@eps1lon flagged this case. Inlined useCallback has an extra LoadLocal indirection which caused us not to add a name. While I was there I added some extra checks to make sure we don't generate names for a given node twice (just in case).
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## Summary
Made many small changes to the compiler playground to improve user
experience. Removed any "Loading" indicators that would flash in before
a component would finish loading in. Additionally, before users would
see the "Show Internals" button toggling from false to true if they had
set it at true previously. I was able to refactor the URL/local storage
loading so that the `Store` would be fully initialized before the
components would load in.
Attempted to integrate `<Activity>` into showing/hiding these different
editors, but the current state of [monaco
editors](https://github.com/suren-atoyan/monaco-react) does not allow
for this. I created an issue for them to address:
https://github.com/suren-atoyan/monaco-react/issues/753
Added a debounce to the config editor so every key type wouldn't cause
the output panel to respond instantly. Users can type for 500 ms before
an error is thrown at them.
<!--
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does the pull request solve?
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## How did you test this change?
Here is what loading the page would look like before (not sure why its
so blurry):
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/58f4281a-cc02-4141-b9b5-f70d6ace12a2
Here is how it looks now:
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/40535165-fc7c-44fb-9282-9c7fa76e7d53
Here is the debouncing:
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/e4ab29e4-1afd-4249-beca-671fb6542f5e
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Stacked on #34510.
The "Commit" phase for a View Transition starts before the snapshot
phase (before mutation) and then stretches into the async gap of
`startViewTransition`, encompasses the mutation phase inside of its
update callback and finally the layout phase.
However, between the mutation phase and the layout phase we may suspend
the start of the view transition on fonts and/or images. In that case we
now split the Commit phase into first one before we suspend and then we
log "Waiting for Images and/or Fonts" and then another Commit phase
around the layout effects.
<img width="897" height="119" alt="Screenshot 2025-09-16 at 11 37 26 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/0fe21388-bb48-4456-a594-62227d12d9b7"
/>
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## Summary
<!--
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does the pull request solve?
--> The React Compiler rejected a default parameter that contains a
TSInstantiationExpression with the todo message that the expression
cannot be safely reordered. This change teaches the reorder check in
BuildHIR.ts to treat TSInstantiationExpression as reorderable. This is
safe because TypeScript instantiation only affects types and is erased
at runtime, so it has no side effects and does not change semantics.
## How did you test this change?
```
Set-Content testfilter.txt 'ts-instantiation-default-param'
yarn test --filter --update
yarn test --filter
```
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>
compiler/packages/babel-plugin-react-compiler/src/__tests__/fixtures/compiler/ts-instantiation-default-param.js
Some components accept a union of a ref callback function or ref object.
In this case we may infer the type as a function due to the presence of
invoking the ref callback function. In that case, we currently report a
"Hint: name `fooRef` as "ref" or with a "-Ref" suffix..." even though
the variable is already named appropriately — the problem is that we
inferred a non-ref type. So here we check the type and don't report this
hint if we inferred another type.
Stacked on #34509.
View Transitions introduces a bunch of new types of gaps in the commit
phase which needs to be logged differently in the performance track.
One thing that can happen is that a `flushSync` update forces the View
Transition to abort before it has started if it happens in the gap
before the transition is ready. In that case we log "Interrupted View
Transition".
Otherwise, when we're done in `startViewTransition` there's some work to
finalize the animations before the `ready` calllback. This is logged as
"Starting Animation".
Then there's a gap before the passive effects fire which we log as
"Animating". This can be long unless they're forced to flush early e.g.
due to another lane updating.
The "Animating" track should then pick up which doesn't do yet. This one
is tricky because this is after the actual commit phase and needs to be
interrupted by new renders which themselves can be suspended on the
animation finshing.
This PR is just a subset of all the cases. Will need a lot more work.
<img width="679" height="161" alt="Screenshot 2025-09-16 at 10 19 06 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/0407372d-aaed-41f5-a262-059b2686ae87"
/>
This simplifies the logic for clamping the start times of various
phases. Instead of checking in multiple places I ensure we compute a
value for each phase that is then clamped to the next phase so they
don't overlap. If they're zero they're not printed.
I also added a name for all the anonymous labels. Those are mainly
fillers for sync work that should be quick but it helps debugging if we
can name them.
Finally the real fix is to update the clamp time which previously could
lead to overlapping entries for consecutive updates when a previous
update never finalized before the next update.
Calling setState functions during render can lead to extraneous renders
or even infinite loops. We also have runtime detection for loops, but
static detection is obviously even better.
This PR adds an option to infer identifers as setState functions if both
the following conditions are met:
- The identifier is named starting with "set"
- The identifier is used as the callee of a call expression
By inferring values as SetState type, this allows our existing
ValidateNoSetStateInRender rule to flag calls during render, disallowing
examples like the following:
```js
function Component({setParentState}) {
setParentState(...);
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Error: Cannot call setState in render
}
```
It turns out that View Transitions can sometimes overshoot and then we
need to ensure it fills. It can otherwise sometimes flash in Chrome.
This is something users might hit as well.
Stacked on #34486.
If we gave up on loading suspensey images for blocking the commit (e.g.
due to #34481), we can still block the view transition from committing
to allow an animation to include the image from the start.
At this point we have more information about the layout so we can
include only the images that are within viewport in the calculation
which may end up with a different answer.
This only applies when we attempt to run an animation (e.g. something
mutated inside a `<ViewTransition>` in a Transition). We could attempt a
`startViewTransition` if we gave up on the suspensey images just so that
we could block it even if no animation would be running.
However, this point the screen is frozen and you can no longer have sync
updates interrupt so ideally we would have already blocked the commit
from happening in the first place.
The reason to have two points where we block is that ideally we leave
the UI responsive while blocking, which blocking the commit does. In the
simple case of all images or a single image being within the viewport,
that's favorable. By combining the techniques we only end up freezing
the screen in the special case that we had a lot of images added outside
the viewport and started an animation with some image inside the
viewport (which presumably is about to finish anyway).
Stacked on #34481.
We currently track the suspended state temporarily with a global which
is safe as long as we always read it during a sync pass. However, we
sometimes read it in closures and then we have to be carefully to pass
the right one since it's possible another commit on a different root has
started at that point. This avoids this footgun.
Another reason to do this is that I want to read it in
`startViewTransition` which is in an async gap after which point it's no
longer safe. So I have to pass that through the `commitRoot` bound
function.
Stacked on #34478.
In general we don't like to deal with timeouts in suspense world. We've
had that in the past but in general it doesn't work well because if you
have a timeout and then give up you made everything wait longer for no
benefit at the end. That's why the recommendation is to remove a
Suspense boundary if you expect it to be fast and add one if you expect
it to be slow. You have to estimate as the developer.
Suspensey images suffer from this same problem. We want to apply
suspensey images to as much as possible so that it's the default to
avoid flashing because if just a few images flash it's still almost as
bad as all of them. However, we do know that it's also very common to
use images and on a slow connection or many images, it's not worth it so
we have the timeout to eventually give up.
However, this means that in cases that are always slow or connections
that are always slow, you're always punished for no reason.
Suspensey images is mainly a polish feature to make high end experiences
on high end connections better but we don't want to unnecessarily punish
all slow connections in the process or things like lots of images below
the viewport.
This PR adds an estimate for whether or not we'll likely be able to load
all the images within the timeout on a high end enough connection. If
not, we'll still do a short suspend (unless we've already exceeded the
wait time adjusted for #34478) to allow loading from cache if available.
This estimate is based on two heuristics:
1) We compute an estimated bandwidth available on the current device in
mbps. This is computed from performance entries that have loaded static
resources already on the site. E.g. this can be other images, css, or
scripts. We see how long they took. If we don't have any entries (or if
they're all cross-origin in Safari) we fallback to
`navigator.connection.downlink` in Chrome or a 5mbps default in
Firefox/Safari.
2) To estimate how many bytes we'll have to download we use the
width/height props of the img tag if available (or a 100 pixel default)
times the device pixel ratio. We assume that a good img implementation
downloads proper resolution image for the device and defines a
width/height up front to avoid layout trash. Then we estimate that it
takes about 0.25 bytes per pixel which is somewhat conservative
estimate.
This is somewhat conservative given that the image could've been
preloaded and be better compressed.
So it really only kicks in for high end connections that are known to
load fast.
In a follow up, we can add an additional wait for View Transitions that
does the same estimate but only for the images that turn out to be in
viewport.
Currently suspensey images doesn't account for how long we've already
been waiting. This means that you can for example wait for 300ms for the
throttle + 500ms for the images. If a Transition takes a while to
complete you can also wait that time + an additional 500ms for the
images.
This tracks the start time of a Transition so that we can count the
timeout starting from when the user interacted or when the last fallback
committed (which is where the 300ms throttle is computed from). Creating
a single timeline.
This also moves the timeout to a central place which I'll use in a
follow up.
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## Summary
Added an "Applied Configs" section under the Config Overrides panel.
Users will now be able to see the full list of configs applied to the
compiler in the playground. Adds greater discoverability for config
options to override as well. Updated the default config as well to be a
commented config option, so users will start with empty overrides.
<!--
Explain the **motivation** for making this change. What existing problem
does the pull request solve?
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## How did you test this change?
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/1a57b2d5-0405-4fc8-9990-1747c30181c0
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## Overview
This PR ships `<Activity />` to the `react@canary` release channel for
final feedback and prepare for semver stable release.
## What this means
Shipping `<Activity />` to canary means it has gone through extensive
testing in production, we are confident in the stability of the feature,
and we are preparing to release it in a future semver stable version.
Libraries and frameworks following the [Canary
Workflow](https://react.dev/blog/2023/05/03/react-canaries) should begin
implementing and testing the feature.
## Why we follow the Canary Workflow
To prepare for semver stable, libraries should test canary features like
`<Activity>` with `react@canary` to confirm compatibility and prepare
for the next semver release in a myriad of environments and
configurations used throughout the React ecosystem. This provides
libraries with ample time to catch any issues we missed before slamming
them with problems in the wider semver release.
Since these features have already gone through extensive production
testing, and we are confident they are stable, frameworks following the
[Canary Workflow](https://react.dev/blog/2023/05/03/react-canaries) can
also begin adopting canary features like `<Activity />`.
This adoption is similar to how different Browsers implement new
proposed browser features before they are added to the standard. If a
frameworks adopts a canary feature, they are committing to stability for
their users by ensuring any API changes before a semver stable release
are opaque and non-breaking to their users.
Apps not using a framework are also free to adopt canary features like
Activity as long as they follow the [Canary
Workflow](https://react.dev/blog/2023/05/03/react-canaries), but we
generally recommend waiting for a semver stable release unless you have
the capacity to commit to following along with the canary changes and
debugging library compatibility issues.
Waiting for semver stable means you're able to benefit from libraries
testing and confirming support, and use semver as signal for which
version of a library you can use with support of the feature.
## Docs
Check out the ["React Labs: View Transitions, Activity, and
more"](https://react.dev/blog/2025/04/23/react-labs-view-transitions-activity-and-more#activity)
blog post, and [the new docs for
`<Activity>`](https://react.dev/reference/react/Activity) for more info.
## TODO
- [x] Bump Activity docs to Canary
https://github.com/reactjs/react.dev/pull/7974
---------
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Sebbie Silbermann <sebastian.silbermann@vercel.com>
When we report an error we typically log the owner stack of the thing
that caught the error. Similarly we restore the `console.createTask`
scope of the catching component when we call `reportError` or
`console.error`.
We also have a special case if something throws during reconciliation
which uses the Server Component task as far as we got before we threw.
https://github.com/facebook/react/blob/main/packages/react-reconciler/src/ReactChildFiber.js#L1952-L1960
Chrome has since fixed it (on our request) that the Error constructor
snapshots the Task at the time the constructor was created and logs that
in `reportError`. This is a good thing since it means we get a coherent
stack. Unfortunately, it means that the fake Errors that we create in
Flight Client gets a snapshot of the task where they were created so
when they're reported in the console they get the root Task instead of
the Task of the handler of the error.
Ideally we'd transfer the Task from the server and restore it. However,
since we don't instrument the Error object to snapshot the owner and we
can't read the native Task (if it's even enabled on the server) we don't
actually have a correct snapshot to transfer for a Server Component
Error. However, we can use the parent's task for where the error was
observed by Flight Server and then encode that as a pseudo owner of the
Error.
Then we use this owner as the Task which the Error is created within.
Now the client snapshots that Task which is reported by `reportError` so
now we have an async stack for Server Component errors again. (Note that
this owner may differ from the one observed by `captureOwnerStack` which
gets the nearest Server Component from where it was caught. We could
attach the owner to the Error object and use that owner when calling
`onCaughtError`/`onUncaughtError`).
Before:
<img width="911" height="57" alt="Screenshot 2025-09-10 at 10 57 54 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/0446ef96-fad9-4e17-8a9a-d89c334233ec"
/>
After:
<img width="910" height="128" alt="Screenshot 2025-09-10 at 11 06 20 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b30e5892-cf40-4246-a588-0f309575439b"
/>
Similarly, there are Errors and warnings created by ChildFiber itself.
Those execute in the scope of the general render of the parent Fiber.
They used to get the scope of the nearest client component parent (e.g.
div in this case) but that's the parent of the Server Component. It
would be too expensive to run every level of reconciliation in its own
task optimistically, so this does it only when we know that we'll throw
or log an error that needs this context. Unfortunately this doesn't
cover user space errors (such as if an iterable errors).
Before:
<img width="903" height="298" alt="Screenshot 2025-09-10 at 11 31 55 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/cffc94da-8c14-4d6e-9a5b-bf0833b8b762"
/>
After:
<img width="1216" height="252" alt="Screenshot 2025-09-10 at 11 50
54 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/f85f93cf-ab73-4046-af3d-dd93b73b3552"
/>
<img width="412" height="115" alt="Screenshot 2025-09-10 at 11 52 46 AM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/a76cef7b-b162-4ecf-9b0a-68bf34afc239"
/>
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## Summary
Updated the UI of the React compiler playground. The config, Input, and
Output panels will now span the viewport width when "Show Internals" is
not toggled on. When "Show Internals" is toggled on, the old vertical
accordion tabs are still used. Going to add support for the "Applied
Configs" tabs underneath the "Config Overrides" tab next.
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## How did you test this change?
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b8eab028-f58c-4cb9-a8b2-0f098f2cc262
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Requiring DevTools to be present for dev builds seems like an overkill,
let's enable the instrumentation by default.
Nothing changes for profiling or production artifacts.
When we emit objects of type `ReactAsyncInfo`, we need to make sure that
their owners are outlined, using `outlineComponentInfo`. Otherwise we
would end up accidentally emitting stashed fields that are not part of
the transport protocol, specifically `debugStack`, `debugTask`, and
`debugLocation`. This would lead to runtime errors in the client, when
for example, the stack for a `debugLocation` is processed in
`buildFakeCallStack`, but the stack was actually omitted from the RSC
payload, because for those fields we don't ensure that the object limit
is increased by the length of the stack, as we do when we're emitting
the `stack` of a `ReactComponentInfo` object in `outlineComponentInfo`.
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4. Ensure the test suite passes (`yarn test`). Tip: `yarn test --watch
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[prettier](https://github.com/prettier/prettier) (`yarn prettier`).
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## Summary
Removed the old `OVERRIDE` pragma to make the source of truth for config
overrides in the left-hand pane. Now, it will automatically update the
output pane each time there is an edit to the config. The old pragma
format is still supported, but it will be overwritten by the config pane
if they are modifying the same flags. Removed the gating on the config
panel so now all users will automatically be able to view it, but it
will be initially collapsed.
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## How did you test this change?
https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/9d4512b9-e203-4ce0-ae95-dd96ff03bbc1
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Two small QoL improvements inspired by feedback:
* `if (ref.current === undefined) { ref.current = ... }` is now allowed.
* `if (!ref.current) { ref.current = ... }` is still disallowed, but we
emit an extra hint suggesting the `if (!ref.current == null)` pattern.
I was on the fence about the latter. We got feedback asking to allow `if
(!ref.current)` but if your ref stores a boolean value then this would
allow reading the ref in render. The unary form is also less precise in
general due to sketchy truthiness conversions. I figured a hint is a
good compromise.
---
[//]: # (BEGIN SAPLING FOOTER)
Stack created with [Sapling](https://sapling-scm.com). Best reviewed
with [ReviewStack](https://reviewstack.dev/facebook/react/pull/34449).
* __->__ #34449
* #34424
@stipsan found this issue where the compiler would bailout on the
`useLayoutEffect` examples in the React docs. While setState in an
effect is typically an anti-pattern due to the fact that it hurts
performance through cascading renders, the one scenario where it _is_
allowed is if the value being set flows from a ref.
When the search query changes, we kick off a transition that updates the
search query in a reducer for TreeContext. The search input is also
using this value for an `input` HTML element.
For a larger applications, sometimes there is a noticeable delay in
displaying the updated search query. This changes the approach to also
keep a local synchronous state that is being updated on a change
callback.
Stacked on #34435.
This adds a method to get all suspended by filtered by a specific
Instance. The purpose of this is to power the feature when you filter by
Activity. This would show you the "root" within that Activity boundary.
This works by selecting the nearest Suspense boundary parent and then
filtering its data based on if all the instances for a given I/O info is
within the Activity instance. If something suspended within the Suspense
boundary but outside the Activity it's not included even if it's also
suspending inside the Activity since we assume it would've already been
loaded then.
Right now I wire this up to be a special case when you select an
Activity boundary same as when you select a Suspense boundary in the
Components tab but we could also only use this when you select the root
in the Suspense tab for example.
Stacked on #34425.
RSC stream info is split into one I/O entry per chunk. This means that
when a single instance or boundary depends on multiple chunks, it'll
show the same stream multiple times. This makes it so just the last one
is shown.
This is a special case for the name "RSC stream" but ideally we'd more
explicitly model the concept of awaiting only part of a stream.
<img width="667" height="427" alt="Screenshot 2025-09-09 at 2 09 43 PM"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/890f6f61-4657-4ca9-82fd-df55a696bacc"
/>
Another remaining issue is that it's possible for an intermediate chunk
to be depended on by just a child boundary. In that case that can be
considered a "unique suspender" even though the parent depends on a
later one. Ideally it would dedupe on everything below. Could also model
it as every Promise depends on its chunk and every previous chunk.
Fixes#34098.
There's an issue in Chrome where the `InvalidStateError` always has the
same error message. The spec doesn't specify the error message to use
but it's more useful to have a specific one for each case like Safari
does.
One reason it's better to have a specific error message is because the
browser console is not the main surface that people look for errors.
Chrome relies on a separate log also in the console. Frameworks has
built-in error dialogs that pop up first and that's where you see the
error and that dialog can't show something specific. Additionally, these
errors can't log something specific to servers in production logging. So
this is a bad strategy.
It's not good to have those error dialogs pop up for non-actionable
errors like when it doesn't start because the document was hidden. Since
we don't have more specific information we have no choice but to hide
all of them. This includes actionable things like duplicate names
(although we also have a React specific warning for that in the common
case).