This is the first of a series of PRs, that let you pass functions, by
reference, to the client and back. E.g. through Server Context. It's
like client references but they're opaque on the client and resolved on
the server.
To do this, for security, you must opt-in to exposing these functions to
the client using the `"use server"` directive. The `"use client"`
directive lets you enter the client from the server. The `"use server"`
directive lets you enter the server from the client.
This works by tagging those functions as Server References. We could
potentially expand this to other non-serializable or stateful objects
too like classes.
This only implements server->server CJS imports and server->server ESM
imports. We really should add a loader to the webpack plug-in for
client->server imports too. I'll leave closures as an exercise for
integrators.
You can't "call" a client reference on the server, however, you can
"call" a server reference on the client. This invokes a callback on the
Flight client options called `callServer`. This lets a router implement
calling back to the server. Effectively creating an RPC. This is using
JSON for serializing those arguments but more utils coming from
client->server serialization.
We're fixing the timing of layout and passive effects in React Native,
and adding support for some Web APIs so common use cases for those
effects can be implemented with the same code on React and React Native.
Let's take this example:
```javascript
function MyComponent(props) {
const viewRef = useRef();
useLayoutEffect(() => {
const rect = viewRef.current?.getBoundingClientRect();
console.log('My view is located at', rect?.toJSON());
}, []);
return <View ref={viewRef}>{props.children}</View>;
}
```
This could would work as expected on Web (ignoring the use of `View` and
assuming something like `div`) but not on React Native because:
1. Layout is done asynchronously in a background thread in parallel with
the execution of layout and passive effects. This is incorrect and it's
being fixed in React Native (see
afec07aca2).
2. We don't have an API to access layout information synchronously. The
existing `ref.current.measureInWindow` uses callbacks to pass the
result. That is asynchronous at the moment in Paper (the legacy renderer
in React Native), but it's actually synchronous in Fabric (the new React
Native renderer).
This fixes point 2) by adding a Web-compatible method to access layout
information (on Fabric only).
This has 2 dependencies in React Native:
1. Access to `getBoundingClientRect` in Fabric, which was added in
https://github.com/facebook/react-native/blob/main/ReactCommon/react/renderer/uimanager/UIManagerBinding.cpp#L644-
L676
2. Access to `DOMRect`, which was added in
673c7617bc
.
As next step, I'll modify the implementation of this and other methods
in Fabric to warn when they're accessed during render. We can't do this
on Web because we can't (shouldn't) modify built-in DOM APIs, but we can
do it in React Native because the refs objects are built by the
framework.
## 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>
We currently abuse the browser builds for Web streams derived
environments. We already have a special build for Bun but we should also
have one for [other "edge"
runtimes](https://runtime-keys.proposal.wintercg.org/) so that we can
maximally take advantage of the APIs that exist on each platform.
In practice, we currently check for a global property called
`AsyncLocalStorage` in the server browser builds which we shouldn't
really do since browsers likely won't ever have it. Additionally, this
should probably move to an import which we can't add to actual browser
builds where that will be an invalid import. So it has to be a separate
build. That's not done yet in this PR but Vercel will follow
Cloudflare's lead here.
The `deno` key still points to the browser build since there's no
AsyncLocalStorage there but it could use this same or a custom build if
support is added.
This updates the Flight fixture to support the new ESM loaders in newer
versions of Node.js.
It also uses native fetch since react-fetch is gone now. (This part
requires Node 18 to run the fixture.)
I also updated everything to use the `"use client"` convention instead
of file name based convention.
The biggest hack here is that the Webpack plugin now just writes every
`.js` file in the manifest. This needs to be more scoped. In practice,
this new convention effectively requires you to traverse the server
graph first to find the actual used files. This is enough to at least
run our own fixture though.
I didn't update the "blocks" fixture.
More details in each commit message.
The "dom" configuration is actually the node specific configuration. It
just happened to be that this was the mainline variant before so it was
implied but with so many variants, this is less obvious now.
The "bun" configuration is specifically for "bun". There's no "native"
renderer for "bun" yet.
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.
This renames Module References to Client References, since they are in
the server->client direction.
I also changed the Proxies exposed from the `node-register` loader to
provide better error messages. Ideally, some of this should be
replicated in the ESM loader too but neither are the source of truth.
We'll replicate this in the static form in the Next.js loaders. cc
@huozhi @shuding
- All references are now functions so that when you call them on the
server, we can yield a better error message.
- References that are themselves already referring to an export name are
now proxies that error when you dot into them.
- `use(...)` can now be used on a client reference to unwrap it server
side and then pass a reference to the awaited value.
## Summary
Should unblock https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/25970
If the callback for `toWarnDev` was `async` and threw, we didn't
ultimately reject the await Promise from the matcher. This resulted in
tests failing even though the failure was expected due to a test gate.
## How did you test this change?
- [x] tested in https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/25970 with `yarn
test --r=stable --env=development
packages/react-dom/src/__tests__/ReactDOMFizzServer-test.js --watch`
- [x] `yarn test`
- [x] CI
This shim is no longer needed on www, in fact I had already deleted it
there and it's currently not on www. See D42503692 which is trying to
add it back as I didn't realize this file was synced from GitHub.
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
~~[Fizz] Duplicate completeBoundaryWithStyles to not reference globals~~
## Summary
Follow-up / cleanup PR to #25437
- `completeBoundaryWithStylesInlineLocals` is used by the Fizz external
runtime, which bundles together all Fizz instruction functions (and is
able to reference / rename `completeBoundary` and `resourceMap` as
locals).
- `completeBoundaryWithStylesInlineGlobals` is used by the Fizz inline
script writer, which sends Fizz instruction functions on an as-needed
basis. This version needs to reference `completeBoundary($RC)` and
`resourceMap($RM)` as globals.
Ideally, Closure would take care of inlining a shared implementation,
but I couldn't figure out a zero-overhead inline due to lack of an
`@inline` compiler directive. It seems that Closure thinks that a shared
`completeBoundaryWithStyles` is too large and will always keep it as a
separate function. I've also tried currying / writing a higher order
function (`getCompleteBoundaryWithStyles`) with no luck
## How did you test this change?
- generated Fizz inline instructions should be unchanged
- bundle size for unstable_external_runtime should be slightly smaller
(due to lack of globals)
- `ReactDOMFizzServer-test.js` and `ReactDOMFloat-test.js` should be
unaffected
## Summary
Updating import for babel-code-frame to use the official @babel package,
as babel-code-frame is a ghost dependency. This change is necessary to
avoid potential issues and stay up-to-date with the latest version of
@babel/code-frame, which is already declared in our project's
package.json.
## How did you test this change?
yarn test
Flow introduced a new syntax to annotated the context type of a
function, this tries to update the rest and add 1 example usage.
- 2b1fb91a55 already added the changes
required for eslint.
- Jest transform is updated to use the recommended `hermes-parser` which
can parse current and Flow syntax and will be updated in the future.
- Rollup uses a new plugin to strip the flow types. This isn't ideal as
the npm module is deprecated in favor of using `hermes-parser`, but I
couldn't figure out how to integrate that with Rollup.
Hermes parser is the preferred parser for Flow code going forward. We
need to upgrade to this parser to support new Flow syntax like function
`this` context type annotations or `ObjectType['prop']` syntax.
Unfortunately, there's quite a few upgrades here to make it work somehow
(dependencies between the changes)
- ~Upgrade `eslint` to `8.*`~ reverted this as the React eslint plugin
tests depend on the older version and there's a [yarn
bug](https://github.com/yarnpkg/yarn/issues/6285) that prevents
`devDependencies` and `peerDependencies` to different versions.
- Remove `eslint-config-fbjs` preset dependency and inline the rules,
imho this makes it a lot clearer what the rules are.
- Remove the turned off `jsx-a11y/*` rules and it's dependency instead
of inlining those from the `fbjs` config.
- Update parser and dependency from `babel-eslint` to `hermes-eslint`.
- `ft-flow/no-unused-expressions` rule replaces `no-unused-expressions`
which now allows standalone type asserts, e.g. `(foo: number);`
- Bunch of globals added to the eslint config
- Disabled `no-redeclare`, seems like the eslint upgrade started making
this more precise and warn against re-defined globals like
`__EXPERIMENTAL__` (in rollup scripts) or `fetch` (when importing fetch
from node-fetch).
- Minor lint fixes like duplicate keys in objects.
We originally had grand plans for using this Event concept for more but
now it's only meant to be used in combination with effects.
It's an Event in the FRP terms, that is triggered from an Effect.
Technically it can also be from another function that itself is
triggered from an existing side-effect but that's kind of an advanced
case.
The canonical case is an effect that triggers an event:
```js
const onHappened = useEffectEvent(() => ...);
useEffect(() => {
onHappened();
}, []);
```
Add support for `setNativeProps` in Fabric to make migration to the new
architecture easier. The React Native part of this has already landed in
the core and iOS in
1d3fa40c59.
It is still recommended to move away from `setNativeProps` because the
API will not work with future features.
This isn't the right way to do this, but internally we have some
restrictions so we need to add an indirection. Let's land this now so we
can catch up our sync and then fix forward from there.
Co-authored-by: Jan Kassens <jkassens@meta.com>
We've heard from multiple contributors that the Reconciler forking
mechanism was confusing and/or annoying to deal with. Since it's
currently unused and there's no immediate plans to start using it again,
this removes the forking.
Fully removing the fork is split into 2 steps to preserve file history:
**This PR**
- remove `enableNewReconciler` feature flag.
- remove `unstable_isNewReconciler` export
- remove eslint rules for cross fork imports
- remove `*.new.js` files and update imports
- merge non-suffixed files into `*.old` files where both exist
(sometimes types were defined there)
**#25775**
- rename `*.old` files
### Changes made:
- Running with enableFizzExternalRuntime (feature flag) and
unstable_externalRuntimeSrc (param) will generate html nodes with data
attributes that encode Fizz instructions.
```
<div
hidden data-rxi=""
data-bid="param0"
data-dgst="param1"
></div>
```
- Added an external runtime browser script
`ReactDOMServerExternalRuntime`, which processes and removes these nodes
- This runtime should be passed as to renderInto[...] via
`unstable_externalRuntimeSrc`
- Since this runtime is render blocking (for all streamed suspense
boundaries and segments), we want this to reach the client as early as
possible. By default, Fizz will send this script at the end of the shell
when it detects dynamic content (e.g. suspenseful pending tasks), but it
can be sent even earlier by calling `preinit(...)` inside a component.
- The current implementation relies on Float to dedupe sending
`unstable_externalRuntimeSrc`, so `enableFizzExternalRuntime` is only
valid when `enableFloat` is also set.
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4. Ensure the test suite passes (`yarn test`). Tip: `yarn test --watch
TestName` is helpful in development.
5. Run `yarn test --prod` to test in the production environment. It
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## Summary
Jest caching wasn't working correctly for
`transform-react-version-pragma`. One condition for including
`transform-react-version-pragma` is that `process.env.REACT_VERSION` is
set, but it wasn't included in the cache key computation. Thus local
test runs would only run without `transform-react-version-pragma`, if
jest runs weren't using the `-reactVersion` flag and then added it.
Inlined the `scripts/jest/devtools/preprocessor.js` file, because it
makes it more obvious that `process.env.REACT_VERSION` is used in
`scripts/jest/preprocessor.js`
<!--
Explain the **motivation** for making this change. What existing problem
does the pull request solve?
-->
## How did you test this change?
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Demonstrate the code is solid. Example: The exact commands you ran and
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Repro step:
- Clear jest cache
- node ./scripts/jest/jest-cli.js --build --project devtools
--release-channel=experimental --reactVersion 18.0
- node ./scripts/jest/jest-cli.js --build --project devtools
--release-channel=experimental
Before:
Jest cached the first run with `REACT_VERSION` set, so in the second run
`transform-react-version-pragma` is still there and runs only the
regression tests on old react versions.
After:
- The second run runs all tests and ignore `// @reactVersion` as
expected.
Now that hook state is preserved while the work loop is suspended, we
don't need to track the thenable state in the work loop. We can track
it alongside the rest of the hook state.
This is a nice simplification and also aligns better with how it works
in Fizz and Flight.
The promises will still be cleared when the component finishes rendering
(either complete or unwind). In the future, we could stash the promises
on the fiber and reuse them during an update. However, this would only
work for `use` calls that occur before an prop/state/context is
processed, because `use` calls can only be assumed to execute in the
same order if no other props/state/context have changed. So it might not
be worth doing until we have finer grained memoization.
When an update flows into a dehydrated boundary, React cannot apply the
update until the boundary has finished hydrating. The way this currently
works is by scheduling a slightly higher priority task on the boundary,
using a special lane that's reserved only for this purpose. Because the
task is slightly higher priority, on the next turn of the work loop, the
Scheduler will force the work loop to yield (i.e. shouldYield starts
returning `true` because there's a higher priority task).
The downside of this approach is that it only works when time slicing is
enabled. It doesn't work for synchronous updates, because the
synchronous work loop does not consult the Scheduler on each iteration.
We plan to add support for selective hydration during synchronous
updates, too, so we need to model this some other way.
I've added a special internal exception that can be thrown to force the
work loop to interrupt the work-in-progress tree. Because it's thrown
from a React-only execution stack, throwing isn't strictly necessary —
we could instead modify some internal work loop state. But using an
exception means we don't need to check for this case on every iteration
of the work loop. So doing it this way moves the check out of the fast
path.
The ideal implementation wouldn't need to unwind the stack at all — we
should be able to hydrate the subtree and then apply the update all
within a single render phase. This is how we intend to implement it in
the future, but this requires a refactor to how we handle "stack"
variables, which are currently pushed to a per-render array. We need to
make this stack resumable, like how context works in Flight and Fizz.
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We appreciate you spending the time to work on these changes. Please
provide enough information so that others can review your pull request.
The three fields below are mandatory.
Before submitting a pull request, please make sure the following is
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1. Fork [the repository](https://github.com/facebook/react) and create
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2. Run `yarn` in the repository root.
3. If you've fixed a bug or added code that should be tested, add tests!
4. Ensure the test suite passes (`yarn test`). Tip: `yarn test --watch
TestName` is helpful in development.
5. Run `yarn test --prod` to test in the production environment. It
supports the same options as `yarn test`.
6. If you need a debugger, run `yarn debug-test --watch TestName`, open
`chrome://inspect`, and press "Inspect".
7. Format your code with
[prettier](https://github.com/prettier/prettier) (`yarn prettier`).
8. Make sure your code lints (`yarn lint`). Tip: `yarn linc` to only
check changed files.
9. Run the [Flow](https://flowtype.org/) type checks (`yarn flow`).
10. If you haven't already, complete the CLA.
Learn more about contributing:
https://reactjs.org/docs/how-to-contribute.html
-->
Following
[comment](https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/25437#discussion_r1010944983)
in #25437 , the external runtime implementation should be moved from
`react-dom` to `react-dom-bindings`.
I did have a question here:
I set the entrypoint to `react-dom/unstable_server-external-runtime.js`,
since a.) I was following #25436 as an example and b.)
`react-dom-bindings` was missing a `README.md` and `npm/`. This also
involved adding the external runtime to `package.json`.
However, the external runtime isn't really a `react-dom` entrypoint. Is
this change alright, or should I change the bundling code instead?
## How did you test this change?
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The old (unstable) mechanism for suspending was to throw a promise. The
purpose of throwing is to interrupt the component's execution, and also
to signal to React that the interruption was caused by Suspense as
opposed to some other error.
A flaw is that throwing is meant to be an implementation detail — if
code in userspace catches the promise, it can lead to unexpected
behavior.
With `use`, userspace code does not throw promises directly, but `use`
itself still needs to throw something to interrupt the component and
unwind the stack.
The solution is to throw an internal error. In development, we can
detect whether the error was caught by a userspace try/catch block and
log a warning — though it's not foolproof, since a clever user could
catch the object and rethrow it later.
The error message includes advice to move `use` outside of the try/catch
block.
I did not yet implement the warning in Flight.
This extends the scope of the cache and fetch instrumentation using
AsyncLocalStorage for microtasks. This is an intermediate step. It sets
up the dispatcher only once. This is unique to RSC because it uses the
react.shared-subset module for its shared state.
Ideally we should support multiple renderers. We should also have this
take over from an outer SSR's instrumented fetch. We should also be able
to have a fallback to global state per request where AsyncLocalStorage
doesn't exist and then the whole client-side solutions. I'm still
figuring out the right wiring for that so this is a temporary hack.
To derisk the rollout of `use`, and simplify the implementation, this
reverts the yield-to-microtasks behavior for promises that are thrown
directly (as opposed to being unwrapped by `use`).
We may add this back later. However, the plan is to deprecate throwing a
promise directly and migrate all existing Suspense code to `use`, so the
extra code probably isn't worth it.
Stacked on #25508
This PR adds meta tags as a resource type.
metas are classified in the following priority
1. charset
2. http-equiv
3. property
4. name
5. itemprop
when using property, there is special logic for og type properties where
a `property="og:image:height"` following a `property="og:image"` will
inherit the key of the previous tag. this relies on timing effects to
stay consistent so when mounting new metas it is important that if
structured properties are being used all members of a structure mount
together. This is similarly true for arrays where the implicit
sequential order defines the array structure. if you need an array you
need to mount all array members in the same pass.
With the `react-dom/server-rendering-stub` you can import `react-dom` in
RSC so that you can call `preload` and `preinit` but if you don't alias
it, then requiring it breaks because we React.Component which doesn't
exist in the react subset.
* 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
* float enhance!!!
Support preinit as script
Support resources from async scripts
Support saving the precedence place when rendering the shell
There was a significant change to the flushing order of resources which follows the general principal of...
1. stuff that blocks display
2. stuff that we know will be used
3. stuff that was explicitly preloaded
As a consequence if you preinit a style now it won't automatically flush in the shell unless you actually depend on it in your tree. To avoid races with precedence order we now emit a tag that saves the place amongst the precedence hierarchy so late insertions still end up where they were intended
There is also a novel hydration pathway for certain tags. If you render an async script with an onLoad or onError it will always treat it like an insertion rather than a hydration.
* restore preinit style flushing behavior and nits