Follow-up to https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/33652.
Don't know how the other were missed. Double-checked that Profiler works
in dev mode.
Now all hooks start with `!isProfiling` check and return, if true.
## Summary
This floods Timings track in dev mode and also hurts performance in dev.
Making sure we are buffering Performance entries (all of them are marks)
only when profiling in RDT. This should be removed once we roll out Perf
tracks.
Stacked on https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/31132. See last
commit.
There are 2 issues:
1. We've been recording timeline events, even if Timeline Profiler was
not supported by the Host. We've been doing this for React Native, for
example, which would significantly regress perf of recording a profiling
session, but we were not even using this data.
2. Currently, we are generating component stack for every state update
event. This is extremely expensive, and we should not be doing this.
We can't currently fix the second one, because we would still need to
generate all these stacks, and this would still take quite a lot of
time. As of right now, we can't generate a component stack lazily
without relying on the fact that reference to the Fiber is not stale.
With `enableOwnerStacks` we could populate component stacks in some
collection, which would be cached at the Backend, and then returned only
once Frontend asks for it. This approach also eliminates the need for
keeping a reference to a Fiber.
## Summary
This PR bumps Flow all the way to the latest 0.245.2.
Most of the suppressions comes from Flow v0.239.0's change to include
undefined in the return of `Array.pop`.
I also enabled `react.custom_jsx_typing=true` and added custom jsx
typing to match the old behavior that `React.createElement` is
effectively any typed. This is necessary since various builtin
components like `React.Fragment` is actually symbol in the React repo
instead of `React.AbstractComponent<...>`. It can be made more accurate
by customizing the `React$CustomJSXFactory` type, but I will leave it to
the React team to decide.
## How did you test this change?
`yarn flow` for all the renderers
I need to start clarifying where things are really actually Fibers and
where they're not since I'm adding Server Components as a separate type
of component instance which is not backed by a Fiber.
Nothing in the front end should really know anything about what kind of
renderer implementation we're inspecting and indeed it's already not
always a "Fiber" in the legacy renderer.
We typically refer to this as a "Component Instance" but the front end
currently refers to it as an Element as it historically grew from the
browser DevTools Elements tab.
I also moved the renderer.js implementation into the `backend/fiber`
folder. These are at the same level as `backend/legacy`. This clarifies
that anything outside of this folder ideally shouldn't refer to a
"Fiber".
console.js and profilingHooks.js unfortunately use Fibers a lot which
needs further refactoring. The profiler frontend also uses the term
alot.
Just a small upgrade to keep us current and remove unused suppressions
(probably fixed by some upgrade since).
- `*` is no longer allowed and has been an alias for `any` for a while
now.
Added an explicit type to all $FlowFixMe suppressions to reduce
over-suppressions of new errors that might be caused on the same lines.
Also removes suppressions that aren't used (e.g. in a `@noflow` file as
they're purely misleading)
Test Plan:
yarn flow-ci
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.
This enables the "exact_empty_objects" setting for Flow which makes
empty objects exact instead of building up the type as properties are
added in code below. This is in preparation to Flow 191 which makes this
the default and removes the config.
More about the change in the Flow blog
[here](https://medium.com/flow-type/improved-handling-of-the-empty-object-in-flow-ead91887e40c).
This setting is an incremental path to the next Flow version enforcing
type annotations on most functions (except some inline callbacks).
Used
```
node_modules/.bin/flow codemod annotate-functions-and-classes --write .
```
to add a majority of the types with some hand cleanup when for large
inferred objects that should just be `Fiber` or weird constructs
including `any`.
Suppressed the remaining issues.
Builds on #25918
* 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
- method unbinding is no longer supported in Flow for soundness, this added a bunch of suppressions
- Flow now prevents objects to be supertypes of interfaces/classes
ghstack-source-id: d7749cbad8
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/25412
This upgrade made more expressions invalidate refinements. In some
places this lead to a large number of suppressions that I automatically
suppressed and should be followed up on when the code is touched.
I think most of them might require either manual annotations or moving
a value into a const to allow refinement.
ghstack-source-id: a45b40abf0
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/25410
This PR adds a component stack field to the `schedule-state-update` event. The algorithm is as follows:
* During profiling, whenever a state update happens collect the parents of the fiber that caused the state update and store it in a map
* After profiling finishes, post process the `schedule-state-update` event and using the parent fibers, generate the component stack by using`describeFiber`, a function that uses error throwing to get the location of the component by calling the component without props.
---
Co-authored-by: Blake Friedman <blake.friedman@gmail.com>
Refactor DevTools to record Timeline data (in memory) while profiling. Updated the Profiler UI to import/export Timeline data along with legacy profiler data.
Relates to issue #22529
Until now, DEV and PROFILING builds of React recorded Timeline profiling data using the User Timing API. This commit changes things so that React records this data by calling methods on the DevTools hook. (For now, DevTools still records that data using the User Timing API, to match previous behavior.)
This commit is large but most of it is just moving things around:
* New methods have been added to the DevTools hook (in "backend/profilingHooks") for recording the Timeline performance events.
* Reconciler's "ReactFiberDevToolsHook" has been updated to call these new methods (when they're present).
* User Timing method calls in "SchedulingProfiler" have been moved to DevTools "backend/profilingHooks" (to match previous behavior, for now).
* The old reconciler tests, "SchedulingProfiler-test" and "SchedulingProfilerLabels-test", have been moved into DevTools "TimelineProfiler-test" to ensure behavior didn't change unexpectedly.
* Two new methods have been added to the injected renderer interface: injectProfilingHooks() and getLaneLabelMap().
Relates to #22529.