Each integrator: browser extension, Chrome DevTools Frontend fork,
Electron shell must define and provide `fetchFileWithCaching` in order
for DevTools to be able to fetch application resources, such as scripts
or source maps.
More specifically, if this is available, React DevTools will be able to
symbolicate source locations for component frames, owner stacks,
"suspended by" Promises call frames.
This will be available with the next release of React DevTools.
The compiler playground was crashing at any small syntax errors in the
`Input` panel due to updating the `CompilerErrorDetailOptions` type in
#34401. Updated the option to take in a `ErrorCategory` instead.
---------
Co-authored-by: lauren <poteto@users.noreply.github.com>
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## Summary
Added a "Show Internals" toggle switch to either show only the Config,
Input, Output, and Source Map tabs, or these tabs + all the additional
compiler options. The open/close state of these tabs will be preserved
(unless on page refresh, which is the same as the currently
functionality).
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## How did you test this change?
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https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/8eb0f69e-360c-4e9b-9155-7aa185a0c018
Adds missing locations to all the statement kinds that we produce in
codegenInstruction(), and adds generic handling of source locations for
the nodes produced by codegenInstructionValue(). There are definitely
some places where we are still missing a location, but this should
address some of the known issues we've seen such as missing location on
`throw`.
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/facebook/react/pull/34406).
* #34394
* __->__ #34406
* #34346
Small fix to make all descriptions consistently printed with a single
period at the end.
Ran `grep -rn "description:" packages/babel-plugin-react-compiler/src
--include="*.ts" --exclude-dir="__tests__" | grep '\.\s*["\`]'` to find
all descriptions ending in a period and manually fixed them.
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/facebook/react/pull/34404).
* #34409
* __->__ #34404
Now that we have a new CompilerDiagnostic type (which the CompilerError
aggregate can hold), the old CompilerErrorDetail type can be marked as
deprecated. Eventually we should migrate everything to the new
CompilerDiagnostic type.
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/facebook/react/pull/34402).
* #34409
* #34404
* #34403
* __->__ #34402
* #34401
With #34176 we now have granular lint rules created for each compiler
ErrorCategory. However, we had remnants of our old error severities
still in use which makes reporting errors quite clunky. Previously you
would need to specify both a category and severity which often ended up
being the same.
This PR moves severity definition into our rules which are generated
from our categories. For now I decided to defer "upgrading" categories
from a simple string to a sum type since we are only using severities to
map errors to eslint severity.
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/facebook/react/pull/34401).
* #34409
* #34404
* #34403
* #34402
* __->__ #34401
### Problem
- Users encounter “Failed to construct 'URL': Invalid base URL” when
clicking the “View source” action in DevTools if the underlying base URL
is invalid.
- This exception originates from `new URL(relative, base)` and bubbles
up, interrupting the DevTools UI.
- Fixes GitHub issue
[#34317](https://github.com/facebook/react/issues/34317)
### Solution
- Wrap URL construction to:
- First try `new URL(sourceMapAt, sourceURL)`.
- If that fails, try `new URL(sourceMapAt)` as an absolute URL.
- If both fail, return `null` (no symbolication) rather than throwing.
- This preserves normal behavior for valid bases and absolute URLs,
while avoiding crashes for invalid bases.
### Implementation details
- Updated `symbolicateSource` in
`packages/react-devtools-shared/src/symbolicateSource.js` to handle
invalid base URL scenarios without throwing.
- Added/verified tests in
`packages/react-devtools-shared/src/__tests__/utils-test.js`:
- “should not throw for invalid base URL with relative source map” →
resolves to `null`.
- “should resolve absolute source map even if base URL is invalid” →
still resolves correctly.
### Test plan
- Lint/format:
- `yarn prettier-check`
- `yarn linc`
- Type checking:
- `yarn flow dom-node`
- Unit tests:
- `yarn test --watchAll=false utils-test`
- Optionally: `yarn test --watchAll=false utils-test inspectedElement`
- All of the above pass locally for experimental channel.
### Risks and rollout
- Risk: Low. Only affects cases where the base URL is invalid.
- Normal cases (valid base or absolute `sourceMappingURL`) are
unchanged.
- No user-facing API changes; DevTools UX becomes more resilient.
### Affected packages
- `react-devtools-shared`
### Related
- Fixes GitHub issue
[#34317](https://github.com/facebook/react/issues/34317)
### Checklist
- [x] Ran `yarn prettier-check`
- [x] Ran `yarn linc`
- [x] Ran `yarn flow dom-node`
- [x] Relevant unit tests passing
- [x] Linked issue and added a concise summary
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## Summary
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## How did you test this change?
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## Summary
Part 3 of adding a "Config Override" panel to the React compiler
playground. Added a button to apply config changes to the Input panel,
as well as making the tab collapsible. Added validation for the the
PluginOptions type (although comes with a bit more boilerplate) to make
it very obvious what the possible config errors could be. Added some
toasts for trying to apply broken configs.
<!--
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## How did you test this change?
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/63ab8636-396f-45ba-aaa5-4136e62ccccc
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I tried turning on `@enablePreserveExistingMemoizationGuarantees` by
default and cleaned up a couple small things:
* We emit freeze calls for StartMemoize deps but these had
ValueReason.Other so the message wasn't great. We now treat these like
other hook arguments.
* PruneNonEscapingScopes was being too aggressive in this mode and
memoizing even loads of globals. Switching to
MemoizationLevel.Conditional ensures we build a graph that connects
through to primitive-returning function calls, but doesn't unnecessarily
force memoization otherwise.
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/facebook/react/pull/34346).
* #34347
* __->__ #34346
`@enablePreserveExistingMemoizationGuarantees` mode currently does not
guarantee memoization of primitive-returning functions. We're often able
to infer that a function returns a primitive based on how its result is
used, for example `foo() + 1` or `object[getIndex()]`, and by default we
do not currently memoize computation that produces a primitive. The
reasoning behind this is that the compiler is primarily focused on
stopping cascading updates — it's fine to recompute a primitive since we
can cheaply compare that primitive and avoid unnecessary downstream
recomputation. But we've gotten a lot of feedback that people find this
surprising, and that sometimes the computation can be expensive enough
that it should be memoized.
This PR changes `@enablePreserveExistingMemoizationGuarantees` mode to
ensure that primitive-returning functions get memoized. Other modes will
not memoize these functions. Separately from this we are considering
enabling this mode by default.
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/facebook/react/pull/34343).
* #34347
* #34346
* __->__ #34343
* #34335
Fixes#34108. If a scope ends with with a conditional where some/all
branches exit via labeled break, we currently compile in a way that
works but bypasses memoization. We end up with a shape like
```js
let t0;
label: {
if (changed) {
...
if (cond) {
t0 = ...;
break label;
}
// we don't save the output if the break happens!
t0 = ...;
$[0] = t0;
} else {
t0 = $[0];
}
```
The fix here is to update AlignReactiveScopesToBlockScopes to take
account of breaks that don't go to the natural fallthrough. In this
case, we take any active scopes and extend them to start at least as
early as the label, and extend at least to the label fallthrough. Thus
we produce the correct:
```js
let t0;
if (changed) {
label: {
...
if (cond) {
t0 = ...;
break label;
}
t0 = ...;
}
// now the break jumps here, and we cache the value
$[0] = t0;
} else {
t0 = $[0];
}
```
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/facebook/react/pull/34335).
* #34347
* #34346
* #34343
* __->__ #34335
Fixes a bug in useDeferredValue's optional `initialValue` argument. In
the regression case, if a new useDeferredValue hook is mounted while an
earlier transition is suspended, the `initialValue` argument of the new
hook was ignored. After the fix, the `initialValue` argument is
correctly rendered during the initial mount, regardless of whether other
transitions were suspended.
The culprit was related to the mechanism we use to track whether a
render is the result of a `useDeferredValue` hook: we assign the
deferred lane a TransitionLane, then entangle that lane with the
DeferredLane bit. During the subsequent render, we check for the
presence of the DeferredLane bit to determine whether to switch to the
final, canonical value.
But because transition lanes can themselves become entangled with other
transitions, the effect is that every entangled transition was being
treated as if it were the result of a `useDeferredValue` hook, causing
us to skip the initial value and go straight to the final one.
The fix I've chosen is to reserve some subset of TransitionLanes to be
used only for deferred work, instead of using entanglement. This is
similar to how retries are already implemented. Originally I tried not
to implement it this way because it means there are now slightly fewer
lanes allocated for regular transitions, but I underestimated how
similar deferred work is to retries; they end up having a lot of the
same requirements. Eventually it may be possible to merge the two
concepts.
React Native doesn't support `console.createTask` yet, but it does
support `performance.measure` and extensibility APIs for Performance
panel, including `detail.devtools` field.
Previously, this logic was gated with `if (__DEV__ && debugTask)`, now
`debugTask` is no longer required to log render. If there is no console
task, we will just call `performance.measure(...)`. The same pattern is
used in other reporters.
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## Summary
Part 2 of adding a "Config Override" panel to the React compiler
playground. Added sync from the config editor (still only accessible
with the "showConfig" param) to the main source code editor. Adding a
valid config to the editor will add/replace the `@OVERRIDE` pragma above
the source code. Additionally refactored the old implementation to
remove `useEffect`s and unnecessary renders.
Realized upon testing that the user experience is quite jarring,
planning to add a `sync` button in the next PR to fix this.
## How did you test this change?
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https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/a71b1b5f-0539-4c00-8d5c-22426f0280f9
Small follow-up to #34350. The `_store` property is now only assigned in
development mode when creating lazy types. It also uses the `validated`
value that was passed to `createElement`, if applicable.
When the debug channel was already closed, we must not try to close it
again when the Response gets garbage collected.
**Test plan:**
1. reduce the Flight fixture `App` component to a minimum [^1]
- remove everything from `<body>`
- delete the `console.log` statement
2. open the app in Firefox (seems to have a more aggressive GC strategy)
3. wait a few seconds
On `main`, you will see the following error in the browser console:
```
TypeError: Can not close stream after closing or error
```
With this change, the error is gone.
[^1]: It's a bit concerning that step 1 is needed to reproduce the
issue. Either GC is behaving differently with the unmodified App, or we
may hold on to the Response under certain conditions, potentially
creating a memory leak. This needs further investigation.
The `WebSocketStream` implementation seems to be a bit unreliable. We've
seen `Cannot close a ERRORED writable stream` errors when expanding the
logged deep object, for example. And when reducing the fixture to a
minimal app, we even get `Connection closed` errors, because the web
socket connection is closed before all debug chunks are sent.
We can improve the reliability of the web socket connection by using a
normal `WebSocket` instance on the client, along with manually creating
a `WritableStream` and a `ReadableStream` for processing the messages.
As an additional benefit, the debug channel now also works in Firefox
and Safari.
On the server, we're simplifying the integration with the Express server
a bit by utilizing the `server` property for `WebSocket.Server`, instead
of the `noServer` property with the manual upgrade handling.
A few libraries are known to be incompatible with memoization, whether
manually via `useMemo()` or via React Compiler. This puts us in a tricky
situation. On the one hand, we understand that these libraries were
developed prior to our documenting the [Rules of
React](https://react.dev/reference/rules), and their designs were the
result of trying to deliver a great experience for their users and
balance multiple priorities around DX, performance, etc. At the same
time, using these libraries with memoization — and in particular with
automatic memoization via React Compiler — can break apps by causing the
components using these APIs not to update. Concretely, the APIs have in
common that they return a function which returns different values over
time, but where the function itself does not change. Memoizing the
result on the identity of the function will mean that the value never
changes. Developers reasonable interpret this as "React Compiler broke
my code".
Of course, the best solution is to work with developers of these
libraries to address the root cause, and we're doing that. We've
previously discussed this situation with both of the respective
libraries:
* React Hook Form:
https://github.com/react-hook-form/react-hook-form/issues/11910#issuecomment-2135608761
* TanStack Table:
https://github.com/facebook/react/issues/33057#issuecomment-2840600158
and https://github.com/TanStack/table/issues/5567
In the meantime we need to make sure that React Compiler can work out of
the box as much as possible. This means teaching it about popular
libraries that cannot be memoized. We also can't silently skip
compilation, as this confuses users, so we need these error messages to
be visible to users. To that end, this PR adds:
* A flag to mark functions/hooks as incompatible
* Validation against use of such functions
* A default type provider to provide declarations for two
known-incompatible libraries
Note that Mobx is also incompatible, but the `observable()` function is
called outside of the component itself, so the compiler cannot currently
detect it. We may add validation for such APIs in the future.
Again, we really empathize with the developers of these libraries. We've
tried to word the error message non-judgementally, because we get that
it's hard! We're open to feedback about the error message, please let us
know.
## Summary
Update the CodeSandbox CI configuration to use Node 20 instead of Node
18, so that it matches the Node version specified in .nvmrc. This
ensures consistency between local development environments and CI
builds, reducing the risk of version-related build issues.
Closes#34328
## How did you test this change?
- Verified that .nvmrc specifies Node 20 and .codesandbox/ci.json is
updated accordingly.
- Locally switched to Node 20 using nvm use 20 and successfully ran
build scripts for all packages: `react`, `react-dom`,
`react-server-dom-webpack`, and `scheduler`.
- Confirmed there are no Node 20–specific build errors or warnings
locally.
- CI on the feature branch will now run with Node 20, and all builds are
expected to succeed.
## Summary
Part 1 of adding a "Config Override" panel to the React compiler
playground. The panel is placed to the left of the current input
section, and supports converting the comment pragmas in the input
section to a JavaScript-based config. Backwards sync has not been
implemented yet.
NOTE: I have added support for a new `OVERRIDE` type pragma to add
support for Map and Function types. (For now, the old pragma format is
still intact)
## Testing
Example of the config overrides synced to the source code:
<img width="1542" height="527" alt="Screenshot 2025-08-28 at 3 38 13 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/d46e7660-61b9-4145-93b5-a4005d30064a"
/>
In #34125 I added a hint where if you assign to the .current property of
a frozen object, we suggest naming the variable as `ref` or `-Ref`.
However, the tracking for mutations that assign to .current specifically
wasn't propagated past function expression boundaries, which meant that
the hint only showed up if you mutated the ref in the main body of the
component/hook. That's less likely to happen since most folks know not
to access refs in render. What's more likely is that you'll (correctly)
assign a ref in an effect or callback, but the compiler will throw an
error. By showing a hint in this case we can help people understand the
naming pattern.
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/facebook/react/pull/34298).
* #34276
* __->__ #34298
This adds `experimental_scrollIntoView(alignToTop)`. It doesn't yet
support `scrollIntoView(options)`.
Cases:
- No host children: Without host children, we represent the virtual
space of the Fragment by attempting to scroll to the nearest edge by
using its siblings. If the preferred sibling is not found, we'll try the
other side, and then the parent.
- 1 or more host children: In order to handle the case of children
spread between multiple scroll containers, we scroll to each child in
reverse order based on the `alignToTop` flag.
Due to the complexity of multiple scroll containers and dealing with
portals, I've added this under a separate feature flag with an
experimental prefix. We may stabilize it along with the other APIs, but
this allows us to not block the whole feature on it.
This PR was previously implementing a much more complex approach to
handling multiple scroll containers and portals. We're going to start
with the simple loop and see if we can find any concrete use cases where
that doesn't suffice. 01f31d4301 is the
diff between approaches here.
I happened to notice that I forgot to cache playwright in
run_devtools_e2e_tests, so it would try to install it every time which
can randomly take a while to complete (I'm not sure why it's not
deterministic, but the dependencies appear to be installed
inconsistently across multiple workflows).
This PR adds the same cache we use for other steps that use playwright,
which should shave off some time from this workflow when the cache is
warm.
Additionally I omitted the standalone install-deps command as it appears
to be redundant and adds a lot of extra time to CI, due to the fact that
it installs many unrelated dependencies.
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/facebook/react/pull/34320).
* #34321
* __->__ #34320
We currently assume that any functions passes as props may be event
handlers or effect functions, and thus don't check for side effects such
as mutating globals. However, if a prop is a function that returns JSX
that is a sure sign that it's actually a render helper and not an event
handler or effect function. So we now emit a `Render` effect for any
prop that is a JSX-returning function, triggering all of our render
validation.
This required a small fix to InferTypes: we weren't correctly populating
the `return` type of function types during unification. I also improved
the printing of types so we can see the inferred return types.
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/facebook/react/pull/33647).
* #33643
* #33650
* #33642
* __->__ #33647
When the Flight Client is waiting for pending debug chunks, it drops the
debug info if there is no writable side of the debug channel defined.
However, it should instead check if there's no readable side defined.
Fixing this is not only important for browser clients that don't want or
need a return channel, but it's also crucial for server-side rendering,
because the Node and Edge clients only accept a readable side of the
debug channel. So they can't even define a noop writable side as a
workaround.