Commit Graph

27 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Dominic Gannaway
8b88ac2592
[Flare] Remove event targets including TouchHitTarget (#16011) 2019-06-27 23:58:48 +01:00
Sunil Pai
fce15f14d3
don't fire missing act() warnings for react-art (#15975)
* 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
2019-06-24 19:18:26 +01:00
Dominic Gannaway
34ce57ae75
[Flare] Refine flow type annotations (#15950) 2019-06-21 12:32:43 +01:00
Dominic Gannaway
689beef6f5
[Flare] Move unstable_createEventComponent to ReactDOM (#15890) 2019-06-18 23:41:00 +01:00
Dominic Gannaway
aece8119cf
Refactor EventComponent logic + add onOwnershipChange callback (#15354) 2019-04-09 12:47:32 +01:00
Dominic Gannaway
4064ea9fa6
Experimental event API: Support EventComponent onUnmount responder callback (#15335) 2019-04-06 08:16:57 +01:00
Dominic Gannaway
4fbbae8afa
Add full TouchHitTarget hit slop (experimental event API) to ReactDOM (#15308) 2019-04-06 07:51:21 +01:00
Dominic Gannaway
6a1e6b2f78
Experimental event API: loosen EventTarget constraints and warnings (#15292)
* Remove warning for event targets being direct children of event component

* Addressed feedback and added more test coverage + warnings
2019-04-02 19:49:28 +01:00
Dominic Gannaway
9444a54720
Warn on nested EventTragets in experimental event API (#15287) 2019-04-01 15:47:03 +01:00
Dominic Gannaway
b83e01cade
Adds more scaffolding for experimental event API (#15112)
* Adds more scaffolding for experimental event API
2019-03-20 11:20:17 +00:00
Dominic Gannaway
0c03a47436
Adds experimental event API scaffolding (#15108)
* Adds experimental event API scaffolding
2019-03-14 17:02:42 +00:00
Andrew Clark
1e3b6192b5
Import Scheduler directly, not via host config (#14984)
* 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
2019-03-06 14:41:45 -08:00
Andrew Clark
ccb2a8a44e
Replace test renderer's fake Scheduler implementation with mock build (#14970)
* 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
2019-02-28 10:50:38 -08:00
Andrew Clark
fb3f7bfde9
Avoid importing Scheduler directly (#14757)
* 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
2019-02-05 03:21:25 -08:00
Sebastian Markbåge
c954efa70f
Remove import * as pattern from the codebase (#14282)
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.
2018-11-19 15:32:54 -08:00
Andrew Clark
8c67bbf183
[scheduler] Deadline object -> shouldYield (#14025)
* [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
2018-10-30 13:47:51 -07:00
Andrew Clark
dac9202a9c
Hide timed-out children instead of deleting them so their state is preserved (#13823)
* 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
2018-10-18 15:37:16 -07:00
Brian Ng
970a34baed Bump babel-eslint and remove flow supressions (#13727) 2018-09-25 22:48:31 +01:00
Dan Abramov
144328fe81
Enable no-use-before-define rule (#13606) 2018-09-10 16:15:18 +01:00
Héctor Ramos
b87aabdfe1
Drop the year from Facebook copyright headers and the LICENSE file. (#13593) 2018-09-07 15:11:23 -07:00
Dan Abramov
90c92c7007 Fix warning message 2018-08-21 18:44:34 +01:00
Brian Vaughn
d670bdc6b1
Warn about ReactDOM.createPortal usage within ReactTestRenderer (#12895) 2018-08-20 10:03:22 -07:00
Brandon Dail
ebbd221432
Configure react-test-renderer as a secondary (#13164) 2018-07-06 16:04:45 -07:00
Andrew Clark
aa8266c4f7
Prepare placeholders before timing out (#13092)
* 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.
2018-07-03 19:22:41 -07:00
Dan Abramov
b1b3acbd6b
Inline fbjs/lib/emptyObject (#13055)
* 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
2018-06-19 13:41:42 +01:00
Dan Abramov
47b003a828
Resolve host configs at build time (#12792)
* 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
2018-05-19 11:29:11 +01:00
Dan Abramov
45b90d4866
Move renderer host configs into separate modules (#12791)
* Separate test renderer host config

* Separate ART renderer host config

* Separate ReactDOM host config

* Extract RN Fabric host config

* Extract RN host config
2018-05-15 01:12:28 +01:00