Commit Graph

67 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sebastian Markbåge
d6cfa0f295
[Fiber] Use Owner/JSX Stack When Appending Stacks to Console (#29206)
This one should be fully behind the `enableOwnerStacks` flag.

Instead of printing the parent Component stack all the way to the root,
this now prints the owner stack of every JSX callsite. It also includes
intermediate callsites between the Component and the JSX call so it has
potentially more frames. Mainly it provides the line number of the JSX
callsite. In terms of the number of components is a subset of the parent
component stack so it's less information in that regard. This is usually
better since it's more focused on components that might affect the
output but if it's contextual based on rendering it's still good to have
parent stack. Therefore, I still use the parent stack when printing DOM
nesting warnings but I plan on switching that format to a diff view
format instead (Next.js already reformats the parent stack like this).

__Follow ups__

- Server Components show up in the owner stack for client logs but logs
done by Server Components don't yet get their owner stack printed as
they're replayed. They're also not yet printed in the server logs of the
RSC server.

- Server Component stack frames are formatted as the server and added to
the end but this might be a different format than the browser. E.g. if
server is running V8 and browser is running JSC or vice versa. Ideally
we can reformat them in terms of the client formatting.

- This doesn't yet update Fizz or DevTools. Those will be follow ups.
Fizz still prints parent stacks in the server side logs. The stacks
added to user space `console.error` calls by DevTools still get the
parent stacks instead.

- It also doesn't yet expose these to user space so there's no way to
get them inside `onCaughtError` for example or inside a custom
`console.error` override.

- In another follow up I'll use `console.createTask` instead and
completely remove these stacks if it's available.
2024-05-25 11:58:17 -04:00
Josh Story
cb151849e1
[react-dom] move all client code to react-dom/client (#28271)
This PR reorganizes the `react-dom` entrypoint to only pull in code that
is environment agnostic. Previously if you required anything from this
entrypoint in any environment the entire client reconciler was loaded.
In a prior release we added a server rendering stub which you could
alias in server environments to omit this unecessary code. After landing
this change this entrypoint should not load any environment specific
code.

While a few APIs are truly client (browser) only such as createRoot and
hydrateRoot many of the APIs you import from this package are only
useful in the browser but could concievably be imported in shared code
(components running in Fizz or shared components as part of an RSC app).
To avoid making these require opting into the client bundle we are
keeping them in the `react-dom` entrypoint and changing their
implementation so that in environments where they are not particularly
useful they do something benign and expected.

#### Removed APIs
The following APIs are being removed in the next major. Largely they
have all been deprecated already and are part of legacy rendering modes
where concurrent features of React are not available
* `render`
* `hydrate`
* `findDOMNode`
* `unmountComponentAtNode`
* `unstable_createEventHandle`
* `unstable_renderSubtreeIntoContainer`
* `unstable_runWithPrioirty`

#### moved Client APIs
These APIs were available on both `react-dom` (with a warning) and
`react-dom/client`. After this change they are only available on
`react-dom/client`
* `createRoot`
* `hydrateRoot`

#### retained APIs
These APIs still exist on the `react-dom` entrypoint but have normalized
behavior depending on which renderers are currently in scope
* `flushSync`: will execute the function (if provided) inside the
flushSync implemention of FlightServer, Fizz, and Fiber DOM renderers.
* `unstable_batchedUpdates`: This is a noop in concurrent mode because
it is now the only supported behavior because there is no legacy
rendering mode
* `createPortal`: This just produces an object. It can be called from
anywhere but since you will probably not have a handle on a DOM node to
pass to it it will likely warn in environments other than the browser
* preloading APIS such as `preload`: These methods will execute the
preload across all renderers currently in scope. Since we resolve the
Request object on the server using AsyncLocalStorage or the current
function stack in practice only one renderer should act upon the
preload.

In addition to these changes the server rendering stub now just rexports
everything from `react-dom`. In a future minor we will add a warning
when using the stub and in the next major we will remove the stub
altogether
2024-04-24 08:50:32 -07:00
Ricky
6e1e2f2198
[tests] assertLog before act in ReactUpdates (#28760)
Fixes tests blocking https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/28737
2024-04-10 10:34:11 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
f613165357
Rename SECRET INTERNALS to __CLIENT_INTERNALS_DO_NOT_USE_OR_WARN_USERS_THEY_CANNOT_UPGRADE (#28789)
Follow up to #28783 and #28786.

Since we've changed the implementations of these we can rename them to
something a bit more descriptive while we're at it, since anyone
depending on them will need to upgrade their code anyway.

"react" with no condition:
`__CLIENT_INTERNALS_DO_NOT_USE_OR_WARN_USERS_THEY_CANNOT_UPGRADE`
"react" with "react-server" condition:
`__SERVER_INTERNALS_DO_NOT_USE_OR_WARN_USERS_THEY_CANNOT_UPGRADE`
"react-dom":
`__DOM_INTERNALS_DO_NOT_USE_OR_WARN_USERS_THEY_CANNOT_UPGRADE`
2024-04-09 12:20:22 -04:00
Josh Story
9ad40b1440
[react-dom] Remove findDOMNode from OSS builds (#28267)
In the next major `findDOMNode` is being removed. This PR removes the
API from the react-dom entrypoints for OSS builds and re-exposes the
implementation as part of internals.

`findDOMNode` is being retained for Meta builds and so all tests that
currently use it will continue to do so by accessing it from internals.
Once the replacement API ships in an upcoming minor any tests that were
using this API incidentally can be updated to use the new API and any
tests asserting `findDOMNode`'s behavior directly can stick around until
we remove it entirely (once Meta has moved away from it)
2024-03-27 14:43:12 -07:00
Sebastian Markbåge
6786563f3c
[Fiber] Don't Rethrow Errors at the Root (#28627)
Stacked on top of #28498 for test fixes.

### Don't Rethrow

When we started React it was 1:1 setState calls a series of renders and
if they error, it errors where the setState was called. Simple. However,
then batching came and the error actually got thrown somewhere else.
With concurrent mode, it's not even possible to get setState itself to
throw anymore.

In fact, all APIs that can rethrow out of React are executed either at
the root of the scheduler or inside a DOM event handler.
If you throw inside a React.startTransition callback that's sync, then
that will bubble out of the startTransition but if you throw inside an
async callback or a useTransition we now need to handle it at the hook
site. So in 19 we need to make all React.startTransition swallow the
error (and report them to reportError).

The only one remaining that can throw is flushSync but it doesn't really
make sense for it to throw at the callsite neither because batching.
Just because something rendered in this flush doesn't mean it was
rendered due to what was just scheduled and doesn't mean that it should
abort any of the remaining code afterwards. setState is fire and forget.
It's send an instruction elsewhere, it's not part of the current
imperative code.

Error boundaries never rethrow. Since you should really always have
error boundaries, most of the time, it wouldn't rethrow anyway.

Rethrowing also actually currently drops errors on the floor since we
can only rethrow the first error, so to avoid that we'd need to call
reportError anyway. This happens in RN events.

The other issue with rethrowing is that it logs an extra console.error.
Since we're not sure that user code will actually log it anywhere we
still log it too just like we do with errors inside error boundaries
which leads all of these to log twice.
The goal of this PR is to never rethrow out of React instead, errors
outside of error boundaries get logged to reportError. Event system
errors too.

### Breaking Changes

The main thing this affects is testing where you want to inspect the
errors thrown. To make it easier to port, if you're inside `act` we
track the error into act in an aggregate error and then rethrow it at
the root of `act`. Unlike before though, if you flush synchronously
inside of act it'll still continue until the end of act before
rethrowing.

I expect most user code breakages would be to migrate from `flushSync`
to `act` if you assert on throwing.

However, in the React repo we also have `internalAct` and the
`waitForThrow` helpers. Since these have to use public production
implementations we track these using the global onerror or process
uncaughtException. Unlike regular act, includes both event handler
errors and onRecoverableError by default too. Not just render/commit
errors. So I had to account for that in our tests.

We restore logging an extra log for uncaught errors after the main log
with the component stack in it. We use `console.warn`. This is not yet
ignorable if you preventDefault to the main error event. To avoid
confusion if you don't end up logging the error to console I just added
`An error occurred`.

### Polyfill

All browsers we support really supports `reportError` but not all test
and server environments do, so I implemented a polyfill for browser and
node in `shared/reportGlobalError`. I don't love that this is included
in all builds and gets duplicated into isomorphic even though it's not
actually needed in production. Maybe in the future we can require a
polyfill for this.

### Follow Ups

In a follow up, I'll make caught vs uncaught error handling be
configurable too.

---------

Co-authored-by: Ricky Hanlon <rickhanlonii@gmail.com>
2024-03-26 23:44:07 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
d579e77482
Remove method name prefix from warnings and errors (#28432)
This pattern is a petpeeve of mine. I don't consider this best practice
and so most don't have these prefixes. Very inconsistent.

At best this is useless and noisey that you have to parse because the
information is also in the stack trace.

At worse these are misleading because they're highlighting something
internal (like validateDOMNesting) which even suggests an internal bug.
Even the ones public to React aren't necessarily what you called because
you might be calling a wrapper around it.

That would be properly reflected in a stack trace - which can also
properly ignore list so that the first stack you see is your callsite,

Which might be like `render()` in react-testing-library rather than
`createRoot()` for example.
2024-02-23 15:16:54 -05:00
Sebastian Silbermann
48ca0e8298
Remove ReactTestUtils from ReactUpdates (#28378) 2024-02-20 16:52:11 +01:00
Andrew Clark
015ff2ed66
Revert "[Tests] Reset modules by default" (#28318)
This was causing a slowdown in one of the tests
ESLintRuleExhaustiveDeps-test.js. Reverting until we figure out why.
2024-02-13 11:39:45 -05:00
Jan Kassens
d8c1fa6b0b
Add infinite update loop detection (#28279)
This is a partial redo of https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/26625.
Since that was unlanded due to some detected breakages. This now
includes a feature flag to be careful in rolling this out.
2024-02-09 11:14:37 -05:00
Ricky
30e2938e04
[Tests] Reset modules by default (#28254)
## Overview

Sets `resetModules: true` in the base Jest config, and deletes all the
`jest.resetModule()` calls we don't need.
2024-02-06 12:43:27 -05:00
Ricky
8bb6ee1d33
Update ReactUpdates-test (#28061)
## Overview

These tests are important for `ReactDOM.render`, so instead of just
re-writing them to `createRoot` and losing coverage:
- Moved the `.render` tests to `ReactLegacyUpdates`
- Re-wrote the tests in `ReactUpdates` to use `createRoot`
- Remove `unstable_batchedUpdates` from `ReactUpdates`

In a future PR, when I flag `batchedUpdates` with a Noop, I can add the
gate to just the tests in `ReactLegacyUpdates`.
2024-01-25 01:17:03 -05:00
Jan Kassens
7f362de158
Revert "Fix: Detect infinite update loops caused by render phase updates (#26625)" (#27027)
This reverts commit 822386f252.

This broke a number of tests when synced internally. We'll need to
investigate the breakages before relanding this.
2023-06-30 12:51:11 -04:00
Andrew Clark
822386f252
Fix: Detect infinite update loops caused by render phase updates (#26625)
This PR contains a regression test and two separate fixes: a targeted
fix, and a more general one that's designed as a last-resort guard
against these types of bugs (both bugs in app code and bugs in React).

I confirmed that each of these fixes separately are sufficient to fix
the regression test I added.

We can't realistically detect all infinite update loop scenarios because
they could be async; even a single microtask can foil our attempts to
detect a cycle. But this improves our strategy for detecting the most
common kind.

See commit messages for more details.
2023-06-27 13:26:35 -04:00
Andrew Clark
fc90eb6368
Codemod more tests to waitFor pattern (#26494) 2023-03-28 00:03:57 -04:00
Tianyu Yao
87c803d1da
Fix a test case in ReactUpdates-test (#26399)
Just noticed the test isn't testing what it is meant to test properly.
The error `Warning: ReactDOM.render is no longer supported in React 18.
Use createRoot instead. Until you switch to the new API, your app will
behave as if it's running React 17. Learn more:
https://reactjs.org/link/switch-to-createroot` is thrown, the inner
`expect(error).toContain('Warning: Maximum update depth exceeded.');`
failed and threw jest error, and the outer `.toThrow('Maximum update
depth exceeded.')` happens to catch it and makes the test pass.
2023-03-16 12:27:15 -07:00
Andrew Clark
62cd5af08e
Codemod redundant async act scopes (#26350)
Prior to #26347, our internal `act` API (not the public API) behaved
differently depending on whether the scope function returned a promise
(i.e. was an async function), for historical reasons that no longer
apply. Now that this is fixed, I've codemodded all async act scopes that
don't contain an await to be sync.

No pressing motivation other than it looks nicer and the codemod was
easy. Might help avoid confusion for new contributors who see async act
scopes with nothing async inside and infer it must be like that for a
reason.
2023-03-08 16:40:23 -05:00
Andrew Clark
44d3807945
Move internalAct to internal-test-utils package (#26344)
This is not a public API. We only use it for our internal tests, the
ones in this repo. Let's move it to this private package. Practically
speaking this will also let us use async/await in the implementation.
2023-03-08 12:58:31 -05:00
Andrew Clark
703c67560d
Codemod act -> await act (1/?) (#26334)
Similar to the rationale for `waitFor` (see
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/26285), we should always await
the result of an `act` call so that microtasks have a chance to fire.

This only affects the internal `act` that we use in our repo, for now.
In the public `act` API, we don't yet require this; however, we
effectively will for any update that triggers suspense once `use` lands.
So we likely will start warning in an upcoming minor.
2023-03-07 10:15:34 -05:00
Andrew Clark
1528c5ccdf
SchedulerMock.unstable_yieldValue -> SchedulerMock.log (#26312)
(This only affects our own internal repo; it's not a public API.)

I think most of us agree this is a less confusing name. It's possible
someone will confuse it with `console.log`. If that becomes a problem we
can warn in dev or something.
2023-03-06 11:09:07 -05:00
Andrew Clark
e64a8f4035
Codemod tests to waitFor pattern (3/?) (#26299)
This converts some of our test suite to use the `waitFor` test pattern,
instead of the `expect(Scheduler).toFlushAndYield` pattern. Most of
these changes are automated with jscodeshift, with some slight manual
cleanup in certain cases.

See #26285 for full context.
2023-03-03 17:02:12 -05:00
Ming Ye
71cace4d32
Migrate testRunner from jasmine2 to jest-circus (#26144)
## Summary

In jest v27, jest-circus as default test runner
(https://github.com/facebook/jest/pull/10686)

## How did you test this change?

ci green
2023-02-10 13:39:14 -05:00
Jan Kassens
6b30832666
Upgrade prettier (#26081)
The old version of prettier we were using didn't support the Flow syntax
to access properties in a type using `SomeType['prop']`. This updates
`prettier` and `rollup-plugin-prettier` to the latest versions.

I added the prettier config `arrowParens: "avoid"` to reduce the diff
size as the default has changed in Prettier 2.0. The largest amount of
changes comes from function expressions now having a space. This doesn't
have an option to preserve the old behavior, so we have to update this.
2023-01-31 08:25:05 -05:00
Sebastian Silbermann
6fb8133ed3
Turn on string ref deprecation warning for everybody (not codemoddable) (#25383)
## Summary
 
Alternate to https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/25334 without any
prod runtime changes i.e. the proposed codemod in
https://github.com/reactjs/rfcs/blob/createlement-rfc/text/0000-create-element-changes.md#deprecate-string-refs-and-remove-production-mode-_owner-field
would not work.

## How did you test this change?

- [x] CI
- [x] `yarn test` with and without `warnAboutStringRefs`
2022-11-16 19:15:57 -05:00
Andrew Clark
9cdf8a99ed
[Codemod] Update copyright header to Meta (#25315)
* Facebook -> Meta in copyright

rg --files | xargs sed -i 's#Copyright (c) Facebook, Inc. and its affiliates.#Copyright (c) Meta Platforms, Inc. and affiliates.#g'

* Manual tweaks
2022-10-18 11:19:24 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
72a933d289
Gate legacy hidden (#24047)
* Gate legacy hidden

* Gate tests

* Remove export from experimental
2022-03-09 11:48:03 -05:00
Sebastian Markbåge
17806594cc
Move createRoot/hydrateRoot to react-dom/client (#23385)
* Move createRoot/hydrateRoot to /client

We want these APIs ideally to be imported separately from things you
might use in arbitrary components (like flushSync). Those other methods
are "isomorphic" to how the ReactDOM tree is rendered. Similar to hooks.

E.g. importing flushSync into a component that only uses it on the client
should ideally not also pull in the entry client implementation on the
server.

This also creates a nicer parity with /server where the roots are in a
separate entry point.

Unfortunately, I can't quite do this yet because we have some legacy APIs
that we plan on removing (like findDOMNode) and we also haven't implemented
flushSync using a flag like startTransition does yet.

Another problem is that we currently encourage these APIs to be aliased by
/profiling (or unstable_testing). In the future you don't have to alias
them because you can just change your roots to just import those APIs and
they'll still work with the isomorphic forms. Although we might also just
use export conditions for them.

For that all to work, I went with a different strategy for now where the
real API is in / but it comes with a warning if you use it. If you instead
import /client it disables the warning in a wrapper. That means that if you
alias / then import /client that will inturn import the alias and it'll
just work.

In a future breaking changes (likely when we switch to ESM) we can just
remove createRoot/hydrateRoot from / and move away from the aliasing
strategy.

* Update tests to import from react-dom/client

* Fix fixtures

* Update warnings

* Add test for the warning

* Update devtools

* Change order of react-dom, react-dom/client alias

I think the order matters here. The first one takes precedence.

* Require react-dom through client so it can be aliased

Co-authored-by: Andrew Clark <git@andrewclark.io>
2022-03-01 00:13:28 -05:00
Andrew Clark
8f96c6b2ac
[Bugfix] Prevent infinite update loop caused by a synchronous update in a passive effect (#22277)
* Add test that triggers infinite update loop

In 18, passive effects are flushed synchronously if they are the
result of a synchronous update. We have a guard for infinite update
loops that occur in the layout phase, but it doesn't currently work for
synchronous updates from a passive effect.

The reason this probably hasn't come up yet is because synchronous
updates inside the passive effect phase are relatively rare: you either
have to imperatively dispatch a discrete event, like `el.focus`, or you
have to call `ReactDOM.flushSync`, which triggers a warning. (In
general, updates inside a passive effect are not encouraged.)

I discovered this because `useSyncExternalStore` does sometimes
trigger updates inside the passive effect phase.

This commit adds a failing test to prove the issue exists. I will fix
it in the next commit.

* Fix failing test added in previous commit

The way we detect a "nested update" is if there's synchronous work
remaining at the end of the commit phase.

Currently this check happens before we synchronously flush the passive
effects. I moved it to after the effects are fired, so that it detects
whether synchronous work was scheduled in that phase.
2021-09-09 08:14:30 -07:00
Andrew Clark
d7dce572c7
Remove internal act builds from public modules (#21721)
* Move internal version of act to shared module

No reason to have three different copies of this anymore.

I've left the the renderer-specific `act` entry points because legacy
mode tests need to also be wrapped in `batchedUpdates`. Next, I'll update
the tests to use `batchedUpdates` manually when needed.

* Migrates tests to use internal module directly

Instead of the `unstable_concurrentAct` exports. Now we can drop those
from the public builds.

I put it in the jest-react package since that's where we put our other
testing utilities (like `toFlushAndYield`). Not so much so it can be
consumed publicly (nobody uses that package except us), but so it works
with our build tests.

* Remove unused internal fields

These were used by the old act implementation. No longer needed.
2021-06-22 14:29:35 -07:00
Sebastian Markbåge
86715efa23
Resolve the true entry point during tests (#21505)
* Resolve the entry point for tests the same way builds do

This way the source tests, test the same entry point configuration.

* Gate test selectors on www

These are currently only exposed in www builds

* Gate createEventHandle / useFocus on www

These are enabled in both www variants but not OSS experimental.

* Temporarily disable www-modern entry point

Use the main one that has all the exports until we fix more tests.

* Remove enableCache override that's no longer correct

* Open gates for www

These used to not be covered because they used Cache which wasn't exposed.
2021-06-02 18:03:29 -07:00
Brian Vaughn
2bf4805e4b
Update entry point exports (#21488)
The following APIs have been added to the `react` stable entry point:
* `SuspenseList`
* `startTransition`
* `unstable_createMutableSource`
* `unstable_useMutableSource`
* `useDeferredValue`
* `useTransition`

The following APIs have been added or removed from the `react-dom` stable entry point:
* `createRoot`
* `unstable_createPortal` (removed)

The following APIs have been added to the `react-is` stable entry point:
* `SuspenseList`
* `isSuspenseList`

The following feature flags have been changed from experimental to true:
* `enableLazyElements`
* `enableSelectiveHydration`
* `enableSuspenseServerRenderer`
2021-05-12 11:28:14 -04:00
Brian Vaughn
fc33f12bde
Remove unstable scheduler/tracing API (#20037) 2021-04-26 19:16:18 -04:00
Andrew Clark
d17086c7c8
Decouple public, internal act implementation (#19745)
In the next major release, we intend to drop support for using the `act`
testing helper in production. (It already fires a warning.) The
rationale is that, in order for `act` to work, you must either mock the
testing environment or add extra logic at runtime. Mocking the testing
environment isn't ideal because it requires extra set up for the user.
Extra logic at runtime is fine only in development mode — we don't want
to slow down the production builds.

Since most people only run their tests in development mode, dropping
support for production should be fine; if there's demand, we can add it
back later using a special testing build that is identical to the
production build except for the additional testing logic.

One blocker for removing production support is that we currently use
`act` to test React itself. We must test React in both development and
production modes.

So, the solution is to fork `act` into separate public and
internal implementations:

- *public implementation of `act`* – exposed to users, only works in
  development mode, uses special runtime logic, does not support partial
  rendering
- *internal implementation of `act`* – private, works in both
  development and productionm modes, only used by the React Core test
  suite, uses no special runtime logic, supports partial rendering (i.e.
  `toFlushAndYieldThrough`)

The internal implementation should mostly match the public
implementation's behavior, but since it's a private API, it doesn't have
to match exactly. It works by mocking the test environment: it uses a
mock build of Scheduler to flush rendering tasks, and Jest's mock timers
to flush Suspense placeholders.

---

In this first commit, I've added the internal forks of `act` and
migrated our tests to use them. The public `act` implementation is
unaffected for now; I will leave refactoring/clean-up for a later step.
2020-09-08 08:11:45 -07:00
Ricky
30b47103d4
Fix spelling errors and typos (#19138) 2020-06-15 19:59:44 -04:00
Andrew Clark
103ed08c46
Remove shouldDeprioritizeSubtree from host config (#19124)
No longer being used.
2020-06-12 12:57:20 -07:00
Andrew Clark
8f05f2bd6d
Land Lanes implementation in old fork (#19108)
* Add autofix to cross-fork lint rule

* replace-fork: Replaces old fork contents with new

For each file in the new fork, copies the contents into the
corresponding file of the old fork, replacing what was already there.

In contrast to merge-fork, which performs a three-way merge.

* Replace old fork contents with new fork

First I ran  `yarn replace-fork`.

Then I ran `yarn lint` with autofix enabled. There's currently no way to
do that from the command line (we should fix that), so I had to edit the
lint script file.

* Manual fix-ups

Removes dead branches, removes prefixes from internal fields.  Stuff
like that.

* Fix DevTools tests

DevTools tests only run against the old fork, which is why I didn't
catch these earlier.

There is one test that is still failing. I'm fairly certain it's related
to the layout of the Suspense fiber: we no longer conditionally wrap the
primary children. They are always wrapped in an extra fiber.

Since this has been running in www for weeks without major issues, I'll
defer fixing the remaining test to a follow up.
2020-06-11 20:05:15 -07:00
Andrew Clark
b4a1a4980c
Disable <div hidden /> API in old fork, too (#18917)
The motivation for doing this is to make it impossible for additional
uses of pre-rendering to sneak into www without going through the
LegacyHidden abstraction. Since this feature was already disabled in
the new fork, this brings the two closer to parity.

The LegacyHidden abstraction itself still needs to opt into
pre-rendering somehow, so rather than totally disabling the feature, I
updated the `hidden` prop check to be obnoxiously specific. Before, you
could set it to any truthy value; now, you must set it to the string
"unstable-do-not-use-legacy-hidden".

The node will still be hidden in the DOM, since any truthy value will
cause the browser to apply a style of `display: none`.

I will have to update the LegacyHidden component in www to use the
obnoxious string prop. This doesn't block merge, though, since the
behavior is gated by a dynamic flag. I will update the component before
I enable the flag.
2020-05-13 20:01:10 -07:00
Andrew Clark
8b9c4d1688
Expose LegacyHidden type and disable <div hidden /> API in new fork (#18891)
* Expose LegacyHidden type

I will use this internally at Facebook to migrate away from
<div hidden />. The end goal is to migrate to the Offscreen type, but
that has different semantics. This is an incremental step.

* Disable <div hidden /> API in new fork

Migrates to the unstable_LegacyHidden type instead. The old fork does
not support the new component type, so I updated the tests to use an
indirection that picks the correct API. I will remove this once the
LegacyHidden (and/or Offscreen) type has landed in both implementations.

* Add gated warning for `<div hidden />` API

Only exists so we can detect callers in www and migrate them to the new
API. Should not visible to anyone outside React Core team.
2020-05-11 20:02:08 -07:00
Andrew Clark
fe7163e73d
Add unstable prefix to experimental APIs (#18825)
We've been shipping unprefixed experimental APIs (like `createRoot` and
`useTransition`) to the Experimental release channel, with the rationale
that because these APIs do not appear in any stable release, we're free
to change or remove them later without breaking any downstream projects.

What we didn't consider is that downstream projects might be tempted to
use feature detection:

```js
const useTransition = React.useTransition || fallbackUseTransition;
```

This pattern assumes that the version of `useTransition` that exists in
the Experimental channel today has the same API contract as the final
`useTransition` API that we'll eventually ship to stable.

To discourage feature detection, I've added an `unstable_` prefix to
all of our unstable APIs.

The Facebook builds still have the unprefixed APIs, though. We will
continue to support those; if we make any breaking changes, we'll
migrate the internal callers like we usually do. To make testing easier,
I added the `unstable_`-prefixed APIs to the www builds, too. That way
our tests can always use the prefixed ones without gating on the
release channel.
2020-05-04 22:25:41 -07:00
Andrew Clark
65237a237e
Codemod it.experimental to gate pragma (#18582)
* Codemod it.experimental to gate pragma

Find-and-replace followed by Prettier

* Delete it.experimental

Removes the API from our test setup script
2020-04-13 10:28:59 -07:00
Sebastian Markbåge
98d410f500
Build Component Stacks from Native Stack Frames (#18561)
* Implement component stack extraction hack

* Normalize errors in tests

This drops the requirement to include owner to pass the test.

* Special case tests

* Add destructuring to force toObject which throws before the side-effects

This ensures that we don't double call yieldValue or advanceTime in tests.

Ideally we could use empty destructuring but ES lint doesn't like it.

* Cache the result in DEV

In DEV it's somewhat likely that we'll see many logs that add component
stacks. This could be slow so we cache the results of previous components.

* Fixture

* Add Reflect to lint

* Log if out of range.

* Fix special case when the function call throws in V8

In V8 we need to ignore the first line. Normally we would never get there
because the stacks would differ before that, but the stacks are the same if
we end up throwing at the same place as the control.
2020-04-10 13:32:12 -07:00
Sebastian Markbåge
5474a83e25
Disable console.logs in the second render pass of DEV mode double render (#18547)
* Disable console log during the second rerender

* Use the disabled log to avoid double yielding values in scheduler mock

* Reenable debugRenderPhaseSideEffectsForStrictMode in tests that can
2020-04-08 16:43:51 -07:00
Sebastian Markbåge
3e94bce765
Enable prefer-const lint rules (#18451)
* Enable prefer-const rule

Stylistically I don't like this but Closure Compiler takes advantage of
this information.

* Auto-fix lints

* Manually fix the remaining callsites
2020-04-01 12:35:52 -07:00
Sebastian Silbermann
ba31ad40a9
feat(StrictMode): Double-invoke render for every component (#18430)
* feat(StrictMode): Double-invoke render for every component

* fix: Mark ReactTestRendererAsync as internal
2020-03-29 23:13:46 +01:00
Dan Abramov
0b5a26a489
Rename toWarnDev -> toErrorDev, toLowPriorityWarnDev -> toWarnDev (#17605)
* Rename toWarnDev -> toErrorDev in tests

* Rename toWarnDev matcher implementation to toErrorDev

* Rename toLowPriorityWarnDev -> toWarnDev in tests and implementation
2019-12-16 12:48:16 +00:00
Dan Abramov
b15bf36750
Add component stacks to (almost) all warnings (#17586) 2019-12-12 23:47:55 +00:00
Dan Abramov
f6b8d31a76
Rename createSyncRoot to createBlockingRoot (#17165)
* Rename createSyncRoot to createBlockingRoot

* Fix up
2019-10-23 15:04:39 -07:00
Andrew Clark
349cf5acc3
Experimental test helper: it.experimental (#17149)
Special version of Jest's `it` for experimental tests. Tests marked as
experimental will run **both** stable and experimental modes. In
experimental mode, they work the same as the normal Jest methods. In
stable mode, they are **expected to fail**. This means we can detect
when a test previously marked as experimental can be un-marked when the
feature becomes stable. It also reduces the chances that we accidentally
add experimental APIs to the stable builds before we intend.

I added corresponding methods for the focus and skip APIs:

- `fit` -> `fit.experimental`
- `it.only` -> `it.only.experimental` or `it.experimental.only`
- `xit` -> `xit.experimental`
- `it.skip` -> `it.skip.experimental` or `it.experimental.skip`

Since `it` is an alias of `test`, `test.experimental` works, too.
2019-10-19 16:08:08 -07:00
Andrew Clark
30c5daf943
Remove concurrent apis from stable (#17088)
* Tests run in experimental mode by default

For local development, you usually want experiments enabled. Unless
the release channel is set with an environment variable, tests will
run with __EXPERIMENTAL__ set to `true`.

* Remove concurrent APIs from stable builds

Those who want to try concurrent mode should use the experimental
builds instead.

I've left the `unstable_` prefixed APIs in the Facebook build so we
can continue experimenting with them internally without blessing them
for widespread use.

* Turn on SSR flags in experimental build

* Remove prefixed concurrent APIs from www build

Instead we'll use the experimental builds when syncing to www.

* Remove "canary" from internal React version string
2019-10-15 15:09:19 -07:00
Andrew Clark
d77c6232d3
[Scheduler] Store Tasks on a Min Binary Heap (#16245)
* [Scheduler] Store Tasks on a Min Binary Heap

Switches Scheduler's priority queue implementation (for both tasks and
timers) to an array-based min binary heap.

This replaces the naive linked-list implementation that was left over
from the queue we once used to schedule React roots. A list was arguably
fine when it was only used for roots, since the total number of roots is
usually small, and is only 1 in the common case of a single-page app.

Since Scheduler is now used for many types of JavaScript tasks (e.g.
including timers), the total number of tasks can be much larger.

Binary heaps are the standard way to implement priority queues.
Insertion is O(1) in the average case (append to the end) and O(log n)
in the worst. Deletion is O(log n). Peek is O(1).

* Sophie nits
2019-08-08 16:18:05 -07:00