Summary: I'm working on getting CI to pass. As a first step, I'll upgrade the lerna setup to use Yarn's workspaces (when yarn is run from the Metro root) as well as upgrading Flow to the same version we use in xplat. I also copied over the Jest type definitions. This should fix all type errors for a start.
Reviewed By: davidaurelio
Differential Revision: D6361276
fbshipit-source-id: 4e8661b7d5fe4e3f6dd1e6923891bd2d23c9b4db
Summary:
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**Summary**
<!-- Explain the **motivation** for making this change. What existing problem does the pull request solve? -->
It is currently not possible to resolve specific module imports (such as `react-native/Libraries/Image/AssetRegistry` using forward slashes as folder separators) using a custom mapping defined in `extraNodeModules` on Windows. This PR solves this issue by normalizing module names to use platform-specific folder separators before splitting the module name using `path.sep` as separators.
**Test plan**
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We use `extraNodeModules` to create a mapping between `react-native` and a forked and scoped version of react-native (i.e. `scope/react-native`). If we import a specific file from react-native (such as [`react-native/Libraries/Image/AssetRegistry`](https://github.com/facebook/react-native/blob/master/local-cli/core/Constants.js), which gets referenced when importing image assets), `ModuleResolution.js` is not able to extract the first folder name on Windows. This first folder name is the name of the module (`react-native` in the previous example) and is used to query `extraNodeModules` for possible matches. It is not able to find this folder name because the module name is split using `path.sep` as a separator, which is `'\\'` on Windows. Most module names use forward slashes as folder separators. The solution is to normalize `toModuleName` before we split on `path.sep`.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/metro-bundler/pull/89
Differential Revision: D6312391
Pulled By: jeanlauliac
fbshipit-source-id: 920c52633e8c9584ecb2bdd309dc4a8516c3199b
Summary:
Uglify@3.1.7 is causing some perf issues (more specifically, this commit: 5b4b07e9a7) that are impacting TTI on RN views and increased memory usage.
More specifically, code like:
```
function nonTrivialFn(pre) {
return pre + Math.random();
}
function hotFunctionCalledALotOfTimes(num) {
return nonTrivialFn(num + Math.random());
}
hotFunctionCalledALotOfTimes(3);
hotFunctionCalledALotOfTimes(5);
```
in v3.1.7 gets converted to:
```
function hotFunctionCalledALotOfTimes(num){
return function(pre) {
return pre + Math.random();
}(num + Math.random())
}
hotFunctionCalledALotOfTimes(3);
hotFunctionCalledALotOfTimes(5);
```
This causes a function creation each time `hotFunctionCalledALotOfTimes` is called.
By comparison, in v3.1.6, that previous code was converted to:
```
function nonTrivialFn(pre){
return pre + Math.random()
}
function hotFunctionCalledALotOfTimes(num){
return nonTrivialFn(num + Math.random())
}
hotFunctionCalledALotOfTimes(3);
hotFunctionCalledALotOfTimes(5);
```
Reviewed By: jeanlauliac, alexeylang
Differential Revision: D6296740
fbshipit-source-id: b3988d886e607103ec3ae6b9763b2f0411a8aa3c
Summary:
`metro-bundler` v0.21 contains a rewritten bundling mechanism, with simplified logic and much faster rebuild times, called delta bundler. This release contains a couple of breaking changes:
* Now, when using a custom transformer, the list of additional babel plugins to apply are passed to the `transform()` method. These are used in non-dev mode for optimization purposes (Check 367a5f5db8 (diff-40653f0c822ac59a5af13d5b4ab31d84) to see how to handle them from the transformer).
* Now, when using a custom transformer outputting `rawMappings`, the transformer does not need to call the `compactMappings` method before returning (check d74685fd1d (diff-40653f0c822ac59a5af13d5b4ab31d84) for more info).
* We've removed support for two config parameters: `postProcessModules` and `postProcessBundleSourcemap`.
Reviewed By: davidaurelio
Differential Revision: D6186035
fbshipit-source-id: 242c5c2a954c6b9b6f339d345f888eaa44704579
Summary:
**Summary**
Minification fails or minified bundle may crash due to uglify-es bugs which have been fixed recently. See https://github.com/facebook/react-native/issues/16689
**Test plan**
Try to production bundle a project using ex-navigation, which fails with:
```
Maximum call stack size exceeded
```
Use this patch and see that bundling suceeds. There are also minified runtime errors solved by this change, see https://github.com/facebook/react-native/issues/16689 for more information.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/metro-bundler/pull/85
Reviewed By: mjesun
Differential Revision: D6259177
Pulled By: rafeca
fbshipit-source-id: 55987eb338b06938181c0da74d104d23eeb135b6
Summary:
This diff migrates Metro Bundler from `worker-farm` to `jest-worker`:
* Fully removes the custom patched `worker-farm` fork.
* Removes //a lot// of non-clear Flow types used to cast functions from callbacks to promises.
* Reduces cyclomatic complexity of the `Transformer` class by using `async`/`await`.
* Cleans all additional methods inside `JSTransformer/index.js`, by moving them to a single class and properly scoping them.
**Note:** this diff does not still enable the ability to bind files to workers by using `computeWorkerKey`; this will come at a later stage.
Reviewed By: davidaurelio
Differential Revision: D6247532
fbshipit-source-id: 51259360a5c15117996777a3be74b73b583f595e
Summary: To determine whether segment boundaries are properly covered by async imports rather than requires, we need to get knowledge about it higher up in the stack. This changeset exposes which of the dependencies are async as an array of indices within the `dependencies` array (I'd prefer avoiding duplicating the strings because they could get inconsistent, and I don't want to have 2 separate arrays of names either because we'd have to modify a bunch of stuff across the stack to support that).
Reviewed By: davidaurelio
Differential Revision: D6220236
fbshipit-source-id: 1ee36bc7c59f7f27e089f7771a24c45c8bd57b5d
Summary: Having types in tests ensure that we're testing what the API is supposed to process and not something else. In that case, adding type revealed that we were mistakenly passing strings instead of `Buffer` objects to the transform and optimize functions, but it would still work because `toString` was called over it. Passing proper `Buffer` objects as expected ensures that it doesn't just work with strings, and that the integration of these files in the rest of the application works as expected. This changeset fixes these callsites and add a few invariants here and there. We use `invariant` instead of `expect()` because Flow understands only the former as a type refinement, even though `expect` would also be a form of possible refinement. I don't think it's a big deal.
Reviewed By: davidaurelio
Differential Revision: D6160019
fbshipit-source-id: cbcbb05d7bccf9e1b9f6bb3ea30b0bb2925aef1b
Summary: Here's a good example why Flow "exact types" are useful: there are a few place where we were adding unusused fields in the objects. As these fields end up in JSON files used to communicate with Buck, this can amount to a waste of resources. This changeset make the type exact and removes the unused fields.
Reviewed By: mjesun
Differential Revision: D6159350
fbshipit-source-id: 8cdf29d5729253f119778943ad961eacb8990c04