https://webpack.js.org/plugins/define-plugin/
Webpack's DefinePlugin has the ability to replace `typeof expr` to a constant in compile-time, which should lead to better dead-code-elimination.
* Rewrite ReactFiberScheduler
Adds a new implementation of ReactFiberScheduler behind a feature flag.
We will maintain both implementations in parallel until the new one
is proven stable enough to replace the old one.
The main difference between the implementations is that the new one is
integrated with the Scheduler package's priority levels.
* Conditionally add fields to FiberRoot
Some fields only used by the old scheduler, and some by the new.
* Add separate build that enables new scheduler
* Re-enable skipped test
If synchronous updates are scheduled by a passive effect, that work
should be flushed synchronously, even if flushPassiveEffects is
called inside batchedUpdates.
* Passive effects have same priority as render
* Revert ability to cancel the current callback
React doesn't need this anyway because it never schedules callbacks if
it's already rendering.
* Revert change to FiberDebugPerf
Turns out this isn't neccessary.
* Fix ReactFiberScheduler dead code elimination
Should initialize to nothing, then assign the exports conditionally,
instead of initializing to the old exports and then reassigning to the
new ones.
* Don't yield before commit during sync error retry
* Call Scheduler.flushAll unconditionally in tests
Instead of wrapping in enableNewScheduler flag.
This took a while, but I'm happy I went through it. Some key moments - recursively flushing effects, flushing microtasks on each async turn, and my team's uncompromising philosophy on code reuse. Really happy with this. I still want to expand test coverage, and I have some more small related todos, but this is good to land. On to the next one.
Soundtrack to landing this - https://open.spotify.com/track/0MF8I8OUo8kytiOo8aSHYq?si=gSWqUheKQbiQDXzptCXHTg
* hacked up act(async () => {...})
* move stuff around
* merge changes
* abstract .act warnings and stuff. all renderers. pass all tests.
* move testutils.act back into testutils
* move into scheduler, rename some bits
* smaller bundle
* a comment for why we don't do typeof === 'function'
* fix test
* pass tests - fire, prod
* lose actContainerElement
* tighter
* write a test for TestRenderer
it's an odd one, because not only does sync act not flush effects correctly, but the async one does (wut). verified it's fine with the dom version.
* lint
* rewrote to move flushing logic closer to the renderer
the scheduler's `flushPassiveEffects` didn't work as expected for the test renderer, so I decided to go back to the hack (rendering a dumb container) This also makes reactdom not as heavy (by a few bytes, but still).
* move it around so the delta isn't too bad
* cleanups
fix promise chaining
propagate errors correctly
test for thenable the 'right' way
more tests!
tidier!
ponies!
* Stray comment
* recursively flush effects
* fixed tests
* lint, move noop.act into react-reconciler
* microtasks when checking if called, s/called/calledLog, cleanup
* pass fb lint
we could have globally changed our eslint config to assume Promise is available, but that means we expect a promise polyfill on the page, and we don't yet. this code is triggered only in jest anyway, and we're fairly certain Promise will be available there. hence, the once-off disable for the check
* shorter timers, fix a test, test for Promise
* use global.Promise for existence check
* flush microtasks
* a version that works in browsers (that support postMessage)
I also added a sanity fixture inside fixtures/dom/ mostly for me.
* hoist flushEffectsAndMicroTasks
* pull out tick logic from ReactFiberScheduler
* fix await act (...sync) hanging
- fix a hang when awaiting sync logic
- a better async/await test for test renderer
* feedback changes
- use node's setImmediate if available
- a warning if MessageChannel isn't available
- rename some functions
* pass lint/flow checks (without requiring a Promise polyfill/exclusion)
* prettier
the prettiest, even.
* use globalPromise for the missed await warning
* __DEV__ check for didWarnAboutMessageChannel
* thenables and callbacks instead of promises, pass flow/lint
* tinier. better.
- pulled most bits out of FiberScheduler
- actedUpdates uses callbacks now
* pass build validation
* augh prettier
* golfing 7 more chars
* Test that effects are not flushed without also flushing microtasks
* export doesHavePendingPassiveEffects, nits
* createAct()
* dead code
* missed in merge?
* lose the preflushing bits
* ugh prettier
* removed `actedUpdates()`, created shared/actingUpdatesScopeDepth
* rearrange imports so builds work, remove the hack versions of flushPassiveEffects
* represent actingUpdatesScopeDepth as a tuple [number]
* use a shared flag on React.__SECRET...
* remove createAct, setup act for all relevant renderers
* review feedback
shared/enqueueTask
import ReactSharedInternals from 'shared/ReactSharedInternals';
simpler act() internals
ReactSharedInternals.ReactShouldWarnActingUpdates
* move act() implementation into createReactNoop
* warnIfNotCurrentlyActingUpdatesInDev condition check order
Adds a feature flag `enableNewScheduler` that toggles between two
implementations of ReactFiberScheduler. This will let us land changes in
master while preserving the ability to quickly rollback.
Ideally this will be a short-lived fork. Once we've tested the new
scheduler for a week or so without issues, we will get rid of it. Until
then, we'll need to maintain two parallel implementations and run tests
against both of them. We rarely land changes to ReactFiberScheduler, so
I don't expect this will be a huge burden.
This commit does not implement anything new. The flag is still off and
tests run against the existing implementation.
Use `yarn test-new-scheduler` to run tests against the new one.
* Transform invariant to custom error type
This transforms calls to the invariant module:
```js
invariant(condition, 'A %s message that contains %s', adj, noun);
```
Into throw statements:
```js
if (!condition) {
if (__DEV__) {
throw ReactError(`A ${adj} message that contains ${noun}`);
} else {
throw ReactErrorProd(ERR_CODE, adj, noun);
}
}
```
The only thing ReactError does is return an error whose name is set
to "Invariant Violation" to match the existing behavior.
ReactErrorProd is a special version used in production that throws
a minified error code, with a link to see to expanded form. This
replaces the reactProdInvariant module.
As a next step, I would like to replace our use of the invariant module
for user facing errors by transforming normal Error constructors to
ReactError and ReactErrorProd. (We can continue using invariant for
internal React errors that are meant to be unreachable, which was the
original purpose of invariant.)
* Use numbers instead of strings for error codes
* Use arguments instead of an array
I wasn't sure about this part so I asked Sebastian, and his rationale
was that using arguments will make ReactErrorProd slightly slower, but
using an array will likely make all the functions that throw slightly
slower to compile, so it's hard to say which way is better. But since
ReactErrorProd is in an error path, and fewer bytes is generally better,
no array is good.
* Casing nit
* Prevent javascript protocol URLs
* Just warn when disableJavaScriptURLs is false
This avoids a breaking change.
* Allow framesets
* Allow <html> to be used in integration tests
Full document renders requires server rendering so the client path
just uses the hydration path in this case to simplify writing these tests.
* Detect leading and intermediate characters and test mixed case
These are considered valid javascript urls by browser so they must be
included in the filter.
This is an exact match according to the spec but maybe we should include
a super set to be safer?
* Test updates to ensure we have coverage there too
* Fix toString invocation and Flow types
Right now we invoke toString twice when we hydrate (three times
with the flag off). Ideally we should only do it once even in this case
but the code structure doesn't really allow for that right now.
* s/itRejects/itRejectsRendering
* Dedupe warning and add the unsafe URL to the warning message
* Add test that fails if g is added to the sanitizer
This only affects the prod version since the warning is deduped anyway.
* Fix prod test
* Add command to run tests in persistent mode
* Convert Suspense fuzz tester to use noop renderer
So we can run it in persistent mode, too.
* Don't mutate stateNode in appendAllChildren
We can't mutate the stateNode in appendAllChildren because the children
could be current.
This is a bit weird because now the child that we append is different
from the one on the fiber stateNode. I think this makes conceptual
sense, but I suspect this likely breaks an assumption in Fabric.
With this approach, we no longer need to clone to unhide the children,
so I removed those host config methods.
Fixes bug surfaced by fuzz tester. (The test case that failed was the
one that's already hard coded.)
* In persistent mode, disable test that reads a ref
Refs behave differently in persistent mode. I added a TODO to write
a persistent mode version of this test.
* Run persistent mode tests in CI
* test-persistent should skip files without noop
If a file doesn't reference react-noop-renderer, we shouldn't bother
running it in persistent mode, since the results will be identical to
the normal test run.
* Remove module constructor from placeholder tests
We don't need this now that we have the ability to run any test file in
either mutation or persistent mode.
* Revert "test-persistent should skip files without noop"
Seb objected to adding shelljs as a dep and I'm too lazy to worry about
Windows support so whatever I'll just revert this.
* Delete duplicate file
* Convert ReactSuspensePlaceholder tests to use noop
Instead of the test renderer, since test renderer does not support
running in persistent mode.
* Run Placeholder tests in persistent mode, too
* Fix Flow and lint
* Hidden text instances should have correct host context
Adds a test for a subtle edge case that only occurs in persistent mode.
* createHiddenTextInstance -> cloneHiddenTextInstance
This sidesteps the problem where createHiddenTextInstance needs access
to the host context.
* 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
* 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
* Replace SSR fallback content with new suspense content
* The three states of a Dehydrated Suspense
This introduces three states for dehydrated suspense boundaries
Pending - This means that the tree is still waiting for additional data or
to be populated with its final content.
Fallback - This means that the tree has entered a permanent fallback state
and no more data from the server is to be expected. This means that the
client should take over and try to render instead. The fallback nodes will
be deleted.
Normal - The node has entered its final content and is now ready to be
hydrated.
* Rename retryTimedOutBoundary to resolveRetryThenable
This doesn't just retry. It assumes that resolving a thenable means that
it is ok to clear it from the thenable cache.
We'll reuse the retryTimedOutBoundary logic separately.
* Register a callback to be fired when a boundary changes away from pending
It's now possible to switch from a pending state to either hydrating
or replacing the content.
* Basic partial hydration test
* Render comments around Suspense components
We need this to be able to identify how far to skip ahead if we're not
going to hydrate this subtree yet.
* Add DehydratedSuspenseComponent type of work
Will be used for Suspense boundaries that are left with their server
rendered content intact.
* Add comment node as hydratable instance type as placeholder for suspense
* Skip past nodes within the Suspense boundary
This lets us continue hydrating sibling nodes.
* A dehydrated suspense boundary comment should be considered a sibling
* Retry hydrating at offscreen pri or after ping if suspended
* Enter hydration state when retrying dehydrated suspense boundary
* Delete all children within a dehydrated suspense boundary when it's deleted
* Delete server rendered content when props change before hydration completes
* Make test internal
* Wrap in act
* Change SSR Fixture to use Partial Hydration
This requires the enableSuspenseServerRenderer flag to be manually enabled
for the build to work.
* Changes to any parent Context forces clearing dehydrated content
We mark dehydrated boundaries as having child work, since they might have
components that read from the changed context.
We check this in beginWork and if it does we treat it as if the input
has changed (same as if props changes).
* Wrap in feature flag
* Treat Suspense boundaries without fallbacks as if not-boundaries
These don't come into play for purposes of hydration.
* Fix clearing of nested suspense boundaries
* ping -> retry
Co-Authored-By: sebmarkbage <sebastian@calyptus.eu>
* Typo
Co-Authored-By: sebmarkbage <sebastian@calyptus.eu>
* Use didReceiveUpdate instead of manually comparing props
* Leave comment for why it's ok to ignore the timeout