In legacy roots, if an update originates outside of `batchedUpdates`,
check if it's inside an `act` scope; if so, treat it as if it were
batched. This is only necessary in legacy roots because in concurrent
roots, updates are batched by default.
With this change, the Test Utils and Test Renderer versions of `act` are
nothing more than aliases of the isomorphic API (still not exposed, but
will likely be the recommended API that replaces the others).
* 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.
Currently, in a React 18 root, `act` only works if you mock the
Scheduler package. This was because we didn't want to add additional
checks at runtime.
But now that the `act` testing API is dev-only, we can simplify its
implementation.
Now when an update is wrapped with `act`, React will bypass Scheduler
entirely and push its tasks onto a special internal queue. Then, when
the outermost `act` scope exists, we'll flush that queue.
I also removed the "wrong act" warning, because the plan is to move
`act` to an isomorphic entry point, simlar to `startTransition`. That's
not directly related to this PR, but I didn't want to bother
re-implementing that warning only to immediately remove it.
I'll add the isomorphic API in a follow up.
Note that the internal version of `act` that we use in our own tests
still depends on mocking the Scheduler package, because it needs to work
in production. I'm planning to move that implementation to a shared
(internal) module, too.
* Delete test-utils implementation of `act`
Since it's dev-only now, we can use the one provided by the reconciler.
* Move act related stuff out of EventInternals
Upgrades the deprecation warning to a runtime error.
I did it this way instead of removing the export so the type is the same
in both builds. It will get dead code eliminated regardless.
* Remove redundant initial of isArray (#21163)
* Reapply prettier
* Type the isArray function with refinement support
This ensures that an argument gets refined just like it does if isArray is
used directly.
I'm not sure how to express with just a direct reference so I added a
function wrapper and confirmed that this does get inlined properly by
closure compiler.
* A few more
* Rename unit test to internal
This is not testing a bundle.
Co-authored-by: Behnam Mohammadi <itten@live.com>
Adds back the `TestUtils.act` implementation that I had removed
in #19745. This version of `act` is implemented in "userspace" (i.e. not
the reconciler), so it doesn't add to the production bundle size.
I had removed this in #19745 in favor of the `act` exported by the
reconciler because I thought we would remove support for `act` in
production in the impending major release. (It currently warns.)
However, we've since decided to continue supporting `act` in prod for
now, so that it doesn't block people from upgrading to v17. We'll drop
support in a future major release.
So, to avoid bloating the production bundle size, we need to move the
public version of `act` back to "userspace", like it was before.
This doesn't negate the main goal of #19745, though, which was to
decouple the public version(s) of `act` from the internal one that we
use to test React itself.
If there are any suspended fallbacks at the end of the `act` scope,
force them to display by running the pending timers (i.e. `setTimeout`).
The public implementation of `act` achieves the same behavior with an
extra check in the work loop (`shouldForceFlushFallbacks`). Since our
internal `act` needs to work in both development and production, without
additional runtime checks, we instead rely on Jest's mock timers.
This doesn't not affect refresh transitions, which are meant to delay
indefinitely, because in that case we exit the work loop without
posting a timer.
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.
* test: Add current behavior for event types of onFocus/onBlur
* fix: onFocus/onBlur have a matching event type
* fix useFocus
* fix: don't compare native event types with react event types
* Add FocusIn/FocusOutEventInterface
* A simpler alternative fix
* Add regression tests
* Always pass React event type and fix beforeinput
Co-authored-by: Dan Abramov <dan.abramov@me.com>
* 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
* Formalize the Wakeable and Thenable types
We use two subsets of Promises throughout React APIs. This introduces
the smallest subset - Wakeable. It's the thing that you can throw to
suspend. It's something that can ping.
I also use a shared type for Thenable in the cases where we expect a value
so we can be a bit more rigid with our us of them.
* Make Chunks into Wakeables instead of using native Promises
This value is just going from here to React so we can keep it a lighter
abstraction throughout.
* Renamed thenable to wakeable in variable names
* Rename lower case isomorphic default exports modules to upper case named exports
We're somewhat inconsistent here between e.g. ReactLazy and memo.
Let's pick one.
This also moves the responder, fundamental, scope creators from shared
since they're isomorphic and same as the other creators.
* Move some files that are specific to the react-reconciler from shared
Individual renderers are allowed to deep require into the reconciler.
* Move files specific to react-dom from shared
react-interactions is right now dom specific (it wasn't before) so we can
type check it together with other dom stuff. Avoids the need for
a shared ReactDOMTypes to be checked by RN for example.
* Move ReactWorkTags to the reconciler
* Move createPortal to export from reconciler
Otherwise Noop can't access it since it's not allowed deep requires.
* Require deep for reconcilers
* Delete inline* files
* Delete react-reconciler/persistent
This no longer makes any sense because it react-reconciler takes
supportsMutation or supportsPersistence as options. It's no longer based
on feature flags.
* Fix jest mocking
* Fix Flow strategy
We now explicitly list which paths we want to be checked by a renderer.
For every other renderer config we ignore those paths.
Nothing is "any" typed. So if some transitive dependency isn't reachable
it won't be accidentally "any" that leaks.
Nothing interesting here except that ReactShallowRenderer currently exports
a class with a static method instead of an object.
I think the public API is probably just meant to be createRenderer but
currently the whole class is exposed. So this means that we have to keep
it as default export. We could potentially also expose a named export for
createRenderer but that's going to cause compatibility issues.
So I'm just going to make that export default.
Unfortunately Rollup and Babel (which powers Jest) disagree on how to
import this. So to make it work I had to move the jest tests to imports.
This doesn't work with module resetting. Some tests weren't doing that
anyway and the rest is just testing ReactShallowRenderer so meh.
* import * as React from "react";
This is the correct way to import React from an ES module since the ES
module will not have a default export. Only named exports.
* import * as ReactDOM from "react-dom"
* Replace all warning/lowPriWarning with console calls
* Replace console.warn/error with a custom wrapper at build time
* Fail the build for console.error/warn() where we can't read the stack
* prep for codemod
* prep warnings
* rename lint rules
* codemod for ifs
* shim www functions
* Handle more cases in the transform
* Thanks De Morgan
* Run the codemod
* Delete the transform
* Fix up confusing conditions manually
* Fix up www shims to match expected API
* Also check for low-pri warning in the lint rule
* Replace Babel plugin with an ESLint plugin
* Fix ESLint rule violations
* Move shared conditions higher
* Test formatting nits
* Tweak ESLint rule
* Bugfix: inside else branch, 'if' tests are not satisfactory
* Use a stricter check for exactly if (__DEV__)
This makes it easier to see what's going on and matches dominant style in the codebase.
* Fix remaining files after stricter check
* Rename lowPriorityWarning to lowPriorityWarningWithoutStack
This maintains parity with the other warning-like functions.
* Duplicate the toWarnDev tests to test toLowPriorityWarnDev
* Make a lowPriorityWarning version of warning.js
* Extract both variants in print-warning
Avoids parsing lowPriorityWarning.js itself as the way it forwards the
call to lowPriorityWarningWithoutStack is not analyzable.
In a previous version of act(), we used a dummy dom element to flush effects. This doesn't need to exist anymore, and this PR removes it. The warning doesn't need to be there either (React will fire a wrong renderer act warning if needed).
We have behaviour divergence for act() between prod and dev (specifically, act() + concurrent mode does not flush fallbacks in prod. This doesn't affect anyone in OSS yet)
We also don't have a good story for writing tests in prod (and what from what I gather, nobody really writes tests in prod mode).
We could have wiped out act() in prod builds, except that _we_ ourselves use act() for our tests when we run them in prod mode.
This PR is a compromise to all of this. We will log a warning if you try to use act() in prod mode, and we silence it in our test suites.
Concurrent/Batched mode tests should always be run with a mocked scheduler (v17 or not). This PR adds a warning for the same. I'll put up a separate PR to the docs with a page detailing how to mock the scheduler.
Not returning the value of flushPassiveEffects() in flushWork() meant that with async act, we wouldn't flush all work with cascading effects. This PR fixes that oversight, and adds some tests to catch this in the future.
Given this snippet:
```jsx
TestRenderer.act(() => {
TestUtils.act(() => {
TestRenderer.create(<Effecty />);
});
});
```
We want to make sure that all work is only flushed on exiting the outermost act().
Now, naively doing this based on actingScopeDepth would work with a mocked scheduler, where flushAll() would flush all work across renderers.
This doesn't work without mocking the scheduler though; and where flushing work only works per renderer. So we disable this behaviour for a non-mocked scenario. This seems like an ok tradeoff.
* [fail] reset IsThisRendererActing correctly
I missed this in https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/16039. I'd pointed at the wrong previous state, corrupting it in further use. This PR fixes that, and adds a test to make sure it doesn't happen again.
* warn for unacted effects only in strict mode
* allow nested `act()`s from different renderers
There are usecases where multiple renderers need to oprate inside an act() scope
- ReactDOM.render being used inside another component tree. The parent component will be rendered using ReactTestRenderer.create for a snapshot test or something.
- a ReactDOM instance interacting with a ReactTestRenderer instance (like for the new devtools)
This PR changes the way the acting sigils operate to allow for this. It keeps 2 booleans, one attached to React, one attached to the renderer. act() changes these values, and the workloop reads them to decide what warning to trigger.
I also renamed shouldWarnUnactedUpdates to warnsIfNotActing
* s/ReactIsActing/IsSomeRendererActing and s/ReactRendererIsActing/IsThisRendererActing
* reset scope depth on synchronous errors
we weren't resetting the acting scope depth on sync errors thrown in the callback. this fixes that.
* typos
* add a test to make sure sync error propagate
* warn when using the wrong renderer's act around another renderer's updates
like it says. it uses a real object as the sigil (instead of just a boolean). specifically, it uses a renderer's flushPassiveEffects as the sigil. We also run tests for this separate from our main suite (which doesn't allow loading multiple renderers in a suite), but makes sure to run this in CI as well.
* unneeded (and wrong) comment
* run the dom fixture on CI
* update the sigil only in __DEV__
* remove the obnoxious comment
* use an explicit export for the sigil