### Based on
- #30761
- #30759
---
`use` has an optimization where in some cases it can suspend the work
loop during the render phase until the data has resolved, rather than
unwind the stack and lose context. However, the current implementation
is not compatible with sibling prerendering. So I've temporarily
disabled it until the sibling prerendering has been refactored. We will
add it back in a later step.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/8b4c54c00f5c047a72a4cecc2689196786c3e5ff.
## Summary
suspenseCallback feature has proved to be useful for FB Web. Let's look
at enabling the feature for the React Native build.
## How did you test this change?
Will sync the react changes with a React Native build and will verify
that performance logging is correctly notified of suspense promises
during the suspense callback.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/246d7bfeb0c90ecccd9531929b60a79d628a4c78.
This is a refactor of the fix in #27505.
When a transition update is scheduled by a popstate event, (i.e. a back/
forward navigation) we attempt to render it synchronously even though
it's a transition, since it's likely the previous page's data is cached.
In #27505, I changed the implementation so that it only "upgrades" the
priority of the transition for a single attempt. If the attempt
suspends, say because the data is not cached after all, from then on it
should be treated as a normal transition.
But it turns out #27505 did not work as intended, because it relied on
marking the root with pending synchronous work (root.pendingLanes),
which was never cleared until the popstate update completed.
The test scenarios I wrote accidentally worked for a different reason
related to suspending the work loop, which I'm currently in the middle
of refactoring.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/ee7f6757c446c4e79ecc7e2bc22b8c9b712834b7.
## Summary
Flow will eventually remove the specific `React.Element` type. For most
of the code, it can be replaced with `React.MixedElement` or
`React.Node`.
When specific react elements are required, it needs to be replaced with
either `React$Element` which will trigger a `internal-type` lint error
that can be disabled project-wide, or use
`ExactReactElement_DEPRECATED`.
Fortunately in this case, this one can be replaced with just
`React.MixedElement`.
## How did you test this change?
`flow`
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/85fb95cdffdd95f2f908ee71974cae06b1c866e1.
Persistent renderers used the `Update` effect flag to check if a subtree
needs to be cloned. In some cases, that causes extra renders, such as
when a layout effect is triggered which only has an effect on the JS
side, but doesn't update the host components.
It's been a bit tricky to find the right places where this needs to be
set and I'm not 100% sure I got all the cases even though the tests
passed.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/5fb67fa25c4ea8be046c6d9af41047f3cc379279.
We use static dependency injection. We shouldn't use this dynamic
dependency injection we do for DevTools internals. There's also meta
programming like spreading and stuff that isn't needed.
This moves the config from `injectIntoDevTools` to the FiberConfig so it
can be statically resolved.
Closure Compiler has some trouble generating optimal code for this
anyway so ideally we'd refactor this further but at least this is better
and saves a few bytes and avoids some code paths (when minified).
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/146df7c311831a1d5b35f3783dae4a7030638fcf.
This is not used by DevTools since it has its own implementation of it.
This function is getting removed since `findDOMNode` is getting removed
so we shouldn't keep around extra bytes unnecessarily.
There is also `findHostInstancesForRefresh` which should really be
implemented on the `react-refresh` side. Not using an injection but
that's a heavier lift and only affects `__DEV__`.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/bea5a2bc46cc95713392175c3c6307e49c14cd98.
There is currently a mismatch in how the persistent mode JS API and the
Fabric native code interpret `completeRoot`.
This is a short-lived experiment to see the effect of moving the Fabric
`completeRoot` call from `finalizeContainerChildren` to
`replaceContainerChildren` which in some cases does not get called.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/6b82f3c9048ff0dd7e6d628dc5770faf85d32a87.
Following https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/30436
Concurrent by default strategy has been unshipped. Here we clean up the
`allowConcurrentByDefault` path and related logic/tests.
For now, this keeps the `concurrentUpdatesByDefaultOverride` argument in
`createContainer` and `createHydrationContainer` and ignores the value
to prevent more breaking changes to `react-reconciler` in the RC stage.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/14a4699ff173936a30ec453f7b94d47105bbb252.
Stacked on #30427.
Most hooks and such are called inside renders which already have these
on the stack but life-cycles that call out on them are useful to cut off
too.
Typically we don't create JSX in here so they wouldn't be part of owner
stacks anyway but they can be apart of plain stacks such as the ones
prefixes to console logs or printed by error dialogs.
This lets us cut off any React internals below. This should really be
possible using just ignore listing too ideally.
At this point we should maybe just build a Babel plugin that lets us
annotate a function to need to have this name.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/da4abf0047cf6dc6d9bff505bd93815264c8c3b7.
Ideally we wouldn't need to filter out React internals and it'd just be
covered by ignore listing by any downstream tool. E.g. a framework using
captureOwnerStack could have its own ignore listing. Printed owner
stacks would get browser source map ignore-listing. React DevTools could
have its own ignore list for internals. However, it's nice to be able to
provide nice owner stacks without a bunch of noise by default.
Especially on the server since they have to be serialized.
We currently call each function that calls into user space and track its
stack frame. However, this needs code for checking each one and doesn't
let us work across bundles.
Instead, we can name each of these frame something predictable by giving
the function a name.
Unfortunately, it's a common practice to rename functions or inline them
in compilers. Even if we didn't, others downstream from us or a dev-mode
minifier could. I use this `.bind()` trick to avoid minifying these
functions and ensure they get a unique name added to them in all
browsers. It's not 100% fool proof since a smart enough compiler could
also discover that the `this` value is not used and strip out the
function and then inline it but nobody does this yet at least.
This lets us find the bottom stack easily from stack traces just by
looking for the name.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/792f1921145e51bd06b836ffa0a16ecc39c8ee82.
## Summary
This PR fixes the `fastAddProperties` function. Now it nullifies a prop
if it was defined in one of the items of a style array, but then set to
`undefined` or `null` in one of the subsequent items. E.g. `style:
[{top: 0}, {top: undefined}]` should evaluate to `{top: null}`. Also
added a test case for that.
## How did you test this change?
```
yarn test packages/react-native-renderer -r=xplat --variant=false
yarn test packages/react-native-renderer -r=xplat --variant=true
yarn flow native
```
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/f510ece86d4621d3b0faf9fe59d850f7807dbb16.
Stacked on #30308.
This is now a noop module so we can stop applying the transform of
console.error using the Babel plugin in the mainline builds. I'm keeping
the transform for RN/WWW for now although it might be nice if the
transform moved into those systems as it gets synced instead of keeping
it upstream.
In jest tests we're already not running the forks for RN/WWW so we don't
need it at all there.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/ff89ba734668fdac06e8de476486830bbf9e0785.
In www, the experimental versions get a .modern.js or .classic.js prefix
and get copied into the same folder. In RN, they don't seem to have
.modern.js and .classic.js versions so they end up getting the same
name.
sebmarkbage's theory is that what happens is that they then override
the file that was already there. So depending on if experimental or
stable build finishes first you get a different version at the end.
It doesn't make sense to use `__EXPERIMENTAL__` for flags in native-fb
since there's no modern/classic split there. So that flag should just be
hardcoded to true or false and then it doesn't matter which one finishes
first.
We don't support experimental builds in OSS RN neither so the same thing
could happen with
[`enableOwnerStacks`](https://github.com/facebook/react/blob/5dcf3ca8d45a276a8b4cee0cedd234967661ca35/packages/shared/forks/ReactFeatureFlags.native-oss.js#L60).
You can see that the build errors in the previous PR but passes after
these flag changes.
ghstack-source-id: d10f37bcea
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/30322
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/ff3f1fac65e7b82efe3f90af42af1278bc6f1d5d.
The full stack is the current execution stack (`new Error().stack`) +
the current owner stack (`React.captureOwnerStack()`).
The idea with the top frame was that when we append it to console.error
we'd include both since otherwise the true reason would be obscured
behind the little `>` to expand. So we'd just put both stack front and
center. By adding this into getCurrentStack it was easy to use the same
filtering. I never implemented in Fizz or Flight though.
However, with the public API `React.captureOwnerStack()` it's not
necessary to include the current stack since you already have it and
you'd have filtering capabilities in user space too.
Since I'm removing the component stacks from React itself we no longer
need this. It's expected that maybe RDT or framework polyfill would
include this same technique though.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/433068eece2071a96de98b60f99ce6a9121a629c.
<!--
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## Summary
<!--
Explain the **motivation** for making this change. What existing problem
does the pull request solve?
-->
Now that HostContext determination for Fabric is a DEV-only behavior, we
can move the HostContext determination to resolve from the ViewConfig
for a given type. Doing this will allow arbitrary types to register
themselves as potential parents of raw text string children. This is the
first of two diffs for react as we'll:
1. Add the new property to the ViewConfig types
2. Update React Native to include the `supportsRawText` property for
`RCTText`, `RCTVirtualText`, `AndroidTextInput`, etc.
3. Switch the behavior of react to read from the ViewConfig rather than
a static list of types.
## How did you test this change?
<!--
Demonstrate the code is solid. Example: The exact commands you ran and
their output, screenshots / videos if the pull request changes the user
interface.
How exactly did you verify that your PR solves the issue you wanted to
solve?
If you leave this empty, your PR will very likely be closed.
-->
- yarn test
- yarn test --prod
- Pulled change into react-native, added `supportsRawText` props to
RCTText, RCTVirtualText, etc. ViewConfigs and confirmed everything type
checks.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/a5cc797b8801dfe58c7a34c99a9fa60c6c9c8274.
Object literals should be faster at least on React Native with Hermes as
the JS engine.
It might also be interesting to confirm the old comments in this file
from years ago are even still valid. Creating an object from a literal
should be a simpler operation.
It's a bit unfortunate that this introduces a bunch of copied code, but
since we rearely update the fields on fibers, this seems like an okay
tradeoff for a hot code path. An alternative would be some sort of macro
system, but that doesn't seem worth the extra complexity.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/fe9828954adcc51aa2bd21fe53d969a44dd3c9d2.
We're removing this wrapper from the mainline but RN is still using
component stacks to filter out warnings.
This is unfortunate since it'll be hard to keep track of the interplay
with these, DevTools and how you're supposed to implement error dialogs
in userspace.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/9647333b3d5a5d2a3ca7fe2a78d2d3da24bc4984.
Currently we're printing parent stacks at the end of DOM nesting even
with owner stacks enabled. That's because the context of parent tree is
relevant for determining why two things are nested. It might not be
sufficient to see the owner stack alone.
I'm trying to get rid of parent stacks and rely on more of the plain
owner stacks or ideally console.createTask. These are generally better
anyway since the exact line for creating the JSX is available. It also
lets you find a parent stack frame that is most relevant e.g. if it's
hidden inside internals.
For DOM nesting there's really only two stacks that are relevant. The
creation of the parent and the creation of the child. Sometimes they're
close enough to be the same thing. Such as for parents that can't have
text children or when the ancestor is the direct parent created at the
same place (same owner).
Sometimes they're far apart. In this case I add a second console.error
within the context of the ancestor. That way the second stack trace can
be used to read the stack trace for where it was created.
To preserve some parent context I now print the parent stack in a diff
view format using the logic from hydration diffs. This includes some
siblings and props for context.
<img width="756" alt="Screenshot 2024-07-10 at 12 21 38 AM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/0843133d-cc7a-4ecc-91c0-f46ae8e99f20">
Text Nodes:
<img width="749" alt="Screenshot 2024-07-10 at 12 37 40 AM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/ee377d82-54ee-450a-99d1-fcc3ef290d59">
---------
Co-authored-by: tjallingt <tjallingt@gmail.com>
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/2d3f81bb6a650386832d885d7b63a7d0d517ba15.
This marker can then be emitted as a getter. When this object gets
accessed we use a special error to let the user know what is going on.
<img width="1350" alt="Screenshot 2024-07-08 at 10 13 46 PM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/e3eb698f-e02d-4394-a051-ba9ac3236480">
When you click the `...`:
<img width="1357" alt="Screenshot 2024-07-08 at 10 13 56 PM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/4b8ce1cf-d762-49a4-97b9-aeeb1aa8722c">
I also increased the object limit in console logs. It was arbitrarily
set very low before.
These limits are per message. So if you have a loop of many logs it can
quickly add up a lot of strain on the server memory and the client. This
is trying to find some tradeoff. Unfortunately we don't really do much
deduping in these logs so with cyclic objects it ends up maximizing the
limit and then siblings aren't logged.
Ideally we should be able to lazy load them but that requires a lot of
plumbing to wire up so if we can avoid it we should try to. If we want
to that though one idea is to use the getter to do a sync XHR to load
more data but the server needs to retain the objects in memory for an
unknown amount of time. The client could maybe send a signal to retain
them until a weakref clean up but even then it kind of needs a heartbeat
to let the server know the client is still alive. That's a lot of
complexity. There's probably more we can do to optimize deduping and
other parts of the protocol to make it possible to have even higher
limits.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/14fdd0e21c420deb4bb96fc1e9021b531543d15a.
This was missed in the mount dev dispatcher. It was only in the rerender
dispatcher which means that it was only logged during the rerender.
Since DevTools can hide logs during rerenders, this hid the warning in
StrictMode.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/274c980c535bb34e17f5d97cc22ef4dd296ab413.
This is the same change as in #30289 but for the main runtime - e.g.
parent stacks in errorInfo.componentStack, appended stacks to
console.error coming from React itself and when we add virtual frames to
owner stacks.
Since we don't add location information these frames look weird to some
stack parsers - such as the native one. This is an existing issue when
you want to use some off-the-shelf parsers to parse production component
stacks for example.
While we won't add Error objects to logs ourselves necessarily, some
third party could want to do the same thing we do in DevTools and so we
should provide the same capability to just take this trace and print it
using an Error object.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/df783f9ea1b6f95e05f830602da1de5ffb325d30.
Follow up to #30105.
This supports `renderToMarkup` in a non-RSC environment (not the
`react-server` condition).
This is just a Fizz renderer but it errors at runtime when you use
state, effects or event handlers that would require hydration - like the
RSC version would. (Except RSC can give early errors too.)
To do this I have to move the `react-html` builds to a new `markup`
dimension out of the `dom-legacy` dimension so that we can configure
this differently from `renderToString`/`renderToStaticMarkup`.
Eventually that dimension can go away though if deprecated. That also
helps us avoid dynamic configuration and we can just compile in the
right configuration so the split helps anyway.
One consideration is that if a compiler strips out useEffects or inlines
initial state from useState, then it would not get called an the error
wouldn't happen. Therefore to preserve semantics, a compiler would need
to inject some call that can check the current renderer and whether it
should throw.
There is an argument that it could be useful to not error for these
because it's possible to write components that works with SSR but are
just optionally hydrated. However, there's also an argument that doing
that silently is too easy to lead to mistakes and it's better to error -
especially for the e-mail use case where you can't take it back but you
can replay a queue that had failures. There are other ways to
conditionally branch components intentionally. Besides if you want it to
be silent you can still use renderToString (or better yet
renderToReadableStream).
The primary mechanism is the RSC environment and the client-environment
is really the secondary one that's only there to support legacy
environments. So this also ensures parity with the primary environment.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/1e241f9d6c5f7d0e875b19a99c83cd6197fa62f7.
This is all behind the `enableOwnerStacks` flag.
This is a follow up to #29088. In that I moved type validation into the
renderer since that's the one that knows what types are allowed.
However, I only removed it from `React.createElement` and not the JSX
which was an oversight.
However, I also noticed that for invalid types we don't have the right
stack trace for throws because we're not yet inside the JSX element that
itself is invalid. We should use its stack for the stack trace. That's
the reason it's enough to just use the throw now because we can get a
good stack trace from the owner stack. This is fixed by creating a fake
Throw Fiber that gets assigned the right stack.
Additionally, I noticed that for certain invalid types like the most
common one `undefined` we error in Flight so a missing import in RSC
leads to a generic error. Instead of erroring on the Flight side we
should just let anything that's not a Server Component through to the
client and then let the Client renderer determine whether it's a valid
type or not. Since we now have owner stacks through the server too, this
will still be able to provide a good stack trace on the client that
points to the server in that case.
<img width="571" alt="Screenshot 2024-06-25 at 6 46 35 PM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/6812c24f-e274-4e09-b4de-21deda9ea1d4">
To get the best stack you have to expand the little icon and the regular
stack is noisy [due to this Chrome
bug](https://issues.chromium.org/issues/345248263) which makes it a
little harder to find but once that's fixed it might be easier.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/e02baf6c92833a0d45a77fb2e741676f393c24f7.
Name of the package is tbd (straw: `react-html`). It's a new package
separate from `react-dom` though and can be used as a standalone package
- e.g. also from a React Native app.
```js
import {renderToMarkup} from '...';
const html = await renderToMarkup(<Component />);
```
The idea is that this is a helper for rendering HTML that is not
intended to be hydrated. It's primarily intended to support a subset of
HTML that can be used as embedding and not served as HTML documents from
HTTP. For example as e-mails or in RSS/Atom feeds or other
distributions. It's a successor to `renderToStaticMarkup`.
A few differences:
- This doesn't support "Client Components". It can only use the Server
Components subset. No useEffect, no useState etc. since it will never be
hydrated. Use of those are errors.
- You also can't pass Client References so you can't use components
marked with `"use client"`.
- Unlike `renderToStaticMarkup` this does support async so you can
suspend and use data from these components.
- Unlike `renderToReadableStream` this does not support streaming or
Suspense boundaries and any error rejects the promise. Since there's no
feasible way to "client render" or patch up the document.
- Form Actions are not supported since in an embedded environment
there's no place to post back to across versions. You can render plain
forms with fixed URLs though.
- You can't use any resource preloading like `preload()` from
`react-dom`.
## Implementation
This first version in this PR only supports Server Components since
that's the thing that doesn't have an existing API. Might add a Client
Components version later that errors.
We don't want to maintain a completely separate implementation for this
use case so this uses the `dom-legacy` build dimension to wire up a
build that encapsulates a Flight Server -> Flight Client -> Fizz stream
to render Server Components that then get SSR:ed.
There's no problem to use a Flight Client in a Server Component
environment since it's already supported for Server-to-Server. Both of
these use a bundler config that just errors for Client References though
since we don't need any bundling integration and this is just a
standalone package.
Running Fizz in a Server Component environment is a problem though
because it depends on "react" and it needs the client version.
Therefore, for this build we embed the client version of "react" shared
internals into the build. It doesn't need anything to be able to use
those APIs since you can't call the client APIs anyway.
One unfortunate thing though is that since Flight currently needs to go
to binary and back, we need TextEncoder/TextDecoder to be available but
this shouldn't really be necessary. Also since we use the legacy stream
config, large strings that use byteLengthOfChunk errors atm. This needs
to be fixed before shipping. I'm not sure what would be the best
layering though that isn't unnecessarily burdensome to maintain. Maybe
some kind of pass-through protocol that would also be useful in general
- e.g. when Fizz and Flight are in the same process.
---------
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Silbermann <silbermann.sebastian@gmail.com>
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/ffec9ec5b5c846f61d7b40e92f138e2a7b34f273.
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## Summary
<!--
Explain the **motivation** for making this change. What existing problem
does the pull request solve?
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In the Fabric renderer in React Native, we only use the HostContext to
issue soft errors in __DEV__ bundles when attempting to add a raw text
child to a node that may not support them. Moving the logic to set this
context to __DEV__ bundles only unblocks more expensive methods for
resolving whether a parent context supports raw text children, like
resolving this information from `getViewConfigForType`.
## How did you test this change?
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Demonstrate the code is solid. Example: The exact commands you ran and
their output, screenshots / videos if the pull request changes the user
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yarn test (--prod)
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/3154ec8a38e6014090039be54e0ca597fa967fdd.
That way we get owner stacks (native or otherwise) for `console.error`
or `console.warn` inside of them.
Since the `reportError` is also called within this context, we also get
them for errors thrown within event listeners. You'll also be able to
observe this in in the `error` event. Similar to how `onUncaughtError`
is in the scope of the instance that errored - even though
`onUncaughtError` doesn't kick in for event listeners.
Chrome (from console.createTask):
<img width="306" alt="Screenshot 2024-06-12 at 2 08 19 PM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/34cd9d57-0df4-44df-a470-e89a5dd1b07d">
<img width="302" alt="Screenshot 2024-06-12 at 2 03 32 PM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/678117b1-e03a-47d4-9989-8350212c8135">
Firefox (from React DevTools):
<img width="493" alt="Screenshot 2024-06-12 at 2 05 01 PM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/94ca224d-354a-4ec8-a886-5740bcb418e5">
(This is the parent stack since React DevTools doesn't just yet print
owner stack.)
(Firefox doesn't print the component stack for uncaught since we don't
add component stacks for "error" events from React DevTools - just
console.error. Perhaps an oversight.)
If we didn't have the synthetic event system this would kind of just
work natively in Chrome because we have this task active when we attach
the event listeners to the DOM node and async stacks just follow along
that way. In fact, if you attach a manual listener in useEffect you get
this same effect. It's just because we use event delegation that this
doesn't work.
However, if we did get rid of the synthetic event system we'd likely
still want to add a wrapper on the DOM node to set our internal current
owner so that the non-native part of the system still can observe the
active instance. That wouldn't work with manually attached listeners
though.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/195d5bb99e366889f0905779a0f9432d1624f999.
Stacked on #29807.
Conceptually the error's owner/task should ideally be captured when the
Error constructor is called but neither `console.createTask` does this,
nor do we override `Error` to capture our `owner`. So instead, we use
the nearest parent as the owner/task of the error. This is usually the
same thing when it's thrown from the same async component but not if you
await a promise started from a different component/task.
Before this stack the "owner" and "task" of a Lazy that errors was the
nearest Fiber but if the thing erroring is a Server Component, we need
to get that as the owner from the inner most part of debugInfo.
To get the Task for that Server Component, we need to expose it on the
ReactComponentInfo object. Unfortunately that makes the object not
serializable so we need to special case this to exclude it from
serialization. It gets restored again on the client.
Before (Shell):
<img width="813" alt="Screenshot 2024-06-06 at 5 16 20 PM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/7da2d4c9-539b-494e-ba63-1abdc58ff13c">
After (App):
<img width="811" alt="Screenshot 2024-06-08 at 12 29 23 AM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/dbf40bd7-c24d-4200-81a6-5018bef55f6d">
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/383b2a18456215d2d3ec46f33c0c912e84efa08f.
This lets us rethrow it in the conceptual place of the child.
There's currently a problem when we suspend or throw in the child fiber
reconciliation phase. This work is done by the parent component, so if
it suspends or errors it is as if that component errored or suspended.
However, conceptually it's like a child suspended or errored.
In theory any thing can throw but it is really mainly due to either
`React.lazy` (both in the element.type position and node position),
`Thenable`s or the `Thenable`s that make up `AsyncIterable`s.
Mainly this happens because a Server Component that errors turns into a
`React.lazy`. In practice this means that if you have a Server Component
as the direct child of an Error Boundary. Errors inside of it won't be
caught.
We used to have the same problem with Thenables and Suspense but because
it's now always nested inside an inner Offscreen boundary that shields
it by being one level nested. However, when we have raw Offscreen
(Activity) boundaries they should also be able to catch the suspense if
it's in a hidden state so the problem returns. This fixes it for thrown
promises but it doesn't fix it for SuspenseException. I'm not sure this
is even the right strategy for Suspense though. It kind of relies on the
node never actually mounting/committing.
It's conceptually a little tricky because the current component can
inspect the children and make decisions based on them. Such as
SuspenseList.
The other thing that this PR tries to address is that it sets the
foundation for dealing with error reporting for Server Components that
errored. If something client side errors it'll be a stack like Server
(DebugInfo) -> Fiber -> Fiber -> Server -> (DebugInfo) -> Fiber.
However, all error reporting relies on it eventually terminating into a
Fiber that is responsible for the error. To avoid having to fork too
much it would be nice if I could create a Fiber to associate with the
error so that even a Server component error in this case ultimately
terminates in a Fiber.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/270229f0c337dc652f07ef27d2254bb922bfaa9e.
Basically make `console.error` and `console.warn` behave like normal -
when a component stack isn't appended. I need this because I need to be
able to print rich logs with the component stack option and to be able
to disable instrumentation completely in `console.createTask`
environments that don't need it.
Currently we can't print logs with richer objects because they're
toString:ed first. In practice, pretty much all arguments we log are
already toString:ed so it's not necessary anyway. Some might be like a
number. So it would only be a problem if some environment can't handle
proper consoles but then it's up to that environment to toString it
before logging.
The `Warning: ` prefix is historic and is both noisy and confusing. It's
mostly unnecessary since the UI surrounding `console.error` and
`console.warn` tend to have visual treatment around it anyway. However,
it's actively misleading when `console.error` gets prefixed with a
Warning that we consider an error level. There's an argument to be made
that some of our `console.error` don't make the bar for an error but
then the argument is to downgrade each of those to `console.warn` - not
to brand all our actual error logging with `Warning: `.
Apparently something needs to change in React Native before landing this
because it depends on the prefix somehow which probably doesn't make
sense already.
DiffTrain build for commit https://github.com/facebook/react/commit/277420803947724b43c47bbc47d3a353553868f1.