Commit Graph

1645 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Josh Story 36e4cbe2e9 [Float][Flight] Flight support for Float (#26502)
Stacked on #26557 

Supporting Float methods such as ReactDOM.preload() are challenging for
flight because it does not have an easy means to convey direct
executions in other environments. Because the flight wire format is a
JSON-like serialization that is expected to be rendered it currently
only describes renderable elements. We need a way to convey a function
invocation that gets run in the context of the client environment
whether that is Fizz or Fiber.

Fiber is somewhat straightforward because the HostDispatcher is always
active and we can just have the FlightClient dispatch the serialized
directive.

Fizz is much more challenging becaue the dispatcher is always scoped but
the specific request the dispatch belongs to is not readily available.
Environments that support AsyncLocalStorage (or in the future
AsyncContext) we will use this to be able to resolve directives in Fizz
to the appropriate Request. For other environments directives will be
elided. Right now this is pragmatic and non-breaking because all
directives are opportunistic and non-critical. If this changes in the
future we will need to reconsider how widespread support for async
context tracking is.

For Flight, if AsyncLocalStorage is available Float methods can be
called before and after await points and be expected to work. If
AsyncLocalStorage is not available float methods called in the sync
phase of a component render will be captured but anything after an await
point will be a noop. If a float call is dropped in this manner a DEV
warning should help you realize your code may need to be modified.

This PR also introduces a way for resources (Fizz) and hints (Flight) to
flush even if there is not active task being worked on. This will help
when Float methods are called in between async points within a function
execution but the task is blocked on the entire function finishing.

This PR also introduces deduping of Hints in Flight using the same
resource keys used in Fizz. This will help shrink payload sizes when the
same hint is attempted to emit over and over again
2023-04-21 20:45:51 -07:00
Andrew Clark fd3fb8e3c5 Rethrow errors from form actions (#26689)
This is the next step toward full support for async form actions.

Errors thrown inside form actions should cause the form to re-render and
throw the error so it can be captured by an error boundary. The behavior
is the same if the `<form />` had an internal useTransition hook, which
is pretty much exactly how we implement it, too.

The first time an action is called, the form's HostComponent is
"upgraded" to become stateful, by lazily mounting a list of hooks. The
rest of the implementation for function components can be shared.

Because the error handling behavior added in this commit is just using
useTransition under-the-hood, it also handles pending states, too.
However, this pending state can't be observed until we add a new hook
for that purpose. I'll add this next.
2023-04-21 13:29:46 -04:00
Josh Story fdad813ac7 [Float][Fiber] Enable Float methods to be called outside of render (#26557)
Stacked on #26570 

Previously we restricted Float methods to only being callable while
rendering. This allowed us to make associations between calls and their
position in the DOM tree, for instance hoisting preinitialized styles
into a ShadowRoot or an iframe Document.

When considering how we are going to support Flight support in Float
however it became clear that this restriction would lead to compromises
on the implementation because the Flight client does not execute within
the context of a client render. We want to be able to disaptch Float
directives coming from Flight as soon as possible and this requires
being able to call them outside of render.

this patch modifies Float so that its methods are callable anywhere. The
main consequence of this change is Float will always use the Document
the renderer script is running within as the HoistableRoot. This means
if you preinit as style inside a component render targeting a ShadowRoot
the style will load in the ownerDocument not the ShadowRoot. Practially
speaking it means that preinit is not useful inside ShadowRoots and
iframes.

This tradeoff was deemed acceptable because these methods are
optimistic, not critical. Additionally, the other methods, preconntect,
prefetchDNS, and preload, are not impacted because they already operated
at the level of the ownerDocument and really only interface with the
Network cache layer.

I added a couple additional fixes that were necessary for getting tests
to pass that are worth considering separately.

The first commit improves the diff for `waitForThrow` so it compares
strings if possible.

The second commit makes invokeGuardedCallback not use metaprogramming
pattern and swallows any novel errors produced from trying to run the
guarded callback. Swallowing may not be the best we can do but it at
least protects React against rapid failure when something causes the
dispatchEvent to throw.
2023-04-20 14:40:25 -07:00
Josh Story e5708b3ea9 [Tests][Fizz] Better HTML parsing behavior for Fizz tests (#26570)
In anticipation of making Fiber use the document global for dispatching
Float methods that arrive from Flight I needed to update some tests that
commonly recreated the JSDOM instance after importing react.

This change updates a few tests to only create JSDOM once per test,
before importing react-dom/client.

Additionally the current act implementation for server streaming did not
adequately model streaming semantics so I rewrite the act implementation
in a way that better mirrors how a browser would parse incoming HTML.

The new act implementation does the following

1. the first time it processes meaningful streamed content it figures
out whether it is rendering into the existing document container or if
it needs to reset the document. this is based on whether the streamed
content contains tags `<html>` or `<body>` etc...
2. Once the streaming container is set it will typically continue to
stream into that container for future calls to act. The exception is if
the streaming container is the `<head>` in which case it will switch to
streaming into the body once it receives a `<body>` tag.

This means for tests that render something like a `<div>...</div>` it
will naturally stream into the default `<div id="container">...` and for
tests that render a full document the HTML will parse like a real
browser would (with some very minor edge case differences)

I also refactored the way we move nodes from buffered content into the
document and execute any scripts we find. Previously we were using
window.eval and I switched this to just setting the external script
content as script text. Additionally the nonce logic is reworked to be a
bit simpler.
2023-04-20 14:27:02 -07:00
Sebastian Markbåge c826dc50de Add (Client) Functions as Form Actions (#26674)
This lets you pass a function to `<form action={...}>` or `<button
formAction={...}>` or `<input type="submit formAction={...}>`. This will
behave basically like a `javascript:` URL except not quite implemented
that way. This is a convenience for the `onSubmit={e => {
e.preventDefault(); const fromData = new FormData(e.target); ... }`
pattern.

You can still implement a custom `onSubmit` handler and if it calls
`preventDefault`, it won't invoke the action, just like it would if you
used a full page form navigation or javascript urls. It behaves just
like a navigation and we might implement it with the Navigation API in
the future.

Currently this is just a synchronous function but in a follow up this
will accept async functions, handle pending states and handle errors.

This is implemented by setting `javascript:` URLs, but these only exist
to trigger an error message if something goes wrong instead of
navigating away. Like if you called `stopPropagation` to prevent React
from handling it or if you called `form.submit()` instead of
`form.requestSubmit()` which by-passes the `submit` event. If CSP is
used to ban `javascript:` urls, those will trigger errors when these
URLs are invoked which would be a different error message but it's still
there to notify the user that something went wrong in the plumbing.

Next up is improving the SSR state with action replaying and progressive
enhancement.
2023-04-19 16:31:08 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge 1f248bdd71 Switching checked to null should leave the current value (#26667)
I accidentally made a behavior change in the refactor. It turns out that
when switching off `checked` to an uncontrolled component, we used to
revert to the concept of "initialChecked" which used to be stored on
state.

When there's a diff to this computed prop and the value of props.checked
is null, then we end up in a case where it sets `checked` to
`initialChecked`:


https://github.com/facebook/react/blob/5cbe6258bc436b1683080a6d978c27849f1d9a22/packages/react-dom-bindings/src/client/ReactDOMInput.js#L69

Since we never changed `initialChecked` and it's not relevant if
non-null `checked` changes value, the only way this "change" could
trigger was if we move from having `checked` to having null.

This wasn't really consistent with how `value` works, where we instead
leave the current value in place regardless. So this is a "bug fix" that
changes `checked` to be consistent with `value` and just leave the
current value in place. This case should already have a warning in it
regardless since it's going from controlled to uncontrolled.

Related to that, there was also another issue observed in
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/26596#discussion_r1162295872 and
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/26588

We need to atomically apply mutations on radio buttons. I fixed this by
setting the name to empty before doing mutations to value/checked/type
in updateInput, and then set the name to whatever it should be. Setting
the name is what ends up atomically applying the changes.

---------

Co-authored-by: Sophie Alpert <git@sophiebits.com>
2023-04-19 11:46:29 -04:00
Sophie Alpert 1b4a0daba8 Add assertions about <input> value dirty state (#26626)
Since this is an observable behavior and is hard to think about, seems
good to have tests for this.

The expected value included in each test is the behavior that existed
prior to #26546.
2023-04-18 11:03:36 -07:00
Sophie Alpert b433c379d5 Fix input tracking bug (#26627)
In
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/26573/commits/2019ddc75f448292ffa6429d7625514af192631b,
we changed to set .defaultValue before .value on updates. In some cases,
setting .defaultValue causes .value to change, and since we only set
.value if it has the wrong value, this resulted in us not assigning to
.value, which resulted in inputValueTracking not knowing the right
value. See new test added.

My fix here is to (a) move the value setting back up first and (b)
narrowing the fix in the aforementioned PR to newly remove the value
attribute only if it defaultValue was previously present in props.

The second half is necessary because for types where the value property
and attribute are indelibly linked (hidden checkbox radio submit image
reset button, i.e. spec modes default or default/on from
https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/input.html#dom-input-value-default),
we can't remove the value attribute after setting .value, because that
will undo the assignment we just did! That is, not having (b) makes all
of those types fail to handle updating props.value.

This code is incredibly hard to think about but I think this is right
(or at least, as right as the old code was) because we set .value here
only if the nextProps.value != null, and we now remove defaultValue only
if lastProps.defaultValue != null. These can't happen at the same time
because we have long warned if value and defaultValue are simultaneously
specified, and also if a component switches between controlled and
uncontrolled.

Also, it fixes the test in https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/26626.
2023-04-18 10:49:32 -07:00
Tianyu Yao d121c67004 Synchronously flush the transition lane scheduled in a popstate event (#26025)
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## Summary

Browsers restore state like forms and scroll position right after the
popstate event. To make sure the page work as expected on back or
forward button, we need to flush transitions scheduled in a popstate
synchronously, and only yields if it suspends.
This PR adds a new HostConfig method to check if `window.event ===
'popstate'`, and `scheduleMicrotask` if a transition is scheduled in a
`PopStateEvent`.

## How did you test this change?

yarn test
2023-04-13 15:21:19 -04:00
Andrew Clark 72c890e312 Convert more Suspense tests to use act (2/n) (#26610)
Many of our Suspense-related tests were written before the `act` API was
introduced, and use the lower level `waitFor` helpers instead. So they
are less resilient to changes in implementation details than they could
be.

This converts some of our test suite to use `act` in more places. I
found these while working on a PR to expand our fallback throttling
mechanism to include all renders that result from a promise resolving,
even if there are no more fallbacks in the tree.

I think this covers all the remaining tests that are affected.
2023-04-12 13:36:13 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge 343a45ffa4 Remove initOption special case (#26595)
This traces back to https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/6449 and then
another before that.

I think that back then we favored the property over the attribute, and
setting the property wouldn't be enough. However, the default path for
these are now using attributes if we don't special case it. So we don't
need it.

The only difference is that we currently have a divergence for
symbol/function behavior between controlled values that use the
getToStringValue helpers which treat them as empty string, where as
everywhere else they're treated as null/missing.

Since this comes with a warning and is a weird error case, it's probably
fine to change.
2023-04-11 12:39:00 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge ac43bf6870 Move validation of text nesting into ReactDOMComponent (#26594)
Extract validateTextNesting from validateDOMNesting. We only need the
parent tag when validating text nodes. Then validate it in setProp.
2023-04-10 21:41:53 -04:00
Josh Story b55d319559 Rename HostConfig files to FiberConfig to clarify they are configs fo… (#26592)
part of https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/26571

merging separately to improve tracking of files renames in git

Rename HostConfig files to FiberConfig to clarify they are configs for
Fiber and not Fizz/Flight. This better conforms to the naming used in
Flight and now Fizz of `ReactFlightServerConfig` and `ReactFizzConfig`
2023-04-10 14:58:44 -07:00
Josh Story ffb8eaca59 Rename ReactServerFormatConfig to ReactFizzConfig (#26591)
part of https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/26571

merging separately to improve tracking of file renames
2023-04-10 14:54:26 -07:00
Sebastian Markbåge 9a9da7721e Don't update textarea defaultValue and input checked unnecessarily (#26580)
In #26573 I changed it so that textareas get their defaultValue reset if
you don't specify one.

However, the way that was implemented, it always set it for any update
even if it hasn't changed.

We have a test for that, but that test only works if no properties
update at all so that no update was scheduled. This fixes the test so
that it updates some unrelated prop.

I also found a test for `checked` that needed a similar fix.

Interestingly, we don't do this deduping for `defaultValue` or
`defaultChecked` on inputs and there's no test for that.
2023-04-09 22:16:38 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge e5146cb525 Refactor some controlled component stuff (#26573)
This is mainly renaming some stuff. The behavior change is
hasOwnProperty to nullish check.

I had a bigger refactor that was a dead-end but might as well land this
part and see if I can pick it up later.
2023-04-09 18:06:16 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge eeabb7312f Refactor DOM Bindings Completely Off of DOMProperty Meta Programming (#26546)
There are four places we have special cases based off the DOMProperty
config:

1) DEV-only: ReactDOMUnknownPropertyHook warns for passing booleans to
non-boolean attributes. We just need a simple list of all properties
that are affected by that. We could probably move this in under setProp
instead and have it covered by that list.
2) DEV-only: Hydration. This just needs to read the value from an
attribute and compare it to what we'd expect to see if it was rendered
on the client. This could use some simplification/unification of the
code but I decided to just keep it simple and duplicated since code size
isn't an issue.
3) DOMServerFormatConfig pushAttribute: This just maps the special case
to how to emit it as a HTML attribute.
4) ReactDOMComponent setProp: This just maps the special case to how to
emit it as setAttribute or removeAttribute.

Basically we just have to remember to keep pushAttribute and setProp
aligned. There's only one long switch in prod per environment.

This just turns it all to a giant simple switch statement with string
cases. This is in theory the most optimizable since syntactically all
the information for a hash table is there. However, unfortunately we
know that most VMs don't optimize this very well and instead just turn
them into a bunch of ifs. JSC is best. We can minimize the cost by just
moving common attribute to the beginning of the list.

If we shipped this, maybe VMs will get it together to start optimizing
this case but there's a chicken and egg problem here and the game theory
reality is that we probably don't want to regress. Therefore, I intend
to do a follow up after landing this which reintroduces an object
indirection for simple property aliases. That should be enough to make
the remaining cases palatable. I'll also extract the most common
attributes to the beginning or separate ifs.

Ran attribute-behavior fixture and the table is the same.
2023-04-04 11:05:56 -04:00
Jan Kassens da94e8b24a Revert "Cleanup enableSyncDefaultUpdate flag (#26236)" (#26528)
This reverts commit b2ae9ddb3b.

While the feature flag is fully rolled out, these tests are also testing
behavior set with an unstable flag on root, which for now we want to
preserve.

Not sure if there's a better way then adding a dynamic feature flag to
the www build?
2023-04-04 10:08:14 -04:00
Andrew Clark 0ae348018d [Float] Suspend unstyled content for up to 1 minute (#26532)
We almost never want to show content before its styles have loaded. But
eventually we will give up and allow unstyled content. So this extends
the timeout to a full minute. This somewhat arbitrary — big enough that
you'd only reach it under extreme circumstances.

Note that, like regular Suspense, the app is still interactive while
we're waiting for content to load. Only the unstyled content is blocked
from appearing, not updates in general. A new update will interrupt it.

We should figure out what the browser engines do during initial page
load and consider aligning our behavior with that. It's supposed to be
render blocking by default but there may be some cases where they, too,
give up and FOUC.
2023-03-31 15:45:45 -04:00
Andrew Clark 888874673f Allow transitions to interrupt Suspensey commits (#26531)
I originally made it so that a Suspensey commit — i.e. a commit that's
waiting for a stylesheet, image, or font to load before proceeding —
could not be interrupted by transitions. My reasoning was that Suspensey
commits always time out after a short interval, anyway, so if the
incoming update isn't urgent, it's better to wait to commit the current
frame instead of throwing it away.

I don't think this rationale was correct, for a few reasons. There are
some cases where we'll suspend for a longer duration, like stylesheets —
it's nearly always a bad idea to show content before its styles have
loaded, so we're going to be extend this timeout to be really long.

But even in the case where the timeout is shorter, like fonts, if you
get a new update, it's possible (even likely) that update will allow us
to avoid showing a fallback, like by navigating to a different page. So
we might as well try.

The behavior now matches our behavior for interrupting a suspended
render phase (i.e. `use`), which makes sense because they're not that
conceptually different.
2023-03-31 15:35:48 -04:00
Andrew Clark 8310854ceb Clean up enableCapturePhaseSelectiveHydrationWithoutDiscreteEventReplay (#26521)
This flag is already enabled everywhere except for www, which is blocked
by a few tests that assert on the old behavior. Once www is ready, I'll
land this.
2023-03-31 10:25:58 -04:00
Ricky ca01f359b9 Remove skipUnmountedBoundaries (#26489)
# Overview

Landing this flag internally, will test this PR in React Native before
merging.
2023-03-30 20:58:13 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge 43a70a610d Limit the meaning of "custom element" to not include is (#26524)
This PR has a bunch of surrounding refactoring. See individual commits.

The main change is that we no longer special case `typeof is ===
'string'` as a special case according to the
`enableCustomElementPropertySupport` flag.

Effectively this means that you can't use custom properties/events,
other than the ones React knows about on `<input is="my-input">`
extensions.

This is unfortunate but there's too many paths that are forked in
inconsistent ways since we fork based on tag name. I think __the
solution is to let all React elements set unknown properties/events in
the same way as this flag__ but that's a bigger change than this flag
implies.

Since `is` is not universally supported yet anyway, this doesn't seem
like a huge loss. Attributes still work.

We still support passing the `is` prop and turn that into the
appropriate createElement call.

@josepharhar
2023-03-30 18:38:50 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge 73deff0d51 Refactor DOMProperty and CSSProperty (#26513)
This is a step towards getting rid of the meta programming in
DOMProperty and CSSProperty.

This moves isAttributeNameSafe and isUnitlessNumber to a separate shared
modules.

isUnitlessNumber is now a single switch instead of meta-programming.
There is a slight behavior change here in that I hard code a specific
set of vendor-prefixed attributes instead of prefixing all the unitless
properties. I based this list on what getComputedStyle returns in
current browsers. I removed Opera prefixes because they were [removed in
Opera](https://dev.opera.com/blog/css-vendor-prefixes-in-opera-12-50-snapshots/)
itself. I included the ms ones mentioned [in the original
PR](https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/5abcce534382d85887f3d33475e8e54e3b5d8457).
These shouldn't really be used anymore anyway so should be pretty safe.
Worst case, they'll fallback to the other property if you specify both.

Finally I inline the mustUseProperty special cases - which are also the
only thing that uses propertyName. These are really all controlled
components and all booleans.

I'm making a small breaking change here by treating `checked` and
`selected` specially only on the `input` and `option` tags instead of
all tags. That's because those are the only DOM nodes that actually have
those properties but we used to set them as expandos instead of
attributes before. That's why one of the tests is updated to now use
`input` instead of testing an expando on a `div` which isn't a real use
case. Interestingly this also uncovered that we update checked twice for
some reason but keeping that logic for now.

Ideally `multiple` and `muted` should move into `select` and
`audio`/`video` respectively for the same reason.

No change to the attribute-behavior fixture.
2023-03-30 14:30:57 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge 29a3be78bd Move ReactDOMFloat to react-dom/src/ (#26514)
This is not really part of the bindings, it's more part of the package
entry points. /shared/ is not really right neither because it's more
like an isomorphic entry point and not some utility.
2023-03-29 23:39:24 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge 4c2fc01900 Generate safe javascript url instead of throwing with disableJavaScriptURLs is on (#26507)
We currently throw an error when disableJavaScriptURLs is on and trigger
an error boundary. I kind of thought that's what would happen with CSP
or Trusted Types anyway. However, that's not what happens. Instead, in
those environments what happens is that the error is triggered when you
try to actually visit those links. So if you `preventDefault()` or
something it'll never show up and since the error just logs to the
console or to a violation logger, it's effectively a noop to users.

We can simulate the same without CSP by simply generating a different
`javascript:` url that throws instead of executing the potential attack
vector.

This still allows these to be used - at least as long as you
preventDefault before using them in practice. This might be legit for
forms. We still don't recommend using them for links-as-buttons since
it'll be possible to "Open in a New Tab" and other weird artifacts. For
links we still recommend the technique of assigning a button role etc.

It also is a little nicer when an attack actually happens because at
least it doesn't allow an attacker to trigger error boundaries and
effectively deny access to a page.
2023-03-29 23:39:02 -04:00
Andrew Clark f0aafa1a7e Convert a few more tests to waitFor test helpers (#26509)
Continuing my journey to migrate all the Scheduler flush* methods to
async versions of the same helpers.
2023-03-29 17:02:15 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge 85de6fde51 Refactor DOM special cases per tags including controlled fields (#26501)
I use a shared helper when setting properties into a helper whether it's
initial or update.

I moved the special cases per tag to commit phase so we can check it
only once. This also effectively inlines getHostProps which can be done
in a single check per prop key.

The diffProperties operation is simplified to mostly just generating a
plain diff of all properties, generating an update payload. This might
generate a few more entries that are now ignored in the commit phase.
that previously would've been ignored earlier. We could skip this and
just do the whole diff in the commit phase by always scheduling a commit
phase update.

I tested the attribute table (one change documented below) and a few
select DOM fixtures.
2023-03-28 22:40:03 -04:00
Andrew Clark fc90eb6368 Codemod more tests to waitFor pattern (#26494) 2023-03-28 00:03:57 -04:00
Andrew Clark e0bbc26623 Improve tests that deal with microtasks (#26493)
I rewrote some of our tests that deal with microtasks with the aim of
making them less coupled to implementation details. This is related to
an upcoming change to move update processing into a microtask.
2023-03-27 23:17:55 -04:00
Jan Kassens afea1d0c53 [flow] make Flow suppressions explicit on the error (#26487)
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
2023-03-27 13:43:04 +02:00
Andrew Clark 768f965de2 Suspensily committing a prerendered tree (#26434)
Prerendering a tree (i.e. with Offscreen) should not suspend the commit
phase, because the content is not yet visible. However, when revealing a
prerendered tree, we should suspend the commit phase if resources in the
prerendered tree haven't finished loading yet.

To do this properly, we need to visit all the visible nodes in the tree
that might possibly suspend. This includes nodes in the current tree,
because even though they were already "mounted", the resources might not
have loaded yet, because we didn't suspend when it was prerendered.

We will need to add this capability to the Offscreen component's
"manual" mode, too. Something like a `ready()` method that returns a
promise that resolves when the tree has fully loaded.

Also includes some fixes to #26450. See PR for details.
2023-03-26 23:48:37 -04:00
Josh Story 73b6435ca4 [Float][Fiber] Implement waitForCommitToBeReady for stylesheet resources (#26450)
Before a commit is finished if any new stylesheet resources are going to
mount and we are capable of delaying the commit we will do the following

1. Wait for all preloads for newly created stylesheet resources to load
2. Once all preloads are finished we insert the stylesheet instances for
these resources and wait for them all to load
3. Once all stylesheets have loaded we complete the commit

In this PR I also removed the synchronous loadingstate tracking in the
fizz runtime. It was not necessary to support the implementation on not
used by the fizz runtime itself. It makes the inline script slightly
smaller

In this PR I also integrated ReactDOMFloatClient with
ReactDOMHostConfig. It leads to better code factoring, something I
already did on the server a while back. To make the diff a little easier
to follow i make these changes in a single commit so you can look at the
change after that commit if helpful

There is a 500ms timeout which will finish the commit even if all
suspended host instances have not finished loading yet

At the moment error and load events are treated the same and we're
really tracking whether the host instance is finished attempting to
load.
2023-03-24 19:17:38 -07:00
Ricky f77099b6f1 Remove layout effect warning on the server (#26395)
## Overview

This PR unfortunately removes the warning emitted when using layout
effects on the server:

> useLayoutEffect does nothing on the server, because its effect cannot
be encoded into the server renderer's output format. This will lead to a
mismatch between the initial, non-hydrated UI and the intended UI. To
avoid this, useLayoutEffect should only be used in components that
render exclusively on the client. See
https://reactjs.org/link/uselayouteffect-ssr for common fixes.

## Why this warning exists
The new docs explain this really well. Adding a screenshot because as
part of this change, we'll be removing these docs.

<img width="1562" alt="Screenshot 2023-03-15 at 10 56 17 AM"
src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/2440089/225349148-f0e57c3f-95f5-4f2e-9178-d9b9b221c28d.png">

## Why are we changing it

In practice, users are not just ignoring this warning, but creating
hooks to bypass this warning by switching the useLayoutEffect hook on
the server instead of fixing it. This battle seems to be lost, so let's
remove the warning so at least users don't need to use the indirection
hook any more. In practice, if it's an issue, you should see the
problems like flashing the wrong content on first load in development.
2023-03-22 13:33:48 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge afb3d51dc6 Fix enableClientRenderFallbackOnTextMismatch flag (#26457)
With this flag off, we don't throw and therefore don't patch up the tree
when suppression is off.

Haven't tested.

---------

Co-authored-by: Rick Hanlon <rickhanlonii@fb.com>
2023-03-22 13:12:41 -04:00
Leedom 56f7a90e68 chore: update new docs links for react-dom (#26456)
Update new documentation links in react-dom's readme.
> [react-dom](https://react.dev/reference/react-dom)
> [react-dom/client](https://react.dev/reference/react-dom/client)
> [react-dom/server](https://react.dev/reference/react-dom/server)
2023-03-22 12:55:06 +01:00
Andrew Clark 12a1d140e3 Don't prerender siblings of suspended component (#26380)
Today if something suspends, React will continue rendering the siblings
of that component.

Our original rationale for prerendering the siblings of a suspended
component was to initiate any lazy fetches that they might contain. This
was when we were more bullish about lazy fetching being a good idea some
of the time (when combined with prefetching), as opposed to our latest
thinking, which is that it's almost always a bad idea.

Another rationale for the original behavior was that the render was I/O
bound, anyway, so we might as do some extra work in the meantime. But
this was before we had the concept of instant loading states: when
navigating to a new screen, it's better to show a loading state as soon
as you can (often a skeleton UI), rather than delay the transition.
(There are still cases where we block the render, when a suitable
loading state is not available; it's just not _all_ cases where
something suspends.) So the biggest issue with our existing
implementation is that the prerendering of the siblings happens within
the same render pass as the one that suspended — _before_ the loading
state appears.

What we should do instead is immediately unwind the stack as soon as
something suspends, to unblock the loading state.

If we want to preserve the ability to prerender the siblings, what we
could do is schedule special render pass immediately after the fallback
is displayed. This is likely what we'll do in the future. However, in
the new implementation of `use`, there's another reason we don't
prerender siblings: so we can preserve the state of the stack when
something suspends, and resume where we left of when the promise
resolves without replaying the parents. The only way to do this
currently is to suspend the entire work loop. Fiber does not currently
support rendering multiple siblings in "parallel". Once you move onto
the next sibling, the stack of the previous sibling is discarded and
cannot be restored. We do plan to implement this feature, but it will
require a not-insignificant refactor.

Given that lazy data fetching is already bad for performance, the best
trade off for now seems to be to disable prerendering of siblings. This
gives us the best performance characteristics when you're following best
practices (i.e. hoist data fetches to Server Components or route
loaders), at the expense of making an already bad pattern a bit worse.

Later, when we implement resumable context stacks, we can reenable
sibling prerendering. Though even then the use case will mostly be to
prerender the CPU-bound work, not lazy fetches.
2023-03-21 10:24:56 -04:00
Andrew Clark 77ba1618a5 Bugfix: Remove extra render pass when reverting to client render (#26445)
(This was reviewed and approved as part of #26380; I'm extracting it
into its own PR so that it can bisected later if it causes an issue.)

I noticed while working on a PR that when an error happens during
hydration, and we revert to client rendering, React actually does _two_
additional render passes instead of just one. We didn't notice it
earlier because none of our tests happened to assert on how many renders
it took to recover, only on the final output.

It's possible this extra render pass had other consequences that I'm not
aware of, like messing with some assumption in the recoverable errors
logic.

This adds a test to demonstrate the issue. (One problem is that we don't
have much test coverage of this scenario in the first place, which
likely would have caught this earlier.)
2023-03-20 22:07:53 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge 520f7f3ed4 Refactor ReactDOMComponent to use flatter property operations (#26433)
This is in line with the refactor I already did on Fizz earlier and
brings Fiber up to a similar structure.

We end up with a lot of extra checks due the extra abstractions we use
to check the various properties. This uses a flatter and more inline
model which makes it easier to see what each property does. The tradeoff
is that a change might need changes in more places.

The general structure is that there's a switch for tag first, then a
switch for each attribute special case, then a switch for the value. So
it's easy to follow where each scenario will end up and there shouldn't
be any unnecessary code executed along the way.

My goal is to eventually get rid of the meta-programming in DOMProperty
and CSSProperty but I'm leaving that in for now - in line with Fizz.

My next step is moving around things a bit in the diff/commit phases.
This is the first step to more refactors for perf and size, but also
because I'm adding more special cases so I need to have a flatter
structure that I can reason about for those special cases.
2023-03-20 20:56:14 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge 8fa41ffa27 Don't "fix up" mismatched text content with suppressedHydrationWarning (#26391)
In concurrent mode we error if child nodes mismatches which triggers a
recreation of the whole hydration boundary. This ensures that we don't
replay the wrong thing, transform state or other security issues.

For text content, we respect `suppressedHydrationWarning` to allow for
things like `<div suppressedHydrationWarning>{timestamp}</div>` to
ignore the timestamp. This mode actually still patches up the text
content to be the client rendered content.

In principle we shouldn't have to do that because either value should be
ok, and arguably it's better not to trigger layout thrash after the
fact.

We do have a lot of code still to deal with patching up the tree because
that's what legacy mode does which is still in the code base. When we
delete legacy mode we would still be stuck with a lot of it just to deal
with this case.

Therefore I propose that we change the semantics to not patch up
hydration errors for text nodes. We already don't for attributes.
2023-03-16 22:39:17 -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
Jan Kassens eaccf27c2e Revert "Remove hydrate entry point from www builds" (#26413)
Reverts facebook/react#26400.

Will take a look at the test failures before re-merging.
2023-03-16 14:01:20 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge 480aa7785f Remove hydrate entry point from www builds (#26400)
As I understand it this isn't used at Meta and it would let us get rid
of at least legacy mode hydration code when we remove legacy mode from
OSS builds.
2023-03-16 11:39:34 -04:00
Jarred Sumner e4606c1e0e Add missing "react-dom/server.bun" entry in package.json "exports" (#26402)
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## Summary

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does the pull request solve?
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`react-dom/server` in Bun (correctly) chooses `react-dom/server.bun`,
but `react-dom/server.bun` currently can't be imported because it is not
included in package.json `"exports"` (`react-dom/server` works,
`react-dom/server.bun` doesn't). Previously, I didn't think it was
necessary to do that, but it is too easy to accidentally run the browser
build in unit tests when importing `react-dom/server`

This also aligns behavior of package.json `"exports"` of
`react-dom/server.bun` with `react-dom/server.browser`,
`react-dom/server.node`, and the rest.

## How did you test this change?

Manually edited package.json in node_modules in a separate folder and
ran tests in Bun with `react-dom/server.bun` as the import specifier

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2023-03-15 22:09:49 -04:00
Jan Kassens 99aa082be0 Remove unstable_flushControlled (#26397)
This API has been fully replaced by `flushSync`.
2023-03-15 16:13:54 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge cfc1274e3b Disable IE innerHTML workaround behind a flag (#26390)
We don't need this workaround for SVG anymore and we don't need to
workaround MSApp's security model since Windows 10.
2023-03-14 23:27:04 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge a57f40d839 Undo dependency injection of batching (#26389)
There's currently a giant cycle between the event system, through
react-dom-bindings, reconciler and then react-dom. We resolve this cycle
using dependency injection. However, this all ends up in the same
bundle. It can be reordered to resolve the cycles. If we avoid
side-effects and avoid reading from module exports during
initialization, this should be resolvable in a more optimal way by the
compiler.
2023-03-14 21:40:43 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge d310d654a7 Avoid meta programming to initialize functions in module scope (#26388)
I'm trying to get rid of all meta programming in the module scope so
that closure can do a better job figuring out cyclic dependencies and
ability to reorder.

This is converting a lot of the patterns that assign functions
conditionally to using function declarations instead.

```
let fn;
if (__DEV__) {
  fn = function() {
    ...
  };
}
```
->
```
function fn() {
  if (__DEV__) {
    ...
  }
}
```
2023-03-14 21:00:22 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge 21aee59e45 Delete unused DOM files (#26387)
These used to be used by partial render.

ReactDOMDispatcher ended up not being used in this way.

Move shared DOM files to client. These are only used by client
abstractions now. They're inlined in the Fizz code so they're no longer
shared.
2023-03-14 19:52:57 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge 2788d0d8dd Allow empty string to be passed to formAction (#26379)
We disallow empty strings for `href` and `src` since they're common
mistakes that end up loading the current page as a preload, image or
link. We also disallow it for `action`. You have to pass `null` which is
the same.

However, for `formAction` passing `null` is not the same as passing
empty string. Passing empty string overrides the form's action to be the
current page even if the form's action was set to something else.
There's no easy way to express the same thing `#` show up in the user
visible URLs and `?` clears the search params.

Since this is also not a common mistake, we can just allow this.
2023-03-13 14:28:17 -04:00