* A clearer message for props destructuring where applicable
* Add line number to the "move function" message
* Add a hint for how to fix callbacks from props
* Simplify code and harden tests
* Collect all dependency references for better warnings
* Suggest updater or reducer where appropriate
* Import Scheduler directly, not via host config
We currently schedule asynchronous tasks via the host config. (The host
config is a static/build-time dependency injection system that varies
across different renderers — DOM, native, test, and so on.) Instead of
calling platform APIs like `requestIdleCallback` directly, each renderer
implements a method called `scheduleDeferredCallback`.
We've since discovered that when scheduling tasks, it's crucial that
React work is placed in the same queue as other, non-React work on the
main thread. Otherwise, you easily end up in a starvation scenario where
rendering is constantly interrupted by less important tasks. You need a
centralized coordinator that is used both by React and by other
frameworks and application code. This coordinator must also have a
consistent API across all the different host environments, for
convention's sake and so product code is portable — e.g. so the same
component can work in both React Native and React Native Web.
This turned into the Scheduler package. We will have different builds of
Scheduler for each of our target platforms. With this approach, we treat
Scheduler like a built-in platform primitive that exists wherever React
is supported.
Now that we have this consistent interface, the indirection of the host
config no longer makes sense for the purpose of scheduling tasks. In
fact, we explicitly do not want renderers to scheduled task via any
system except the Scheduler package.
So, this PR removes `scheduleDeferredCallback` and its associated
methods from the host config in favor of directly importing Scheduler.
* Missed an extraneous export
* Warn on mount when deps are not an array
* Check other Hooks
* I can't figure out how to fix error/warning nesting lint
But it doesn't really matter much because we test other cases in the other test.
* Revert #14756 changes to ReactFiberScheduler
This PR introduced some bugs in concurrent mode during internal testing.
Until we figure out a proper solution, I'm going to try reverting it.
Not totally certain this is sufficient to unbreak the bugs we found, but
I'm using this branch to determine that.
* Add back commented out Scheduler import
With a note not to use named imports next time we import Scheduler
in this module.
* ReactDebugHooks identifies State and Reducer hooks as editable
* Inject overrideHookState() method to DevTools to support editing in DEV builds
* Added an integration test for React DevTools, react-debug-tools, and overrideHookState
* Swap expect(ReactNoop) for expect(Scheduler)
In the previous commits, I upgraded our custom Jest matchers for the
noop and test renderers to use Scheduler under the hood.
Now that all these matchers are using Scheduler, we can drop
support for passing ReactNoop and test roots and always pass
Scheduler directly.
* Externalize Scheduler in noop and test bundles
I also noticed we don't need to regenerator runtime in noop anymore.
* Replace test renderer's fake Scheduler implementation with mock build
The test renderer has its own mock implementation of the Scheduler
interface, with the ability to partially render work in tests. Now that
this functionality has been lifted into a proper mock Scheduler build,
we can use that instead.
* Fix Profiler tests in prod
* Replace noop's fake Scheduler implementation with mock Scheduler build
The noop renderer has its own mock implementation of the Scheduler
interface, with the ability to partially render work in tests. Now that
this functionality has been lifted into a proper mock Scheduler build,
we can use that instead.
Most of the existing noop tests were unaffected, but I did have to make
some changes. The biggest one involved passive effects: previously, they
were scheduled on a separate queue from the queue that handles
rendering. After this change, both rendering and effects are scheduled
in the Scheduler queue. I think this is a better approach because tests
no longer have to worry about the difference; if you call `flushAll`,
all the work is flushed, both rendering and effects. But for those few
tests that do care to flush the rendering without the effects, that's
still possible using the `yieldValue` API.
Follow-up: Do the same for test renderer.
* Fix import to scheduler/unstable_mock
* Add new mock build of Scheduler with flush, yield API
Test environments need a way to take control of the Scheduler queue and
incrementally flush work. Our current tests accomplish this either using
dynamic injection, or by using Jest's fake timers feature. Both of these
options are fragile and rely too much on implementation details.
In this new approach, we have a separate build of Scheduler that is
specifically designed for test environments. We mock the default
implementation like we would any other module; in our case, via Jest.
This special build has methods like `flushAll` and `yieldValue` that
control when work is flushed. These methods are based on equivalent
methods we've been using to write incremental React tests. Eventually
we may want to migrate the React tests to interact with the mock
Scheduler directly, instead of going through the host config like we
currently do.
For now, I'm using our custom static injection infrastructure to create
the two builds of Scheduler — a default build for DOM (which falls back
to a naive timer based implementation), and the new mock build. I did it
this way because it allows me to share most of the implementation, which
isn't specific to a host environment — e.g. everything related to the
priority queue. It may be better to duplicate the shared code instead,
especially considering that future environments (like React Native) may
have entirely forked implementations. I'd prefer to wait until the
implementation stabilizes before worrying about that, but I'm open to
changing this now if we decide it's important enough.
* Mock Scheduler in bundle tests, too
* Remove special case by making regex more restrictive
* Refactor hook ordering check to use DEV-only data structure. This enables us to warn about more cases (e.g. useContext, useDebugValue) withou the need to add any overhead to production bundles.
* Throw in tests if work is done before emptying log
Test renderer already does this. Makes it harder to miss unexpected
behavior by forcing you to assert on every logged value.
* Convert ReactNoop tests to use jest matchers
The matchers warn if work is flushed while the log is empty. This is
the pattern we already follow for test renderer. I've used the same APIs
as test renderer, so it should be easy to switch between the two.
* Deprecate ref.setNativeProps in favor of ReactNative.setNativeProps
* Using a feature flag for the setNativeProps warning
* Removing extra line breaks
* Set the FB native feature flag to true
* Prettier
* Remove ReactNoop.flushDeferredPri and flushUnitsOfWork
Some of our older tests worked by counting how many times React checked
whether it should yield to the main thread, instead of something
publicly observable like how many times a component is rendered.
Our newer tests have converged on a style where we push into a log and
make assertions on the log. This pattern is less coupled to the
implementation while still being sufficient to test performance
optimizations, like resuming (whenever we add that back).
This commit removes flushDeferredPri and flushUnitsOfWork and upgrades
the affected tests.
* Remove shouldYieldToRenderer indirection
This wrapper is no longer necessary.
As I prepare to refactor the Fiber scheduler, I've noticed some quirks
in our implementation. This PR addressed one of them.
---
There's no reason for a timed out Scheduler callback to check
`shouldYield`, because the value will always be false until the work
has completed. The `didTimeout` argument provides this information to
the callback so it can avoid the redundant checks.
React's existing check for whether a callback has timed out didn't make
any sense, but happened to work anyway. I don't think the wrongness of
the old implementation is observable via React APIs but it's
incoherent regardless.
* Adding ReactNative.setNativeProps that takes a ref
* Adding test for components rendered with Fabric with Paper's setNativeProps
* Fixing flow types
* Fix prettier
* Rename ReactNativeSetNativeProps.js to be more general