This lets us pass a writable on the server side and readable on the
client side to send debug info through a separate channel so that it
doesn't interfere with the main payload as much. The main payload refers
to chunks defined in the debug info which means it's still blocked on it
though. This ensures that the debug data has loaded by the time the
value is rendered so that the next step can forward the data.
This will be a bit fragile to race conditions until #33665 lands.
Another follow up needed is the ability to skip the debug channel on the
receiving side. Right now it'll block forever if you don't provide one
since we're blocking on the debug data.
This adds plumbing for opening a stream from the Flight Client to the
Flight Server so it can ask for more data on-demand. In this mode, the
Flight Server keeps the connection open as long as the client is still
alive and there's more objects to load. It retains any depth limited
objects so that they can be asked for later. In this first PR it just
releases the object when it's discovered on the server and doesn't
actually lazy load it yet. That's coming in a follow up.
This strategy is built on the model that each request has its own
channel for this. Instead of some global registry. That ensures that
referential identity is preserved within a Request and the Request can
refer to previously written objects by reference.
The fixture implements a WebSocket per request but it doesn't have to be
done that way. It can be multiplexed through an existing WebSocket for
example. The current protocol is just a Readable(Stream) on the server
and WritableStream on the client. It could even be sent through a HTTP
request body if browsers implemented full duplex (which they don't).
This PR only implements the direction of messages from Client to Server.
However, I also plan on adding Debug Channel in the other direction to
allow debug info (optionally) be sent from Server to Client through this
channel instead of through the main RSC request. So the `debugChannel`
option will be able to take writable or readable or both.
---------
Co-authored-by: Hendrik Liebau <mail@hendrik-liebau.de>
This effectively lets us consume Web Streams in a Node build. In fact
the Node entry point is now just adding Node stream APIs.
For the client, this is simple because the configs are not actually
stream type specific. The server is a little trickier.
Reverts #33457, #33456 and #33442.
There are too many issues with wrappers, lazy init, stateful modules,
duplicate instantiation of async_hooks and duplication of code.
Instead, we'll just do a wrapper polyfill that uses Node Streams
internally.
I kept the client indirection files that I added for consistency with
the server though.
This is used to register Server References that exist in the current
environment but also exists in the server it might call into. Such as a
remote server.
If the value comes from the remote server in the first place then this
is called automatically to ensure that you can pass a reference back to
where it came from - even if the `serverModuleMap` option is used. This
was already the case when `serverModuleMap` wasn't passed. This is how
you can pass server references back to the server. However, when we
added `serverModuleMap` that pass was skipped because we were getting
real functions instead of proxies.
For functions that wasn't yet passed from the remote server to the
current server, we can register them eagerly just like we do for
`import('/server').registerServerReference()`. You can now also do this
with `import('/client').registerServerReference()`. We could make them
shared so you only have to do this once but it might not be possible to
pass to the remote server and the remote server might not even be the
same RSC renderer. Therefore I split them. It's up to the compiler
whether it should do that or not. It has to know that any function you
might call might be able to receive it. This is currently global to a
specific RSC renderer.
This implements `findSourceMapURL` in react-server-dom-parcel, enabling
source maps for replayed server errors on the client. It utilizes a new
endpoint in the Parcel dev server that returns the source map for a
given bundle/file. The error overlay UI has also been updated to handle
these stacks. See https://github.com/parcel-bundler/parcel/pull/10082
Also updated the fixture to the latest Parcel canary. A few APIs have
changed. We do have a higher level library wrapper now (`@parcel/rsc`
added in https://github.com/parcel-bundler/parcel/pull/10074) but I left
the fixture using the lower level APIs directly here since it is easier
to see how react-server-dom-parcel is used.
Corresponding Parcel PR:
https://github.com/parcel-bundler/parcel/pull/10073
Parcel avoids [cascading cache
invalidation](https://philipwalton.com/articles/cascading-cache-invalidation/)
by injecting a bundle manifest containing a mapping of stable bundle ids
to hashed URLs. When using an HTML entry point, this is done (as of the
above PR) via a native import map. This means that if a bundle's hash
changes, only that bundle will be invalidated (plus the HTML itself
which typically has a short caching policy), not any other bundles that
reference it.
For RSCs, we cannot currently use native import maps because of client
side navigations, where a new HTML file is not requested. Eventually,
multiple `<script type="importmap">` elements will be supported
(https://github.com/whatwg/html/pull/10528) ([coming Chrome
133](https://chromestatus.com/feature/5121916248260608)), at which point
React could potentially inject them. In the meantime, I've added some
APIs to Parcel to polyfill this. With this change, an import map can be
sent along with a client reference, containing a mapping for any dynamic
imports and URL dependencies (e.g. images) that are referenced by the JS
bundles. On the client, the import map is extended with these new
mappings prior to executing the referenced bundles. This preserves the
caching advantages described above while supporting client navigations.
Followup to #31725
This implements `prepareDestinationForModule` in the Parcel Flight
client. On the Parcel side, the `<Resources>` component now only inserts
`<link>` elements for stylesheets (along with a bootstrap script when
needed), and React is responsible for inserting scripts. This ensures
that components that are conditionally dynamic imported during render
are also preloaded.
CSS must be added to the RSC tree using `<Resources>` to avoid FOUC.
This must be manually rendered in both the top-level page, and in any
component that is dynamic imported. It would be nice if there was a way
for React to automatically insert CSS as well, but unfortunately
`prepareDestinationForModule` only knows about client components and not
CSS for server components. Perhaps there could be a way we could
annotate components at code splitting boundaries with the resources they
need? More thoughts in this thread:
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/31725#discussion_r1884867607
We support streaming `multipart/form-data` in Node.js using Busboy since
that's kind of the idiomatic ecosystem way for handling these stream
there. There's not really anything idiomatic like that for Edge that's
universal yet.
This adds a version that's basically just
`AsyncIterable.from(formData)`. It could also be a `ReadableStream` of
those entries since those are also `AsyncIterable`.
I imagine that in the future we might add one from a binary
`ReadableStream` that does the parsing built-in.
Follow up to #31725.
I diffed against the Turbopack one to find any unexpected discrepancies.
Some parts are forked enough that it's hard to diff but I think I got
most of it.
This adds a new `react-server-dom-parcel-package`, which is an RSC
integration for the Parcel bundler. It is mostly copied from the
existing webpack/turbopack integrations, with some changes to utilize
Parcel runtime APIs for loading and executing bundles/modules.
See https://github.com/parcel-bundler/parcel/pull/10043 for the Parcel
side of this, which includes the plugin needed to generate client and
server references. https://github.com/parcel-bundler/rsc-examples also
includes examples of various ways to use RSCs with Parcel.
Differences from other integrations:
* Client and server modules are all part of the same graph, and we use
Parcel's
[environments](https://parceljs.org/plugin-system/transformer/#the-environment)
to distinguish them. The server is the Parcel build entry point, and it
imports and renders server components in route handlers. When a `"use
client"` directive is seen, the environment changes and Parcel creates a
new client bundle for the page, combining all client modules together.
CSS from both client and server components are also combined
automatically.
* There is no separate manifest file that needs to be passed around by
the user. A [Runtime](https://parceljs.org/plugin-system/runtime/)
plugin injects client and server references as needed into the relevant
bundles, and registers server action ids using `react-server-dom-parcel`
automatically.
* A special `<Resources>` component is also generated by Parcel to
render the `<script>` and `<link rel="stylesheet">` elements needed for
a page, using the relevant info from the bundle graph.
Note: I've already published a 0.0.x version of this package to npm for
testing purposes but happy to add whoever needs access to it as well.
### Questions
* How to test this in the React repo. I'll have integration tests in
Parcel, but setting up all the different mocks and environments to
simulate that here seems challenging. I could try to copy how
Webpack/Turbopack do it but it's a bit different.
* Where to put TypeScript types. Right now I have some ambient types in
my [example
repo](https://github.com/parcel-bundler/rsc-examples/blob/main/types.d.ts)
but it would be nice for users not to copy and paste these. Can I
include them in the package or do they need to maintained separately in
definitelytyped? I would really prefer not to have to maintain code in
three different repos ideally.
---------
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Markbage <sebastian@calyptus.eu>