Upgraded from Babel 6 to Babel 7.
The only significant change seems to be the way `@babel/plugin-transform-classes` handles classes differently from `babel-plugin-transform-es2015-classes`. In regular mode, the former injects a `_createClass` function that increases the bundle size, and in the latter it removes the safeguard checks. However, this is okay because we don't all classes in new features, and we want to deprecate class usage in the future in the react repo.
Co-authored-by: Luna Ruan <luna@fb.com>
Co-authored-by: Abdul Rauf <abdulraufmujahid@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Maksim Markelov <maks-markel@mail.ru>
We have behaviour divergence for act() between prod and dev (specifically, act() + concurrent mode does not flush fallbacks in prod. This doesn't affect anyone in OSS yet)
We also don't have a good story for writing tests in prod (and what from what I gather, nobody really writes tests in prod mode).
We could have wiped out act() in prod builds, except that _we_ ourselves use act() for our tests when we run them in prod mode.
This PR is a compromise to all of this. We will log a warning if you try to use act() in prod mode, and we silence it in our test suites.
The React Native build does not minify error messages in production,
but it still needs to run the error messages transform to compile
`invariant` calls to `ReactError`. To do this, I added a `noMinify`
option to the Babel plugin. I also renamed it from
`minify-error-messages` to the more generic `transform-error-messages`.
* 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.
Adds a feature flag `enableNewScheduler` that toggles between two
implementations of ReactFiberScheduler. This will let us land changes in
master while preserving the ability to quickly rollback.
Ideally this will be a short-lived fork. Once we've tested the new
scheduler for a week or so without issues, we will get rid of it. Until
then, we'll need to maintain two parallel implementations and run tests
against both of them. We rarely land changes to ReactFiberScheduler, so
I don't expect this will be a huge burden.
This commit does not implement anything new. The flag is still off and
tests run against the existing implementation.
Use `yarn test-new-scheduler` to run tests against the new one.
* Transform invariant to custom error type
This transforms calls to the invariant module:
```js
invariant(condition, 'A %s message that contains %s', adj, noun);
```
Into throw statements:
```js
if (!condition) {
if (__DEV__) {
throw ReactError(`A ${adj} message that contains ${noun}`);
} else {
throw ReactErrorProd(ERR_CODE, adj, noun);
}
}
```
The only thing ReactError does is return an error whose name is set
to "Invariant Violation" to match the existing behavior.
ReactErrorProd is a special version used in production that throws
a minified error code, with a link to see to expanded form. This
replaces the reactProdInvariant module.
As a next step, I would like to replace our use of the invariant module
for user facing errors by transforming normal Error constructors to
ReactError and ReactErrorProd. (We can continue using invariant for
internal React errors that are meant to be unreachable, which was the
original purpose of invariant.)
* Use numbers instead of strings for error codes
* Use arguments instead of an array
I wasn't sure about this part so I asked Sebastian, and his rationale
was that using arguments will make ReactErrorProd slightly slower, but
using an array will likely make all the functions that throw slightly
slower to compile, so it's hard to say which way is better. But since
ReactErrorProd is in an error path, and fewer bytes is generally better,
no array is good.
* Casing nit
* Add command to run tests in persistent mode
* Convert Suspense fuzz tester to use noop renderer
So we can run it in persistent mode, too.
* Don't mutate stateNode in appendAllChildren
We can't mutate the stateNode in appendAllChildren because the children
could be current.
This is a bit weird because now the child that we append is different
from the one on the fiber stateNode. I think this makes conceptual
sense, but I suspect this likely breaks an assumption in Fabric.
With this approach, we no longer need to clone to unhide the children,
so I removed those host config methods.
Fixes bug surfaced by fuzz tester. (The test case that failed was the
one that's already hard coded.)
* In persistent mode, disable test that reads a ref
Refs behave differently in persistent mode. I added a TODO to write
a persistent mode version of this test.
* Run persistent mode tests in CI
* test-persistent should skip files without noop
If a file doesn't reference react-noop-renderer, we shouldn't bother
running it in persistent mode, since the results will be identical to
the normal test run.
* Remove module constructor from placeholder tests
We don't need this now that we have the ability to run any test file in
either mutation or persistent mode.
* Revert "test-persistent should skip files without noop"
Seb objected to adding shelljs as a dep and I'm too lazy to worry about
Windows support so whatever I'll just revert this.
* Delete duplicate file
* 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
* Replace noop's fake Scheduler implementation with mock Scheduler build
The noop 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.
Most of the existing noop tests were unaffected, but I did have to make
some changes. The biggest one involved passive effects: previously, they
were scheduled on a separate queue from the queue that handles
rendering. After this change, both rendering and effects are scheduled
in the Scheduler queue. I think this is a better approach because tests
no longer have to worry about the difference; if you call `flushAll`,
all the work is flushed, both rendering and effects. But for those few
tests that do care to flush the rendering without the effects, that's
still possible using the `yieldValue` API.
Follow-up: Do the same for test renderer.
* Fix import to scheduler/unstable_mock
* Add new mock build of Scheduler with flush, yield API
Test environments need a way to take control of the Scheduler queue and
incrementally flush work. Our current tests accomplish this either using
dynamic injection, or by using Jest's fake timers feature. Both of these
options are fragile and rely too much on implementation details.
In this new approach, we have a separate build of Scheduler that is
specifically designed for test environments. We mock the default
implementation like we would any other module; in our case, via Jest.
This special build has methods like `flushAll` and `yieldValue` that
control when work is flushed. These methods are based on equivalent
methods we've been using to write incremental React tests. Eventually
we may want to migrate the React tests to interact with the mock
Scheduler directly, instead of going through the host config like we
currently do.
For now, I'm using our custom static injection infrastructure to create
the two builds of Scheduler — a default build for DOM (which falls back
to a naive timer based implementation), and the new mock build. I did it
this way because it allows me to share most of the implementation, which
isn't specific to a host environment — e.g. everything related to the
priority queue. It may be better to duplicate the shared code instead,
especially considering that future environments (like React Native) may
have entirely forked implementations. I'd prefer to wait until the
implementation stabilizes before worrying about that, but I'm open to
changing this now if we decide it's important enough.
* Mock Scheduler in bundle tests, too
* Remove special case by making regex more restrictive
* 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.
* [Fizz] Add Flow/Jest/Rollup build infra
Add a new package for react-stream which allows for custom server renderer
outputs. I picked the name because it's a reasonable name but also
because the npm name is currently owned by a friend of the project.
The react-dom build has its own inlined server renderer under the
name `react-dom/fizz`.
There is also a noop renderer to be used for testing. At some point
we might add a public one to test-renderer but for now I don't want to have
to think about public API design for the tests.
* Add FormatConfig too
We need to separate the format (DOM, React Native, etc) from the host
running the server (Node, Browser, etc).
* Basic wiring between Node, Noop and DOM configs
The Node DOM API is pipeToNodeStream which accepts a writable stream.
* Merge host and format config in dynamic react-stream entry point
Simpler API this way but also avoids having to fork the wrapper config.
Fixes noop builds.
* Add setImmediate/Buffer globals to lint config
Used by the server renderer
* Properly include fizz.node.js
Also use forwarding to it from fizz.js in builds so that tests covers
this.
* Make react-stream private since we're not ready to publish
or even name it yet
* Rename Renderer -> Streamer
* Prefix react-dom/fizz with react-dom/unstable-fizz
* Add Fizz Browser host config
This lets Fizz render to WHATWG streams. E.g. for rendering in a
Service Worker.
I added react-dom/unstable-fizz.browser as the entry point for this.
Since we now have two configurations of DOM. I had to add another
inlinedHostConfigs configuration called `dom-browser`. The reconciler
treats this configuration the same as `dom`. For stream it checks
against the ReactFizzHostConfigBrowser instead of the Node one.
* Add Fizz Browser Fixture
This is for testing server rendering - on the client.
* Lower version number to detach it from react-reconciler version
* 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
* 🔥 Stop syncing the value attribute on inputs
* Eliminate some additional checks
* Remove initialValue and initialWrapper from wrapperState flow type
* Update tests with new sync logic, reduce some operations
* Update tests, add some caveats for SSR mismatches
* Revert newline change
* Remove unused type
* Call toString to safely type string values
* Add disableInputAttributeSyncing feature flag
Reverts tests to original state, adds attribute sync feature flag,
then moves all affected tests to ReactFire-test.js.
* Revert position of types in toStringValues
* Invert flag on number input blur
* Add clarification why double blur is necessary
* Update ReactFire number cases to be more explicite about blur
* Move comments to reduce diff size
* Add comments to clarify behavior in each branch
* There is no need to assign a different checked behavior in Fire
* Use checked reference
* Format
* Avoid precomputing stringable values
* Revert getToStringValue comment
* Revert placement of undefined in getToStringValue
* Do not eagerly stringify value
* Unify Fire test cases with normal ones
* Revert toString change. Only assign unsynced values when not nully
* Merged interaction-tracking package into react-scheduler
* Add tracking API to FB+www builds
* Added Rollup plugin to strip no-side-effect imports from Rollup bundles
* Re-bundle tracking and scheduling APIs on SECRET_INTERNALS object for UMD build (and provide lazy forwarding methods)
* Added some additional tests and fixtures
* Fixed broken UMD fixture in master (#13512)
* Add a regression test for #13188
* Replace console.error() with a throw in setTimeout() as last resort
* Fix lint and comment
* Fix tests to check we throw after all
* Fix build tests
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.
This is a leftover from #13161 that I forgot to include.
It ensures we don't accidentally write code in the old way and end up passing the stack twice.
* Use %s in the console calls
* Add shared/warningWithStack
* Convert some warning callsites to warningWithStack
* Use warningInStack in shared utilities and remove unnecessary checks
* Replace more warning() calls with warningWithStack()
* Fixes after rebase + use warningWithStack in react
* Make warning have stack by default; warningWithoutStack opts out
* Forbid builds that may not use internals
* Revert newly added stacks
I changed my mind and want to keep this PR without functional changes. So we won't "fix" any warnings that are already missing stacks. We'll do it in follow-ups instead.
* Fix silly find/replace mistake
* Reorder imports
* Add protection against warning argument count mismatches
* Address review
* 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
* 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
```
$ jest
FAIL scripts/jest/dont-run-jest-directly.js
● Test suite failed to run
Don't run `jest` directly. Run `yarn test` instead.
> 1 | throw new Error("Don't run `jest` directly. Run `yarn test` instead.");
2 |
at Object.<anonymous> (scripts/jest/dont-run-jest-directly.js:1:96)
Test Suites: 1 failed, 1 total
Tests: 0 total
Snapshots: 0 total
Time: 0.866s
Ran all test suites.
```
While writing tests for unsafe async warnings, I noticed that in certain cases, errors were swallowed by the toWarnDev matcher and resulted in confusing test failures. For example, if an error prevented the code being tested from logging an expected warning- the test would fail saying that the warning hadn't been logged rather than reporting the unexpected error. I think a better approach for this is to always treat caught errors as the highest-priority reason for failing a test.
I reran all of the test cases for this matcher that I originally ran with PR #11786 and ensured they all still pass.
* Warn about spying on the console
* Added suppress warning flag for spyOn(console)
* Nits
* Removed spy-on-console guard
* Fixed a potential source of false-positives in toWarnDev() matcher
Also updated (most of) ReactIncrementalErrorLogging-test.internal to use the new matcher
* Removed unused third param to spyOn
* Improved clarity of inline comments
* Removed unused normalizeCodeLocInfo() method
* Move build/packages/* to build/node_modules/*
This fixes Node resolution in that folder and lets us require() packages in it in Node shell for manual testing.
* Link fixtures to packages/node_modules
This updates the location and also uses link: instead of file: to avoid Yarn caching the folder contents.
* 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
* Added toWarnInDev matcher and connected to 1 test
* Added .toLowPriorityWarnDev() matcher
* Reply Jest spy with custom spy. Unregister spy after toWarnDev() so unexpected console.error/warn calls will fail tests.
* console warn/error throws immediately in tests by default (if not spied on)
* Pass-thru console message before erroring to make it easier to identify
* More robustly handle unexpected warnings within try/catch
* Error message includes remaining expected warnings in addition to unexpected warning
* 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
* Add a test-only transform to catch infinite loops
* Only track iteration count, not time
This makes the detection dramatically faster, and is okay in our case because we don't have tests that iterate so much.
* Use clearer naming
* Set different limits for tests
* Fail tests with infinite loops even if the error was caught
* Add a test
* 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.
* 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.
* Fix dead code elimination for feature flags
Turning flags into named exports fixes dead code elimination.
This required some restructuring of how we verify that flag types match up. I used the Check<> trick combined with import typeof, as suggested by @calebmer.
For www, we can no longer re-export `require('ReactFeatureFlags')` directly, and instead destructure it. This means flags have to be known at init time. This is already the case so it's not a problem. In fact it may be better since it removes extra property access in tight paths.
For things that we *want* to be dynamic on www (currently, only performance flag) we can export a function to toggle it, and then put it on the secret exports. In fact this is better than just letting everyone mutate the flag at arbitrary times since we can provide, e.g., a ref counting interface to it.
* Record 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
* 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
* 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
Did find and replace in TextMate.
```
find: (?:( \*)( ))?Copyright (?:\(c\) )?(\d{4})\b.+Facebook[\s\S]+(?:this source tree|the same directory)\.$
replace: $1$2Copyright (c) $3-present, Facebook, Inc.\n$1\n$1$2This source code is licensed under the MIT license found in the\n$1$2LICENSE file in the root directory of this source tree.
```
FB bundles wrap warning() calls in __DEV__
Split dev-mode transforms into separate parts:
1) umd+cjs+fb: Wrap warning calls with process.env checks
2) umd+cjs: Replace error messages with minified codes
Also updated transforms to use __DEV__ since it transforms to smaller code after stripEnvVariables is run.
Also renamed 'scripts/error-codes/dev-expression-with-codes.js' -> 'scripts/error-codes/replace-invariant-error-codes.js'
The critical semantics are resilient to browser flakiness, so we don't
need this feature test.
Also added comments explaining how invokeGuardedCallback dev works.
* Support throwing null
In JavaScript, you can throw values of any type, not just errors. That
includes null. We currently rely on null checks to determine if a user-
provided function has thrown. This refactors our error handling code to
keep track of an explicit boolean flag instead.
* Add DOM fixture test case for break on exception behavior
* preventDefault error events during feature test
We call invokeGuardedCallbackDev at startup as part of a feature test.
But we don't want those errors to log to the console.
* Add throwing null test case
* Use ReactFeatureFlags instead of ReactDOMFeatureFlags
React ART uses this, too.
* Non-errors in error logger
If a non-error is thrown, we'll coerce the value to a string and use
that as the message.
* Disable Fiber specific test run in CI
This disables the comparison against previously recorded test. Instead,
we'll rely on jest failures to fail tests.
* Extract jest config into two separate projects for Fiber and Stack
Allows us to run both in the same jest run. The setupMocks file is forked into
specific environment configuration for each project. This replaces the
environment variable.
I used copy pasta here to make it clear. We can abstract this later. It's clear
to me that simply extracting shared stuff is not the best way to abstract this.
setupMocks for example didn't need all the code in both branches.
I think that some of the stuff that is shared such as error message extracting
etc. should probably be lifted out into a stand-alone jest project instead of
being shared.
* Fix class equivalence test
There's a behavior change when projects are used which makes
setupTestFrameworkScriptFile not override the normal config.
This test should probably just move to a separate CI script or something
less hacky.
* Only run Fiber tests with scripts/fiber/record-tests
* Upgrade jest to 20.1.0-delta.1
This includes multi-project support.
* Use isSpy polyfill that is not available in jest 20
* Remove use of jasmine.createSpyObj
We don't really need this and it's not in jest 20.
* Upgrade record-tests script to use the new jest 20 APIs
* Remove internal forwarding modules for /lib/
* Add *Entry suffix to all entry points
* Don't bundle ReactNativeFeatureFlags since it's shimmed
* Delete TestRendererStack
* Switch tests at forwarding modules rather than via Jest
* Share mocks between regular and equivalence fixtures
* Rename environment flag to be more generic
* Remove accidental variable name change
* Minor naming changes for consistency
Files that have two versions get the engine in variable name.