* allow nested `act()`s from different renderers
There are usecases where multiple renderers need to oprate inside an act() scope
- ReactDOM.render being used inside another component tree. The parent component will be rendered using ReactTestRenderer.create for a snapshot test or something.
- a ReactDOM instance interacting with a ReactTestRenderer instance (like for the new devtools)
This PR changes the way the acting sigils operate to allow for this. It keeps 2 booleans, one attached to React, one attached to the renderer. act() changes these values, and the workloop reads them to decide what warning to trigger.
I also renamed shouldWarnUnactedUpdates to warnsIfNotActing
* s/ReactIsActing/IsSomeRendererActing and s/ReactRendererIsActing/IsThisRendererActing
* use toWarnDev for dom fixture tests
forks toWarnDev from root into fixture/dom, updates tes tests to use it
* disable act() warnings for react-art()
- For 'secondary' renderers like react-act, we don't want to fire missing act() warnings; the wrapping renderer will fire warnings anyway, and when it flushes, it flushes effects *across* renderers.
- I could have used isPrimaryRenderer as the flag, but this is marked as false for react-test-renderer, and we *do* want the warning to fire for it. Hence a new flag.
* add missing dependency `art` to fixtures/dom
* reset scope depth on synchronous errors
we weren't resetting the acting scope depth on sync errors thrown in the callback. this fixes that.
* typos
* add a test to make sure sync error propagate
* warn when using the wrong renderer's act around another renderer's updates
like it says. it uses a real object as the sigil (instead of just a boolean). specifically, it uses a renderer's flushPassiveEffects as the sigil. We also run tests for this separate from our main suite (which doesn't allow loading multiple renderers in a suite), but makes sure to run this in CI as well.
* unneeded (and wrong) comment
* run the dom fixture on CI
* update the sigil only in __DEV__
* remove the obnoxious comment
* use an explicit export for the sigil
* Rename ReactFiberScheduler to ReactFiberWorkLoop
The scheduling part is mostly extracted out to the scheduler package.
What's remaining is mostly around the loop around each section of work.
I name it something with Work in it because it's very related to the
BeginWork, CompleteWork and UnwindWork sections.
* Extract throwException from UnwindWork
Our throwing works more like algebraic effects in that it's a separate
phase where we find a handler and we later unwind.
* s/flushPassiveEffects/unstable_flushWithoutYielding
a first crack at flushing the scheduler manually from inside act(). uses unstable_flushWithoutYielding(). The tests that changed, mostly replaced toFlushAndYield(...) with toHaveYielded(). For some tests that tested the state of the tree before flushing effects (but still after updates), I replaced act() with bacthedUpdates().
* ugh lint
* pass build, flushPassiveEffects returns nothing now
* pass test-fire
* flush all work (not just effects), add a compatibility mode
of note, unstable_flushWithoutYielding now returns a boolean much like flushPassiveEffects
* umd build for scheduler/unstable_mock, pass the fixture with it
* add a comment to Shcduler.umd.js for why we're exporting unstable_flushWithoutYielding
* run testsutilsact tests in both sync/concurrent modes
* augh lint
* use a feature flag for the missing mock scheduler warning
I also tried writing a test for it, but couldn't get the scheduler to unmock. included the failing test.
* Update ReactTestUtilsAct-test.js
- pass the mock scheduler warning test,
- rewrite some tests to use Scheduler.yieldValue
- structure concurrent/legacy suites neatly
* pass failing tests in batchedmode-test
* fix pretty/lint/import errors
* pass test-build
* nit: pull .create(null) out of the act() call
* Add Batched Mode
React has an unfortunate quirk where updates are sometimes synchronous
-- where React starts rendering immediately within the call stack of
`setState` — and sometimes batched, where updates are flushed at the
end of the current event. Any update that originates within the call
stack of the React event system is batched. This encompasses most
updates, since most updates originate from an event handler like
`onClick` or `onChange`. It also includes updates triggered by lifecycle
methods or effects. But there are also updates that originate outside
React's event system, like timer events, network events, and microtasks
(promise resolution handlers). These are not batched, which results in
both worse performance (multiple render passes instead of single one)
and confusing semantics.
Ideally all updates would be batched by default. Unfortunately, it's
easy for components to accidentally rely on this behavior, so changing
it could break existing apps in subtle ways.
One way to move to a batched-by-default model is to opt into Concurrent
Mode (still experimental). But Concurrent Mode introduces additional
semantic changes that apps may not be ready to adopt.
This commit introduces an additional mode called Batched Mode. Batched
Mode enables a batched-by-default model that defers all updates to the
next React event. Once it begins rendering, React will not yield to
the browser until the entire render is finished.
Batched Mode is superset of Strict Mode. It fires all the same warnings.
It also drops the forked Suspense behavior used by Legacy Mode, in favor
of the proper semantics used by Concurrent Mode.
I have not added any public APIs that expose the new mode yet. I'll do
that in subsequent commits.
* Suspense in Batched Mode
Should have same semantics as Concurrent Mode.
* Use RootTag field to configure type of root
There are three types of roots: Legacy, Batched, and Concurrent.
* flushSync should not flush batched work
Treat Sync and Batched expiration times separately. Only Sync updates
are pushed to our internal queue of synchronous callbacks.
Renamed `flushImmediateQueue` to `flushSyncCallbackQueue` for clarity.
* Rewrite ReactFiberScheduler
Adds a new implementation of ReactFiberScheduler behind a feature flag.
We will maintain both implementations in parallel until the new one
is proven stable enough to replace the old one.
The main difference between the implementations is that the new one is
integrated with the Scheduler package's priority levels.
* Conditionally add fields to FiberRoot
Some fields only used by the old scheduler, and some by the new.
* Add separate build that enables new scheduler
* Re-enable skipped test
If synchronous updates are scheduled by a passive effect, that work
should be flushed synchronously, even if flushPassiveEffects is
called inside batchedUpdates.
* Passive effects have same priority as render
* Revert ability to cancel the current callback
React doesn't need this anyway because it never schedules callbacks if
it's already rendering.
* Revert change to FiberDebugPerf
Turns out this isn't neccessary.
* Fix ReactFiberScheduler dead code elimination
Should initialize to nothing, then assign the exports conditionally,
instead of initializing to the old exports and then reassigning to the
new ones.
* Don't yield before commit during sync error retry
* Call Scheduler.flushAll unconditionally in tests
Instead of wrapping in enableNewScheduler flag.
This took a while, but I'm happy I went through it. Some key moments - recursively flushing effects, flushing microtasks on each async turn, and my team's uncompromising philosophy on code reuse. Really happy with this. I still want to expand test coverage, and I have some more small related todos, but this is good to land. On to the next one.
Soundtrack to landing this - https://open.spotify.com/track/0MF8I8OUo8kytiOo8aSHYq?si=gSWqUheKQbiQDXzptCXHTg
* hacked up act(async () => {...})
* move stuff around
* merge changes
* abstract .act warnings and stuff. all renderers. pass all tests.
* move testutils.act back into testutils
* move into scheduler, rename some bits
* smaller bundle
* a comment for why we don't do typeof === 'function'
* fix test
* pass tests - fire, prod
* lose actContainerElement
* tighter
* write a test for TestRenderer
it's an odd one, because not only does sync act not flush effects correctly, but the async one does (wut). verified it's fine with the dom version.
* lint
* rewrote to move flushing logic closer to the renderer
the scheduler's `flushPassiveEffects` didn't work as expected for the test renderer, so I decided to go back to the hack (rendering a dumb container) This also makes reactdom not as heavy (by a few bytes, but still).
* move it around so the delta isn't too bad
* cleanups
fix promise chaining
propagate errors correctly
test for thenable the 'right' way
more tests!
tidier!
ponies!
* Stray comment
* recursively flush effects
* fixed tests
* lint, move noop.act into react-reconciler
* microtasks when checking if called, s/called/calledLog, cleanup
* pass fb lint
we could have globally changed our eslint config to assume Promise is available, but that means we expect a promise polyfill on the page, and we don't yet. this code is triggered only in jest anyway, and we're fairly certain Promise will be available there. hence, the once-off disable for the check
* shorter timers, fix a test, test for Promise
* use global.Promise for existence check
* flush microtasks
* a version that works in browsers (that support postMessage)
I also added a sanity fixture inside fixtures/dom/ mostly for me.
* hoist flushEffectsAndMicroTasks
* pull out tick logic from ReactFiberScheduler
* fix await act (...sync) hanging
- fix a hang when awaiting sync logic
- a better async/await test for test renderer
* feedback changes
- use node's setImmediate if available
- a warning if MessageChannel isn't available
- rename some functions
* pass lint/flow checks (without requiring a Promise polyfill/exclusion)
* prettier
the prettiest, even.
* use globalPromise for the missed await warning
* __DEV__ check for didWarnAboutMessageChannel
* thenables and callbacks instead of promises, pass flow/lint
* tinier. better.
- pulled most bits out of FiberScheduler
- actedUpdates uses callbacks now
* pass build validation
* augh prettier
* golfing 7 more chars
* Test that effects are not flushed without also flushing microtasks
* export doesHavePendingPassiveEffects, nits
* createAct()
* dead code
* missed in merge?
* lose the preflushing bits
* ugh prettier
* removed `actedUpdates()`, created shared/actingUpdatesScopeDepth
* rearrange imports so builds work, remove the hack versions of flushPassiveEffects
* represent actingUpdatesScopeDepth as a tuple [number]
* use a shared flag on React.__SECRET...
* remove createAct, setup act for all relevant renderers
* review feedback
shared/enqueueTask
import ReactSharedInternals from 'shared/ReactSharedInternals';
simpler act() internals
ReactSharedInternals.ReactShouldWarnActingUpdates
* move act() implementation into createReactNoop
* warnIfNotCurrentlyActingUpdatesInDev condition check order
* Add more info to invalid hook call error message
* Update other renderers + change call to action
* Update related tests for new hooks error message
* Fix lint errors
* Throw away old shallow renderer state on type change
This worked in function components but was broken for classes. It incorrectly retained the old instance even if the type was different.
* Remove _previousComponentIdentity
We only needed this because we didn't correctly reset based on type. Now we do so this can go away.
* Use _reset when unmounting
* Use arbitrary componentIdentity
There was no particular reason it was set to element.type. We just wanted to check if something is a render phase update.
* Support Hook state updates in shallow renderer
* Support React.memo in ReactShallowRenderer
ReactShallowRenderer uses element.type frequently, but with React.memo
elements the actual type is element.type.type. This updates
ReactShallowRenderer so it uses the correct element type for Memo
components and also validates the inner props for the wrapped
components.
* Allow Rect.memo to prevent re-renders
* Support memo(forwardRef())
* Dont call memo comparison function on initial render
* Fix test
* Small tweaks
* Import Scheduler directly, not via host config
We currently schedule asynchronous tasks via the host config. (The host
config is a static/build-time dependency injection system that varies
across different renderers — DOM, native, test, and so on.) Instead of
calling platform APIs like `requestIdleCallback` directly, each renderer
implements a method called `scheduleDeferredCallback`.
We've since discovered that when scheduling tasks, it's crucial that
React work is placed in the same queue as other, non-React work on the
main thread. Otherwise, you easily end up in a starvation scenario where
rendering is constantly interrupted by less important tasks. You need a
centralized coordinator that is used both by React and by other
frameworks and application code. This coordinator must also have a
consistent API across all the different host environments, for
convention's sake and so product code is portable — e.g. so the same
component can work in both React Native and React Native Web.
This turned into the Scheduler package. We will have different builds of
Scheduler for each of our target platforms. With this approach, we treat
Scheduler like a built-in platform primitive that exists wherever React
is supported.
Now that we have this consistent interface, the indirection of the host
config no longer makes sense for the purpose of scheduling tasks. In
fact, we explicitly do not want renderers to scheduled task via any
system except the Scheduler package.
So, this PR removes `scheduleDeferredCallback` and its associated
methods from the host config in favor of directly importing Scheduler.
* Missed an extraneous export
* Swap expect(ReactNoop) for expect(Scheduler)
In the previous commits, I upgraded our custom Jest matchers for the
noop and test renderers to use Scheduler under the hood.
Now that all these matchers are using Scheduler, we can drop
support for passing ReactNoop and test roots and always pass
Scheduler directly.
* Externalize Scheduler in noop and test bundles
I also noticed we don't need to regenerator runtime in noop anymore.
* Replace test renderer's fake Scheduler implementation with mock build
The test renderer has its own mock implementation of the Scheduler
interface, with the ability to partially render work in tests. Now that
this functionality has been lifted into a proper mock Scheduler build,
we can use that instead.
* Fix Profiler tests in prod
* Throw in tests if work is done before emptying log
Test renderer already does this. Makes it harder to miss unexpected
behavior by forcing you to assert on every logged value.
* Convert ReactNoop tests to use jest matchers
The matchers warn if work is flushed while the log is empty. This is
the pattern we already follow for test renderer. I've used the same APIs
as test renderer, so it should be easy to switch between the two.
* expose unstable_interact for batching actions in tests
* move to TestUtils
* move it all into testutils
* s/interact/act
* warn when calling hook-like setState outside batching mode
* pass tests
* merge-temp
* move jsdom test to callsite
* mark failing tests
* pass most tests (except one)
* augh IE
* pass fuzz tests
* better warning, expose the right batchedUpdates on TestRenderer for www
* move it into hooks, test for dom
* expose a flag on the host config, move stuff around
* rename, pass flow
* pass flow... again
* tweak .act() type
* enable for all jest environments/renderers; pass (most) tests.
* pass all tests
* expose just the warning from the scheduler
* don't return values
* a bunch of changes.
can't return values from .act
don't try to await .act calls
pass tests
* fixes and nits
* "fire events that udpates state"
* nit
* 🙄
* my bad
* hi andrew
(prettier fix)
* Avoid importing Scheduler directly
The reconciler should not depend directly on Scheduler. This adds it to
the host config for the renderer instead.
(Except for `scheduler/tracing` imports, which are used only by the
profiling build. I've left those imports as-is, though I'm open to
directing those through the host config, too.)
* Make throwaway root id longer to appease Brian
* Improve Reducer Hook's lazy init API
* Use generic type for initilizer input
Still requires an `any` cast in the case where `init` function is
not provided.
* Move DEV-only function right above where it's used
I don't like looking at this top-level function #petty
* Use different dispatchers for functions & classes
Classes support readContext, but not any of the other dispatcher
methods. Function support all methods.
This is a more robust version of our previous strategy of checking
whether `currentlyRenderingFiber` is null.
As a next step, we can use a separate dispatcher for each phase of the
render cycle (mount versus update).
* Use separate dispatchers for mount and update
* Remove mount code from update path
Deletes mount-specific code from the update path, since it should be
unreachable. To continue supporting progressive enhancement (mounting
new hooks at the end of the list), we detect when there are no more
current hooks and switch back to the mount dispatcher. Progressive
enhancement isn't officially supported yet, so it will continue to warn.
* Factoring nits
* Fix Flow
Had to cheat more than I would like
* More Flow nits
* Switch back to using a special dispatcher for nested hooks in DEV
In order for this strategy to work, I had to revert progressive
enhancement support (appending hooks to the end). It was previously a
warning but now it results in an error. We'll reconsider later.
* Always pass args to updateState and updateReducer
Even though the extra args are only used on mount, to ensure
type consistency.
* Turned enableHooks feature flag on everywhere
* Removed useHooks feature flag from tests (now that it's on by default)
* Remove useHooks feature flag entirely
Whenever we do this, Rollup needs to materialize this as an object.
This causes it to also add the Babel compatibility property which is
unnecessary bloat. However, since when we use these, we leak the object
this often also deopts any compiler optimizations.
If we really need an object we should export default an object.
Currently there is an exception for DOMTopLevelEventTypes since
listing out the imports is a PITA and it doesn't escape so it should
get properly inlined. We should probably move to a different pattern
to avoid this for consistency though.
* Add debug tools package
* Add basic implementation
* Implement inspection of the current state of hooks using the fiber tree
* Support useContext hooks inspection by backtracking from the Fiber
I'm not sure this is safe because the return fibers may not be current
but close enough and it's fast.
We use this to set up the current values of the providers.
* rm copypasta
* Use lastIndexOf
Just in case. I don't know of any scenario where this can happen.
* Support ForwardRef
* Add test for memo and custom hooks
* Support defaultProps resolution
* [scheduler] Deadline object -> shouldYield
Instead of using a requestIdleCallback-style deadline object, expose a
method Scheduler.shouldYield that returns true if there's a higher
priority event in the queue.
* Nits
* [Synchronous Suspense] Suspending a class outside concurrent mode
When a class component suspends during mount outside concurrent mode,
change the tag so it's not mistaken for a completed component. For
example, we should not call componentWillUnmount if it is deleted.
* PR nits
* Allow arbitrary types to be wrapped in pure
This creates an outer fiber that container the pure check and an inner
fiber that represents which ever type of component.
* Add optimized fast path for simple pure function components
Special cased when there are no defaultProps and it's a simple function
component instead of class. This doesn't require an extra fiber.
We could make it so that this also works with custom comparer but that
means we have to go through one extra indirection to get to it.
Maybe it's worth it, donno.
* Introduce elementType field
This will be used to store the wrapped type of an element. E.g. pure and
lazy.
The existing type field will be used for the unwrapped type within them.
* Store the unwrapped type on the type field of lazy components
* Use the raw tags for lazy components
Instead, we check if the elementType and type are equal to test if
we need to resolve props. This is slightly slower in the normal case
but will yield less code and branching.
* Clean up lazy branches
* Collapse work tag numbering
* Split IndeterminateComponent out from Lazy
This way we don't have to check the type in a hacky way in the
indeterminate path. Also, lets us deal with lazy that resolves to
indeterminate and such.
* Missing clean up in rebase
* Store the start time on `updateQueue` instead of `stateNode`
Originally I did this to free the `stateNode` field to store a second
set of children. I don't we'll need this anymore, since we use fragment
fibers instead. But I still think using `updateQueue` makes more sense
so I'll leave this in.
* Use fragment fibers to keep the primary and fallback children separate
If the children timeout, we switch to showing the fallback children in
place of the "primary" children. However, we don't want to delete the
primary children because then their state will be lost (both the React
state and the host state, e.g. uncontrolled form inputs). Instead we
keep them mounted and hide them. Both the fallback children AND the
primary children are rendered at the same time. Once the primary
children are un-suspended, we can delete the fallback children — don't
need to preserve their state.
The two sets of children are siblings in the host environment, but
semantically, for purposes of reconciliation, they are two separate
sets. So we store them using two fragment fibers.
However, we want to avoid allocating extra fibers for every placeholder.
They're only necessary when the children time out, because that's the
only time when both sets are mounted.
So, the extra fragment fibers are only used if the children time out.
Otherwise, we render the primary children directly. This requires some
custom reconciliation logic to preserve the state of the primary
children. It's essentially a very basic form of re-parenting.
* Use `memoizedState` to store various pieces of SuspenseComponent's state
SuspenseComponent has three pieces of state:
- alreadyCaptured: Whether a component in the child subtree already
suspended. If true, subsequent suspends should bubble up to the
next boundary.
- didTimeout: Whether the boundary renders the primary or fallback
children. This is separate from `alreadyCaptured` because outside of
strict mode, when a boundary times out, the first commit renders the
primary children in an incomplete state, then performs a second commit
to switch the fallback. In that first commit, `alreadyCaptured` is
false and `didTimeout` is true.
- timedOutAt: The time at which the boundary timed out. This is separate
from `didTimeout` because it's not set unless the boundary
actually commits.
These were previously spread across several fields.
This happens to make the non-strict case a bit less hacky; the logic for
that special case is now mostly localized to the UnwindWork module.
* Hide timed-out Suspense children
When a subtree takes too long to load, we swap its contents out for
a fallback to unblock the rest of the tree. Because we don't want
to lose the state of the timed out view, we shouldn't actually delete
the nodes from the tree. Instead, we'll keep them mounted and hide
them visually. When the subtree is unblocked, we un-hide it, having
preserved the existing state.
Adds additional host config methods. For mutation mode:
- hideInstance
- hideTextInstance
- unhideInstance
- unhideTextInstance
For persistent mode:
- cloneHiddenInstance
- cloneUnhiddenInstance
- createHiddenTextInstance
I've only implemented the new methods in the noop and test renderers.
I'll implement them in the other renderers in subsequent commits.
* Include `hidden` prop in noop renderer's output
This will be used in subsequent commits to test that timed-out children
are properly hidden.
Also adds getChildrenAsJSX() method as an alternative to using
getChildren(). (Ideally all our tests would use test renderer #oneday.)
* Implement hide/unhide host config methods for DOM renderer
For DOM nodes, we hide using `el.style.display = 'none'`.
Text nodes don't have style, so we hide using `text.textContent = ''`.
* Implement hide/unhide host config methods for Art renderer
* Create DOM fixture that tests state preservation of timed out content
* Account for class components that suspend outside concurrent mode
Need to distinguish mount from update. An unfortunate edge case :(
* Fork appendAllChildren between persistent and mutation mode
* Remove redundant check for existence of el.style
* Schedule placement effect on indeterminate components
In non-concurrent mode, indeterminate fibers may commit in an
inconsistent state. But when they update, we should throw out the
old fiber and start fresh. Which means the new fiber needs a
placement effect.
* Pass null instead of current everywhere in mountIndeterminateComponent
* Jest + test renderer helpers for concurrent mode
Most of our concurrent React tests use the noop renderer. But most
of those tests don't test the renderer API, and could instead be
written with the test renderer. We should switch to using the test
renderer whenever possible, because that's what we expect product devs
and library authors to do. If test renderer is sufficient for writing
most React core tests, it should be sufficient for others, too. (The
converse isn't true but we should aim to dogfood test renderer as much
as possible.)
This PR adds a new package, jest-react (thanks @cpojer). I've moved
our existing Jest matchers into that package and added some new ones.
I'm not expecting to figure out the final API in this PR. My goal is
to land something good enough that we can start dogfooding in www.
TODO: Continue migrating Suspense tests, decide on better API names
* Add additional invariants to prevent common errors
- Errors if user attempts to flush when log of yields is not empty
- Throws if argument passed to toClearYields is not ReactTestRenderer
* Better method names
- toFlushAll -> toFlushAndYield
- toFlushAndYieldThrough ->
- toClearYields -> toHaveYielded
Also added toFlushWithoutYielding
* Fix jest-react exports
* Tweak README
* pure
A higher-order component version of the `React.PureComponent` class.
During an update, the previous props are compared to the new props. If
they are the same, React will skip rendering the component and
its children.
Unlike userspace implementations, `pure` will not add an additional
fiber to the tree.
The first argument must be a functional component; it does not work
with classes.
`pure` uses shallow comparison by default, like `React.PureComponent`.
A custom comparison can be passed as the second argument.
Co-authored-by: Andrew Clark <acdlite@fb.com>
Co-authored-by: Sophie Alpert <sophiebits@fb.com>
* Warn if first argument is not a functional component
* Accept promise as element type
On the initial render, the element will suspend as if a promise were
thrown from inside the body of the unresolved component. Siblings should
continue rendering and if the parent is a Placeholder, the promise
should be captured by that Placeholder.
When the promise resolves, rendering resumes. If the resolved value
has a `default` property, it is assumed to be the default export of
an ES module, and we use that as the component type. If it does not have
a `default` property, we use the resolved value itself.
The resolved value is stored as an expando on the promise/thenable.
* Use special types of work for lazy components
Because reconciliation is a hot path, this adds ClassComponentLazy,
FunctionalComponentLazy, and ForwardRefLazy as special types of work.
The other types are not supported, but wouldn't be placed into a
separate module regardless.
* Resolve defaultProps for lazy types
* Remove some calls to isContextProvider
isContextProvider checks the fiber tag, but it's typically called after
we've already refined the type of work. We should get rid of it. I
removed some of them in the previous commit, and deleted a few more
in this one. I left a few behind because the remaining ones would
require additional refactoring that feels outside the scope of this PR.
* Remove getLazyComponentTypeIfResolved
* Return baseProps instead of null
The caller compares the result to baseProps to see if anything changed.
* Avoid redundant checks by inlining getFiberTagFromObjectType
* Move tag resolution to ReactFiber module
* Pass next props to update* functions
We should do this with all types of work in the future.
* Refine component type before pushing/popping context
Removes unnecessary checks.
* Replace all occurrences of _reactResult with helper
* Move shared thenable logic to `shared` package
* Check type of wrapper object before resolving to `default` export
* Return resolved tag instead of reassigning
Adds custom Jest matchers that help with writing async tests:
- `toFlushThrough`
- `toFlushAll`
- `toFlushAndThrow`
- `toClearYields`
Each one accepts an array of expected yielded values, to prevent
false negatives.
Eventually I imagine we'll want to publish this on npm.
The `yield` method isn't tied to any specific root. Putting this
on the main export enables test components that are not within scope
to yield even if they don't have access to the currently rendering
root instance. This follows the pattern established by ReactNoop.
Added a `clearYields` method, too, for reading values that were yielded
out of band. This is also based on ReactNoop.
* Fix getComponentName() for types with nested $$typeof
* Temporarily remove Profiler ID from messages
* Change getComponentName() signature to take just type
It doesn't actually need the whole Fiber.
* Remove getComponentName() forks in isomorphic and SSR
* Remove unnecessary .type access where we already have a type
* Remove unused type
* Prepare placeholders before timing out
While a tree is suspended, prepare for the timeout by pre-rendering the
placeholder state.
This simplifies the implementation a bit because every render now
results in a completed tree.
* Suspend inside an already timed out Placeholder
A component should be able to suspend inside an already timed out
placeholder. The time at which the placeholder committed is used as
the start time for a subsequent suspend.
So, if a placeholder times out after 3 seconds, and an inner
placeholder has a threshold of 2 seconds, the inner placeholder will
not time out until 5 seconds total have elapsed.
* react-test-renderer injects itself into DevTools if present
* Fibers are always opted into ProfileMode if DevTools is present
* Added simple test for DevTools + always profiling behavior
* Inline fbjs/lib/emptyObject
* Explicit naming
* Compare to undefined
* Another approach for detecting whether we can mutate
Each renderer would have its own local LegacyRefsObject function.
While in general we don't want `instanceof`, here it lets us do a simple check: did *we* create the refs object?
Then we can mutate it.
If the check didn't pass, either we're attaching ref for the first time (so we know to use the constructor),
or (unlikely) we're attaching a ref to a component owned by another renderer. In this case, to avoid "losing"
refs, we assign them onto the new object. Even in that case it shouldn't "hop" between renderers anymore.
* Clearer naming
* Add test case for strings refs across renderers
* Use a shared empty object for refs by reading it from React
* Remove string refs from ReactART test
It's not currently possible to resetModules() between several renderers
without also resetting the `React` module. However, that leads to losing
the referential identity of the empty ref object, and thus subsequent
checks in the renderers for whether it is pooled fail (and cause assignments
to a frozen object).
This has always been the case, but we used to work around it by shimming
fbjs/lib/emptyObject in tests and preserving its referential identity.
This won't work anymore because we've inlined it. And preserving referential
identity of React itself wouldn't be great because it could be confusing during
testing (although we might want to revisit this in the future by moving its
stateful parts into a separate package).
For now, I'm removing string ref usage from this test because only this is
the only place in our tests where we hit this problem, and it's only
related to string refs, and not just ref mechanism in general.
* Simplify the condition
* [schedule] Use linked list instead of queue and map for storing cbs
NOTE: This PR depends on https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/12880
and https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/12884
Please review those first, and after they land Flarnie will rebase on
top of them.
---
**what is the change?:**
See title
**why make this change?:**
This seems to make the code simpler, and potentially saves space of
having an array and object around holding references to the callbacks.
**test plan:**
Run existing tests
* minor style improvements
* refactor conditionals in cancelScheduledWork for increased clarity
* Remove 'canUseDOM' condition and fix some flow issues w/callbackID type
**what is the change?:**
- Removed conditional which fell back to 'setTimeout' when the
environment doesn't have DOM. This appears to be an old polyfill used
for test environments and we don't use it any more.
- Fixed type definitions around the callbackID to be more accurate in
the scheduler itself, and more loose in the React code.
**why make this change?:**
To get Flow passing, simplify the scheduler code, make things accurate.
**test plan:**
Run tests and flow.
* Rewrite 'cancelScheduledWork' so that Flow accepts it
**what is the change?:**
Adding verification that 'previousCallbackConfig' and
'nextCallbackConfig' are not null before accessing properties on them.
Slightly concerned because this implementation relies on these
properties being untouched and correct on the config which is passed to
'cancelScheduledWork' but I guess we already rely heavily on that for
this whole approach. :\
**why make this change?:**
To get Flow passing.
Not sure why it passed earlier and in CI, but now it's not.
**test plan:**
`yarn flow dom` and other flow tests, lint, tests, etc.
* ran prettier
* Put back the fallback implementation of scheduler for node environment
**what is the change?:**
We had tried removing the fallback implementation of `scheduler` but
tests reminded us that this is important for supporting isomorphic uses
of React.
Long term we will move this out of the `schedule` module but for now
let's keep things simple.
**why make this change?:**
Keep things working!
**test plan:**
Ran tests and flow
* Shorten properties stored in objects by sheduler
**what is the change?:**
`previousScheduledCallback` -> `prev`
`nextScheduledCallback` -> `next`
**why make this change?:**
We want this package to be smaller, and less letters means less code
means smaller!
**test plan:**
ran existing tests
* further remove extra lines in scheduler
* Extract base Jest config
This makes it easier to change the source config without affecting the build test config.
* Statically import the host config
This changes react-reconciler to import HostConfig instead of getting it through a function argument.
Rather than start with packages like ReactDOM that want to inline it, I started with React Noop and ensured that *custom* renderers using react-reconciler package still work. To do this, I'm making HostConfig module in the reconciler look at a global variable by default (which, in case of the react-reconciler npm package, ends up being the host config argument in the top-level scope).
This is still very broken.
* Add scaffolding for importing an inlined renderer
* Fix the build
* ES exports for renderer methods
* ES modules for host configs
* Remove closures from the reconciler
* Check each renderer's config with Flow
* Fix uncovered Flow issue
We know nextHydratableInstance doesn't get mutated inside this function, but Flow doesn't so it thinks it may be null.
Help Flow.
* Prettier
* Get rid of enable*Reconciler flags
They are not as useful anymore because for almost all cases (except third party renderers) we *know* whether it supports mutation or persistence.
This refactoring means react-reconciler and react-reconciler/persistent third-party packages now ship the same thing.
Not ideal, but this seems worth how simpler the code becomes. We can later look into addressing it by having a single toggle instead.
* Prettier again
* Fix Flow config creation issue
* Fix imprecise Flow typing
* Revert accidental changes
* Support concurrent primary and secondary renderers.
As a workaround to support multiple concurrent renderers, we categorize
some renderers as primary and others as secondary. We only expect
there to be two concurrent renderers at most: React Native (primary) and
Fabric (secondary); React DOM (primary) and React ART (secondary).
Secondary renderers store their context values on separate fields.
* Add back concurrent renderer warning
Only warn for two concurrent primary or two concurrent secondary renderers.
* Change "_secondary" suffix to "2"
#EveryBitCounts
Add a new component type, Profiler, that can be used to collect new render time metrics. Since this is a new, experimental API, it will be exported as React.unstable_Profiler initially.
Most of the functionality for this component has been added behind a feature flag, enableProfileModeMetrics. When the feature flag is disabled, the component will just render its children with no additional behavior. When the flag is enabled, React will also collect timing information and pass it to the onRender function (as described below).
These are based on the ReactNoop renderer, which we use to test React
itself. This gives library authors (Relay, Apollo, Redux, et al.) a way
to test their components for async compatibility.
- Pass `unstable_isAsync` to `TestRenderer.create` to create an async
renderer instance. This causes updates to be lazily flushed.
- `renderer.unstable_yield` tells React to yield execution after the
currently rendering component.
- `renderer.unstable_flushAll` flushes all pending async work, and
returns an array of yielded values.
- `renderer.unstable_flushThrough` receives an array of expected values,
begins rendering, and stops once those values have been yielded. It
returns the array of values that are actually yielded. The user should
assert that they are equal.
Although we've used this pattern successfully in our own tests, I'm not
sure if these are the final APIs we'll make public.
* Implemented new getSnapshotBeforeUpdate lifecycle
* Store snapshot value from Fiber to instance (__reactInternalSnapshotBeforeUpdate)
* Use commitAllHostEffects() traversal for getSnapshotBeforeUpdate()
* Added DEV warnings and tests for new lifecycle
* Don't invoke legacy lifecycles if getSnapshotBeforeUpdate() is defined. DEV warn about this.
* Converted did-warn objects to Sets in ReactFiberClassComponent
* Replaced redundant new lifecycle checks in a few methods
* Check for polyfill suppress flag on cWU as well before warning
* Added Snapshot bit to HostEffectMask
* Support ForwardRef type of work in TestRenderer and ShallowRenderer.
* Release script now updates inter-package dependencies too (e.g. react-test-renderer depends on react-is).
* Add stack unwinding phase for handling errors
A rewrite of error handling, with semantics that more closely match
stack unwinding.
Errors that are thrown during the render phase unwind to the nearest
error boundary, like before. But rather than synchronously unmount the
children before retrying, we restart the failed subtree within the same
render phase. The failed children are still unmounted (as if all their
keys changed) but without an extra commit.
Commit phase errors are different. They work by scheduling an error on
the update queue of the error boundary. When we enter the render phase,
the error is popped off the queue. The rest of the algorithm is
the same.
This approach is designed to work for throwing non-errors, too, though
that feature is not implemented yet.
* Add experimental getDerivedStateFromCatch lifecycle
Fires during the render phase, so you can recover from an error within the same
pass. This aligns error boundaries more closely with try-catch semantics.
Let's keep this behind a feature flag until a future release. For now, the
recommendation is to keep using componentDidCatch. Eventually, the advice will
be to use getDerivedStateFromCatch for handling errors and componentDidCatch
only for logging.
* Reconcile twice to remount failed children, instead of using a boolean
* Handle effect immediately after its thrown
This way we don't have to store the thrown values on the effect list.
* ReactFiberIncompleteWork -> ReactFiberUnwindWork
* Remove startTime
* Remove TypeOfException
We don't need it yet. We'll reconsider once we add another exception type.
* Move replay to outer catch block
This moves it out of the hot path.
* Invoke both legacy and UNSAFE_ lifecycles when both are present
This is to support edge cases with eg create-react-class where a mixin defines a legacy lifecycle but the component being created defines an UNSAFE one (or vice versa).
I did not warn about this case because the warning would be a bit redundant with the deprecation warning which we will soon be enabling. I could be convinced to change my stance here though.
* Added explicit function-type check to SS ReactPartialRenderer
* Suppress unsafe/deprecation warnings for polyfilled components.
* Don't invoke deprecated lifecycles if static gDSFP exists.
* Applied recent changes to server rendering also
* Added unsafe_* lifecycles and deprecation warnings
If the old lifecycle hooks (componentWillMount, componentWillUpdate, componentWillReceiveProps) are detected, these methods will be called and a deprecation warning will be logged. (In other words, we do not check for both the presence of the old and new lifecycles.) This commit is expected to fail tests.
* Ran lifecycle hook codemod over project
This should handle the bulk of the updates. I will manually update TypeScript and CoffeeScript tests with another commit.
The actual command run with this commit was: jscodeshift --parser=flow -t ../react-codemod/transforms/rename-unsafe-lifecycles.js ./packages/**/src/**/*.js
* Manually migrated CoffeeScript and TypeScript tests
* Added inline note to createReactClassIntegration-test
Explaining why lifecycles hooks have not been renamed in this test.
* Udated NativeMethodsMixin with new lifecycle hooks
* Added static getDerivedStateFromProps to ReactPartialRenderer
Also added a new set of tests focused on server side lifecycle hooks.
* Added getDerivedStateFromProps to shallow renderer
Also added warnings for several cases involving getDerivedStateFromProps() as well as the deprecated lifecycles.
Also added tests for the above.
* Dedupe and DEV-only deprecation warning in server renderer
* Renamed unsafe_* prefix to UNSAFE_* to be more noticeable
* Added getDerivedStateFromProps to ReactFiberClassComponent
Also updated class component and lifecyle tests to cover the added functionality.
* Warn about UNSAFE_componentWillRecieveProps misspelling
* Added tests to createReactClassIntegration for new lifecycles
* Added warning for stateless functional components with gDSFP
* Added createReactClass test for static gDSFP
* Moved lifecycle deprecation warnings behind (disabled) feature flag
Updated tests accordingly, by temporarily splitting tests that were specific to this feature-flag into their own, internal tests. This was the only way I knew of to interact with the feature flag without breaking our build/dist tests.
* Tidying up
* Tweaked warning message wording slightly
Replaced 'You may may have returned undefined.' with 'You may have returned undefined.'
* Replaced truthy partialState checks with != null
* Call getDerivedStateFromProps via .call(null) to prevent type access
* Move shallow-renderer didWarn* maps off the instance
* Only call getDerivedStateFromProps if props instance has changed
* Avoid creating new state object if not necessary
* Inject state as a param to callGetDerivedStateFromProps
This value will be either workInProgress.memoizedState (for updates) or instance.state (for initialization).
* Explicitly warn about uninitialized state before calling getDerivedStateFromProps.
And added some new tests for this change.
Also:
* Improved a couple of falsy null/undefined checks to more explicitly check for null or undefined.
* Made some small tweaks to ReactFiberClassComponent WRT when and how it reads instance.state and sets to null.
* Improved wording for deprecation lifecycle warnings
* Fix state-regression for module-pattern components
Also add support for new static getDerivedStateFromProps method
Removes the `useSyncScheduling` option from the HostConfig, since it's
no longer needed. Instead of globally flipping between sync and async,
our strategy will be to opt-in specific trees and subtrees.
* 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
API for batching top-level updates and deferring the commit.
- `root.createBatch` creates a batch with an async expiration time
associated with it.
- `batch.render` updates the children that the batch renders.
- `batch.then` resolves when the root has completed.
- `batch.commit` synchronously flushes any remaining work and commits.
No two batches can have the same expiration time. The only way to
commit a batch is by calling its `commit` method. E.g. flushing one
batch will not cause a different batch to also flush.
* Move ReactFiberTreeReflection to react-reconciler/reflection #11659
* Use * for react-reconciler
We don't know the latest local version, and release script currently doesn't bump deps automatically.
* Remove unused field
* Use CommonJS in entry point for consistency
* Undo the CommonJS change
I didn't realize it would break the build.
* Record sizes
* Remove reconciler fixtures
They're unnecessary now that we run real tests on reconciler bundles.
* Create test to verify ReactShallowRenderer bug (#11496)
* Fix ReactShallowRenderer callback bug on componentWillMount (#11496)
* Improve fnction naming and clean up queued callback before call
* Run prettier on ReactShallowRenderer.js
* Consolidate callback call on ReactShallowRenderer.js
* Ensure callback behavior is similar between ReactDOM and ReactShallowRenderer
* Fix Code Review requests (#11507)
* Move test to ReactCompositeComponent
* Verify the callback gets called
* Ensure multiple callbacks are correctly handled on ReactShallowRenderer
* Ensure the setState callback is called inside componentWillMount (ReactDOM)
* Clear ReactShallowRenderer callback queue before actually calling the callbacks
* Add test for multiple callbacks on ReactShallowRenderer
* Ensure the ReactShallowRenderer callback queue is cleared after invoking callbacks
* Remove references to internal fields on ReactShallowRenderer test
* 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.
* Don't call idle callback unless there's time remaining
* Expiration fixture
Fixture that demonstrates how async work expires after a certain interval.
The fixture clogs the main thread with animation work, so it only works if the
`timeout` option is provided to `requestIdleCallback`.
* Pass timeout option to requestIdleCallback
Forces `requestIdleCallback` to fire if too much time has elapsed, even if the
main thread is busy. Required to make expiration times work properly. Otherwise,
async work can expire, but React never has a chance to flush it because the
browser never calls into React.
* Convert EventPlugin{Hub,Registry} to named exports
* Convert EventPluginUtils to named exports
* Convert EventPropagators to named exports
* Convert ReactControlledComponent to named exports
* Convert ReactGenericBatching to named exports
* Convert ReactDOMComponentTree to named exports
* Convert ReactNativeComponentTree to named exports
* Convert ReactNativeRTComponentTree to named exports
* Convert FallbackCompositionState to named exports
* Convert ReactEventEmitterMixin to named exports
* Convert ReactBrowserEventEmitter to named exports
* Convert ReactNativeEventEmitter to named exports
* Convert ReactDOMEventListener to named exports
* Convert DOMMarkupOperations to named exports
* Convert DOMProperty to named exports
* Add suppression for existing Flow violation
Flow didn't see it before.
* Update sizes
* 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
* 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
* Move files and tests to more meaningful places
* Fix the build
Now that we import reconciler via react-reconciler, I needed to make a few tweaks.
* Update sizes
* Move @preventMunge directive to FB header
* Revert unintentional change
* Fix Flow coverage
I forgot to @flow-ify those files. This uncovered some issues.
* Prettier, I love you but you're bringing me down
Prettier, I love you but you're bringing me down
Like a rat in a cage
Pulling minimum wage
Prettier, I love you but you're bringing me down
Prettier, you're safer and you're wasting my time
Our records all show you were filthy but fine
But they shuttered your stores
When you opened the doors
To the cops who were bored once they'd run out of crime
Prettier, you're perfect, oh, please don't change a thing
Your mild billionaire mayor's now convinced he's a king
So the boring collect
I mean all disrespect
In the neighborhood bars I'd once dreamt I would drink
Prettier, I love you but you're freaking me out
There's a ton of the twist but we're fresh out of shout
Like a death in the hall
That you hear through your wall
Prettier, I love you but you're freaking me out
Prettier, I love you but you're bringing me down
Prettier, I love you but you're bringing me down
Like a death of the heart
Jesus, where do I start?
But you're still the one pool where I'd happily drown
And oh! Take me off your mailing list
For kids who think it still exists
Yes, for those who think it still exists
Maybe I'm wrong and maybe you're right
Maybe I'm wrong and maybe you're right
Maybe you're right, maybe I'm wrong
And just maybe you're right
And oh! Maybe mother told you true
And there'll always be somebody there for you
And you'll never be alone
But maybe she's wrong and maybe I'm right
And just maybe she's wrong
Maybe she's wrong and maybe I'm right
And if so, here's this song!
* 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