Commit Graph

5363 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jack Pope bb66aa3cef Use concurrent root in RTR (#28498)
Based on
- https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/28497
- https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/28419

Reusing the disableLegacyMode flag, we set ReactTestRenderer to always
render with concurrent root where legacy APIs are no longer available.
If disableLegacyMode is false, we continue to allow the
unstable_isConcurrent option determine the root type.

Also checking a global `IS_REACT_NATIVE_TEST_ENVIRONMENT` so we can
maintain the existing behavior for RN until we remove legacy root
support there.
2024-03-26 18:53:09 -04:00
Jack Pope 1f9befef5c Remove react-test-renderer/shallow export (#28497)
Based on
- https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/28419

## Summary

The shallow renderer was extracted from the repo years ago and published
by enzyme: https://github.com/enzymejs/react-shallow-renderer

We no longer need to reexport under the react-test-renderer namespace.
People can import `react-shallow-renderer` as needed

## How did you test this change?

- Observe shallow.js in react-test-renderer package from standard build
- Run build with changes on this branch
- Observe no more shallow.js export in build output
2024-03-26 18:04:47 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge 84c84d72f1 Remove enableClientRenderFallbackOnTextMismatch flag (#28458)
Build on top of #28440.

This lets us remove the path where updates are tracked on differences in
text.
2024-03-26 17:55:14 -04:00
Jack Pope f73d11f092 [RTR] Enable warning flag (#28419)
## Summary

Based on
- https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/27903

This PR
- Silence warning in React tests
- Turn on flag

We want to finish cleaning up internal RTR usage, but let's prioritize
the deprecation process. We do this by silencing the internal warning
for now.

## How did you test this change?

`yarn build`
`yarn test ReactHooksInspectionIntegration -b`
2024-03-26 17:44:31 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge 670d61bea2 Remove legacy hydration mode (#28440)
While Meta is still using legacy mode and we can't remove completely,
Meta is not using legacy hydration so we should be able to remove that.

This is just the first step. Once removed, we can vastly simplify the
DOMConfig for hydration.

This will have to be rebased when tests are upgraded.
2024-03-26 17:41:49 -04:00
Ricky dbfbfb3312 Update error messages (#28652)
## Overview

The error messages that say:

> ReactDOM.hydrate is no longer supported in React 18

Don't make sense in the React 19 release. Instead, they should say:

> ReactDOM.hydrate was removed in React 19.

For legacy mode, they should say:

> ReactDOM.hydrate has not been supported since React 18.
2024-03-26 17:25:53 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge f24cf4a1af Remove zoom from special cases list (#26631)
Looks like [it's getting removed
anyway](https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/g/blink-dev/c/V7q43bgutbo/m/-7jneTl8CQAJ?pli=1).

Maybe should wait for a major though.
2024-03-26 17:19:02 -04:00
Ricky 1a6d36b1a3 Remove unmountComponentAtNode outside of legacy mode (#28650) 2024-03-26 16:32:43 -04:00
Andrew Clark 56efb2e227 Bump canary versions to v19-canary (#28646)
This bumps the canary versions to v19 to communicate that the next
release will be a major. Once this lands, we can start merging breaking
changes into `main`.
2024-03-26 15:31:57 -04:00
Jack Pope 738993da0b Turn on enableRenderableContext in experimental (#28645)
Let's get this into experimental to get more usage and allow other
renderers to test against the changes easier.
2024-03-26 14:17:43 -04:00
Timothy Yung 6fd0cb9a9f Cleanup alwaysThrottleDisappearingFallbacks Flag (#28639)
## Summary

After realizing that this feature flag is entangled with
`alwaysThrottleRetries`, we're going to undo
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/28550

## How did you test this change?

```
$ yarn test
$ yarn flow dom-browser
$ yarn flow dom-fb
$ yarn flow fabric
```
2024-03-26 10:01:38 -07:00
Ricky c3048aab4c Fix tests on main (#28643)
Not sure how these broke when merging
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/28299 and
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/28361
2024-03-26 11:26:42 -04:00
Ruslan Lesiutin 75de4ff72a fix[devtools/ci]: split profiling cache test for different react versions and toEqual checker (#28628)
This should fix the failing backwards-compatibility tests on CI:
-
https://app.circleci.com/pipelines/github/facebook/react/51347/workflows/9d319db5-7a29-4e9a-a3a0-8d49a24ee9bd/jobs/809381
-
https://app.circleci.com/pipelines/github/facebook/react/51347/workflows/9d319db5-7a29-4e9a-a3a0-8d49a24ee9bd/jobs/809386

Started failing after https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/27991.

Brief summary:
1. Revert changes to `profilingCache-test` in
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/27991.
2. Scope previous test to react versions 16.9 - 18.2
3. Add a new test for react versions > 18.2 (includes testing react from
souce), which is also gated with `!disableLegacyContext`.

> [!IMPORTANT]
> `@gate` pragma expects the test to throw. Jest doesn't throw any
exceptions when snapshots are mismatched, this is why I've migrated test
from `toMatchInlineSnapshot` checker to `toEqual`.
> If the test doesn't throw, we will fail it manually:
>
https://github.com/facebook/react/blob/5a75f9e78544fa6d052aff7fe99607e48f35b979/scripts/jest/setupTests.js#L291-L295
2024-03-26 10:55:07 +00:00
Ricky 07def0cc5a Add test for throttling suspended siblings (#28361)
# Overview

Adds a test to show the combination of the new throttling behavior and
not pre-rendering siblings results in pushing out content that could
have rendered much faster.

- Without the new throttling, the sibling content would render in 30ms.
- Without removing pre-rendering, the sibling content would render in
0ms.
- With both, the sibling content takes 600ms.

## Example


https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/2440089/abd62dc4-93f9-4b7b-a5aa-b795827c1a3a
2024-03-26 00:02:46 -04:00
Ricky 67e6fa6d17 Test for suspending with modern strict mode (#28513)
## Overview

Adds a test to show the cause of an infinite loop in Relay related to
[these effects in
Relay](https://github.com/facebook/relay/blob/448aa67d2a11e7d45cd7b4492b9f599b498cb39e/packages/react-relay/relay-hooks/useLazyLoadQueryNode.js#L77-L104)
and `useModernStrictMode`. The bug is related to effect behavior when
committing trees that re-suspend after initial mount.

With `useModernStrictEffect`, when you:
- initial mount
- update
- suspend (to fallbacks)
- resolve
- re-commit

We fire strict effects during the second mount, like it's a new tree.
This creates weird cases, where if there was an update while we
suspended, we'll first fire only the effects that changed dependencies,
and then fire strict effects.

Creating a test to demonstrate the behavior to see if it's a bug.
2024-03-26 00:02:16 -04:00
Ricky d3037405c4 Test showing mismatches after suspending force fallbacks to be shown (#28299)
While investigating https://github.com/facebook/react/issues/28285 I
found a possible bug in handling Suspense and mismatches. As the tests
show, if the first sibling in a boundary suspends, and the second has a
mismatch, we will NOT show a fallback. If the first sibling is a
mismatch, and the second sibling suspends, we WILL show a fallback.

[Here's a stackbliz showing the behavior on
Canary](https://stackblitz.com/edit/stackblitz-starters-bh3snf?file=src%2Fstyle.css,public%2Findex.html,src%2Findex.tsx).

This breakage was introduced by:
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/26380. Before this PR, we would
not show a fallback in either case. That PR makes it so that we don't
pre-render siblings of suspended trees, so presumably, whatever
detection we had to avoid fallbacks on mismatches, requires knowing
there's a mismatch in the tree when we suspend.
2024-03-25 20:33:31 -04:00
Jan Kassens 5a75f9e785 Make enableBigIntSupport a dynamic flag for Meta (#28617)
Make enableBigIntSupport a dynamic flag for Meta

Should be an easy launch, but let's make this a dynamic flag to be safe.
2024-03-25 13:48:22 -04:00
Jan Kassens 527ed72bfd Cleanup enableFormActions flag (#28614)
Cleanup enableFormActions flag
2024-03-25 13:25:14 -04:00
Sebastian Silbermann e373190faf Guard against legacy context not being supported in DevTools fixture (#28596) 2024-03-25 14:30:08 +01:00
Jan Kassens f09e1599d6 Fix test after merge conflict (#28616)
Something went wrong when rebasing #28491  and renaming the hook.
2024-03-22 14:05:55 -04:00
Ricky 5c65b27587 Add React.useActionState (#28491)
## Overview

_Depends on https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/28514_

This PR adds a new React hook called `useActionState` to replace and
improve the ReactDOM `useFormState` hook.

## Motivation

This hook intends to fix some of the confusion and limitations of the
`useFormState` hook.

The `useFormState` hook is only exported from the `ReactDOM` package and
implies that it is used only for the state of `<form>` actions, similar
to `useFormStatus` (which is only for `<form>` element status). This
leads to understandable confusion about why `useFormState` does not
provide a `pending` state value like `useFormStatus` does.

The key insight is that the `useFormState` hook does not actually return
the state of any particular form at all. Instead, it returns the state
of the _action_ passed to the hook, wrapping it and returning a
trackable action to add to a form, and returning the last returned value
of the action given. In fact, `useFormState` doesn't need to be used in
a `<form>` at all.

Thus, adding a `pending` value to `useFormState` as-is would thus be
confusing because it would only return the pending state of the _action_
given, not the `<form>` the action is passed to. Even if we wanted to
tie them together, the returned `action` can be passed to multiple
forms, creating confusing and conflicting pending states during multiple
form submissions.

Additionally, since the action is not related to any particular
`<form>`, the hook can be used in any renderer - not only `react-dom`.
For example, React Native could use the hook to wrap an action, pass it
to a component that will unwrap it, and return the form result state and
pending state. It's renderer agnostic.

To fix these issues, this PR:
- Renames `useFormState` to `useActionState`
- Adds a `pending` state to the returned tuple
- Moves the hook to the `'react'` package

## Reference

The `useFormState` hook allows you to track the pending state and return
value of a function (called an "action"). The function passed can be a
plain JavaScript client function, or a bound server action to a
reference on the server. It accepts an optional `initialState` value
used for the initial render, and an optional `permalink` argument for
renderer specific pre-hydration handling (such as a URL to support
progressive hydration in `react-dom`).

Type:

```ts
function useActionState<State>(
        action: (state: Awaited<State>) => State | Promise<State>,
        initialState: Awaited<State>,
        permalink?: string,
    ): [state: Awaited<State>, dispatch: () => void, boolean];
```

The hook returns a tuple with:
- `state`: the last state the action returned
- `dispatch`: the method to call to dispatch the wrapped action
- `pending`: the pending state of the action and any state updates
contained

Notably, state updates inside of the action dispatched are wrapped in a
transition to keep the page responsive while the action is completing
and the UI is updated based on the result.

## Usage

The `useActionState` hook can be used similar to `useFormState`:

```js
import { useActionState } from "react"; // not react-dom

function Form({ formAction }) {
  const [state, action, isPending] = useActionState(formAction);

  return (
    <form action={action}>
      <input type="email" name="email" disabled={isPending} />
      <button type="submit" disabled={isPending}>
        Submit
      </button>
      {state.errorMessage && <p>{state.errorMessage}</p>}
    </form>
  );
}
```

But it doesn't need to be used with a `<form/>` (neither did
`useFormState`, hence the confusion):

```js
import { useActionState, useRef } from "react";

function Form({ someAction }) {
  const ref = useRef(null);
  const [state, action, isPending] = useActionState(someAction);

  async function handleSubmit() {
    // See caveats below
    await action({ email: ref.current.value });
  }

  return (
    <div>
      <input ref={ref} type="email" name="email" disabled={isPending} />
      <button onClick={handleSubmit} disabled={isPending}>
        Submit
      </button>
      {state.errorMessage && <p>{state.errorMessage}</p>}
    </div>
  );
}
```

## Benefits

One of the benefits of using this hook is the automatic tracking of the
return value and pending states of the wrapped function. For example,
the above example could be accomplished via:

```js
import { useActionState, useRef } from "react";

function Form({ someAction }) {
  const ref = useRef(null);
  const [state, setState] = useState(null);
  const [isPending, setIsPending] = useTransition();

  function handleSubmit() {
    startTransition(async () => {
      const response = await someAction({ email: ref.current.value });
      setState(response);
    });
  }

  return (
    <div>
      <input ref={ref} type="email" name="email" disabled={isPending} />
      <button onClick={handleSubmit} disabled={isPending}>
        Submit
      </button>
      {state.errorMessage && <p>{state.errorMessage}</p>}
    </div>
  );
}
```

However, this hook adds more benefits when used with render specific
elements like react-dom `<form>` elements and Server Action. With
`<form>` elements, React will automatically support replay actions on
the form if it is submitted before hydration has completed, providing a
form of partial progressive enhancement: enhancement for when javascript
is enabled but not ready.

Additionally, with the `permalink` argument and Server Actions,
frameworks can provide full progressive enhancement support, submitting
the form to the URL provided along with the FormData from the form. On
submission, the Server Action will be called during the MPA navigation,
similar to any raw HTML app, server rendered, and the result returned to
the client without any JavaScript on the client.

## Caveats
There are a few Caveats to this new hook:
**Additional state update**: Since we cannot know whether you use the
pending state value returned by the hook, the hook will always set the
`isPending` state at the beginning of the first chained action,
resulting in an additional state update similar to `useTransition`. In
the future a type-aware compiler could optimize this for when the
pending state is not accessed.

**Pending state is for the action, not the handler**: The difference is
subtle but important, the pending state begins when the return action is
dispatched and will revert back after all actions and transitions have
settled. The mechanism for this under the hook is the same as
useOptimisitic.

Concretely, what this means is that the pending state of
`useActionState` will not represent any actions or sync work performed
before dispatching the action returned by `useActionState`. Hopefully
this is obvious based on the name and shape of the API, but there may be
some temporary confusion.

As an example, let's take the above example and await another action
inside of it:

```js
import { useActionState, useRef } from "react";

function Form({ someAction, someOtherAction }) {
  const ref = useRef(null);
  const [state, action, isPending] = useActionState(someAction);

  async function handleSubmit() {
    await someOtherAction();

    // The pending state does not start until this call.
    await action({ email: ref.current.value });
  }

  return (
    <div>
      <input ref={ref} type="email" name="email" disabled={isPending} />
      <button onClick={handleSubmit} disabled={isPending}>
        Submit
      </button>
      {state.errorMessage && <p>{state.errorMessage}</p>}
    </div>
  );
}

```

Since the pending state is related to the action, and not the handler or
form it's attached to, the pending state only changes when the action is
dispatched. To solve, there are two options.

First (recommended): place the other function call inside of the action
passed to `useActionState`:

```js
import { useActionState, useRef } from "react";

function Form({ someAction, someOtherAction }) {
  const ref = useRef(null);
  const [state, action, isPending] = useActionState(async (data) => {
    // Pending state is true already.
    await someOtherAction();
    return someAction(data);
  });

  async function handleSubmit() {
    // The pending state starts at this call.
    await action({ email: ref.current.value });
  }

  return (
    <div>
      <input ref={ref} type="email" name="email" disabled={isPending} />
      <button onClick={handleSubmit} disabled={isPending}>
        Submit
      </button>
      {state.errorMessage && <p>{state.errorMessage}</p>}
    </div>
  );
}
```

For greater control, you can also wrap both in a transition and use the
`isPending` state of the transition:

```js
import { useActionState, useTransition, useRef } from "react";

function Form({ someAction, someOtherAction }) {
  const ref = useRef(null);

  // isPending is used from the transition wrapping both action calls.
  const [isPending, startTransition] = useTransition();

  // isPending not used from the individual action.
  const [state, action] = useActionState(someAction);

  async function handleSubmit() {
    startTransition(async () => {
      // The transition pending state has begun.
      await someOtherAction();
      await action({ email: ref.current.value });
    });
  }

  return (
    <div>
      <input ref={ref} type="email" name="email" disabled={isPending} />
      <button onClick={handleSubmit} disabled={isPending}>
        Submit
      </button>
      {state.errorMessage && <p>{state.errorMessage}</p>}
    </div>
  );
}
```

A similar technique using `useOptimistic` is preferred over using
`useTransition` directly, and is left as an exercise to the reader.

## Thanks

Thanks to @ryanflorence @mjackson @wesbos
(https://github.com/facebook/react/issues/27980#issuecomment-1960685940)
and [Allan
Lasser](https://allanlasser.com/posts/2024-01-26-avoid-using-reacts-useformstatus)
for their feedback and suggestions on `useFormStatus` hook.
2024-03-22 13:03:44 -04:00
Ricky fabd6d3a64 Better NEXT_MAJOR support for RN flags (#28583)
The `__NEXT_MAJOR__` value in the RN flags doesn't make sense because:

a) The flags are for the next RN major, since it only impacts the
renderers
b) The flags are off, so they're not currently in the next major, they
need enabled
c) the flag script didn't support it

This PR adds two aliases to the RN file:
- `__TODO_NEXT_RN_MAJOR__`: flags that need enabled before the next RN
major.
- `__NEXT_RN_MAJOR__`: flags that have been enabled since the last RN
major.

These values will need to be manually kept up to date when we cut a RN
version, but once RN switches to the canary build and aligns all the
flags, this entire file can be deleted.

## Script screen
Notably, I added a TODO value and a legend that prints at the end of the
script:

<img width="1078" alt="Screenshot 2024-03-18 at 8 11 27 PM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/2440089/14da9066-f77d-437f-8188-830a31a843c5">
2024-03-22 13:02:04 -04:00
Ricky fa0efa1ae3 Update RN dynamic flag types (#28427)
Updates the RN flag flow types to work like www does, so we can use the
`.native-fb-dynamic.js` file as the type/shim for the dynamically
imported file.
2024-03-22 12:23:38 -04:00
Jan Kassens 208ceeb46c Cleanup enableFloat flag (#28613)
Cleanup enableFloat flag
2024-03-22 12:22:30 -04:00
Jan Kassens 6708115937 Use declare const instead of declare var (#28599)
Use `declare const` instead of `declare var`
2024-03-22 11:20:18 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge fee786a057 [Fizz] Recover from errors thrown by progressive enhancement form generation (#28611)
This a follow up to #28564. It's alternative to #28609 which takes
#28610 into account.

It used to be possible to return JSX from an action with
`useActionState`.

```js
async function action(errors, payload) {
  "use server";
  try {
    ...
  } catch (x) {
    return <div>Error message</div>;
  }
}
```

```js
const [errors, formAction] = useActionState(action);
return <div>{errors}</div>;
```

Returning JSX from an action is itself not anything problematic. It's
that it also has to return the previous state to the action reducer
again that's the problem. When this happens we accidentally could
serialize an Element back to the server.

I fixed this in #28564 so it's now blocked if you don't have a temporary
reference set.

However, you can't have that for the progressive enhancement case. The
reply is eagerly encoded as part of the SSR render. Typically you
wouldn't have these in the initial state so the common case is that they
show up after the first POST back that yields an error and it's only in
the no-JS case where this happens so it's hard to discover.

As noted in #28609 there's a security implication with allowing elements
to be sent across this kind of payload, so we can't just make it work.

When an error happens during SSR our general policy is to try to recover
on the client instead. After all, SSR is mainly a perf optimization in
React terms and it's not primarily intended for a no JS solution.

This PR takes the approach that if we fail to generate the progressive
enhancement payload. I.e. if the serialization of previous state /
closures throw. Then we fallback to the replaying semantics just client
actions instead which will succeed.

The effect of this is that this pattern mostly just works:

- First render in the typical case doesn't have any JSX in it so it just
renders a progressive enhanced form.
- If JS fails to hydrate or you click early we do a form POST. If that
hits an error and it tries to render it using JSX, then the new page
will render successfully - however this time with a Replaying form
instead.
- If you try to submit the form again it'll have to be using JS.

Meaning if you use JSX as the error return value of form state and you
make a first attempt that fails, then no JS won't work because either
the first or second attempt has to hydrate.

We have ideas for potentially optimizing away serializing unused
arguments like if you don't actually use previous state which would also
solve it but it wouldn't cover all cases such as if it was deeply nested
in complex state.

Another approach that I considered was to poison the prev state if you
passed an element back but let it through to the action but if you try
to render the poisoned value, it wouldn't work. The downside of this is
when to error. Because in the progressive enhancement case it wouldn't
error early but when you actually try to invoke it at which point it
would be too late to fallback to client replaying. It would probably
have to always error even on the client which is unfortunate since this
mostly just works as long as it hydrates.
2024-03-21 19:51:38 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge 72e02a8350 [Flight Reply] Don't allow Symbols to be passed to a reply (#28610)
As mentioned in #28609 there's a potential security risk if you allow a
passed value to the server to spoof Elements because it allows a hacker
to POST cross origin. This is only an issue if your framework allows
this which it shouldn't but it seems like we should provide an extra
layer of security here.

```js
function action(errors, payload) {
  try {
    ...
  } catch (x) {
    return [newError].concat(errors);
  }
}
```
```js
const [errors, formAction] = useActionState(action);
return <div>{errors}</div>;
```
This would allow you to construct a payload where the previous "errors"
set includes something like `<script src="danger.js" />`.

We could block only elements from being received but it could
potentially be a risk with creating other React types like Context too.
We use symbols as a way to securely brand these.

Most JS don't use this kind of branding with symbols like we do. They're
generally properties which we don't support anyway. However in theory
someone else could be using them like we do. So in an abundance of
carefulness I just ban all symbols from being passed (except by
temporary reference) - not just ours.

This means that the format isn't fully symmetric even beyond just React
Nodes.

#28611 allows code that includes symbols/elements to continue working
but may have to bail out to replaying instead of no JS sometimes.
However, you still can't access the symbols inside the server - they're
by reference only.
2024-03-21 16:53:02 -04:00
Josh Story c47fee55d9 [Fizz][Legacy] use static markup mode for renderToStaticNodeStream (#28606)
Since it was first implemented renderToStaticNodeStream never correctly
set the renderer state to mark the output as static markup which means
it was functionally the same as renderToNodeStream. This change fixes
this oversight. While we are removing renderToNodeStream in a future
version we never did deprecate the static version of this API because it
has no immediate analog in the modern APIs.
2024-03-21 11:03:09 -07:00
Jack Pope 7263b4f80a Update RTR usage in ReactLazy-test (#28598)
- Make all test cases in ReactLazy use RTR with concurrent root
- Except, two cases with "legacy mode" specified in description. These
are moved to a separate description block where the disableLegacyMode
flag is turned off to allow RTR to use legacy root after
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/28498
2024-03-21 13:28:20 -04:00
Jack Pope a4939017ff Concurrent RTR in ReactHooksInspectionIntegration-test (#28549)
More test updates to use concurrent root in RTR

`yarn test
packages/react-debug-tools/src/__tests__/ReactHooksInspectionIntegration-test.js`
2024-03-20 11:15:32 -04:00
Sebastian Silbermann 8ef14cf242 Ensure dispatch from useFormState works in StrictMode (#28557)
Co-authored-by: Andrew Clark <git@andrewclark.io>
2024-03-20 16:15:22 +01:00
Sebastian Silbermann 5cec48e145 DevTools: Read context values from context dependencies (#28467) 2024-03-20 12:16:42 +01:00
Sebastian Markbåge 83409a1fdd [Flight] Encode React Elements in Replies as Temporary References (#28564)
Currently you can accidentally pass React Element to a Server Action. It
warns but in prod it actually works because we can encode the symbol and
otherwise it's mostly a plain object. It only works if you only pass
host components and no function props etc. which makes it potentially
error later. The first thing this does it just early hard error for
elements.

I made Lazy work by unwrapping though since that will be replaced by
Promises later which works.

Our protocol is not fully symmetric in that elements flow from Server ->
Client. Only the Server can resolve Components and only the client
should really be able to receive host components. It's not intended that
a Server can actually do something with them other than passing them to
the client.

In the case of a Reply, we expect the client to be stateful. It's
waiting for a response. So anything we can't serialize we can still pass
by reference to an in memory object. So I introduce the concept of a
TemporaryReferenceSet which is an opaque object that you create before
encoding the reply. This then stashes any unserializable values in this
set and encode the slot by id. When a new response from the Action then
returns we pass the same temporary set into the parser which can then
restore the objects. This lets you pass a value by reference to the
server and back into another slot.

For example it can be used to render children inside a parent tree from
a server action:

```
export async function Component({ children }) {
  "use server";
  return <div>{children}</div>;
}
```

(You wouldn't normally do this due to the waterfalls but for advanced
cases.)

A common scenario where this comes up accidentally today is in
`useActionState`.

```
export function action(state, formData) {
  "use server";
   if (errored) {
     return <div>This action <strong>errored</strong></div>;
   }
   return null;
}
```

```
const [errors, formAction] = useActionState(action);
return <div>{errors}<div>;
```

It feels like I'm just passing the JSX from server to client. However,
because `useActionState` also sends the previous state *back* to the
server this should not actually be valid. Before this PR this actually
worked accidentally. You get a DEV warning but it used to work in prod.
Once you do something like pass a client reference it won't work tho. We
could perhaps make client references work by stashing where we got them
from but it wouldn't work with all possible JSX.

By adding temporary references to the action implementation this will
work again - on the client. It'll also be more efficient since we don't
send back the JSX content that you shouldn't introspect on the server
anyway.

However, a flaw here is that the progressive enhancement of this case
won't work because we can't use temporary references for progressive
enhancement since there's no in memory stash. What is worse is that it
won't error if you hydrate. ~It also will error late in the example
above because the first state is "undefined" so invoking the form once
works - it errors on the second attempt when it tries to send the error
state back again.~ It actually errors on the first invocation because we
need to eagerly serialize "previous state" into the form. So at least
that's better.

I think maybe the solution to this particular pattern would be to allow
JSX to serialize if you have no temporary reference set, and remember
client references so that client references can be returned back to the
server as client references. That way anything you could send from the
server could also be returned to the server. But it would only deopt to
serializing it for progressive enhancement. The consequence of that
would be that there's a lot of JSX that might accidentally seem like it
should work but it's only if you've gotten it from the server before
that it works. This would have to have pair them somehow though since
you can't take a client reference from one implementation of Flight and
use it with another.
2024-03-19 16:59:52 -04:00
Jan Kassens 9c75cd5e84 Set disableModulePatternComponents flag to __NEXT_MAJOR__ (#28579) 2024-03-18 17:25:28 -04:00
Jack Pope e02f87f139 Use RTR with concurrent root in ReactHooks-test.internal (#28578)
Continued cleanup of legacy root usage from RTR
2024-03-18 15:49:30 -04:00
Jack Pope bc13750bdf Concurrent rendering for ReactART-test (#28521)
## Summary

We need to unblock flipping the default for RTR to be concurrent
rendering. Update ReactART-test to use `unstable_isConcurrent` in place.

## How did you test this change?

`yarn test packages/react-art/src/__tests__/ReactART-test.js`
2024-03-18 15:40:02 -04:00
Timothy Yung 0aab065eb3 Add alwaysThrottleDisappearingFallbacks Flag (#28550)
## Summary

Creates a new `alwaysThrottleDisappearingFallbacks` feature flag that
gates the changes from https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/26802
(instead of being controlled by `alwaysThrottleRetries`). The values of
this new flag mirror the current values of `alwaysThrottleRetries` such
that there is no behavior difference.

This additional feature flag allows us to incrementally validate the
change (arguably bug fix) from
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/26802 independently from
`alwaysThrottleRetries`.

## How did you test this change?

```
$ yarn test
$ yarn flow dom-browser
$ yarn flow dom-fb
$ yarn flow fabric
```
2024-03-18 11:16:47 -07:00
Jack Pope 6a01aca75b Fix ReactHooksInspectionIntegration-test (#28577)
Resolve conflict between #28508 and #28546
2024-03-18 13:15:23 -04:00
Rom Grk 4d686a2da1 Performance: avoid triggering map deopt in V8 (#28569)
The shape of the objects changed by this PR are both created in 2
locations with 2 different shapes, which most JS engines won't like.
I've noticed this in particular in V8 while benchmarking production
code.


https://github.com/facebook/react/blob/1293047d6063f3508af15e68cca916660ded791e/packages/react-reconciler/src/ReactFiberCacheComponent.js#L66-L77


https://github.com/facebook/react/blob/1293047d6063f3508af15e68cca916660ded791e/packages/react-reconciler/src/ReactFiberHostContext.js#L47-L54


https://github.com/facebook/react/blob/1293047d6063f3508af15e68cca916660ded791e/packages/react-reconciler/src/ReactFiberHooks.js#L3530-L3531


https://github.com/facebook/react/blob/1293047d6063f3508af15e68cca916660ded791e/packages/react-reconciler/src/ReactFiberHooks.js#L3492-L3493
2024-03-18 11:54:34 -04:00
Jack Pope 38327309a4 Update isConcurrent RTR option usage (#28546)
Reverting some of https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/27804 which
renamed this option to stable. This PR just replaces internal usage to
make upcoming PRs cleaner.

Keeping isConcurrent unstable for the next major release in order to
enable a broader deprecation of RTR and be consistent with concurrent
rendering everywhere for next major.
(https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/28498)
- Next major will use concurrent root
- The old behavior (legacy root by default, concurrent root with
unstable option) will be preserved for React Native until new
architecture is fully shipped.
- Flag and legacy root usage can be removed after RN dependency is
unblocked without an additional breaking change
2024-03-18 11:35:16 -04:00
Josh Story b09e102ff1 [Fizz] Prevent uncloned large precomputed chunks without relying on render-time assertions (#28568)
A while back we implemented a heuristic that if a chunk was large it was
assumed to be produced by the render and thus was safe to stream which
results in transferring the underlying object memory. Later we ran into
an issue where a precomputed chunk grew large enough to trigger this
hueristic and it started causing renders to fail because once a second
render had occurred the precomputed chunk would not have an underlying
buffer of bytes to send and these bytes would be omitted from the
stream. We implemented a technique to detect large precomputed chunks
and we enforced that these always be cloned before writing.
Unfortunately our test coverage was not perfect and there has been for a
very long time now a usage pattern where if you complete a boundary in
one flush and then complete a boundary that has stylehsheet dependencies
in another flush you can get a large precomputed chunk that was not
being cloned to be sent twice causing streaming errors.

I've thought about why we even went with this solution in the first
place and I think it was a mistake. It relies on a dev only check to
catch paired with potentially version specific order of operations on
the streaming side. This is too unreliable. Additionally the low limit
of view size for Edge is not used in Node.js but there is not real
justification for this.

In this change I updated the view size for edge streaming to match Node
at 2048 bytes which is still relatively small and we have no data one
way or another to preference 512 over this. Then I updated the assertion
logic to error anytime a precomputed chunk exceeds the size. This
eliminates the need to clone these chunks by just making sure our view
size is always larger than the largest precomputed chunk we can possibly
write. I'm generally in favor of this for a few reasons.

First, we'll always know during testing whether we've violated the limit
as long as we exercise each stream config because the precomputed chunks
are created in module scope. Second, we can always split up large chunks
so making sure the precomptued chunk is smaller than whatever view size
we actually desire is relatively trivial.
2024-03-16 12:39:37 -07:00
sweetliquid 1293047d60 Fix log assertion in cancels tasks in Scheduler-test (#28562) 2024-03-15 21:21:46 +01:00
Sebastian Silbermann 4d85c666a3 Remove excess ms prop from Suspense tests (#28566) 2024-03-15 20:57:42 +01:00
Rubén Norte 9372c63116 Revert rollout state of enableCache in React Native to next major only (#28565)
## Summary

We're working on enabling the use of microtasks in React Native by
default when using the new architecture. To enable this we need to
synchronize the RN renderers from React, but doing this causes an error
because the renderers now rely on an object defined in
`React.__SECRET_INTERNALS_DO_NOT_USE_OR_YOU_WILL_BE_FIRED`
(`ReactCurrentCache`) that's hasn't been released as a stable version
yet (cache).

This reverts the change done in #28519 to avoid enabling the cache API
in RN until we release a new version of React in npm.

## How did you test this change?

Manually built the RN renderer, copied it to the RN repository and
tested e2e in RNTester.
2024-03-15 18:02:46 +00:00
Sebastian Silbermann a870b2d549 Make enableNewBooleanProps www dynamic (#28559)
Feature: https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/24730
2024-03-14 11:50:11 -04:00
Sebastian Silbermann 7268dacf70 Devtools: Ensure component control flow is consistent with commit when using `useDeferredValue (#28508) 2024-03-14 15:41:50 +01:00
Sebastian Silbermann a540f53616 Add passing exhaustive-deps test for type parameters in TypeScript (#20432) 2024-03-14 15:41:37 +01:00
bubucuo 9ffe9102ff Fix a spelling mistake. (#28555) 2024-03-14 10:04:44 -04:00
Sebastian Silbermann bbc571aee4 React DOM: Support boolean values for inert prop (#24730) 2024-03-13 23:10:41 +01:00
Rubén Norte bb0944fe5b [RN] Use microtasks in the RN renderer based on a global flag defined by RN (#28472)
## Summary

We want to enable the new event loop in React Native
(https://github.com/react-native-community/discussions-and-proposals/pull/744)
for all users in the new architecture (determined by the use of
bridgeless, not by the use of Fabric). In order to leverage that, we
need to also set the flag for the React reconciler to use microtasks for
scheduling (so we'll execute them at the right time in the new event
loop).

This migrates from the previous approach using a dynamic flag (to be
used at Meta) with the check of a global set by React Native. The reason
for doing this is:
1) We still need to determine this dynamically in OSS (based on
Bridgeless, not on Fabric).
2) We still need the ability to configure the behavior at Meta, and for
internal build system reasons we cannot access the flag that enables
microtasks in
[`ReactNativeFeatureFlags`](https://github.com/facebook/react-native/blob/6c28c87c4d5d8a9f5be5e02cd7d3eba5b4aaca8c/packages/react-native/src/private/featureflags/ReactNativeFeatureFlags.js#L121).

## How did you test this change?

Manually synchronized the changes to React Native and ran all tests for
the new architecture on it. Also tested manually.

> [!NOTE]
> This change depends on
https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/43397 which has been
merged already
2024-03-13 10:00:10 +00:00