Files
react/packages/react-dom
Sebastian Markbåge 3ef31d196a Implement Partial Hydration for Activity (#32863)
Stacked on #32862 and #32842.

This means that Activity boundaries now act as boundaries which can have
their effects mounted independently. Just like Suspense boundaries, we
hydrate the outer content first and then start hydrating the content in
an Offscreen lane. Flowing props or interacting with the content
increases the priority just like Suspense boundaries.

This skips emitting even the comments for `<Activity mode="hidden">` so
we don't hydrate those. Instead those are deferred to a later client
render.

The implementation are just forked copies of the SuspenseComponent
branches and then carefully going through each line and tweaking it.

The main interesting bit is that, unlike Suspense, Activity boundaries
don't have fallbacks so all those branches where you might commit a
suspended tree disappears. Instead, if something suspends while
hydration, we can just leave the dehydrated content in place. However,
if something does suspend during client rendering then it should bubble
up to the parent. Therefore, we have to be careful to only
pushSuspenseHandler when hydrating. That's really the main difference.

This just uses the existing basic Activity tests but I've started work
on port all of the applicable Suspense tests in SelectiveHydration-test
and PartialHydration-test to Activity versions.
2025-04-22 21:00:30 -04:00
..

react-dom

This package serves as the entry point to the DOM and server renderers for React. It is intended to be paired with the generic React package, which is shipped as react to npm.

Installation

npm install react react-dom

Usage

In the browser

import { createRoot } from 'react-dom/client';

function App() {
  return <div>Hello World</div>;
}

const root = createRoot(document.getElementById('root'));
root.render(<App />);

On the server

import { renderToPipeableStream } from 'react-dom/server';

function App() {
  return <div>Hello World</div>;
}

function handleRequest(res) {
  // ... in your server handler ...
  const stream = renderToPipeableStream(<App />, {
    onShellReady() {
      res.statusCode = 200;
      res.setHeader('Content-type', 'text/html');
      stream.pipe(res);
    },
    // ...
  });
}

API

react-dom

See https://react.dev/reference/react-dom

react-dom/client

See https://react.dev/reference/react-dom/client

react-dom/server

See https://react.dev/reference/react-dom/server