* New context API
Introduces a declarative context API that propagates updates even when
shouldComponentUpdate returns false.
* Fuzz tester for context
* Use ReactElement for provider and consumer children
* Unify more branches in createFiberFromElement
* Compare context values using Object.is
Same semantics as PureComponent/shallowEqual.
* Add support for Provider and Consumer to server-side renderer
* Store providers on global stack
Rather than using a linked list stored on the context type. The global
stack can be reset in case of an interruption or error, whereas with the
linked list implementation, you'd need to keep track of every
context type.
* Put new context API behind a feature flag
We'll enable this in www only for now.
* Store nearest provider on context object
* Handle reentrancy in server renderer
Context stack should be per server renderer instance.
* Bailout of consumer updates using bitmask
The context type defines an optional function that compares two context
values, returning a bitfield. A consumer may specify the bits it needs
for rendering. If a provider's context changes, and the consumer's bits
do not intersect with the changed bits, we can skip the consumer.
This is similar to how selectors are used in Redux but fast enough to do
while scanning the tree. The only user code involved is the function
that computes the changed bits. But that's only called once per provider
update, not for every consumer.
* Store current value and changed bits on context object
There are fewer providers than consumers, so better to do this work
at the provider.
* Use maximum of 31 bits for bitmask
This is the largest integer size in V8 on 32-bit systems. Warn in
development if too large a number is used.
* ProviderComponent -> ContextProvider, ConsumerComponent -> ContextConsumer
* Inline Object.is
* Warn if multiple renderers concurrently render the same context provider
Let's see if we can get away with not supporting this for now. If it
turns out that it's needed, we can fall back to backtracking the
fiber return path.
* Nits that came up during review
* Adds danger_js with an initial rule for warning about large PRs
Signed-off-by: Anandaroop Roy <roop@artsymail.com>
* [WIP] Get the before and after for the build results
* [Dev] More work on the Dangerfile
* [Danger] Split the reports into sections based on their package
* Remove the --extract-errors on the circle build
* [Danger] Improve the lookup for previous -> current build to also include the environment
* Fix rebase
* Added 'flow-coverage-report' package for discussion
* Aded flow-coverage command and configuration file
* Moved FLow coverage config file to scripts/flow/coverage-config
* Moved Flow coverage config back to root as dotfile
* Runs a lint rule on tests only that errors if it sees `fdescribe` or `fit` calls.
* Changes `file:` to `link:` for our custom, internal rules (just to simplify updating these in the future).
* Updates `eslint` from 3.10 -> 4.1 and `babel-eslint` from 7.1 -> 8.0 so that we can run this new rule only against tests.
* Bump deps to Jest 22
* Prevent jsdom from logging intentionally thrown errors
This relies on our existing special field that we use to mute errors.
Perhaps, it would be better to instead rely on preventDefault() directly.
I outlined a possible strategy here: https://github.com/facebook/react/issues/11098#issuecomment-355032539
* Update snapshots
* Mock out a method called by ReactART that now throws
* Calling .click() no longer works, dispatch event instead
* Fix incorrect SVG element creation in test
* Render SVG elements inside <svg> to avoid extra warnings
* Fix range input test to use numeric value
* Fix creating SVG element in test
* Replace brittle test that relied on jsdom behavior
The test passed in jsdom due to its implementation details.
The original intention was to test the mutation method, but it was removed a while ago.
Following @nhunzaker's suggestion, I moved the tests to ReactDOMInput and adjusted them to not rely on implementation details.
* Add a workaround for the expected extra client-side warning
This is a bit ugly but it's just two places. I think we can live with this.
* Only warn once for mismatches caused by bad attribute casing
We used to warn both about bad casing and about a mismatch.
The mismatch warning was a bit confusing. We didn't know we warned twice because jsdom didn't faithfully emulate SVG.
This changes the behavior to only leave the warning about bad casing if that's what caused the mismatch.
It also adjusts the test to have an expectation that matches the real world behavior.
* Add an expected warning per comment in the same test
* use different eslint config for es6 and es5
* remove confusing eslint/baseConfig.js & add more eslint setting for es5, es6
* more clear way to run eslint on es5 & es6 file
* seperate ESNext, ES6, ES6 path, and use different lint config
* rename eslint config file & update eslint rules
* Undo yarn.lock changes
* Rename a file
* Remove unnecessary exceptions
* Refactor a little bit
* Refactor and tweak the logic
* Minor issues
* Rewrite the build scripts
* Don't crash when doing FB-only builds
* Group sync imports under Sync.*
* Don't print known errors twice
* Use an exclamation that aligns vertically
* Change build process to include npm pack and unpacking generated packages to corresponding build directories.
* Update function name, change to use os's default temp directory
* appending uuid to temp npm packaging directory.
* Unify the way we fork modules
* Replace rollup-plugin-alias with our own plugin
This does exactly what we need and doesn't suffer from https://github.com/rollup/rollup-plugin-alias/issues/34.
* Move the new plugin to its own file
* Rename variable for consistency
I settled on calling them "forks" since we already have a different concept of "shims".
* Move fork config into its own file
* Add bundle linting and tests to the release script
- add yarn lint-build
- use yarn lint-build in circle ci build.sh
- add yarn lint-build, yarn test-prod, yarn test-build, and yarn test-build-prod to the realse script
* Improve readability of release test messages
* Run prettier
* Updating package versions for release 16.2.0
* Seperate bundle specific tests
- Moved the runYarnTask into utils since its being used two files now
- Uncomment out checks I mistakenly committed
* Revert a bunch of version bump changes
Mistakenly commited by release script
* .js for consistency
* 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).
* Remove global mocks
They are making it harder to test compiled bundles.
One of them (FeatureFlags) is not used. It is mocked in some specific test files (and that's fine).
The other (FiberErrorLogger) is mocked to silence its output. I'll look if there's some other way to achieve this.
* Add error.suppressReactErrorLogging and use it in tests
This adds an escape hatch to *not* log errors that go through React to the console.
We will enable it for our own tests.
* 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.
* Improve formatting of errors when building
* Remove undefined from the header when error.plugin is undefined
* Add babel-code-frame and syntax highlighting in error message
* Run yarn prettier and fix code format
* Update Flow
* Fix createElement() issue
The * type was too ambiguous. It's always a string so what's the point?
Suppression for missing Flow support for {is: ''} web component argument to createElement() didn't work for some reason.
I don't understand what the regex is testing for anyway (a task number?) so I just removed that, and suppression got fixed.
* Remove deleted $Abstract<> feature
* Expand the unsound isAsync check
Flow now errors earlier because it can't find .type on a portal.
* Add an unsafe cast for the null State in UpdateQueue
* Introduce "hydratable instance" type
The Flow error here highlighted a quirk in our typing of hydration.
React only really knows about a subset of all possible nodes that can
exist in a hydrated tree. Currently we assume that the host renderer
filters them out to be either Instance or TextInstance. We also assume
that those are different things which they might not be. E.g. it could
be fine for a renderer to render "text" as the same type as one of the
instances, with some default props.
We don't really know what it will be narrowed down to until we call
canHydrateInstance or canHydrateTextInstance. That's when the type is
truly refined.
So to solve this I use a different type for hydratable instance that is
used in that temporary stage between us reading it from the DOM and until
it gets refined by canHydrate(Text)Instance.
* Have the renderer refine Hydratable Instance to Instance or Text Instance
Currently we assume that if canHydrateInstance or canHydrateTextInstance
returns true, then the types also match up. But we don't tell that to Flow.
It just happens to work because `fiber.stateNode` is still `any`.
We could potentially use some kind of predicate typing but instead
of that I can just return null or instance from the "can" tests.
This ensures that the renderer has to do the refinement properly.
* Consolidate build process with GCC
* Record sizes
* Refactor header and footer wrapping
It is easier to understand if we just explicitly type them out.
* Update Jest
* Remove hacks for Jest + Workspace integration
They were fixed by https://github.com/facebook/jest/pull/4761.
* Use relative requires in tests relying on private APIs
I changed them to absolute to work around a Jest bug.
The bug has been fixed so I can revert my past changes now.
* Use relative paths in packages/react
* Use relative paths in packages/react-art
* Use relative paths in packages/react-cs
* Use relative paths in other packages
* Fix as many issues as I can
This uncovered an interesting problem where ./b from package/src/a would resolve to a different instantiation of package/src/b in Jest.
Either this is a showstopper or we can solve it by completely fobbidding remaining /src/.
* Fix all tests
It seems we can't use relative requires in tests anymore. Otherwise Jest becomes confused between real file and symlink.
https://github.com/facebook/jest/issues/3830
This seems bad... Except that we already *don't* want people to create tests that import individual source files.
All existing cases of us doing so are actually TODOs waiting to be fixed.
So perhaps this requirement isn't too bad because it makes bad code looks bad.
Of course, if we go with this, we'll have to lint against relative requires in tests.
It also makes moving things more painful.
* Prettier
* Remove @providesModule
* Fix remaining Haste imports I missed earlier
* Fix up paths to reflect new flat structure
* Fix Flow
* Fix CJS and UMD builds
* Fix FB bundles
* Fix RN bundles
* Prettier
* Fix lint
* Fix warning printing and error codes
* Fix buggy return
* Fix lint and Flow
* Use Yarn on CI
* Unbreak Jest
* Fix lint
* Fix aliased originals getting included in DEV
Shouldn't affect correctness (they were ignored) but fixes DEV size regression.
* Record sizes
* Fix weird version in package.json
* Tweak bundle labels
* Get rid of output option by introducing react-dom/server.node
* Reconciler should depend on prop-types
* Update sizes last time
* Enable Yarn workspaces for packages/*
* Move src/isomorphic/* into packages/react/src/*
* Create index.js stubs for all packages in packages/*
This makes the test pass again, but breaks the build because npm/ folders aren't used yet.
I'm not sure if we'll keep this structure--I'll just keep working and fix the build after it settles down.
* Put FB entry point for react-dom into packages/*
* Move src/renderers/testing/* into packages/react-test-renderer/src/*
Note that this is currently broken because Jest ignores node_modules,
and so Yarn linking makes Jest skip React source when transforming.
* Remove src/node_modules
It is now unnecessary. Some tests fail though.
* Add a hacky workaround for Jest/Workspaces issue
Jest sees node_modules and thinks it's third party code.
This is a hacky way to teach Jest to still transform anything in node_modules/react*
if it resolves outside of node_modules (such as to our packages/*) folder.
I'm not very happy with this and we should revisit.
* Add a fake react-native package
* Move src/renderers/art/* into packages/react-art/src/*
* Move src/renderers/noop/* into packages/react-noop-renderer/src/*
* Move src/renderers/dom/* into packages/react-dom/src/*
* Move src/renderers/shared/fiber/* into packages/react-reconciler/src/*
* Move DOM/reconciler tests I previously forgot to move
* Move src/renderers/native-*/* into packages/react-native-*/src/*
* Move shared code into packages/shared
It's not super clear how to organize this properly yet.
* Add back files that somehow got lost
* Fix the build
* Prettier
* Add missing license headers
* Fix an issue that caused mocks to get included into build
* Update other references to src/
* Re-run Prettier
* Fix lint
* Fix weird Flow violation
I didn't change this file but Flow started complaining.
Caleb said this annotation was unnecessarily using $Abstract though so I removed it.
* Update sizes
* Fix stats script
* Fix packaging fixtures
Use file: instead of NODE_PATH since NODE_PATH.
NODE_PATH trick only worked because we had no react/react-dom in root node_modules, but now we do.
file: dependency only works as I expect in Yarn, so I moved the packaging fixtures to use Yarn and committed lockfiles.
Verified that the page shows up.
* Fix art fixture
* Fix reconciler fixture
* Fix SSR fixture
* Rename native packages
* Delete tests that only mattered during createElement transition
They were added after #2576, but were only important when React.createElement was introduced as a migration path.
Now that elements are used consistently, these tests shouldn't be necessary.
I created a separate test specifically for scryRenderedComponentsWithType() though because that was the only one.
* Simplify mocking test setup
Today, the only remaining special behavior for Jest mocks is we let them render undefined.
We don't plan to introduce any other special behavior for them in the future.
(In fact, we already decided against replicating this special behavior for functional components.)
Therefore, we can remove dependency on Jest automocking mechanism in these tests completely,
and just explicitly mock the render method which is the only one for which we have special behavior.
For clarity, we add an explicit test for mockComponent() API (whose naming is a bit of a lie).
* Inline getTestDocument into test cases
* Remove mention of mock file we do not use
* Remove unused configuration entries
* Move eslint-rules package into the scripts/ folder
* Deterministic updates
High priority updates typically require less work to render than
low priority ones. It's beneficial to flush those first, in their own
batch, before working on more expensive low priority ones. We do this
even if a high priority is scheduled after a low priority one.
However, we don't want this reordering of updates to affect the terminal
state. State should be deterministic: once all work has been flushed,
the final state should be the same regardless of how they were
scheduled.
To get both properties, we store updates on the queue in insertion
order instead of priority order (always append). Then, when processing
the queue, we skip over updates with insufficient priority. Instead of
removing updates from the queue right after processing them, we only
remove them if there are no unprocessed updates before it in the list.
This means that updates may be processed more than once.
As a bonus, the new implementation is simpler and requires less code.
* Fix ceiling function
Mixed up the operators.
* Remove addUpdate, addReplaceState, et al
These functions don't really do anything. Simpler to use a single
insertUpdateIntoFiber function.
Also splits scheduleUpdate into two functions:
- scheduleWork traverses a fiber's ancestor path and updates their
expiration times.
- scheduleUpdate inserts an update into a fiber's update queue, then
calls scheduleWork.
* Remove getExpirationTime
The last remaining use for getExpirationTime was for top-level async
updates. I moved that check to scheduleUpdate instead.
* Move UpdateQueue insertions back to class module
Moves UpdateQueue related functions out of the scheduler and back into
the class component module. It's a bit awkward that now we need to pass
around createUpdateExpirationForFiber, too. But we can still do without
addUpdate, replaceUpdate, et al.
* Store callbacks as an array of Updates
Simpler this way.
Also moves commitCallbacks back to UpdateQueue module.
* beginUpdateQueue -> processUpdateQueue
* Updates should never have an expiration of NoWork
* Rename expiration related functions
* Fix update queue Flow types
Gets rid of an unneccessary null check