Commit Graph

540 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Benoit Girard
246d7bfeb0 Enable suspenseCallback on React Native (#29210)
## Summary

suspenseCallback feature has proved to be useful for FB Web. Let's look
at enabling the feature for the React Native build.


## How did you test this change?

Will sync the react changes with a React Native build and will verify
that performance logging is correctly notified of suspense promises
during the suspense callback.
2024-08-26 22:06:02 -04:00
Andrew Clark
eb3ad065a1 Feature flag: enableSiblingPrerendering (#30761)
Adds a new feature flag for an upcoming experiment.

No implementation yet.
2024-08-22 10:17:19 -04:00
Josh Story
7b41cdc093 [Flight][Static] Implement halting a prerender behind enableHalt (#30705)
enableHalt turns on a mode for flight prerenders where aborts are
treated like infinitely stalled outcomes while still completing the
prerender. For regular tasks we simply serialize the slot as a promise
that never settles. For ReadableStream, Blob, and Async Iterators we
just never advance the serialization so they remain unfinished when
consumed on the client.

When enableHalt is turned on aborts of prerenders will halt rather than
error. The abort reason is forwarded to the upstream produces of the
aforementioned async iterators, blobs, and ReadableStreams. In the
future if we expose a signal that you can consume from within a render
to cancel additional work the abort reason will also be forwarded there
2024-08-16 14:21:57 -07:00
Jan Kassens
65903583d2 Remove flag enableUseDeferredValueInitialArg (#30595)
This is enabled everywhere for a while and I don't think we'd be backing
this out of 19. Seems like it's good to clean up to me.
2024-08-05 11:25:05 -04:00
Jan Kassens
5fb67fa25c Cloned flag to avoid extra clones in persistent renderer (#27647)
Persistent renderers used the `Update` effect flag to check if a subtree
needs to be cloned. In some cases, that causes extra renders, such as
when a layout effect is triggered which only has an effect on the JS
side, but doesn't update the host components.

It's been a bit tricky to find the right places where this needs to be
set and I'm not 100% sure I got all the cases even though the tests
passed.
2024-08-01 15:11:19 -04:00
Jack Pope
3f8b1333da Set enableLazyContextPropagation to dynamic on RN (#30516) 2024-07-30 18:31:31 -04:00
Jan Kassens
6b82f3c904 [RN] experiment to move Fabric completeWork to the commit phase (#30513)
There is currently a mismatch in how the persistent mode JS API and the
Fabric native code interpret `completeRoot`.

This is a short-lived experiment to see the effect of moving the Fabric
`completeRoot` call from `finalizeContainerChildren` to
`replaceContainerChildren` which in some cases does not get called.
2024-07-29 18:38:55 -04:00
Jack Pope
397646ad51 Update enableLazyContextPropagation flag (#30514)
- Flag set to true for FB
- Flag set to experimental for OSS
2024-07-29 16:50:28 -04:00
Jack Pope
1350a85980 Add unstable context bailout for profiling (#30407)
**This API is not intended to ship. This is a temporary unstable hook
for internal performance profiling.**

This PR exposes `unstable_useContextWithBailout`, which takes a compare
function in addition to Context. The comparison function is run to
determine if Context propagation and render should bail out earlier.
`unstable_useContextWithBailout` returns the full Context value, same as
`useContext`.

We can profile this API against `useContext` to better measure the cost
of Context value updates and gather more data around propagation and
render performance.

The bailout logic and test cases are based on
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/20646

Additionally, this implementation allows multiple values to be compared
in one hook by returning a tuple to avoid requiring additional Context
consumer hooks.
2024-07-26 14:38:24 -04:00
Jack Pope
14a4699ff1 Remove allowConcurrentByDefault flag (#30445)
Following https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/30436

Concurrent by default strategy has been unshipped. Here we clean up the
`allowConcurrentByDefault` path and related logic/tests.

For now, this keeps the `concurrentUpdatesByDefaultOverride` argument in
`createContainer` and `createHydrationContainer` and ignores the value
to prevent more breaking changes to `react-reconciler` in the RC stage.
2024-07-25 11:59:50 -04:00
Jack Pope
e902c45caf Remove forceConcurrentByDefaultForTesting flag (#30436)
Concurrent by default has been unshipped! Let's clean it up.

Here we remove `forceConcurrentByDefaultForTesting`, which allows us to
run tests against both concurrent strategies. In the next PR, we'll
remove the actual concurrent by default code path.
2024-07-24 10:17:33 -04:00
Jan Kassens
d025ddd3b9 Set enableFastJSX flag to true (#30343)
When these to diffs are landed, we can merge this

- [x] D59772879
- [x] D59773043
2024-07-22 11:50:35 -04:00
Jan Kassens
1d5a208fda [native-fb] set disableDefaultPropsExceptForClasses flag to true (#30339)
Reflecting D59402048
2024-07-15 14:20:40 -04:00
Jan Kassens
fc1371f6bf [native-fb] set consoleManagedByDevToolsDuringStrictMode flag to true (#30338)
Reflecting D59232098.
2024-07-15 12:31:17 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
400e822277 Remove Component Stack from React Logged Warnings and Error Reporting (#30308)
React transpiles some of its own `console.error` calls into a helper
that appends component stacks to those calls. However, this doesn't
cover user space `console.error` calls - which includes React helpers
that React has moved into third parties like createClass and prop-types.

The idea is that any user space component can add a warning just like
React can which is why React DevTools adds them too if they don't
already exist. Having them appended in both places is tricky because now
you have to know whether to remove them from React's logs.

Similarly it's often common for server-side frameworks to forget to
cover the `console.error` logs from other sources since React DevTools
isn't active there. However, it's also annoying to get component stacks
clogging the terminal - depending on where the log came from.

In the future `console.createTask()` will cover this use case natively
and when available we don't append them at all.

The new strategy relies on either:

- React DevTools existing to add them to React logs as well as third
parties.
- `console.createTask` being supported and surfaced.
- A third party framework showing the component stack either in an Error
Dialog or appended to terminal output.

For a third party to be able to implement this they need to be able to
get the component stack. To get the component stack from within a
`console.error` call you need to use the `React.captureOwnerStack()`
helper which is only available in `enableOwnerStacks` flag. However,
it's possible to polyfill with parent stacks using internals as a stop
gap. There's a question of whether React 19 should just go out with
`enableOwnerStacks` to expose this but regardless I think it's best it
doesn't include component stacks from the runtime for consistency.

In practice it's not really a regression though because typically either
of the other options exists and error dialogs don't implement
`console.error` overrides anyway yet. SSR terminals might miss them but
they'd only have them in DEV warnings to begin with an a subset of React
warnings. Typically those are either going to happen on the client
anyway or replayed.

Our tests are written to assert that component stacks work in various
scenarios all over the place. To ensure that this keeps working I
implement a "polyfill" that is similar to that expected a server
framework might do - in `assertConsoleErrorDev` and `toErrorDev`.

This PR doesn't yet change www or RN since they have their own forks of
consoleWithStackDev for now.
2024-07-12 13:02:22 -04:00
Lauren Tan
ff3f1fac65 [RN] Set enableOwnerStacks and enableUseDeferredValueInitialArg to false
In www, the experimental versions get a .modern.js or .classic.js prefix
and get copied into the same folder. In RN, they don't seem to have
.modern.js and .classic.js versions so they end up getting the same
name.

sebmarkbage's theory is that what happens is that they then override
the file that was already there. So depending on if experimental or
stable build finishes first you get a different version at the end.

It doesn't make sense to use `__EXPERIMENTAL__` for flags in native-fb
since there's no modern/classic split there. So that flag should just be
hardcoded to true or false and then it doesn't matter which one finishes
first.

We don't support experimental builds in OSS RN neither so the same thing
could happen with
[`enableOwnerStacks`](5dcf3ca8d4/packages/shared/forks/ReactFeatureFlags.native-oss.js (L60)).

You can see that the build errors in the previous PR but passes after
these flag changes.

ghstack-source-id: d10f37bcea
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/30322
2024-07-12 12:11:50 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
433068eece Remove top stack frame from getCurrentStack (#30306)
The full stack is the current execution stack (`new Error().stack`) +
the current owner stack (`React.captureOwnerStack()`).

The idea with the top frame was that when we append it to console.error
we'd include both since otherwise the true reason would be obscured
behind the little `>` to expand. So we'd just put both stack front and
center. By adding this into getCurrentStack it was easy to use the same
filtering. I never implemented in Fizz or Flight though.

However, with the public API `React.captureOwnerStack()` it's not
necessary to include the current stack since you already have it and
you'd have filtering capabilities in user space too.

Since I'm removing the component stacks from React itself we no longer
need this. It's expected that maybe RDT or framework polyfill would
include this same technique though.
2024-07-11 18:34:41 -04:00
Jan Kassens
af28f480e8 Feature flag to disable legacy context for function components (#30319)
While the goal is to remove legacy context completely, I think we can
already land the removal of legacy context for function components. I
didn't even know this feature existed until reading the code recently.

The win is just a couple of property lookups on function renders, but it
trims down the API already as the full removal will likely still take a
bit more time.

www: Starting with enabled test renderer and a feature flag for
production rollout.

RN: Not enabled, will follow up on this.
2024-07-11 16:21:12 -04:00
Jan Kassens
fe9828954a Experiment with using an object literal for Fiber creation (#28734)
Object literals should be faster at least on React Native with Hermes as
the JS engine.
It might also be interesting to confirm the old comments in this file
from years ago are even still valid. Creating an object from a literal
should be a simpler operation.

It's a bit unfortunate that this introduces a bunch of copied code, but
since we rearely update the fields on fibers, this seems like an okay
tradeoff for a hot code path. An alternative would be some sort of macro
system, but that doesn't seem worth the extra complexity.
2024-07-10 16:42:08 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
9647333b3d Add RN fork of consoleWithStackDev so we can improve the mainline one (#30305)
We're removing this wrapper from the mainline but RN is still using
component stacks to filter out warnings.

This is unfortunate since it'll be hard to keep track of the interplay
with these, DevTools and how you're supposed to implement error dialogs
in userspace.
2024-07-10 13:37:56 -04:00
Timothy Yung
ef0f44ecff Enable enableDeferRootSchedulingToMicrotask and enableInfiniteRenderLoopDetection for React Native (Meta) (#30090) 2024-06-26 08:50:06 -07:00
Jack Pope
89580f209c Set renameElementSymbol to dynamic value (#30066)
Prepare to roll this out with dynamic flag

`yarn flags --diff www canary`

<img width="514" alt="Screenshot 2024-06-24 at 11 33 55 AM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/8965173/31508fdc-4cb1-4ce0-8e22-c02a034377b0">
2024-06-24 12:28:39 -04:00
Jack Pope
c21bcd627b Clean up enableUnifiedSyncLane flag (#30062)
`enableUnifiedSyncLane` now passes everywhere. Let's clean it up

Implemented with https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/27646

Flag enabled with https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/27646,
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/28269,
https://github.com/facebook/react/pull/29052
2024-06-24 11:18:22 -04:00
Jan Kassens
6ab67c35f1 Revert "www: remove dynamic feature flag enableSchedulingProfiler" (#29995)
Reverts facebook/react#29994
2024-06-20 17:17:25 -04:00
Jan Kassens
babe5a2f1b www: remove dynamic feature flag enableSchedulingProfiler (#29994) 2024-06-20 16:47:28 -04:00
Timothy Yung
f14d7f0d25 Prepare Feature Flags for React Native 0.75 (#29903)
## Summary

Configures the React Native open source feature flags in preparation for
React Native 0.75, which will be upgraded to React 19.

## How did you test this change?

```
$ yarn test
$ yarn flow fabric
```
2024-06-14 17:09:50 -07:00
Jan Kassens
88959fd54a Revert "Set disableLegacyMode to true for www" (#29901)
Reverts facebook/react#29871

Just temporarily while we're investigating something.
2024-06-14 15:27:32 -04:00
Jan Kassens
fb9a90fa48 Set disableLegacyMode to true for www (#29871)
Set disableLegacyMode to true for www
2024-06-14 09:52:49 -04:00
Jan Kassens
142b2a8230 www: make disableLegacyMode dynamic flag (#29774)
This makes the flag dynamic for Meta and turns it on for the www test
renderer.
2024-06-07 07:36:10 -04:00
Dmytro Rykun
eb259b5d3b Add enableShallowPropDiffing feature flag (#29664)
## Summary

We currently do deep diffing for object props, and also use custom
differs, if they are defined, for props with custom attribute config.

The idea is to simply do a `===` comparison instead of all that work. We
will do less computation on the JS side, but send more data to native.

The hypothesis is that this change should be neutral in terms of
performance. If that's the case, we'll be able to get rid of custom
differs, and be one step closer to deleting view configs.

This PR adds the `enableShallowPropDiffing` feature flag to support this
experiment.

## How did you test this change?

With `enableShallowPropDiffing` hardcoded to `true`:
```
yarn test packages/react-native-renderer
```
This fails on the following test cases:
- should use the diff attribute
- should do deep diffs of Objects by default
- should skip deeply-nested changed functions

Which makes sense with this change. These test cases should be deleted
if the experiment is shipped.
2024-06-05 15:07:58 +01:00
Jan Kassens
a26e90c29c www: set enableRefAsProp to true (#29756)
www: set enableRefAsProp to true
2024-06-04 11:17:19 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
4dcdf21325 [Fiber] Prefix owner stacks with the current stack at the console call (#29697)
This information is available in the regular stack but since that's
hidden behind an expando and our appended stack to logs is not hidden,
it hides the most important frames like the name of the current
component.

This is closer to what happens to the native stack.

We only include stacks if they're within a ReactFiberCallUserSpace call
frame. This should be most that have a current fiber but this is
critical to filtering out most React frames if the regular node_modules
filter doesn't work.

Most React warnings fire during the rendering phase and not inside a
user space function but some do like hooks warnings and setState in
render. This feature is more important if we port this to React DevTools
appending stacks to all logs where it's likely to originate from inside
a component and you want the line within that component to immediately
part of the visible stack.

One thing that kind sucks is that we don't have a reliable way to
exclude React internal stack frames. We filter node_modules but it might
not match. For other cases I try hard to only track the stack frame at
the root of React (e.g. immediately inside createElement) until the
ReactFiberCallUserSpace so we don't need the filtering to work. In this
case it's hard to achieve the same thing though. This is easier in RDT
because we have the start/end line and parsing of stack traces so we can
use that to exclude internals but that's a lot of code/complexity for
shipping within the library.

For example in Safari:

<img width="590" alt="Screenshot 2024-05-31 at 6 15 27 PM"
src="https://github.com/facebook/react/assets/63648/2820c8c0-8a03-42e9-8678-8348f66b051a">

Ideally warnOnUseFormStateInDev and useFormState wouldn't be included
since they're React internals. Before this change, the Counter.js line
also wasn't included though which points to exactly where the error is
within the user code.

(Note Server Components have V8 formatted lines and Client Components
have JSC formatted lines.)
2024-06-03 12:26:38 -04:00
Jack Pope
2787eebe52 Clean up disableDOMTestUtils (#29610)
`disableDOMTestUtils` and the FB build `ReactTestUtilsFB` allowed us to
finish migrating internal callsites off of ReactTestUtils. Now that
usage is cleaned up, we can remove the flag, build artifact, and test
coverage for the deprecated utility methods.
2024-05-28 14:55:14 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
84239da896 Move createElement/JSX Warnings into the Renderer (#29088)
This is necessary to simplify the component stack handling to make way
for owner stacks. It also solves some hacks that we used to have but
don't quite make sense. It also solves the problem where things like key
warnings get silenced in RSC because they get deduped. It also surfaces
areas where we were missing key warnings to begin with.

Almost every type of warning is issued from the renderer. React Elements
are really not anything special themselves. They're just lazily invoked
functions and its really the renderer that determines there semantics.

We have three types of warnings that previously fired in
JSX/createElement:

- Fragment props validation.
- Type validation.
- Key warning.

It's nice to be able to do some validation in the JSX/createElement
because it has a more specific stack frame at the callsite. However,
that's the case for every type of component and validation. That's the
whole point of enableOwnerStacks. It's also not sufficient to do it in
JSX/createElement so we also have validation in the renderers too. So
this validation is really just an eager validation but also happens
again later.

The problem with these is that we don't really know what types are valid
until we get to the renderer. Additionally, by placing it in the
isomorphic code it becomes harder to do deduping of warnings in a way
that makes sense for that renderer. It also means we can't reuse logic
for managing stacks etc.

Fragment props validation really should just be part of the renderer
like any other component type. This also matters once we add Fragment
refs and other fragment features. So I moved this into Fiber. However,
since some Fragments don't have Fibers, I do the validation in
ChildFiber instead of beginWork where it would normally happen.

For `type` validation we already do validation when rendering. By
leaving it to the renderer we don't have to hard code an extra list.
This list also varies by context. E.g. class components aren't allowed
in RSC but client references are but we don't have an isomorphic way to
identify client references because they're defined by the host config so
the current logic is flawed anyway. I kept the early validation for now
without the `enableOwnerStacks` since it does provide a nicer stack
frame but with that flag on it'll be handled with nice stacks anyway. I
normalized some of the errors to ensure tests pass.

For `key` validation it's the same principle. The mechanism for the
heuristic is still the same - if it passes statically through a parent
JSX/createElement call then it's considered validated. We already did
print the error later from the renderer so this also disables the early
log in the `enableOwnerStacks` flag.

I also added logging to Fizz so that key warnings can print in SSR logs.

Flight is a bit more complex. For elements that end up on the client we
just pass the `validated` flag along to the client and let the client
renderer print the error once rendered. For server components we log the
error from Flight with the server component as the owner on the stack
which will allow us to print the right stack for context. The factoring
of this is a little tricky because we only want to warn if it's in an
array parent but we want to log the error later to get the right debug
info.

Fiber/Fizz has a similar factoring problem that causes us to create a
fake Fiber for the owner which means the logs won't be associated with
the right place in DevTools.
2024-05-23 12:48:57 -04:00
Josh Story
217b2ccf16 [Fiber] render boundary in fallback if it contains a new stylesheet during sync update (#28965)
Updates Suspensey instances and resources to preload even during urgent
updates and to potentially suspend.

The current implementation is unchanged for transitions but for sync
updates if there is a suspense boundary above the resource/instance it
will be rendered in fallback mode instead.

Note: This behavior is not what we want for images once we make them
suspense enabled. We will need to have forked behavior here to
distinguish between stylesheets which should never commit when not
loaded and images which should commit after a small delay
2024-05-21 16:03:46 -07:00
Timothy Yung
7621466b1b Enable disableStringRefs and enableRefAsProp for React Native (Meta) (#29177)
## Summary

Enables the `disableStringRefs` and `enableRefAsProp` feature flags for
React Native (Meta).

## How did you test this change?

```
$ yarn test
$ yarn flow fabric
```
2024-05-21 11:19:12 +01:00
Timothy Yung
5f28f51759 Enable enableUnifiedSyncLane for React Native (Meta) (#29052)
## Summary

Enables the `enableUnifiedSyncLane` feature flag for React Native
(Meta).

## How did you test this change?

```
$ yarn test
$ yarn flow fabric
```
2024-05-13 22:56:42 -07:00
Dmytro Rykun
2c022b847e Clean up the enableEarlyReturnForPropDiffing experiment (#29041)
## Summary

The experiment has shown no significant performance changes. This PR
removes it.

## How did you test this change?
```
yarn flow native
yarn lint
```
2024-05-10 11:00:03 +01:00
Sebastian Markbåge
6ef0dd4f2c [Flight] Enable Binary and ReadableStreams in Stable (#29035)
These are ready to ship in stable.
2024-05-09 20:56:15 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
151cce3740 Track Stack of JSX Calls (#29032)
This is the first step to experimenting with a new type of stack traces
behind the `enableOwnerStacks` flag - in DEV only.

The idea is to generate stacks that are more like if the JSX was a
direct call even though it's actually a lazy call. Not only can you see
which exact JSX call line number generated the erroring component but if
that's inside an abstraction function, which function called that
function and if it's a component, which component generated that
component. For this to make sense it really need to be the "owner" stack
rather than the parent stack like we do for other component stacks. On
one hand it has more precise information but on the other hand it also
loses context. For most types of problems the owner stack is the most
useful though since it tells you which component rendered this
component.

The problem with the platform in its current state is that there's two
ways to deal with stacks:

1) `new Error().stack` 
2) `console.createTask()`

The nice thing about `new Error().stack` is that we can extract the
frames and piece them together in whatever way we want. That is great
for constructing custom UIs like error dialogs. Unfortunately, we can't
take custom stacks and set them in the native UIs like Chrome DevTools.

The nice thing about `console.createTask()` is that the resulting stacks
are natively integrated into the Chrome DevTools in the console and the
breakpoint debugger. They also automatically follow source mapping and
ignoreLists. The downside is that there's no way to extract the async
stack outside the native UI itself so this information cannot be used
for custom UIs like errors dialogs. It also means we can't collect this
on the server and then pass it to the client for server components.

The solution here is that we use both techniques and collect both an
`Error` object and a `Task` object for every JSX call.

The main concern about this approach is the performance so that's the
main thing to test. It's certainly too slow for production but it might
also be too slow even for DEV.

This first PR doesn't actually use the stacks yet. It just collects them
as the first step. The next step is to start utilizing this information
in error printing etc.

For RSC we pass the stack along across over the wire. This can be
concatenated on the client following the owner path to create an owner
stack leading back into the server. We'll later use this information to
restore fake frames on the client for native integration. Since this
information quickly gets pretty heavy if we include all frames, we strip
out the top frame. We also strip out everything below the functions that
call into user space in the Flight runtime. To do this we need to figure
out the frames that represents calling out into user space. The
resulting stack is typically just the one frame inside the owner
component's JSX callsite. I also eagerly strip out things we expect to
be ignoreList:ed anyway - such as `node_modules` and Node.js internals.
2024-05-09 12:23:05 -04:00
Jan Kassens
6946ebe620 Cleanup enableServerComponentKeys flag (#28743)
Cleanup enableServerComponentKeys flag

Flag is `true` everywhere but RN where it doesn't apply.
2024-05-08 10:52:49 -04:00
Jan Kassens
b498834eab Set enableUseMemoCacheHook to true everywhere (#28964)
Set enableUseMemoCacheHook to true everywhere for the next major releases.
2024-05-06 14:20:08 -04:00
Timothy Yung
9b1300209e Setup Wave 2 of Feature Flags for React Native (#28990)
## Summary

Sets up dynamic feature flags for `disableStringRefs`, `enableFastJSX`,
and `enableRefAsProp` in React Native (at Meta).

## How did you test this change?

```
$ yarn test
$ yarn flow fabric
```
2024-05-06 10:30:40 -07:00
Jack Pope
1beb73de0f Add flag to test fast jsx (#28816)
Following #28768, add a path to testing Fast JSX on www.

We want to measure the impact of Fast JSX and enable a path to testing
before string refs are completely removed in www (which is a work in
progress).

Without `disableStringRefs`, we need to copy any object with a `ref` key
so we can pass it through `coerceStringRef()` and copy it into the
object. This de-opt path is what is gated behind
`enableFastJSXWithStringRefs`.

The additional checks should have no perf impact in OSS as the flags
remain true there and the build output is not changed. For www, I've
benchmarked the addition of the boolean checks with values cached at
module scope. There is no significant change observed from our
benchmarks and any latency will apply to test and control branches
evenly. This added experiment complexity is temporary. We should be able
to clean it up, along with the flag checks for `enableRefAsProp` and
`disableStringRefs` shortly.
2024-05-03 10:47:13 -04:00
Timothy Yung
1d618a9cf3 Enable Wave 1 of Feature Flags for React Native (#28977) 2024-05-02 20:01:30 -07:00
Dmytro Rykun
73bcdfbae5 Introduce a faster version of the addProperties function (#28969)
## Summary

This PR introduces a faster version of the `addProperties` function.
This new function is basically the `diffProperties` with `prevProps` set
to `null`, propagated constants, and all the unreachable code paths
collapsed.

## How did you test this change?

I've tested this change with [the benchmark
app](https://github.com/react-native-community/RNNewArchitectureApp/tree/new-architecture-benchmarks)
and got ~4.4% improvement in the view creation time.
2024-05-02 17:10:13 +01:00
Jan Kassens
4508873393 Move useMemoCache hook to react/compiler-runtime (#28954)
Move useMemoCache hook to react/compiler-runtime

For Meta-internal purposes, we keep the export on `react` itself to
reduce churn.
2024-04-30 12:00:22 -04:00
Andrew Clark
a94838df1c Remove automatic fetch cache instrumentation (#28896)
This removes the automatic patching of the global `fetch` function in
Server Components environments to dedupe requests using `React.cache`, a
behavior that some RSC framework maintainers have objected to.

We may revisit this decision in the future, but for now it's not worth
the controversy.

Frameworks that have already shipped this behavior, like Next.js, can
reimplement it in userspace.

I considered keeping the implementation in the codebase and disabling it
by setting `enableFetchInstrumentation` to `false` everywhere, but since
that also disables the tests, it doesn't seem worth it because without
test coverage the behavior is likely to drift regardless. We can just
revert this PR later if desired.
2024-04-23 14:14:12 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
9f2eebd807 [Fiber/Fizz] Support AsyncIterable as Children and AsyncGenerator Client Components (#28868)
Stacked on #28849, #28854, #28853. Behind a flag.

If you're following along from the side-lines. This is probably not what
you think it is.

It's NOT a way to get updates to a component over time. The
AsyncIterable works like an Iterable already works in React which is how
an Array works. I.e. it's a list of children - not the value of a child
over time.

It also doesn't actually render one component at a time. The way it
works is more like awaiting the entire list to become an array and then
it shows up. Before that it suspends the parent.

To actually get these to display one at a time, you have to opt-in with
`<SuspenseList>` to describe how they should appear. That's really the
interesting part and that not implemented yet.

Additionally, since these are effectively Async Functions and uncached
promises, they're not actually fully "supported" on the client yet for
the same reason rendering plain Promises and Async Functions aren't.
They warn. It's only really useful when paired with RSC that produces
instrumented versions of these. Ideally we'd published instrumented
helpers to help with map/filter style operations that yield new
instrumented AsyncIterables.

The way the implementation works basically just relies on unwrapThenable
and otherwise works like a plain Iterator.

There is one quirk with these that are different than just promises. We
ask for a new iterator each time we rerender. This means that upon retry
we kick off another iteration which itself might kick off new requests
that block iterating further. To solve this and make it actually
efficient enough to use on the client we'd need to stash something like
a buffer of the previous iteration and maybe iterator on the iterable so
that we can continue where we left off or synchronously iterate if we've
seen it before. Similar to our `.value` convention on Promises.

In Fizz, I had to do a special case because when we render an iterator
child we don't actually rerender the parent again like we do in Fiber.
However, it's more efficient to just continue on where we left off by
reusing the entries from the thenable state from before in that case.
2024-04-22 13:25:05 -04:00
Sebastian Markbåge
3b551c8284 Rename the react.element symbol to react.transitional.element (#28813)
We have changed the shape (and the runtime) of React Elements. To help
avoid precompiled or inlined JSX having subtle breakages or deopting
hidden classes, I renamed the symbol so that we can early error if
private implementation details are used or mismatching versions are
used.

Why "transitional"? Well, because this is not the last time we'll change
the shape. This is just a stepping stone to removing the `ref` field on
the elements in the next version so we'll likely have to do it again.
2024-04-22 12:39:56 -04:00