Depends on:
- #28317
- #28320
---
Changes the behavior of the JSX runtime to pass through `ref` as a
normal prop, rather than plucking it from the props object and storing
on the element.
This is a breaking change since it changes the type of the receiving
component. However, most code is unaffected since it's unlikely that a
component would have attempted to access a `ref` prop, since it was not
possible to get a reference to one.
`forwardRef` _will_ still pluck `ref` from the props object, though,
since it's extremely common for users to spread the props object onto
the inner component and pass `ref` as a differently named prop. This is
for maximum compatibility with existing code — the real impact of this
change is that `forwardRef` is no longer required.
Currently, refs are resolved during child reconciliation and stored on
the fiber. As a result of this change, we can move ref resolution to
happen only much later, and only for components that actually use them.
Then we can remove the `ref` field from the Fiber type. I have not yet
done that in this step, though.
Instead of createElement.
We should have done this when we initially released jsx-runtime but
better late than never. The general principle is that our tests should
be written using the most up-to-date idioms that we recommend for users,
except when explicitly testing an edge case or legacy behavior, like for
backwards compatibility.
Most of the diff is related to tweaking test output and isn't very
interesting.
I did have to workaround an issue related to component stacks. The
component stack logic depends on shared state that lives in the React
module. The problem is that most of our tests reset the React module
state and re-require a fresh instance of React, React DOM, etc. However,
the JSX runtime is not re-required because it's injected by the compiler
as a static import. This means its copy of the shared state is no longer
the same as the one used by React, causing any warning logged by the JSX
runtime to not include a component stack. (This same issue also breaks
string refs, but since we're removing those soon I'm not so concerned
about that.) The solution I went with for now is to mock the JSX runtime
with a proxy that re-requires the module on every function invocation. I
don't love this but it will have to do for now. What we should really do
is migrate our tests away from manually resetting the module state and
use import syntax instead.
Starting in version 19, users can import the `act` testing API from the
`react` package instead of using a renderer specific API, like
`react-dom/test-utils`.
Fix ReactFreshIntegration-test not running all tests as assumed
`testCommon` was executed twice without setting `compileDestructuring`
ever to true.
This fixes this and removes one layer of abstraction in this test by
using `describe.each`.
As part of the process of removing the deprecated `react-dom/test-utils`
package references to `act` from this module are replaced with
references to `unstable_act` in `react`. It is likely that the unstable
act implementation will be made stable. The test utils act is just a
reexport of the unstable_act implementation in react itself.
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.
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.
Similar to the rationale for `waitFor` (see #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.
Similar to the rationale for `waitFor` (see #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.
(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.
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.
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.
* 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
* 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>
* 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.
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`
* [Fast Refresh] Support callthrough HOCs
* Add a newly failing testing to demonstrate the flaw
This shows why my initial approach doesn't make sense.
* Attach signatures at every nesting level
* Sign nested memo/forwardRef too
* Add an IIFE test
This is not a case that is important for Fast Refresh, but we shouldn't change the code semantics. This case shows the transform isn't quite correct. It's wrapping the call at the wrong place.
* Find HOCs above more precisely
This fixes a false positive that was causing an IIFE to be wrapped in the wrong place, which made the wrapping unsafe.
* Be defensive against non-components being passed to setSignature
* Fix lint
In some scenarios (either timing dependent, or pre-FR compatible React versions) FR blocked calling the React DevTools commit hook. This PR adds a test and a fix for that.
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.
* 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.
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.
* 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.
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.
Previously, we transformed
```
let Foo = styled.div``;
```
to
```
let Foo = _c1 = styled.div``;
```
and then babel-plugin-styled-components would infer `_c1` as the display name. Widen the existing case that applies to function expressions to apply to any type of variable declaration.
* Upgrade fbjs-scripts
This script takes into account the NODE_ENV as part of jest cache keys.
This avoids flaky tests since we depend on different transforms in prod
and dev.
* Upgrade Fresh test to Babel 7 transform
* 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
* [Fresh] Detect root updates more reliably
* [Fresh] Use WeakMap for root elements
* [Fresh] Make initial failures recoverable too
* Fix DevTools check
* Fix wrong flow type