* Invoke both legacy and UNSAFE_ lifecycles when both are present
This is to support edge cases with eg create-react-class where a mixin defines a legacy lifecycle but the component being created defines an UNSAFE one (or vice versa).
I did not warn about this case because the warning would be a bit redundant with the deprecation warning which we will soon be enabling. I could be convinced to change my stance here though.
* Added explicit function-type check to SS ReactPartialRenderer
Accounts for the case where an event is dispatched synchronously from
inside another event, like `el.focus`. I've added a test, but in general
we need more coverage around this area.
* Switch to JSX API for context
80% sure this will be the final API. Merging this now so we can get this
into the next www sync in preparation for 16.3.
* Promote context to a stable API
* Updates inside controlled events (onChange) are sync even in async mode
This guarantees the DOM is in a consistent state before we yield back
to the browser.
We'll need to figure out a separate strategy for other
interactive events.
* Don't rely on flushing behavior of public batchedUpdates implementation
Flush work as an explicit step at the end of the event, right before
restoring controlled state.
* Interactive updates
At the beginning of an interactive browser event (events that fire as
the result of a user interaction, like a click), check for pending
updates that were scheduled in a previous interactive event. Flush the
pending updates synchronously so that the event handlers are up-to-date
before responding to the current event.
We now have three classes of events:
- Controlled events. Updates are always flushed synchronously.
- Interactive events. Updates are async, unless another a subsequent
event is fired before it can complete, as described above. They are
also slightly higher priority than a normal async update.
- Non-interactive events. These are treated as normal, low-priority
async updates.
* Flush lowest pending interactive update time
Accounts for case when multiple interactive updates are scheduled at
different priorities. This can happen when an interactive event is
dispatched inside an async subtree, and there's an event handler on
an ancestor that is outside the subtree.
* Update comment about restoring controlled components
* ReactDOM.flushControlled
New API for wrapping event handlers that need to fire before React
yields to the browser. Previously we thought that flushSync was
sufficient for this use case, but it turns out that flushSync is only
safe if you're guaranteed to be at the top of the stack; that is, if
you know for sure that your event handler is not nested inside another
React event handler or lifecycle. This isn't true for cases like
el.focus, el.click, or dispatchEvent, where an event handler can be
invoked synchronously from inside an existing stack.
flushControlled has similar semantics to batchedUpdates, where if you
nest multiple batches, the work is not flushed until the end of the
outermost batch. The work is not guaranteed to synchronously flush, as
with flushSync, but it is guaranteed to flush before React yields to
the browser.
flushSync is still the preferred API in most cases, such as inside
a requestAnimationFrame callback.
* Test that flushControlled does not flush inside batchedUpdates
* Make flushControlled a void function
In the future, we may want to return a thenable work object. For now,
we'll return nothing.
* flushControlled -> unstable_flushControlled
* Replace unstable_AsyncComponent with Unstable_AsyncMode
Mirrors the StrictMode API and uses the new Mode type of work.
* internalContextTag -> mode
Change this now that we have a better name
* Unstable_ -> unstable_
* Suppress unsafe/deprecation warnings for polyfilled components.
* Don't invoke deprecated lifecycles if static gDSFP exists.
* Applied recent changes to server rendering also
A new feature flag has been added, debugRenderPhaseSideEffectsForStrictMode. When enabled, StrictMode subtrees will also double-invoke lifecycles in the same way as debugRenderPhaseSideEffects.
By default, this flag is enabled for __DEV__ only. Internally we can toggle it with a GK.
This breaks several of our incremental tests which make use of the noop-renderer. Updating the tests to account for the double-rendering in development mode makes them significantly more complicated. The most straight forward fix for this will be to convert them to be run as internal tests only. I believe this is reasonable since we are the only people making use of the noop renderer.
Builds on top of PR #12083 and resolves issue #12044.
Coalesces deprecation warnings until the commit phase. This proposal extends the utility introduced in #12060 to also coalesce deprecation warnings.
New warning format will look like this:
> componentWillMount is deprecated and will be removed in the next major version. Use componentDidMount instead. As a temporary workaround, you can rename to UNSAFE_componentWillMount.
>
> Please update the following components: Foo, Bar
>
> Learn more about this warning here:
> https://fb.me/react-async-component-lifecycle-hooks
* New context API
Introduces a declarative context API that propagates updates even when
shouldComponentUpdate returns false.
* Fuzz tester for context
* Use ReactElement for provider and consumer children
* Unify more branches in createFiberFromElement
* Compare context values using Object.is
Same semantics as PureComponent/shallowEqual.
* Add support for Provider and Consumer to server-side renderer
* Store providers on global stack
Rather than using a linked list stored on the context type. The global
stack can be reset in case of an interruption or error, whereas with the
linked list implementation, you'd need to keep track of every
context type.
* Put new context API behind a feature flag
We'll enable this in www only for now.
* Store nearest provider on context object
* Handle reentrancy in server renderer
Context stack should be per server renderer instance.
* Bailout of consumer updates using bitmask
The context type defines an optional function that compares two context
values, returning a bitfield. A consumer may specify the bits it needs
for rendering. If a provider's context changes, and the consumer's bits
do not intersect with the changed bits, we can skip the consumer.
This is similar to how selectors are used in Redux but fast enough to do
while scanning the tree. The only user code involved is the function
that computes the changed bits. But that's only called once per provider
update, not for every consumer.
* Store current value and changed bits on context object
There are fewer providers than consumers, so better to do this work
at the provider.
* Use maximum of 31 bits for bitmask
This is the largest integer size in V8 on 32-bit systems. Warn in
development if too large a number is used.
* ProviderComponent -> ContextProvider, ConsumerComponent -> ContextConsumer
* Inline Object.is
* Warn if multiple renderers concurrently render the same context provider
Let's see if we can get away with not supporting this for now. If it
turns out that it's needed, we can fall back to backtracking the
fiber return path.
* Nits that came up during review
Added new StrictMode component for enabling async warnings (without enabling async rendering). This component can be used in the future to help with other warnings (eg compilation, Fabric).
Update debugRenderPhaseSideEffects behavior
This feature flag no longer double-invokes componentWillMount, componentWillReceiveProps, componentWillUpdate, or shouldComponentUpdate.
It continues to double-invoke the constructor, render, and setState updater functions as well as the recently added, static getDerivedStateFromProps method
Tests have been updated.
While writing tests for unsafe async warnings, I noticed that in certain cases, errors were swallowed by the toWarnDev matcher and resulted in confusing test failures. For example, if an error prevented the code being tested from logging an expected warning- the test would fail saying that the warning hadn't been logged rather than reporting the unexpected error. I think a better approach for this is to always treat caught errors as the highest-priority reason for failing a test.
I reran all of the test cases for this matcher that I originally ran with PR #11786 and ensured they all still pass.
* Added unsafe_* lifecycles and deprecation warnings
If the old lifecycle hooks (componentWillMount, componentWillUpdate, componentWillReceiveProps) are detected, these methods will be called and a deprecation warning will be logged. (In other words, we do not check for both the presence of the old and new lifecycles.) This commit is expected to fail tests.
* Ran lifecycle hook codemod over project
This should handle the bulk of the updates. I will manually update TypeScript and CoffeeScript tests with another commit.
The actual command run with this commit was: jscodeshift --parser=flow -t ../react-codemod/transforms/rename-unsafe-lifecycles.js ./packages/**/src/**/*.js
* Manually migrated CoffeeScript and TypeScript tests
* Added inline note to createReactClassIntegration-test
Explaining why lifecycles hooks have not been renamed in this test.
* Udated NativeMethodsMixin with new lifecycle hooks
* Added static getDerivedStateFromProps to ReactPartialRenderer
Also added a new set of tests focused on server side lifecycle hooks.
* Added getDerivedStateFromProps to shallow renderer
Also added warnings for several cases involving getDerivedStateFromProps() as well as the deprecated lifecycles.
Also added tests for the above.
* Dedupe and DEV-only deprecation warning in server renderer
* Renamed unsafe_* prefix to UNSAFE_* to be more noticeable
* Added getDerivedStateFromProps to ReactFiberClassComponent
Also updated class component and lifecyle tests to cover the added functionality.
* Warn about UNSAFE_componentWillRecieveProps misspelling
* Added tests to createReactClassIntegration for new lifecycles
* Added warning for stateless functional components with gDSFP
* Added createReactClass test for static gDSFP
* Moved lifecycle deprecation warnings behind (disabled) feature flag
Updated tests accordingly, by temporarily splitting tests that were specific to this feature-flag into their own, internal tests. This was the only way I knew of to interact with the feature flag without breaking our build/dist tests.
* Tidying up
* Tweaked warning message wording slightly
Replaced 'You may may have returned undefined.' with 'You may have returned undefined.'
* Replaced truthy partialState checks with != null
* Call getDerivedStateFromProps via .call(null) to prevent type access
* Move shallow-renderer didWarn* maps off the instance
* Only call getDerivedStateFromProps if props instance has changed
* Avoid creating new state object if not necessary
* Inject state as a param to callGetDerivedStateFromProps
This value will be either workInProgress.memoizedState (for updates) or instance.state (for initialization).
* Explicitly warn about uninitialized state before calling getDerivedStateFromProps.
And added some new tests for this change.
Also:
* Improved a couple of falsy null/undefined checks to more explicitly check for null or undefined.
* Made some small tweaks to ReactFiberClassComponent WRT when and how it reads instance.state and sets to null.
* Improved wording for deprecation lifecycle warnings
* Fix state-regression for module-pattern components
Also add support for new static getDerivedStateFromProps method
* Adds danger_js with an initial rule for warning about large PRs
Signed-off-by: Anandaroop Roy <roop@artsymail.com>
* [WIP] Get the before and after for the build results
* [Dev] More work on the Dangerfile
* [Danger] Split the reports into sections based on their package
* Remove the --extract-errors on the circle build
* [Danger] Improve the lookup for previous -> current build to also include the environment
* Fix rebase
The TestUtils lost media events when they were pulled out of the
topLevelTypes constant. This commit adds them back by concatenating
the media event keys to the list of top level types.
We want to start refactoring some of the event constants, but we don't
have a great way to confirm media events work as intended. This commit
adds a new DOM test fixture to verify that media events bubble.
In absence of a value, radio and checkboxes report a value of
"on". Between 16 and 16.2, we assigned a node's value to it's current
value in order to "dettach" it from defaultValue. This had the
unfortunate side-effect of assigning value="on" to radio and
checkboxes
Related issues:
https://github.com/facebook/react/issues/11998
* Added 'flow-coverage-report' package for discussion
* Aded flow-coverage command and configuration file
* Moved FLow coverage config file to scripts/flow/coverage-config
* Moved Flow coverage config back to root as dotfile
* Runs a lint rule on tests only that errors if it sees `fdescribe` or `fit` calls.
* Changes `file:` to `link:` for our custom, internal rules (just to simplify updating these in the future).
* Updates `eslint` from 3.10 -> 4.1 and `babel-eslint` from 7.1 -> 8.0 so that we can run this new rule only against tests.
* Add warning in server renderer if class doesn't extend React.Component
In dev mode, while server rendering, a warning will be thrown if there is a class that doesn't extend React.Component.
* Use `.toWarnDev` matcher and deduplicate warnings
* Deduplicate client-side warning if class doesn't extend React.Component
* Default componentName to Unknown if null
Removes the `useSyncScheduling` option from the HostConfig, since it's
no longer needed. Instead of globally flipping between sync and async,
our strategy will be to opt-in specific trees and subtrees.