* Extract base Jest config
This makes it easier to change the source config without affecting the build test config.
* Statically import the host config
This changes react-reconciler to import HostConfig instead of getting it through a function argument.
Rather than start with packages like ReactDOM that want to inline it, I started with React Noop and ensured that *custom* renderers using react-reconciler package still work. To do this, I'm making HostConfig module in the reconciler look at a global variable by default (which, in case of the react-reconciler npm package, ends up being the host config argument in the top-level scope).
This is still very broken.
* Add scaffolding for importing an inlined renderer
* Fix the build
* ES exports for renderer methods
* ES modules for host configs
* Remove closures from the reconciler
* Check each renderer's config with Flow
* Fix uncovered Flow issue
We know nextHydratableInstance doesn't get mutated inside this function, but Flow doesn't so it thinks it may be null.
Help Flow.
* Prettier
* Get rid of enable*Reconciler flags
They are not as useful anymore because for almost all cases (except third party renderers) we *know* whether it supports mutation or persistence.
This refactoring means react-reconciler and react-reconciler/persistent third-party packages now ship the same thing.
Not ideal, but this seems worth how simpler the code becomes. We can later look into addressing it by having a single toggle instead.
* Prettier again
* Fix Flow config creation issue
* Fix imprecise Flow typing
* Revert accidental changes
* Generate Flow config on install
We'll need to do pre-renderer Flow passes with different configs.
This is the first step to get it working. We only want the original version checked in.
* Create multiple Flow configs from a template
* Run Flow per renderer
* Lint
* Revert the environment consolidation
I thought this would be a bit cleaner at first because we now have non-environment files in this directory.
But Sebastian is changing these files at the same time so I want to avoid conflicts and keep the PR more tightly scoped. Undo.
* Misc
* Temporary fix for grabbing wrong rAF polyfill in ReactScheduler
**what is the change?:**
For now...
We need to grab a slightly different implementation of rAF internally at
FB than in Open Source. Making rAF a dependency of the ReactScheduler
module allows us to fork the dependency at FB.
NOTE: After this lands we have an alternative plan to make this module
separate from React and require it before our Facebook timer polyfills
are applied. But want to land this now to keep master in a working state
and fix bugs folks are seeing at Facebook.
Thanks @sebmarkbage @acdlite and @sophiebits for discussing the options
and trade-offs for solving this issue.
**why make this change?:**
This fixes a problem we're running into when experimenting with
ReactScheduler internally at Facebook, **and* it's part of our long term
plan to use dependency injection with the scheduler to make it easier to
test and adjust.
**test plan:**
Ran tests, lint, flow, and will manually test when syncing into
Facebook's codebase.
**issue:**
See internal task T29442940
* ran prettier
* Add TopLevelEventTypes
* Fix `ReactBrowserEventEmitter`
* Fix EventPluginUtils
* Fix TapEventPlugin
* Fix ResponderEventPlugin
* Update ReactDOMFiberComponent
* Fix BeforeInputEventPlugin
* Fix ChangeEventPlugin
* Fix EnterLeaveEventPlugin
* Add missing non top event type used in ChangeEventPlugin
* Fix SelectEventPlugin
* Fix SimpleEventPlugin
* Fix outstanding Flow issues and move TopLevelEventTypes
* Inline a list of all events in `ReactTestUtils`
* Fix tests
* Make it pretty
* Fix completly unrelated typo
* Don’t use map constructor because of IE11
* Update typings, revert changes to native code
* Make topLevelTypes in ResponderEventPlugin injectable and create DOM and ReactNative variant
* Set proper dependencies for DOMResponderEventPlugin
* Prettify
* Make some react dom tests no longer depend on internal API
* Use factories to create top level speific generic event modules
* Remove unused dependency
* Revert exposed module renaming, hide store creation, and inline dependency decleration
* Add Flow types to createResponderEventPlugin and its consumers
* Remove unused dependency
* Use opaque flow type for TopLevelType
* Add missing semis
* Use raw event names as top level identifer
* Upgrade baylon
This is required for parsing opaque flow types in our CI tests.
* Clean up flow types
* Revert Map changes of ReactBrowserEventEmitter
* Upgrade babel-* packages
Apparently local unit tests also have issues with parsing JavaScript
modules that contain opaque types (not sure why I didn't notice
earlier!?).
* Revert Map changes of SimpleEventPlugin
* Clean up ReactTestUtils
* Add missing semi
* Fix Flow issue
* Make TopLevelType clearer
* Favor for loops
* Explain the new DOMTopLevelEventTypes concept
* Use static injection for Responder plugin types
* Remove null check and rely on flow checks
* Add missing ResponderEventPlugin dependencies
* makes closure compiler threaded
* Dans PR with a closure compiler java version
* Remove unused dep
* Pin GCC
* Prettier
* Nit rename
* Fix error handling
* Name plugins consistently
* Fix lint
* Maybe this works?
* or this
* AppVeyor
* Fix lint
```
$ jest
FAIL scripts/jest/dont-run-jest-directly.js
● Test suite failed to run
Don't run `jest` directly. Run `yarn test` instead.
> 1 | throw new Error("Don't run `jest` directly. Run `yarn test` instead.");
2 |
at Object.<anonymous> (scripts/jest/dont-run-jest-directly.js:1:96)
Test Suites: 1 failed, 1 total
Tests: 0 total
Snapshots: 0 total
Time: 0.866s
Ran all test suites.
```
This is the first step - pulling the ReactDOMFrameScheduling module out
into a separate package.
Co-authored-by: Brandon Dail <aweary@users.noreply.github.com>
* Added new "native-fb" and "native-fabric-fb" bundles.
* Split RN_DEV and RN_PROD bundle types into RN_OSS_DEV, RN_OSS_PROD, RN_FB_DEV, and RN_FB_PROD. (This is a bit redundant but it seemed the least intrusive way of supporting a forked feature flags file for these bundles.)
* Renamed FB_DEV and FB_PROD bundle types to be more explicitly for www (FB_WWW_DEV and FB_WWW_PROD)
* Removed Haste @providesModule headers from the RB-specific RN renderer bundles to avoid a duplicate name conflicts.
* Remove dynamic values from OSS RN feature flags. (Leave them in FB RN feature flags.)
* Updated the sync script(s) to account for new renderer type.
* Move ReactFeatureFlags.js shim to FB bundle only (since OSS bundle no longer needs dynamic values).
* Don't download bundle stats from master on CI
This was temporarily necessary in the past because we didn't have the logic that downloads actual *merge base* stats.
We do have that now as part of the Danger script. So we can remove this.
* Use absolute threshold for whether to show a change
* Download master stats, but only for other master builds
* Rewrite sizes
* Move view config registry to shims
This ensures that both Fabric and RN renderers share the same view config
registry since it is stateful.
I had to duplicate in the mocks for testing.
* Move createReactNativeComponentClass to shims and delete internal usage
Since createReactNativeComponentClass is just an alias for the register
there's no need to bundle it. This file should probably just move back
to RN too.
We already have one stateful module that contains all the view config.
We might as well store the event types there too. That way the shared
state is compartmentalized (and I can move it out in a follow up PR).
The view config registry also already has an appropriate place to call
processEventTypes so now we no longer have to do it in RN.
Will follow up with a PR to RN to remove that call.
These are based on the ReactNoop renderer, which we use to test React
itself. This gives library authors (Relay, Apollo, Redux, et al.) a way
to test their components for async compatibility.
- Pass `unstable_isAsync` to `TestRenderer.create` to create an async
renderer instance. This causes updates to be lazily flushed.
- `renderer.unstable_yield` tells React to yield execution after the
currently rendering component.
- `renderer.unstable_flushAll` flushes all pending async work, and
returns an array of yielded values.
- `renderer.unstable_flushThrough` receives an array of expected values,
begins rendering, and stops once those values have been yielded. It
returns the array of values that are actually yielded. The user should
assert that they are equal.
Although we've used this pattern successfully in our own tests, I'm not
sure if these are the final APIs we'll make public.