While trying to resolve some issues with Flow in ESLint, noticed that we
are still listing `eslint-plugin-flowtype` as dev dependency, but it has
been deprecated in favour of `eslint-plugin-ft-flow`.
This Flow upgrade includes 2 fixes:
- Remove `React$StatelessFunctionalComponent` as that was replaced by
just `React$AbstractComponent` as Flow doesn't make any guarantees, see
the Flow change here:
https://github.com/facebook/flow/commit/521317c48f44ffb5eac072a7b2548a72b0745095
- Flow no longer allows `number` type indexing into objects which
discovered an incorrect type that is actually an array of the data.
Used this command to upgrade
```
yarn add -W flow-bin flow-remove-types hermes-parser hermes-eslint
```
and ran `yarn flow-ci` to check for errors in different configurations.
I do not see references to these modules. Unless there's some dynamic
loading going on (hopefully we should see that in CI) these seem like
they can be removed.
I think these have been dead for a while now. If the purpose is
documentation, we should see if we need to improve `yarn test --help` or
something instead.
## Summary
I had to change the commands to be windows specific so that it doesn't
cause any crashes
## How did you test this change?
I successfully built the different types of devtools extenstions on my
personal computer. In future may need to add a github action with
windows config to test these errors
#27193
Upgrade Flow to latest using
```
yarn add -W flow-bin flow-remove-types hermes-parser hermes-eslint
```
This also updates `createFlowConfigs.js` to get the Flow version from
`package.json` to avoid needing to bump the version there in the future.
Updates useFormState to allow a sync function to be passed as an action.
A form action is almost always async, because it needs to talk to the
server. But since we support client-side actions, too, there's no reason
we can't allow sync actions, too.
I originally chose not to allow them to keep the implementation simpler
but it's not really that much more complicated because we already
support this for actions passed to startTransition. So now it's
consistent: anywhere an action is accepted, a sync client function is a
valid input.
This upgrade made the `React$Element` type opaque, which is good for
product code where accessing props of elements is code smell, but React
needs to use that internally. I overrode the type to restore it.
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## Summary
- Remove unused webpack 4 dependencies
## How did you test this change?
- Ran `yarn test --prod`
- Ran `yarn test`
## Related PRs:
- https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/26887
Modern runtimes support native async/await, as does the version of Node
we use for our tests. To match how most of our users run React, this
disables the transpilation of async/await in our test suite.
Just a small upgrade to keep us current and remove unused suppressions
(probably fixed by some upgrade since).
- `*` is no longer allowed and has been an alias for `any` for a while
now.
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We appreciate you spending the time to work on these changes. Please
provide enough information so that others can review your pull request.
The three fields below are mandatory.
Before submitting a pull request, please make sure the following is
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1. Fork [the repository](https://github.com/facebook/react) and create
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2. Run `yarn` in the repository root.
3. If you've fixed a bug or added code that should be tested, add tests!
4. Ensure the test suite passes (`yarn test`). Tip: `yarn test --watch
TestName` is helpful in development.
5. Run `yarn test --prod` to test in the production environment. It
supports the same options as `yarn test`.
6. If you need a debugger, run `yarn test --debug --watch TestName`,
open `chrome://inspect`, and press "Inspect".
7. Format your code with
[prettier](https://github.com/prettier/prettier) (`yarn prettier`).
8. Make sure your code lints (`yarn lint`). Tip: `yarn linc` to only
check changed files.
9. Run the [Flow](https://flowtype.org/) type checks (`yarn flow`).
10. If you haven't already, complete the CLA.
Learn more about contributing:
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## Summary
This PR:
- Updates Rollup from 2.x to latest 3.x, and updates associated plugins
- Updates deprecated / altered config settings in the Rollup plugin
pipeline
- Fixes some file extension and import issues related to use of ESM in
`react-dom-webpack-server`
- Removes a now-obsolete `strip-unused-imports` Rollup plugin
- <s>Fixes an _existing_ bug with the Rollup 2.x plugin pipeline on
`main` that was causing parts of `DOMProperty.js` to get left out of the
`react-dom-webpack-server` JS bundles, by adding a new plugin to tell
Rollup to treat that file as if it as side effects</s>
This PR should be functionally identical to the other existing "Rollup 3
upgrade" PR at #26078 . I'm filing this as a near-duplicate because I'm
ready to push this change through ASAP so that I can follow it up with a
PR that adds sourcemap support, that PR's artifact diffing seems like
it's possibly stuck and I want to compare the build results, and I've
got this set up against latest `main`.
<!--
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This gets React's build setup updated to the latest Rollup version,
which is generally a good practice, but also ensures that any further
Rollup config tweaks can be done using the current Rollup docs as a
reference.
## How did you test this change?
<!--
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- Made builds from the latest `main`
- Updated Rollup package versions and cross-compared the changes I
needed to make locally to get successful builds vs #26078
- Diffed the output folders between `main` and this PR, and confirmed
that the bundle contents are identical (with the exception of version
strings and the `react-dom-webpack-server` bundle fix re-adding missing
`DOMProperty.js` content)
- Specifies Node 16 as the minimum supported version.
- Remove no longer supported 17.x version (per
https://nodejs.dev/en/about/releases/)
- Add 19.x
Test Plan:
(using node 19) as that's what I'm adding)
- yarn build
- yarn test
The `start` convention is a CRA convention but nobody else of the modern
frameworks / tools use this convention for a file watcher and dev mode.
Instead the common convention is `dev`. Instead `start` is for running a
production build that's already been built.
---------
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Silbermann <silbermann.sebastian@gmail.com>
It's confusing to new contributors, and me, that you're supposed to use
`yarn build-combined` for almost everything but not fixtures.
We should use only one build command for everything.
Updated fixtures to use the folder convention of build-combined.
## Summary
- yarn.lock diff +-6249, **small pr**
- use jest-environment-jsdom by default
- uncaught error from jsdom is an error object instead of strings
- abortSignal.reason is read-only in jsdom and node,
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/AbortSignal/reason
## How did you test this change?
ci green
---------
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Silbermann <silbermann.sebastian@gmail.com>
## Summary
This PR removes the unused dependency 'abort-controller' from the
project. it helps to keep the project clean and maintainable.
## How did you test this change?
ci green
The old version of prettier we were using didn't support the Flow syntax
to access properties in a type using `SomeType['prop']`. This updates
`prettier` and `rollup-plugin-prettier` to the latest versions.
I added the prettier config `arrowParens: "avoid"` to reduce the diff
size as the default has changed in Prettier 2.0. The largest amount of
changes comes from function expressions now having a space. This doesn't
have an option to preserve the old behavior, so we have to update this.
After the previous changes these upgrade are easy.
- removes config options that were removed
- object index access now requires an indexer key in the type, this
cause a handful of errors that were fixed
- undefined keys error in all places, this needed a few extra
suppressions for repeated undefined identifiers.
Flow's
[CHANGELOG.md](https://github.com/facebook/flow/blob/main/Changelog.md).
Flow introduced a new syntax to annotated the context type of a
function, this tries to update the rest and add 1 example usage.
- 2b1fb91a55 already added the changes
required for eslint.
- Jest transform is updated to use the recommended `hermes-parser` which
can parse current and Flow syntax and will be updated in the future.
- Rollup uses a new plugin to strip the flow types. This isn't ideal as
the npm module is deprecated in favor of using `hermes-parser`, but I
couldn't figure out how to integrate that with Rollup.
Hermes parser is the preferred parser for Flow code going forward. We
need to upgrade to this parser to support new Flow syntax like function
`this` context type annotations or `ObjectType['prop']` syntax.
Unfortunately, there's quite a few upgrades here to make it work somehow
(dependencies between the changes)
- ~Upgrade `eslint` to `8.*`~ reverted this as the React eslint plugin
tests depend on the older version and there's a [yarn
bug](https://github.com/yarnpkg/yarn/issues/6285) that prevents
`devDependencies` and `peerDependencies` to different versions.
- Remove `eslint-config-fbjs` preset dependency and inline the rules,
imho this makes it a lot clearer what the rules are.
- Remove the turned off `jsx-a11y/*` rules and it's dependency instead
of inlining those from the `fbjs` config.
- Update parser and dependency from `babel-eslint` to `hermes-eslint`.
- `ft-flow/no-unused-expressions` rule replaces `no-unused-expressions`
which now allows standalone type asserts, e.g. `(foo: number);`
- Bunch of globals added to the eslint config
- Disabled `no-redeclare`, seems like the eslint upgrade started making
this more precise and warn against re-defined globals like
`__EXPERIMENTAL__` (in rollup scripts) or `fetch` (when importing fetch
from node-fetch).
- Minor lint fixes like duplicate keys in objects.
We've heard from multiple contributors that the Reconciler forking
mechanism was confusing and/or annoying to deal with. Since it's
currently unused and there's no immediate plans to start using it again,
this removes the forking.
Fully removing the fork is split into 2 steps to preserve file history:
**This PR**
- remove `enableNewReconciler` feature flag.
- remove `unstable_isNewReconciler` export
- remove eslint rules for cross fork imports
- remove `*.new.js` files and update imports
- merge non-suffixed files into `*.old` files where both exist
(sometimes types were defined there)
**#25775**
- rename `*.old` files
* Add fetch instrumentation in cached contexts
* Avoid unhandled rejection errors for Promises that we intentionally ignore
In the final passes, we ignore the newly generated Promises and use
the previous ones. This ensures that if those generate errors, that we
intentionally ignore those.
* Add extra fetch properties if there were any
* Move Fizz inline instructions to unified module
Instead of a separate module per instruction, this exports all of them
from a unified module.
In the next step, I'll add a script to generate this new module.
* Add script to generate inline Fizz runtime
This adds a script to generate the inline Fizz runtime. Previously, the
runtime source was in an inline comment, and a compiled version of the
instructions were hardcoded as strings into the Fizz implementation,
where they are injected into the HTML stream.
I've moved the source for the instructions to a regular JavaScript
module. A script compiles the instructions with Closure, then generates
another module that exports the compiled instructions as strings.
Then the Fizz runtime imports the instructions from the
generated module.
To build the instructions, run:
yarn generate-inline-fizz-runtime
In the next step, I'll add a CI check to verify that the generated files
are up to date.
* Check in CI if generated Fizz runtime is in sync
The generated Fizz runtime is checked into source. In CI, we'll ensure
it stays in sync by running the script and confirming nothing changed.