This adds a new dimension similar to dom-relay. It's different from
"native" which would be Flight for RN without Relay.
This has some copy-pasta that's the same between the two Relay builds but
the key difference will be Metro and we're not quite sure what other
differences there will be yet.
* Remove Blocks
* Remove Flight Server Runtime
There's no need for this now that the JSResource is part of the bundler
protocol. Might need something for Webpack plugin specifically later.
* Devtools
* Refactor Flight to require a module reference to be brand checked
This exposes a host environment (bundler) specific hook to check if an
object is a module reference. This will be used so that they can be passed
directly into Flight without needing additional wrapper objects.
* Emit module references as a special type of value
We already have JSON and errors as special types of "rows". This encodes
module references as a special type of row value. This was always the
intention because it allows those values to be emitted first in the stream
so that as a large models stream down, we can start preloading as early
as possible.
We preload the module when they resolve but we lazily require them as they
are referenced.
* Emit module references where ever they occur
This emits module references where ever they occur. In blocks or even
directly in elements.
* Don't special case the root row
I originally did this so that a simple stream is also just plain JSON.
However, since we might want to emit things like modules before the root
module in the stream, this gets unnecessarily complicated. We could add
this back as a special case if it's the first byte written but meh.
* Update the protocol
* Add test for using a module reference as a client component
* Relax element type check
Since Flight now accepts a module reference as returned by any bundler
system, depending on the renderer running. We need to drastically relax
the check to include all of them. We can add more as we discover them.
* Move flow annotation
Seems like our compiler is not happy with stripping this.
* Some bookkeeping bug
* Can't use the private field to check
If there are any suspended fallbacks at the end of the `act` scope,
force them to display by running the pending timers (i.e. `setTimeout`).
The public implementation of `act` achieves the same behavior with an
extra check in the work loop (`shouldForceFlushFallbacks`). Since our
internal `act` needs to work in both development and production, without
additional runtime checks, we instead rely on Jest's mock timers.
This doesn't not affect refresh transitions, which are meant to delay
indefinitely, because in that case we exit the work loop without
posting a timer.
This updates the experimental Scheduler postTask build to call postTask
directly, instead of managing our own custom queue and work loop.
We still use a deadline 5ms mechanism to implement `shouldYield`.
The main thing that postTask is currently missing is the continuation
feature — when yielding to the main thread, the yielding task is sent
to the back of the queue, instead of maintaining its position.
While this would be nice to have, even without it, postTask may be good
enough to replace our userspace implementation.
We'll run some tests to see.
* Reduce code to necessities
* Switch to postTask API
* Add SchedulerPostTask tests
* Updates from review
* Fix typo from review
* Generate build of unstable_post_task
We need this so we can version them separately and use different
feature flags than we use for OSS RN.
I put them in a separate facebook-react-native folder which won't go
into the RN GH repo. I plan on moving the renderers there too but not yet.
I don't think we'll ever use this just because we have such a unique set up
for network delivery so we'll use something custom for this case.
Also, we don't need a profiling build for this since it doesn't have an
entry point.
* Lint bundles using the bundle config instead of scanning for files
This ensures that we look for all the files that we expect to see there.
If something doesn't get built we wouldn't detect it.
However, this doesn't find files that aren't part of our builds such as
indirection files in the root. This will need to change with ESM anyway
since indirection files doesn't work. Everything should be built anyway.
This ensures that we can use the bundles.js config to determine special
cases instead of relying on file system conventions.
* Run lint with flag
* Gate test
* Delete entrypoints without Build Outputs from package.json and build output
If an entry point exists in bundles.js but doesn't have any bundleTypes,
I delete that entry point file from the build directory. I also remove it
from the files field in package.json if it exists.
This allows us to remove bundles from being built in the stable release
channel.
* First pass at scaffolding out the Node implementation of react-data.
While incomplete, this patch contains some changes to the react-data
package in order to start adding support for Node.
The first part of this change accounts for splitting react-data/fetch
into two discrete entries, adding (and defaulting to) the Node
implementation.
The second part is sketching out a rough approximation of `fetch` for
Node. This implementation is not complete by any means, but provides a
starting point.
* Remove NodeFetch module and put it directly into ReactDataFetchNode.
* Replaced react-data with react-fetch.
This patch shuffles around some of the scaffolding that was in
react-data in favor of react-fetch. It also removes the additional
"fetch" package in favor of something flatter.
* Tweak package organization
* Simplify and add a test
Co-authored-by: Dan Abramov <dan.abramov@me.com>
* Rename Flight to Transport
Flight is still the codename for the implementation details (like Fiber).
However, now the public package is react-transport-... which is only
intended to be used directly by integrators.
* Rename names
* Rename ReactCache -> ReactCacheOld
We still use it in some tests so I'm going to leave it for now. I'll start making the new one in parallel in the react package.
* Add react/unstable-cache entry point
* Add react-data entry point
* Initial implementation of cache and data/fetch
* Address review
* Implement component stack extraction hack
* Normalize errors in tests
This drops the requirement to include owner to pass the test.
* Special case tests
* Add destructuring to force toObject which throws before the side-effects
This ensures that we don't double call yieldValue or advanceTime in tests.
Ideally we could use empty destructuring but ES lint doesn't like it.
* Cache the result in DEV
In DEV it's somewhat likely that we'll see many logs that add component
stacks. This could be slow so we cache the results of previous components.
* Fixture
* Add Reflect to lint
* Log if out of range.
* Fix special case when the function call throws in V8
In V8 we need to ignore the first line. Normally we would never get there
because the stacks would differ before that, but the stacks are the same if
we end up throwing at the same place as the control.
* Eject CRA from Flight
We need to eject because we're going to add a custom Webpack Plugin.
We can undo this once the plugin has upstreamed into CRA.
* Add Webpack plugin build
I call this entry point "webpack-plugin" instead of "plugin" even though
this is a webpack specific package. That's because there will also be a
Node.js plugin to do the server transform.
* Add Flight Webpack plugin to fixture
* Rm UMD builds
* Transform classes
* Rename webpack-plugin to plugin
This avoids the double webpack name. We're going to reuse this for both
server and client.
* Remove /dist/ UMD builds
We publish UMDs to npm (and we're considering stopping even that).
This means we'll stop publishing to http://react.zpao.com/builds/master/latest/
* Update fixture paths
* Upgrade Closure
There are newer versions but they don't yet have corresponding releases
of google-closure-compiler-osx.
* Configure build
* Refactor ReactSymbols a bit
Provides a little better output.
This is equivalent to the jsx-runtime in that this is what the compiled
output on the server is supposed to target.
It's really just the same code for all the different Flights, but they
have different types in their arguments so each one gets their own entry
point. We might use this to add runtime warnings per entry point.
Unlike the client-side React.block call this doesn't provide the factory
function that curries the load function. The compiler is expected to wrap
this call in the currying factory.
* Resolve Server-side Blocks instead of Components
React elements should no longer be used to extract arbitrary data but only
for prerendering trees.
Blocks are used to create asynchronous behavior.
* Resolve Blocks in the Client
* Tests
* Bug fix relay JSON traversal
It's supposed to pass the original object and not the new one.
* Lint
* Move Noop Module Test Helpers to top level entry points
This module has shared state. It needs to be external from builds.
This lets us test the built versions of the Noop renderer.
This is a really old one and all callers have since been codemodded away
anyway because of problems.
This file is not really as rigorously maintained as the official Flow types
but has a few more specifics. However, the inconsistency causes problems
when you try to pass files typed using the built-in Flow typing for React
and mix it with these.
We just happen to get away with it because we compile out the types. If we
didn't we would hit those problems by even using these in our renderers.