This is a partial replacement for the 'Press' responder:
1. `useTap` is scoped to pointers (no keyboard support). Our current thinking is
that "responders" should be limited to working with pointers, and that they can
be combined with 'useKeyboard' in user-space. For example, we might create a
'usePress' hook in user-space that combines 'useTap' with 'useKeyboard' to react
to both pointers and keyboard interactions.
2. `useTap` cancels the gesture once the pointer moves over an element that is
not within the responder target's subtree. This differs from `usePress` (and
React Native), where the gesture remains active after the pointer exits the
target's subtree and is restarted once the pointer reenters. One of the
drawbacks with the `usePress` behavior is that it requires repeatedly measuring
DOM elements (which can cause jank) to perform hit region tests. `useTap` avoids
doing this and relies on `document.elementFromPoint` only to support the
TouchEvent fallbacks.
3. `useTap` calls `onTapUpdate` when the active gesture's state changes,
`onTapEnd` when the gesture successfully completes. and `onTapCancel` when it
fails. There is no `onTap` callback. `usePress` did not explicitly report back
when the gesture failed, and product developers were confused about the
difference between `onPress` and `onPressEnd`.
4. `useTap` explicitly separates the PointerEvent implementation from the
MouseEvent/TouchEvent fallback.
5. `useTap` has better unit test coverage . All pointer types and the fallback
environment are tested. The shape of the gesture state object is also defined
and tested.
* Revert "Revert "[Scheduler] Profiling features (#16145)" (#16392)"
This reverts commit 4ba1412305.
* Fix copy paste mistake
* Remove init path dependency on ArrayBuffer
* Add a regression test for cancelling multiple tasks
* Prevent deopt from adding isQueued later
* Remove pop() calls that were added for profiling
* Verify that Suspend/Unsuspend events match up in tests
This currently breaks tests.
* Treat Suspend and Resume as exiting and entering work loop
Their definitions used to be more fuzzy. For example, Suspend didn't always fire on exit, and sometimes fired when we did _not_ exit (such as at task enqueue).
I chatted to Boone, and he's saying treating Suspend and Resume as strictly exiting and entering the loop is fine for their use case.
* Revert "Prevent deopt from adding isQueued later"
This reverts commit 9c30b0b695d81e9c43b296ab93d895e4416ef713.
Unnecessary because GCC
* Start counter with 1
* Group exports into unstable_Profiling namespace
* No catch in PROD codepath
* No label TODO
* No null checks
* [Scheduler] Mark user-timing events
Marks when Scheduler starts and stops running a task. Also marks when
a task is initially scheduled, and when Scheduler is waiting for a
callback, which can't be inferred from a sample-based JavaScript CPU
profile alone.
The plan is to use the user-timing events to build a Scheduler profiler
that shows how the lifetime of tasks interact with each other and
with unscheduled main thread work.
The test suite works by printing an text representation of a
Scheduler flamegraph.
* Expose shared array buffer with profiling info
Array contains
- the priority Scheduler is currently running
- the size of the queue
- the id of the currently running task
* Replace user-timing calls with event log
Events are written to an array buffer using a custom instruction format.
For now, this is only meant to be used during page start up, before the
profiler worker has a chance to start up. Once the worker is ready, call
`stopLoggingProfilerEvents` to return the log up to that point, then
send the array buffer to the worker.
Then switch to the sampling based approach.
* Record the current run ID
Each synchronous block of Scheduler work is given a unique run ID. This
is different than a task ID because a single task will have more than
one run if it yields with a continuation.
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>
* [react-native] Use path-based imports instead of Haste for the RN renderer
To move React Native to standard path-based imports instead of Haste, the RN renderer that is generated from the code in this repo needs to use path-based imports as well since the generated code is vendored by RN. This commit makes it so the interface between the generated renderers and RN does not rely on Haste and instead uses a private interface explicitly defined by RN. This inverts control of the abstraction so that RN decides the internals to export rather than React deciding what to import.
On RN's side, a new module named `react-native/Libraries/ReactPrivate/ReactNativePrivateInterface` explicitly exports the modules used by the renderers in this repo. (There is also a private module for InitializeCore so that we can import it just for the side effects.) On React's side, the various renderer modules access RN internals through the explicit private interface.
The Rollup configuration becomes slimmer since the only external package is now `react-native`, and the individual modules are instead listed out in `ReactNativePrivateInterface`.
Task description: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/issues/24770
Sister RN PR (needs to land before this one): https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/24782
Test Plan: Ran unit tests and Flow in this repo. Generated the renderers and manually copied them over to the RN repo. Ran the RN tests and launched the RNTester app.
* Access natively defined "nativeFabricUIManager" instead of importing it
Some places in the Fabric renderers access `nativeFabricUIManager` (a natively defined global) instead of importing UIManager. While this is coupling across repos that depends on the timing of events, it is necessary until we have a way to defer top-level imports to run after `nativeFabricUIManager` is defined. So for consistency we use `nativeFabricUIManager` everywhere (see the comment in https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/15604#pullrequestreview-236842223 for more context).
* Add a stub for React Fresh Babel plugin package
* Move ReactFresh-test into ReactFresh top level directory
* Add a stub for React Fresh Runtime entry point
* Extract Fresh runtime from tests into its entry point
* 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
* [React Native] Add tests to paper renderer for measure, measureLayout
* [React Native] measure calls will now call FabricUIManager
The Fabric renderer was previously calling the paper UIManager's measure calls and passing the react tag. This PR changes the renderer to now call FabricUIManager passing the node instead.
One of the parts of this that feels more controversial is making NativeMethodsMixin and ReactNative.NativeComponent warn when calling measureLayout in Fabric. As Seb and I decided in https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/15126, it doesn't make sense for a component created with one of these methods to require a native ref but not work the other way around. For example: a.measureLayout(b) might work but b.measureLayout(a) wouldn't. We figure we should keep these consistent and continue migrating things off of NativeMethodsMixin and NativeComponent.
If this becomes problematic for the Fabric rollout then we should revisit this.
* Fixing Flow
* Add FabricUIManager to externals for paper renderer
* import * as FabricUIManager from 'FabricUIManager';
* Update tests
* Shouldn't have removed UIManager import
* Update with the new tests
* 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.
* 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.
* 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
* [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
* Parse build script type and package names
This ensures that `yarn build core dom` includes DOM.
It also ensures that spaces like `yarn build "core, dom"` doesn't build EVERYTHING.
* Get rid of label in bundles config
Instead we just use the name from entry using fuzzy search.
There is one special case. If you put in `/index` or `/index.js`.
That allows to build things like `react/index` to only build isomorphic
where as `react` would build everything. Or `react-dom/index` to exclude
the server renderers.
* Instead of matching `/index.js` just append it to the search string
That way things like `yarn build react/` works too.
* 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
* [react-cache] Remove `cache` as argument to `read`
Updated is API is `Resource.read(key)` instead of
`Resource.read(cache, key)`.
The cache is read from context using `readContext`.
This also removes cache invalidation entirely (other than the default
LRU mechanism), as well as the ability to have multiple caches. We'll
add it back once `Context.write` lands and we can implement it the
right way.
Since there's now only a single cache (the global one), we don't
actually need to use context yet, but I've added a dummy context
anyway so the user gets an error if they attempt to read outside the
render phase.
* nits
* Add test for thenables that resolve multiple times
* 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
* Added UMD_PROFILING type to react-dom and scheduling package. Added UMD shim to schedule package.
* Added new schedule umd prod+prof bundle to API test
* 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)
* Updated suspense fixture to use new interaction-tracking API
* Integrated Profiler API with interaction-tracking API (and added tests)
* Pass interaction Set (rather than Array) to Profiler onRender callback
* Removed some :any casts for enableInteractionTracking fields in FiberRoot type
* Refactored threadID calculation into a helper method
* Errors thrown by interaction tracking hooks use unhandledError to rethrow more safely.
Reverted try/finally change to ReactTestRendererScheduling
* Added a $FlowFixMe above the FiberRoot :any cast
* Reduce overhead from calling work-started hook
* Remove interaction-tracking wrap() references from unwind work in favor of managing suspense/interaction continuations in the scheduler
* Moved the logic for calling work-started hook from performWorkOnRoot() to renderRoot()
* Add interaction-tracking to bundle externals. Set feature flag to __PROFILE__
* Renamed the freezeInteractionCount flag and replaced one use-case with a method param
* let -> const
* Updated suspense fixture to handle recent API changes
* Removed enableInteractionTrackingObserver as a separate flag; only enableInteractionTracking is used now
* Added interaction-tracking/subscriptions bundle and split tests
* Added multi-subscriber support
* Moved subscriptions behind feature flag
* Fixed bug with wrap() parameters and added test
* Replaced wrap arrow function
* Use local references to global things inside 'scheduler'
**what is the change?:**
See title
**why make this change?:**
We want to avoid initially calling one version of an API and then later
accessing a polyfilled version.
**test plan:**
Run existing tests.
* Shim ReactScheduler for www
**what is the change?:**
In 'www' we want to reference the separate build of ReactScheduler,
which allows treating it as a separate module internally.
**why make this change?:**
We need to require the ReactScheduler before our rAF polyfill activates,
in order to customize which custom behaviors we want.
This is also a step towards being able to experiment with using it
outside of React.
**test plan:**
Ran tests, ran the build, and ran `test-build`.
* Generate a bundle for fb-www
**what is the change?:**
See title
**why make this change?:**
Splitting out the 'schedule' module allows us to load it before
polyfills kick in for rAF and other APIs.
And long term we want to split this into a separate module anyway, this
is a step towards that.
**test plan:**
I'll run the sync next week and verify that this all works. :)
* ran prettier
* fix rebase issues
* Change names of variables used for holding globals
* 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
This is the first step - pulling the ReactDOMFrameScheduling module out
into a separate package.
Co-authored-by: Brandon Dail <aweary@users.noreply.github.com>
* Added new "native-fb" and "native-fabric-fb" bundles.
* Split RN_DEV and RN_PROD bundle types into RN_OSS_DEV, RN_OSS_PROD, RN_FB_DEV, and RN_FB_PROD. (This is a bit redundant but it seemed the least intrusive way of supporting a forked feature flags file for these bundles.)
* Renamed FB_DEV and FB_PROD bundle types to be more explicitly for www (FB_WWW_DEV and FB_WWW_PROD)
* Removed Haste @providesModule headers from the RB-specific RN renderer bundles to avoid a duplicate name conflicts.
* Remove dynamic values from OSS RN feature flags. (Leave them in FB RN feature flags.)
* Updated the sync script(s) to account for new renderer type.
* Move ReactFeatureFlags.js shim to FB bundle only (since OSS bundle no longer needs dynamic values).
* Move view config registry to shims
This ensures that both Fabric and RN renderers share the same view config
registry since it is stateful.
I had to duplicate in the mocks for testing.
* Move createReactNativeComponentClass to shims and delete internal usage
Since createReactNativeComponentClass is just an alias for the register
there's no need to bundle it. This file should probably just move back
to RN too.
* [experimental] simple-cache-provider
Pushing an early version of this for testing and demonstration purposes.
* Change invariant to DEV-only warning
* Use function overloading for createResource type
Expresses that primitive keys do not require a hash function, but
non-primitive keys do.
* More tests
* Use export *
* Make Record type a disjoint union
* Pass miss argument separate from key to avoid a closure
* Unify the way we fork modules
* Replace rollup-plugin-alias with our own plugin
This does exactly what we need and doesn't suffer from https://github.com/rollup/rollup-plugin-alias/issues/34.
* Move the new plugin to its own file
* Rename variable for consistency
I settled on calling them "forks" since we already have a different concept of "shims".
* Move fork config into its own file
* 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.
* 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).
* Forked ReactFeatureFlags for React Native to enable debugRenderPhaseSideEffects GK
* Changed debugRenderPhaseSideEffects in www feature flags to be runtime as well
* Implement CS first take
This is using a pure JS API. This should probably switch to native hooks
at some later point but I'll start ironing out issues at this level first.
* Use async scheduling by default
The scheduled callback gets called immediately in render with infinite
time for now. Later this will be per root and abortable.
* Fix up the type signature of the ReactNativeCSType export
* Add escape hatch for special cased children
Working around the fact that we can't map arbitrary children slots. Just
the "children" prop.
* Readd providesModule for ReactNativeCSTypes
* Fix lint
* Fix ReactNativeTypes providesModule and CI check
* Special case a parent instance that doesn't have a props object
CSCustom can be anything here. Ugly but whatevs.
* Don't forget to store stateUpdater so that we can trigger updates
* Fix test
* 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
* react-dom/src/syntheticEvents => events, and put plugins into it
* Flatten react-dom/src/shared
* Split react-dom/src/client/utils into event/ and root client folder
Makes it clearer what is used by what.
* Strictly separate modules that can be imported by client and server
* 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!
* Include component stack in more places, including SSR
* Forbid including reconciler code into the server bundle
* Tighten up the Flow annotation
* Fix lint
* Gosh Prettier
* Only renderers should depend on reconciler code
* Remove react-art dependency on react-dom modules
They share ReactDOMFrameScheduling so I moved it to shared.
* Update build size
* [CS] Clone container instead of new root concept
The extra "root" concept is kind of unnecessary. Instead of having a
mutable container even in the persistent mode, I'll instead make the
container be immutable too and be cloned. Then the "commit" just becomes
swapping the previous container for the new one.
* Change the signature or persistence again
We may need to clone without any updates, e.g. when the children are changed.
Passing in the previous node is not enough to recycle since it won't have the
up-to-date props and children. It's really only useful to for allocation pooling.
* Implement persistent updates
This forks the update path for host fibers. For mutation mode we mark
them as having an effect. For persistence mode, we clone the stateNode with
new props/children.
Next I'll do HostRoot and HostPortal.
* Refine protocol into a complete and commit phase
finalizeContainerChildren will get called at the complete phase.
replaceContainer will get called at commit.
Also, drop the keepChildren flag. We'll never keep children as we'll never
update a container if none of the children has changed.
* Implement persistent updates of roots and portals
These are both "containers". Normally we rely on placement/deletion effects
to deal with insertions into the containers. In the persistent mode we need
to clone the container and append all the changed children to it.
I needed somewhere to store these new containers before they're committed
so I added another field.
* Commit persistent work at the end by swapping out the container
* Unify cloneOrRecycle
Originally I tried to make the recyclable instance nullable but Flow didn't
like that and it's kind of sketchy since the instance type might not be
nullable.
However, the real difference which one we call is depending on whether they
are equal. We can just offload that to the renderer. Most of them won't
need to know about this at all since they'll always clone or just create
new.
The ones that do know now have to be careful to compare them so they don't
reuse an existing instance but that's probably fine to simplify the
implementation and API.
* Add persistent noop renderer for testing
* Add basic persistent tree test
* Test bail out
This adds a test for bailouts. This revealed a subtle bug. We don't set the
return pointer when stepping into newly created fibers because there
can only be one. However, since I'm reusing this mechanism for persistent
updates, I'll need to set the return pointer because a bailed out tree
won't have the right return pointer.
* Test persistent text nodes
Found another bug.
* Add persistent portal test
This creates a bit of an unfortunate feature testing in the unmount
branch.
That's because we want to trigger nested host deletions in portals in the
mutation mode.
* Don't consider container when determining portal identity
Basically, we can't use the container to determine if we should keep
identity and update an existing portal instead of recreate it. Because
for persistent containers, there is no permanent identity.
This makes it kind of strange to even use portals in this mode. It's
probably more ideal to have another concept that has permanent identity
rather than trying to swap out containers.
* Clear portals when the portal is deleted
When a portal gets deleted we need to create a new empty container and
replace the current one with the empty one.
* Add renderer mode flags for dead code elimination
* Simplify ReactNoop fix
* Add new type to the host config for persistent configs
We need container to stay as the persistent identity of the root atom.
So that we can refer to portals over time.
Instead, I'll introduce a new type just to temporarily hold the children
of a container until they're ready to be committed into the permanent
container. Essentially, this is just a fancy array that is not an array
so that the host can choose data structure/allocation for it.
* Implement new hooks
Now containers are singletons and instead their children swap. That way
portals can use the container as part of their identity again.
* Update build size and error codes
* Address comment
* Move new files to new location
* 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
* CS renderer
Because we didn't have enough RN experiments. I want to add one more.
* Split out hydration from the host config object
This makes it easier to do feature detection on the configuration.
* Move mutation host config to separate optional object
* Refs and life-cycles should happen even in immutable mode
* Unmount components even in non-mutation mode
This is the same as committing deletions but instead of finding host
components to delete, it only invokes componentWillUnmount and detaching
of refs.
* Add persistent updates API
This mode will use a clone based API instead of mutating host instances.
Needs implementation still.
It's awkward that there can be more than one child inserted into the root.
So we need a new API to create a "root" instance so that we can update it
atomically. Alternatively we could keep the mutable API for containers
and assume that most use cases would only have a single root.
* Package up CS renderer
* Fix reconciler package fixture
* Initial commit of react-reconciler bundle
* I think it’s working 🙀
* React reconciler: slightly better description and README
* Drop react-reconciler version to an unstable release number
* Convert to moduleType enum and fix packaging
* eslint
* s/Renderer/Reconciler in docs
* yarn prettier
* change names of things in the react-reconciler readme
* change predicate
* rollup: flip object-assign shimming check
* copy noop renderer into react-reconciler fixture
* Change reconciler fixture test
* prettier
* Remove a bunch of Noop test renderer
* Delete a bunch of stuff we don’t care about for reconciler teesting. Add flow pragmas for future flow pragma testing
* Remove PATENTS
* Update Reconciler fixture docs
* ReactDOMUnstableNativeDependencies should be ISOMORPHIC
* Inline fixture renderer
* Make it "RENDERER"
* There is no UMD build. It also doesn't need propTypes.
* Tweak how the reconciler is built
* Record sizes
* Update README.md
* Inject the right event emitter
Previously this was injecting the ReactNativeEventEmitter even though
we want the ReactNativeRTEventEmitter.
RCTEventEmitter is also just an abstraction around BatchedBridge that
registers a single name. We can't register more than one with it. Removed
that abstraction for now so we don't have to add it back into the RN repo.
* Unify appendChildToDetachedParent and appendChild, separate root
Merge appendChildToDetachedParent and appendChild. We don't need the distinction.
We do however need a separate notion for the root container.
Calling this `appendChildToContext` since Context has a meaning here.
* Add a simple shallow comparison so that we don't send updates for equal props
This still sends all props if any differs. Not sure we'll want that but I
think so.
* Add BatchedBridge to bundle externals
* Lint
This is an experimental new protocol for some experiments we want to play
with. To make that easier, I'm just going to fork it.
This experiment won't use the event system so I by-pass it and just invoke
functions on the props object for now.
I also fork the UIManager into a new RTManager.
* Freeze bundle configs before the build
This ensures we don't accidentally mutate it.
* Fix config mutation during the build uncovered by freeze
* Fix FB isomorphic build by marking object-assign as an external
* Bye bye redundant check
* ReactNative doesn't query UIManager for native event types
This is a pre-req to unblock Prepack optimiations for ReactNative apps
* Replaced mock ReactNativeEventTypes with mock Platform
* Added Platform.OS to RN host hooks Flow types