValue` that
control when work is flushed. These methods are based on equivalent
methods we've been using to write incremental React tests. Eventually
we may want to migrate the React tests to interact with the mock
Scheduler directly, instead of going through the host config like we
currently do.

For now, I'm using our custom static injection infrastructure to create
the two builds of Scheduler — a default build for DOM (which falls back
to a naive timer based implementation), and the new mock build. I did it
this way because it allows me to share most of the implementation, which
isn't specific to a host environment — e.g. everything related to the
priority queue. It may be better to duplicate the shared code instead,
especially considering that future environments (like React Native) may
have entirely forked implementations. I'd prefer to wait until the
implementation stabilizes before worrying about that, but I'm open to
changing this now if we decide it's important enough.

* Mock Scheduler in bundle tests, too

* Remove special case by making regex more restrictive
2019-02-26 20:51:17 -08:00
Brian Vaughn
52bea95cfc Fixed scheduler setTimeout fallback (#14358)
* Fixed scheduler setTimeout fallback
* Moved unit-test-specific setTimeout code into a new NPM package, jest-mock-scheduler.
2018-12-01 13:03:19 -08:00
Andrew Clark
8feeed10d8 [scheduler] Remove window.postMessage fallback
Every browser we can about supports MessageChannel. The ones we don't
care about will fallback to the setTimeout implementation.
2018-11-14 14:44:26 -08:00
Jordan Harband
cdbfa6b5dd [react-is] add back proper AsyncMode symbol, for back compat (#13959)
- Partial revert of #13732
 - Fixes #13958.
2018-10-31 19:03:50 +00:00
Andrew Clark
9f819a5ea9 [schedule] Refactor Schedule, remove React-isms (#13582)
* Refactor Schedule, remove React-isms

Once the API stabilizes, we will move Schedule this into a separate
repo. To promote adoption, especially by projects outside the React
ecosystem, we'll remove all React-isms from the source and keep it as
simple as possible:

- No build step.
- No static types.
- Everything is in a single file.

If we end up needing to support multiple targets, like CommonJS and ESM,
we can still avoid a build step by maintaining two copies of the same
file, but with different exports.

This commit also refactors the implementation to split out the DOM-
specific parts (essentially a requestIdleCallback polyfill). Aside from
the architectural benefits, this also makes it possible to write host-
agnostic tests. If/when we publish a version of Schedule that targets
other environments, like React Native, we can run these same tests
across all implementations.

* Edits in response to Dan's PR feedback
2018-09-14 14:05:55 -07:00
Héctor Ramos
b87aabdfe1 Drop the year from Facebook copyright headers and the LICENSE file. (#13593) 2018-09-07 15:11:23 -07:00
Dan Abramov
83e446e1d8 Refactor ReactErrorUtils (#13406)
* Refactor ReactErrorUtils

* Remove unnecessary assignments
2018-08-15 19:02:11 +01:00
Billy Janitsch
54d86eb822 Improve display of filenames in component stack (#12059)
* Improve display of filenames in component stack

* Add explanatory comment

* tests: add tests for component stack trace displaying

* Tweak test

* Rewrite test and revert implementation

* Extract a variable

* Rewrite implementation
2018-08-09 03:33:30 +01:00
Dan Abramov
467d139101 Enforce presence or absence of component stack in tests (#13215)
* Enforce presence or absence of stack in tests

* Rename expectNoStack to withoutStack

* Fix lint

* Add some tests for toWarnDev()
2018-07-16 20:20:18 +01:00
Flarnie Marchan
2a8085980f Remove rAF fork (#12980)
* Remove rAF fork

**what is the change?:**
Undid https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/12837

**why make this change?:**
We originally forked rAF because we needed to pull in a particular
version of rAF internally at Facebook, to avoid grabbing the default
polyfilled version.

The longer term solution, until we can get rid of the global polyfill
behavior, is to initialize 'schedule' before the polyfilling happens.

Now that we have landed and synced
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/12900 successfully, we can
initialize 'schedule' before the polyfill runs.
So we can remove the rAF fork. Here is how it will work:

1. Land this PR on Github.
2. Flarnie will quickly run a sync getting this change into www.
3. We delete the internal forked version of
   'requestAnimationFrameForReact'.
4. We require 'schedule' in the polyfill file itself, before the
   polyfilling happens.

**test plan:**
Flarnie will manually try the above steps locally and verify that things
work.

**issue:**
Internal task T29442940

* fix nits

* fix tests, fix changes from rebasing

* fix lint
2018-06-13 10:57:35 -07:00
Sophie Alpert
9bed4a6aee https in reactProdInvariant text (#12869) 2018-05-19 17:29:41 -07:00
Brian Vaughn
17908c8ac9 Add test to ensure no duplicate values in ReactSymbols (#12845) 2018-05-18 07:57:25 -07:00
Dan Abramov
e932e321a8 facebook.github.io/react -> reactjs.org (#12545) 2018-04-04 21:20:41 +01:00
Brian Vaughn
9f848f8ebe Update additional tests to use .toWarnDev() matcher (#11957)
* Migrated several additional tests to use new .toWarnDev() matcher

* Migrated ReactDOMComponent-test to use .toWarnDev() matcher

Note this test previous had some hacky logic to verify errors were reported against unique line numbers. Since the new matcher doesn't suppor this, I replaced this check with an equivalent (I think) comparison of unique DOM elements (eg div -> span)

* Updated several additional tests to use the new .toWarnDev() matcher

* Updated many more tests to use .toWarnDev()

* Updated several additional tests to use .toWarnDev() matcher

* Updated ReactElementValidator to distinguish between Array and Object in its warning. Also updated its test to use .toWarnDev() matcher.

* Updated a couple of additional tests

* Removed unused normalizeCodeLocInfo() methods
2018-01-03 13:55:37 -08:00
Raphael Amorim
6c1fba539a shared: convert vars into let/const (#11730) 2017-12-01 00:03:27 +00:00
Dan Abramov
46b3c3e4ae Use static injection for ReactErrorUtils (#11725)
* Use `this` inside invokeGuardedCallback

It's slightly odd but that's exactly how our www fork works.
Might as well do it in the open source version to make it clear we rely on context here.

* Move invokeGuardedCallback into a separate file

This lets us introduce forks for it.

* Add a www fork for invokeGuardedCallback

* Fix Flow
2017-11-30 19:10:46 +00:00
Dan Abramov
fa7a97fc46 Run 90% of tests on compiled bundles (both development and production) (#11633)
* Extract Jest config into a separate file

* Refactor Jest scripts directory structure

Introduces a more consistent naming scheme.

* Add yarn test-bundles and yarn test-prod-bundles

Only files ending with -test.public.js are opted in (so far we don't have any).

* Fix error decoding for production bundles

GCC seems to remove `new` from `new Error()` which broke our proxy.

* Build production version of react-noop-renderer

This lets us test more bundles.

* Switch to blacklist (exclude .private.js tests)

* Rename tests that are currently broken against bundles to *-test.internal.js

Some of these are using private APIs. Some have other issues.

* Add bundle tests to CI

* Split private and public ReactJSXElementValidator tests

* Remove internal deps from ReactServerRendering-test and make it public

* Only run tests directly in __tests__

This lets us share code between test files by placing them in __tests__/utils.

* Remove ExecutionEnvironment dependency from DOMServerIntegrationTest

It's not necessary since Stack.

* Split up ReactDOMServerIntegration into test suite and utilities

This enables us to further split it down. Good both for parallelization and extracting public parts.

* Split Fragment tests from other DOMServerIntegration tests

This enables them to opt other DOMServerIntegration tests into bundle testing.

* Split ReactDOMServerIntegration into different test files

It was way too slow to run all these in sequence.

* Don't reset the cache twice in DOMServerIntegration tests

We used to do this to simulate testing separate bundles.
But now we actually *do* test bundles. So there is no need for this, as it makes tests slower.

* Rename test-bundles* commands to test-build*

Also add test-prod-build as alias for test-build-prod because I keep messing them up.

* Use regenerator polyfill for react-noop

This fixes other issues and finally lets us run ReactNoop tests against a prod bundle.

* Run most Incremental tests against bundles

Now that GCC generator issue is fixed, we can do this.
I split ErrorLogging test separately because it does mocking. Other error handling tests don't need it.

* Update sizes

* Fix ReactMount test

* Enable ReactDOMComponent test

* Fix a warning issue uncovered by flat bundle testing

With flat bundles, we couldn't produce a good warning for <div onclick={}> on SSR
because it doesn't use the event system. However the issue was not visible in normal
Jest runs because the event plugins have been injected by the time the test ran.

To solve this, I am explicitly passing whether event system is available as an argument
to the hook. This makes the behavior consistent between source and bundle tests. Then
I change the tests to document the actual logic and _attempt_ to show a nice message
(e.g. we know for sure `onclick` is a bad event but we don't know the right name for it
on the server so we just say a generic message about camelCase naming convention).
2017-11-23 17:44:58 +00:00
Dan Abramov
6041f481b7 Run Jest in production mode (#11616)
* Move Jest setup files to /dev/ subdirectory

* Clone Jest /dev/ files into /prod/

* Move shared code into scripts/jest

* Move Jest config into the scripts folder

* Fix the equivalence test

It fails because the config is now passed to Jest explicitly.
But the test doesn't know about the config.

To fix this, we just run it via `yarn test` (which includes the config).
We already depend on Yarn for development anyway.

* Add yarn test-prod to run Jest with production environment

* Actually flip the production tests to run in prod environment

This produces a bunch of errors:

Test Suites: 64 failed, 58 passed, 122 total
Tests:       740 failed, 26 skipped, 1809 passed, 2575 total
Snapshots:   16 failed, 4 passed, 20 total

* Ignore expectDev() calls in production

Down from 740 to 175 failed.

Test Suites: 44 failed, 78 passed, 122 total
Tests:       175 failed, 26 skipped, 2374 passed, 2575 total
Snapshots:   16 failed, 4 passed, 20 total

* Decode errors so tests can assert on their messages

Down from 175 to 129.

Test Suites: 33 failed, 89 passed, 122 total
Tests:       129 failed, 1029 skipped, 1417 passed, 2575 total
Snapshots:   16 failed, 4 passed, 20 total

* Remove ReactDOMProduction-test

There is no need for it now. The only test that was special is moved into ReactDOM-test.

* Remove production switches from ReactErrorUtils

The tests now run in production in a separate pass.

* Add and use spyOnDev() for warnings

This ensures that by default we expect no warnings in production bundles.
If the warning *is* expected, use the regular spyOn() method.

This currently breaks all expectDev() assertions without __DEV__ blocks so we go back to:

Test Suites: 56 failed, 65 passed, 121 total
Tests:       379 failed, 1029 skipped, 1148 passed, 2556 total
Snapshots:   16 failed, 4 passed, 20 total

* Replace expectDev() with expect() in __DEV__ blocks

We started using spyOnDev() for console warnings to ensure we don't *expect* them to occur in production. As a consequence, expectDev() assertions on console.error.calls fail because console.error.calls doesn't exist. This is actually good because it would help catch accidental warnings in production.

To solve this, we are getting rid of expectDev() altogether, and instead introduce explicit expectation branches. We'd need them anyway for testing intentional behavior differences.

This commit replaces all expectDev() calls with expect() calls in __DEV__ blocks. It also removes a few unnecessary expect() checks that no warnings were produced (by also removing the corresponding spyOnDev() calls).

Some DEV-only assertions used plain expect(). Those were also moved into __DEV__ blocks.

ReactFiberErrorLogger was special because it console.error()'s in production too. So in that case I intentionally used spyOn() instead of spyOnDev(), and added extra assertions.

This gets us down to:

Test Suites: 21 failed, 100 passed, 121 total
Tests:       72 failed, 26 skipped, 2458 passed, 2556 total
Snapshots:   16 failed, 4 passed, 20 total

* Enable User Timing API for production testing

We could've disabled it, but seems like a good idea to test since we use it at FB.

* Test for explicit Object.freeze() differences between PROD and DEV

This is one of the few places where DEV and PROD behavior differs for performance reasons.
Now we explicitly test both branches.

* Run Jest via "yarn test" on CI

* Remove unused variable

* Assert different error messages

* Fix error handling tests

This logic is really complicated because of the global ReactFiberErrorLogger mock.
I understand it now, so I added TODOs for later.

It can be much simpler if we change the rest of the tests that assert uncaught errors to also assert they are logged as warnings.
Which mirrors what happens in practice anyway.

* Fix more assertions

* Change tests to document the DEV/PROD difference for state invariant

It is very likely unintentional but I don't want to change behavior in this PR.
Filed a follow up as https://github.com/facebook/react/issues/11618.

* Remove unnecessary split between DEV/PROD ref tests

* Fix more test message assertions

* Make validateDOMNesting tests DEV-only

* Fix error message assertions

* Document existing DEV/PROD message difference (possible bug)

* Change mocking assertions to be DEV-only

* Fix the error code test

* Fix more error message assertions

* Fix the last failing test due to known issue

* Run production tests on CI

* Unify configuration

* Fix coverage script

* Remove expectDev from eslintrc

* Run everything in band

We used to before, too. I just forgot to add the arguments after deleting the script.
2017-11-22 13:02:26 +00:00
Clement Hoang
94f44aeba7 Update prettier to 1.8.1 (#10785)
* Change prettier dependency in package.json version 1.8.1

* Update yarn.lock

* Apply prettier changes

* Fix ReactDOMServerIntegration-test.js

* Fix test for ReactDOMComponent-test.js
2017-11-07 18:09:33 +00:00
Dan Abramov
21d0c11523 Convert the Source to ES Modules (#11389)
* Update transforms to handle ES modules

* Update Jest to handle ES modules

* Convert react package to ES modules

* Convert react-art package to ES Modules

* Convert react-call-return package to ES Modules

* Convert react-test-renderer package to ES Modules

* Convert react-cs-renderer package to ES Modules

* Convert react-rt-renderer package to ES Modules

* Convert react-noop-renderer package to ES Modules

* Convert react-dom/server to ES modules

* Convert react-dom/{client,events,test-utils} to ES modules

* Convert react-dom/shared to ES modules

* Convert react-native-renderer to ES modules

* Convert react-reconciler to ES modules

* Convert events to ES modules

* Convert shared to ES modules

* Remove CommonJS support from transforms

* Move ReactDOMFB entry point code into react-dom/src

This is clearer because we can use ES imports in it.

* Fix Rollup shim configuration to work with ESM

* Fix incorrect comment

* Exclude external imports without side effects

* Fix ReactDOM FB build

* Remove TODOs I don’t intend to fix yet
2017-11-02 19:50:03 +00:00