Summary: The problem with `bundleOpts` is that it discards Flow typing, so it prevents reinforcing the integration of `Bundler` into `Server`. This changeset removes the `bundleOpts` to solve that issues. Instead, it makes the options explicit so that there is less uncertaintly. I love making options explicit, because they force callsites to take a consicious decision about what is really needed, making them more robust. They also expose oddities that probably needs refatoring, for example having a `resolutionRequest` in the bundle options does not seem correct, it should be an implementation details. Likewise, `onProgress` should probably be exposed differently, as it does not affect the content of the bundle itself.
Reviewed By: davidaurelio
Differential Revision: D4697729
fbshipit-source-id: d543870ba024e7588c10b101fa51429c77cc5ddc
Summary: Also remove the unnecessary await of the resolver, because `_bundler.bundle()` already does that.
Reviewed By: davidaurelio
Differential Revision: D4689448
fbshipit-source-id: 3b4fd73b1368f8b00c6eb7483e751387d9856ce9
Summary: The function giving the worker count was duplicated, let's just pass it down from a central place, the Bundler. Also, I simplified the function to use a simple formula rather than arbitrary ranges (it's still arbitrary, just a tad bit less :D ).
Reviewed By: davidaurelio
Differential Revision: D4689366
fbshipit-source-id: fe5b349396f1a07858f4f80ccaa63c375122fac8
Summary: Not having default everywhere (keeping them at the top level instead) makes for a code that is easier to understand, and more robust as different pieces of code cannot default to different values. This changeset also unifies the option types (ex. `platform`).
Reviewed By: cpojer
Differential Revision: D4688882
fbshipit-source-id: b5f407601386336f937a0ac1f68c666acc89dfd8
Summary:
Absolute imports on Windows were broken, I'm not 100% sure when this happens but when I tested Exponent on Windows which uses `rn-cli.config.js` with
```js
getTransformOptions() {
return {
reactNativePath: path.resolve('./node_modules/react-native'),
reactPath: path.resolve('./node_modules/react'),
};
}
```
it seemed to use absolute paths for these modules.
I also tested absolute paths in node repl and it does work for absolute paths of different formats. `C:/root/test.js`, `/root/test.js`, `C:\root\test.js` all do resolve properly to the same module.
To fix this I resolve the absolute path using `path.resolve` on Windows. Noop on other platforms to avoid the overhead since it's not necessary.
**Test plan**
- Tested that it fixed the bug I had when running Exponent on Windows.
- Updated the absolute path test to use forward slashes since this is what happens in practice when using `getTransformOptions`. We can't test all cases on linux since adding the drive letter au
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/12530
Differential Revision: D4634699
Pulled By: jeanlauliac
fbshipit-source-id: 0cf6528069b79cba2e0f79f48f5a524d59b7091e
Summary:
Similar to https://github.com/facebook/jest/pull/2877, this introduces an optional config `HasteImpl` of type `{getHasteName(filePath: string): (string|void)}` that returns the haste name for a module at filePath if it is a haste module or undefined otherwise.
This allows us to inject a custom implementation of haste's module id resolution rather than only relying on `providesModule` annotations
Reviewed By: davidaurelio
Differential Revision: D4589372
fbshipit-source-id: 4d1983dfbf09c9d67faf725e86ae86ab42433b7d
Summary:
Moves stack trace symbolication to a worker process.
The worker process is spawned laziliy, and is treated as an exclusive resource (requests are queued).
This helps keeping the server process responsive when symbolicating.
Reviewed By: cpojer
Differential Revision: D4602722
fbshipit-source-id: 5da97e53afd9a1ab981c5ba4b02a7d1d869dee71
Summary:
These are not modules and don't need a `providesModule` annotation.
`sed -i -e '/providesModule/d' packager/src/Resolver/polyfills/*.js`
Reviewed By: cpojer
Differential Revision: D4605374
fbshipit-source-id: 5045a9664bc105dab15936f408d373da8d9322fe
Summary:
HTTP request URLs don’t include protocol, host and port. Stack frames URLs, on the other hand, contain full URLs. These full URLs are used to get the correct bundle to build the source map from.
The method that creates option objects from URLs therefore now discards leading protocol, host and port to ensure that cached bundles can be reused for symbolication rather than triggering rebuilds.
Reviewed By: jeanlauliac, cpojer
Differential Revision: D4598077
fbshipit-source-id: 262df187bcdf7099011371e8b55ae692c6e1a942
Summary:
I extracted all the dependencies (using jest-haste-map) and copied them from the package.json in react-native to RNP. There is some duplication here for now but we can later go back and remove the duplicated dependencies from react-native that aren't needed there.
I also removed a mock file that hasn't been in use for a long time.
Reviewed By: jeanlauliac
Differential Revision: D4598155
fbshipit-source-id: 850b6dfa6fc2eec138ebdd7208cd34bee21f7927
Summary:
The first time I tried to commit this changeset, it was causing many new packages to be installed, because the dependency would depend on newer versions that what we have installed. So, I had made a diff so upgrade all the babel packages. Unfortunately this caused some problem as the newer versions of Babel are more strict on some syntaxes. Of course, these have to be addressed, but I don't want this changeset to be coupled with Babel upgrades and the issues that arise from it.
So instead, I decided to install the slightly older version of the async-to-generator module. At first I tried with just doing:
yarn add babel-plugin-transform-async-to-generator@6.16.0
But, `yarn` is stubborn: because this module depends on a caret version of `babel-helper-remap-async-to-generator`, it installs the very last version of it, that itself needs more recent versions of other Babel modules. So, instead, I add to install a slightly older version of the dependency manually, then then the plugin:
yarn add babel-helper-remap-async-to-generator@6.16.0
yarn add babel-plugin-transform-async-to-generator@6.16.0
This allows us to have a `yarn.lock` with only a minimal amount of changes, and uncouple this change from any Babel upgrades. Because we only have a few new modules, the `node_modules` folder also stays the same, 133M, and it gives us confidence this will not cause significant startup time regressions.
Reviewed By: cpojer
Differential Revision: D4578733
fbshipit-source-id: deb0f720b895b7196aaf432adec3e56f18663940
Summary:
allow-large-files
By using async/await the code is (1) less nested, (2) more compact and (3) more robust (no exceptions running away, and much less risks of forgetting to call the callback/resolve, or mistakenly calling it twice). I now tend to think we could switch to it for all the callsites that are not in a perf-critical path.
I switched from 'request' to 'node-fetch' because 'request' has an annoying callback with 2 arguments. So it's simpler to use an interface that's (1) already returning a Promise and (2) that is becoming standard.
This changeset was a way for me to start experiment with introducing async/await in packager codebase, and it looks pretty good so far.
Reviewed By: cpojer
Differential Revision: D4559167
fbshipit-source-id: 89a328c5766c2ba890e9d0e67a81a38dac6cfc73
Summary: I figured out that the uncaught rejection that happens on transform error originated from a "fork" along the chain, where we both "then" on a promise, and return that promise. In that case Node.js, legitimately I think, identifies this as an uncaught rejection case. One solution, in this changeset, is to do the side-effects as part of the promise chain instead of "forking". Another option would be to add an explicit error handler to the additional "then", but it seems we don't have to handle that case here.
Reviewed By: davidaurelio
Differential Revision: D4515592
fbshipit-source-id: 17d813cfdbc76685b6273b8d94e97d948fd68674