/** * @license * Copyright Google LLC All Rights Reserved. * * Use of this source code is governed by an MIT-style license that can be * found in the LICENSE file at https://angular.io/license */ /// /** * Suppress closure compiler errors about unknown 'global' variable * @fileoverview * @suppress {undefinedVars} */ /** * Zone is a mechanism for intercepting and keeping track of asynchronous work. * * A Zone is a global object which is configured with rules about how to intercept and keep track * of the asynchronous callbacks. Zone has these responsibilities: * * 1. Intercept asynchronous task scheduling * 2. Wrap callbacks for error-handling and zone tracking across async operations. * 3. Provide a way to attach data to zones * 4. Provide a context specific last frame error handling * 5. (Intercept blocking methods) * * A zone by itself does not do anything, instead it relies on some other code to route existing * platform API through it. (The zone library ships with code which monkey patches all of the * browsers's asynchronous API and redirects them through the zone for interception.) * * In its simplest form a zone allows one to intercept the scheduling and calling of asynchronous * operations, and execute additional code before as well as after the asynchronous task. The rules * of interception are configured using [ZoneConfig]. There can be many different zone instances in * a system, but only one zone is active at any given time which can be retrieved using * [Zone#current]. * * * * ## Callback Wrapping * * An important aspect of the zones is that they should persist across asynchronous operations. To * achieve this, when a future work is scheduled through async API, it is necessary to capture, and * subsequently restore the current zone. For example if a code is running in zone `b` and it * invokes `setTimeout` to scheduleTask work later, the `setTimeout` method needs to 1) capture the * current zone and 2) wrap the `wrapCallback` in code which will restore the current zone `b` once * the wrapCallback executes. In this way the rules which govern the current code are preserved in * all future asynchronous tasks. There could be a different zone `c` which has different rules and * is associated with different asynchronous tasks. As these tasks are processed, each asynchronous * wrapCallback correctly restores the correct zone, as well as preserves the zone for future * asynchronous callbacks. * * Example: Suppose a browser page consist of application code as well as third-party * advertisement code. (These two code bases are independent, developed by different mutually * unaware developers.) The application code may be interested in doing global error handling and * so it configures the `app` zone to send all of the errors to the server for analysis, and then * executes the application in the `app` zone. The advertising code is interested in the same * error processing but it needs to send the errors to a different third-party. So it creates the * `ads` zone with a different error handler. Now both advertising as well as application code * create many asynchronous operations, but the [Zone] will ensure that all of the asynchronous * operations created from the application code will execute in `app` zone with its error * handler and all of the advertisement code will execute in the `ads` zone with its error handler. * This will not only work for the async operations created directly, but also for all subsequent * asynchronous operations. * * If you think of chain of asynchronous operations as a thread of execution (bit of a stretch) * then [Zone#current] will act as a thread local variable. * * * * ## Asynchronous operation scheduling * * In addition to wrapping the callbacks to restore the zone, all operations which cause a * scheduling of work for later are routed through the current zone which is allowed to intercept * them by adding work before or after the wrapCallback as well as using different means of * achieving the request. (Useful for unit testing, or tracking of requests). In some instances * such as `setTimeout` the wrapping of the wrapCallback and scheduling is done in the same * wrapCallback, but there are other examples such as `Promises` where the `then` wrapCallback is * wrapped, but the execution of `then` is triggered by `Promise` scheduling `resolve` work. * * Fundamentally there are three kinds of tasks which can be scheduled: * * 1. [MicroTask] used for doing work right after the current task. This is non-cancelable which is * guaranteed to run exactly once and immediately. * 2. [MacroTask] used for doing work later. Such as `setTimeout`. This is typically cancelable * which is guaranteed to execute at least once after some well understood delay. * 3. [EventTask] used for listening on some future event. This may execute zero or more times, with * an unknown delay. * * Each asynchronous API is modeled and routed through one of these APIs. * * * ### [MicroTask] * * [MicroTask]s represent work which will be done in current VM turn as soon as possible, before VM * yielding. * * * ### [MacroTask] * * [MacroTask]s represent work which will be done after some delay. (Sometimes the delay is * approximate such as on next available animation frame). Typically these methods include: * `setTimeout`, `setImmediate`, `setInterval`, `requestAnimationFrame`, and all browser specific * variants. * * * ### [EventTask] * * [EventTask]s represent a request to create a listener on an event. Unlike the other task * events they may never be executed, but typically execute more than once. There is no queue of * events, rather their callbacks are unpredictable both in order and time. * * * ## Global Error Handling * * * ## Composability * * Zones can be composed together through [Zone.fork()]. A child zone may create its own set of * rules. A child zone is expected to either: * * 1. Delegate the interception to a parent zone, and optionally add before and after wrapCallback * hooks. * 2. Process the request itself without delegation. * * Composability allows zones to keep their concerns clean. For example a top most zone may choose * to handle error handling, while child zones may choose to do user action tracking. * * * ## Root Zone * * At the start the browser will run in a special root zone, which is configured to behave exactly * like the platform, making any existing code which is not zone-aware behave as expected. All * zones are children of the root zone. * */ interface Zone { /** * * @returns {Zone} The parent Zone. */ parent: Zone | null; /** * @returns {string} The Zone name (useful for debugging) */ name: string; /** * Returns a value associated with the `key`. * * If the current zone does not have a key, the request is delegated to the parent zone. Use * [ZoneSpec.properties] to configure the set of properties associated with the current zone. * * @param key The key to retrieve. * @returns {any} The value for the key, or `undefined` if not found. */ get(key: string): any; /** * Returns a Zone which defines a `key`. * * Recursively search the parent Zone until a Zone which has a property `key` is found. * * @param key The key to use for identification of the returned zone. * @returns {Zone} The Zone which defines the `key`, `null` if not found. */ getZoneWith(key: string): Zone | null; /** * Used to create a child zone. * * @param zoneSpec A set of rules which the child zone should follow. * @returns {Zone} A new child zone. */ fork(zoneSpec: ZoneSpec): Zone; /** * Wraps a callback function in a new function which will properly restore the current zone upon * invocation. * * The wrapped function will properly forward `this` as well as `arguments` to the `callback`. * * Before the function is wrapped the zone can intercept the `callback` by declaring * [ZoneSpec.onIntercept]. * * @param callback the function which will be wrapped in the zone. * @param source A unique debug location of the API being wrapped. * @returns {function(): *} A function which will invoke the `callback` through [Zone.runGuarded]. */ wrap(callback: F, source: string): F; /** * Invokes a function in a given zone. * * The invocation of `callback` can be intercepted by declaring [ZoneSpec.onInvoke]. * * @param callback The function to invoke. * @param applyThis * @param applyArgs * @param source A unique debug location of the API being invoked. * @returns {any} Value from the `callback` function. */ run(callback: Function, applyThis?: any, applyArgs?: any[], source?: string): T; /** * Invokes a function in a given zone and catches any exceptions. * * Any exceptions thrown will be forwarded to [Zone.HandleError]. * * The invocation of `callback` can be intercepted by declaring [ZoneSpec.onInvoke]. The * handling of exceptions can be intercepted by declaring [ZoneSpec.handleError]. * * @param callback The function to invoke. * @param applyThis * @param applyArgs * @param source A unique debug location of the API being invoked. * @returns {any} Value from the `callback` function. */ runGuarded(callback: Function, applyThis?: any, applyArgs?: any[], source?: string): T; /** * Execute the Task by restoring the [Zone.currentTask] in the Task's zone. * * @param task to run * @param applyThis * @param applyArgs * @returns {any} Value from the `task.callback` function. */ runTask(task: Task, applyThis?: any, applyArgs?: any): T; /** * Schedule a MicroTask. * * @param source * @param callback * @param data * @param customSchedule */ scheduleMicroTask(source: string, callback: Function, data?: TaskData, customSchedule?: (task: Task) => void): MicroTask; /** * Schedule a MacroTask. * * @param source * @param callback * @param data * @param customSchedule * @param customCancel */ scheduleMacroTask(source: string, callback: Function, data?: TaskData, customSchedule?: (task: Task) => void, customCancel?: (task: Task) => void): MacroTask; /** * Schedule an EventTask. * * @param source * @param callback * @param data * @param customSchedule * @param customCancel */ scheduleEventTask(source: string, callback: Function, data?: TaskData, customSchedule?: (task: Task) => void, customCancel?: (task: Task) => void): EventTask; /** * Schedule an existing Task. * * Useful for rescheduling a task which was already canceled. * * @param task */ scheduleTask(task: T): T; /** * Allows the zone to intercept canceling of scheduled Task. * * The interception is configured using [ZoneSpec.onCancelTask]. The default canceler invokes * the [Task.cancelFn]. * * @param task * @returns {any} */ cancelTask(task: Task): any; } interface ZoneType { /** * @returns {Zone} Returns the current [Zone]. The only way to change * the current zone is by invoking a run() method, which will update the current zone for the * duration of the run method callback. */ current: Zone; /** * @returns {Task} The task associated with the current execution. */ currentTask: Task | null; /** * Verify that Zone has been correctly patched. Specifically that Promise is zone aware. */ assertZonePatched(): void; /** * Return the root zone. */ root: Zone; /** * load patch for specified native module, allow user to * define their own patch, user can use this API after loading zone.js */ __load_patch(name: string, fn: _PatchFn, ignoreDuplicate?: boolean): void; /** * Zone symbol API to generate a string with __zone_symbol__ prefix */ __symbol__(name: string): string; } /** * Patch Function to allow user define their own monkey patch module. */ declare type _PatchFn = (global: Window, Zone: ZoneType, api: _ZonePrivate) => void; /** * _ZonePrivate interface to provide helper method to help user implement * their own monkey patch module. */ interface _ZonePrivate { currentZoneFrame: () => _ZoneFrame; symbol: (name: string) => string; scheduleMicroTask: (task?: MicroTask) => void; onUnhandledError: (error: Error) => void; microtaskDrainDone: () => void; showUncaughtError: () => boolean; patchEventTarget: (global: any, apis: any[], options?: any) => boolean[]; patchOnProperties: (obj: any, properties: string[] | null, prototype?: any) => void; patchThen: (ctro: Function) => void; patchMethod: (target: any, name: string, patchFn: (delegate: Function, delegateName: string, name: string) => (self: any, args: any[]) => any) => Function | null; bindArguments: (args: any[], source: string) => any[]; patchMacroTask: (obj: any, funcName: string, metaCreator: (self: any, args: any[]) => any) => void; patchEventPrototype: (_global: any, api: _ZonePrivate) => void; isIEOrEdge: () => boolean; ObjectDefineProperty: (o: any, p: PropertyKey, attributes: PropertyDescriptor & ThisType) => any; ObjectGetOwnPropertyDescriptor: (o: any, p: PropertyKey) => PropertyDescriptor | undefined; ObjectCreate(o: object | null, properties?: PropertyDescriptorMap & ThisType): any; ArraySlice(start?: number, end?: number): any[]; patchClass: (className: string) => void; wrapWithCurrentZone: (callback: any, source: string) => any; filterProperties: (target: any, onProperties: string[], ignoreProperties: any[]) => string[]; attachOriginToPatched: (target: any, origin: any) => void; _redefineProperty: (target: any, callback: string, desc: any) => void; patchCallbacks: (api: _ZonePrivate, target: any, targetName: string, method: string, callbacks: string[]) => void; getGlobalObjects: () => { globalSources: any; zoneSymbolEventNames: any; eventNames: string[]; isBrowser: boolean; isMix: boolean; isNode: boolean; TRUE_STR: string; FALSE_STR: string; ZONE_SYMBOL_PREFIX: string; ADD_EVENT_LISTENER_STR: string; REMOVE_EVENT_LISTENER_STR: string; } | undefined; } /** * _ZoneFrame represents zone stack frame information */ interface _ZoneFrame { parent: _ZoneFrame | null; zone: Zone; } interface UncaughtPromiseError extends Error { zone: Zone; task: Task; promise: Promise; rejection: any; throwOriginal?: boolean; } /** * Provides a way to configure the interception of zone events. * * Only the `name` property is required (all other are optional). */ interface ZoneSpec { /** * The name of the zone. Useful when debugging Zones. */ name: string; /** * A set of properties to be associated with Zone. Use [Zone.get] to retrieve them. */ properties?: { [key: string]: any; }; /** * Allows the interception of zone forking. * * When the zone is being forked, the request is forwarded to this method for interception. * * @param parentZoneDelegate Delegate which performs the parent [ZoneSpec] operation. * @param currentZone The current [Zone] where the current interceptor has been declared. * @param targetZone The [Zone] which originally received the request. * @param zoneSpec The argument passed into the `fork` method. */ onFork?: (parentZoneDelegate: ZoneDelegate, currentZone: Zone, targetZone: Zone, zoneSpec: ZoneSpec) => Zone; /** * Allows interception of the wrapping of the callback. * * @param parentZoneDelegate Delegate which performs the parent [ZoneSpec] operation. * @param currentZone The current [Zone] where the current interceptor has been declared. * @param targetZone The [Zone] which originally received the request. * @param delegate The argument passed into the `wrap` method. * @param source The argument passed into the `wrap` method. */ onIntercept?: (parentZoneDelegate: ZoneDelegate, currentZone: Zone, targetZone: Zone, delegate: Function, source: string) => Function; /** * Allows interception of the callback invocation. * * @param parentZoneDelegate Delegate which performs the parent [ZoneSpec] operation. * @param currentZone The current [Zone] where the current interceptor has been declared. * @param targetZone The [Zone] which originally received the request. * @param delegate The argument passed into the `run` method. * @param applyThis The argument passed into the `run` method. * @param applyArgs The argument passed into the `run` method. * @param source The argument passed into the `run` method. */ onInvoke?: (parentZoneDelegate: ZoneDelegate, currentZone: Zone, targetZone: Zone, delegate: Function, applyThis: any, applyArgs?: any[], source?: string) => any; /** * Allows interception of the error handling. * * @param parentZoneDelegate Delegate which performs the parent [ZoneSpec] operation. * @param currentZone The current [Zone] where the current interceptor has been declared. * @param targetZone The [Zone] which originally received the request. * @param error The argument passed into the `handleError` method. */ onHandleError?: (parentZoneDelegate: ZoneDelegate, currentZone: Zone, targetZone: Zone, error: any) => boolean; /** * Allows interception of task scheduling. * * @param parentZoneDelegate Delegate which performs the parent [ZoneSpec] operation. * @param currentZone The current [Zone] where the current interceptor has been declared. * @param targetZone The [Zone] which originally received the request. * @param task The argument passed into the `scheduleTask` method. */ onScheduleTask?: (parentZoneDelegate: ZoneDelegate, currentZone: Zone, targetZone: Zone, task: Task) => Task; onInvokeTask?: (parentZoneDelegate: ZoneDelegate, currentZone: Zone, targetZone: Zone, task: Task, applyThis: any, applyArgs?: any[]) => any; /** * Allows interception of task cancellation. * * @param parentZoneDelegate Delegate which performs the parent [ZoneSpec] operation. * @param currentZone The current [Zone] where the current interceptor has been declared. * @param targetZone The [Zone] which originally received the request. * @param task The argument passed into the `cancelTask` method. */ onCancelTask?: (parentZoneDelegate: ZoneDelegate, currentZone: Zone, targetZone: Zone, task: Task) => any; /** * Notifies of changes to the task queue empty status. * * @param parentZoneDelegate Delegate which performs the parent [ZoneSpec] operation. * @param currentZone The current [Zone] where the current interceptor has been declared. * @param targetZone The [Zone] which originally received the request. * @param hasTaskState */ onHasTask?: (parentZoneDelegate: ZoneDelegate, currentZone: Zone, targetZone: Zone, hasTaskState: HasTaskState) => void; } /** * A delegate when intercepting zone operations. * * A ZoneDelegate is needed because a child zone can't simply invoke a method on a parent zone. For * example a child zone wrap can't just call parent zone wrap. Doing so would create a callback * which is bound to the parent zone. What we are interested in is intercepting the callback before * it is bound to any zone. Furthermore, we also need to pass the targetZone (zone which received * the original request) to the delegate. * * The ZoneDelegate methods mirror those of Zone with an addition of extra targetZone argument in * the method signature. (The original Zone which received the request.) Some methods are renamed * to prevent confusion, because they have slightly different semantics and arguments. * * - `wrap` => `intercept`: The `wrap` method delegates to `intercept`. The `wrap` method returns * a callback which will run in a given zone, where as intercept allows wrapping the callback * so that additional code can be run before and after, but does not associate the callback * with the zone. * - `run` => `invoke`: The `run` method delegates to `invoke` to perform the actual execution of * the callback. The `run` method switches to new zone; saves and restores the `Zone.current`; * and optionally performs error handling. The invoke is not responsible for error handling, * or zone management. * * Not every method is usually overwritten in the child zone, for this reason the ZoneDelegate * stores the closest zone which overwrites this behavior along with the closest ZoneSpec. * * NOTE: We have tried to make this API analogous to Event bubbling with target and current * properties. * * Note: The ZoneDelegate treats ZoneSpec as class. This allows the ZoneSpec to use its `this` to * store internal state. */ interface ZoneDelegate { zone: Zone; fork(targetZone: Zone, zoneSpec: ZoneSpec): Zone; intercept(targetZone: Zone, callback: Function, source: string): Function; invoke(targetZone: Zone, callback: Function, applyThis?: any, applyArgs?: any[], source?: string): any; handleError(targetZone: Zone, error: any): boolean; scheduleTask(targetZone: Zone, task: Task): Task; invokeTask(targetZone: Zone, task: Task, applyThis?: any, applyArgs?: any[]): any; cancelTask(targetZone: Zone, task: Task): any; hasTask(targetZone: Zone, isEmpty: HasTaskState): void; } declare type HasTaskState = { microTask: boolean; macroTask: boolean; eventTask: boolean; change: TaskType; }; /** * Task type: `microTask`, `macroTask`, `eventTask`. */ declare type TaskType = 'microTask' | 'macroTask' | 'eventTask'; /** * Task type: `notScheduled`, `scheduling`, `scheduled`, `running`, `canceling`, 'unknown'. */ declare type TaskState = 'notScheduled' | 'scheduling' | 'scheduled' | 'running' | 'canceling' | 'unknown'; /** */ interface TaskData { /** * A periodic [MacroTask] is such which get automatically rescheduled after it is executed. */ isPeriodic?: boolean; /** * Delay in milliseconds when the Task will run. */ delay?: number; /** * identifier returned by the native setTimeout. */ handleId?: number; } /** * Represents work which is executed with a clean stack. * * Tasks are used in Zones to mark work which is performed on clean stack frame. There are three * kinds of task. [MicroTask], [MacroTask], and [EventTask]. * * A JS VM can be modeled as a [MicroTask] queue, [MacroTask] queue, and [EventTask] set. * * - [MicroTask] queue represents a set of tasks which are executing right after the current stack * frame becomes clean and before a VM yield. All [MicroTask]s execute in order of insertion * before VM yield and the next [MacroTask] is executed. * - [MacroTask] queue represents a set of tasks which are executed one at a time after each VM * yield. The queue is ordered by time, and insertions can happen in any location. * - [EventTask] is a set of tasks which can at any time be inserted to the end of the [MacroTask] * queue. This happens when the event fires. * */ interface Task { /** * Task type: `microTask`, `macroTask`, `eventTask`. */ type: TaskType; /** * Task state: `notScheduled`, `scheduling`, `scheduled`, `running`, `canceling`, `unknown`. */ state: TaskState; /** * Debug string representing the API which requested the scheduling of the task. */ source: string; /** * The Function to be used by the VM upon entering the [Task]. This function will delegate to * [Zone.runTask] and delegate to `callback`. */ invoke: Function; /** * Function which needs to be executed by the Task after the [Zone.currentTask] has been set to * the current task. */ callback: Function; /** * Task specific options associated with the current task. This is passed to the `scheduleFn`. */ data?: TaskData; /** * Represents the default work which needs to be done to schedule the Task by the VM. * * A zone may choose to intercept this function and perform its own scheduling. */ scheduleFn?: (task: Task) => void; /** * Represents the default work which needs to be done to un-schedule the Task from the VM. Not all * Tasks are cancelable, and therefore this method is optional. * * A zone may chose to intercept this function and perform its own un-scheduling. */ cancelFn?: (task: Task) => void; /** * @type {Zone} The zone which will be used to invoke the `callback`. The Zone is captured * at the time of Task creation. */ readonly zone: Zone; /** * Number of times the task has been executed, or -1 if canceled. */ runCount: number; /** * Cancel the scheduling request. This method can be called from `ZoneSpec.onScheduleTask` to * cancel the current scheduling interception. Once canceled the task can be discarded or * rescheduled using `Zone.scheduleTask` on a different zone. */ cancelScheduleRequest(): void; } interface MicroTask extends Task { type: 'microTask'; } interface MacroTask extends Task { type: 'macroTask'; } interface EventTask extends Task { type: 'eventTask'; } declare const Zone: ZoneType; /** * @license * Copyright Google LLC All Rights Reserved. * * Use of this source code is governed by an MIT-style license that can be * found in the LICENSE file at https://angular.io/license */ /** * Additional `EventTarget` methods added by `Zone.js`. * * 1. removeAllListeners, remove all event listeners of the given event name. * 2. eventListeners, get all event listeners of the given event name. */ interface EventTarget { /** * * Remove all event listeners by name for this event target. * * This method is optional because it may not be available if you use `noop zone` when * bootstrapping Angular application or disable the `EventTarget` monkey patch by `zone.js`. * * If the `eventName` is provided, will remove event listeners of that name. * If the `eventName` is not provided, will remove all event listeners associated with * `EventTarget`. * * @param eventName the name of the event, such as `click`. This parameter is optional. */ removeAllListeners?(eventName?: string): void; /** * * Retrieve all event listeners by name. * * This method is optional because it may not be available if you use `noop zone` when * bootstrapping Angular application or disable the `EventTarget` monkey patch by `zone.js`. * * If the `eventName` is provided, will return an array of event handlers or event listener * objects of the given event. * If the `eventName` is not provided, will return all listeners. * * @param eventName the name of the event, such as click. This parameter is optional. */ eventListeners?(eventName?: string): EventListenerOrEventListenerObject[]; } /** * @license * Copyright Google LLC All Rights Reserved. * * Use of this source code is governed by an MIT-style license that can be * found in the LICENSE file at https://angular.io/license */ /** * Interface of `zone.js` configurations. * * You can define the following configurations on the `window/global` object before * importing `zone.js` to change `zone.js` default behaviors. */ interface ZoneGlobalConfigurations { /** * Disable the monkey patch of the `Node.js` `EventEmitter` API. * * By default, `zone.js` monkey patches the `Node.js` `EventEmitter` APIs to make asynchronous * callbacks of those APIs in the same zone when scheduled. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * const EventEmitter = require('events'); * class MyEmitter extends EventEmitter {} * const myEmitter = new MyEmitter(); * * const zone = Zone.current.fork({name: 'myZone'}); * zone.run(() => { * myEmitter.on('event', () => { * console.log('an event occurs in the zone', Zone.current.name); * // the callback runs in the zone when it is scheduled, * // so the output is 'an event occurs in the zone myZone'. * }); * }); * myEmitter.emit('event'); * ``` * * If you set `__Zone_disable_EventEmitter = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch the `EventEmitter` APIs and the above code * outputs 'an event occurred '. */ __Zone_disable_EventEmitter?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the `Node.js` `fs` API. * * By default, `zone.js` monkey patches `Node.js` `fs` APIs to make asynchronous callbacks of * those APIs in the same zone when scheduled. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * const fs = require('fs'); * * const zone = Zone.current.fork({name: 'myZone'}); * zone.run(() => { * fs.stat('/tmp/world', (err, stats) => { * console.log('fs.stats() callback is invoked in the zone', Zone.current.name); * // since the callback of the `fs.stat()` runs in the same zone * // when it is called, so the output is 'fs.stats() callback is invoked in the zone myZone'. * }); * }); * ``` * * If you set `__Zone_disable_fs = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch the `fs` API and the above code * outputs 'get stats occurred '. */ __Zone_disable_fs?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the `Node.js` `timer` API. * * By default, `zone.js` monkey patches the `Node.js` `timer` APIs to make asynchronous * callbacks of those APIs in the same zone when scheduled. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * const zone = Zone.current.fork({name: 'myZone'}); * zone.run(() => { * setTimeout(() => { * console.log('setTimeout() callback is invoked in the zone', Zone.current.name); * // since the callback of `setTimeout()` runs in the same zone * // when it is scheduled, so the output is 'setTimeout() callback is invoked in the zone * // myZone'. * }); * }); * ``` * * If you set `__Zone_disable_timers = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch the `timer` APIs and the above code * outputs 'timeout '. */ __Zone_disable_node_timers?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the `Node.js` `process.nextTick()` API. * * By default, `zone.js` monkey patches the `Node.js` `process.nextTick()` API to make the * callback in the same zone when calling `process.nextTick()`. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * const zone = Zone.current.fork({name: 'myZone'}); * zone.run(() => { * process.nextTick(() => { * console.log('process.nextTick() callback is invoked in the zone', Zone.current.name); * // since the callback of `process.nextTick()` runs in the same zone * // when it is scheduled, so the output is 'process.nextTick() callback is invoked in the * // zone myZone'. * }); * }); * ``` * * If you set `__Zone_disable_nextTick = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch the `process.nextTick()` API and the above code * outputs 'nextTick '. */ __Zone_disable_nextTick?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the `Node.js` `crypto` API. * * By default, `zone.js` monkey patches the `Node.js` `crypto` APIs to make asynchronous callbacks * of those APIs in the same zone when called. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * const crypto = require('crypto'); * * const zone = Zone.current.fork({name: 'myZone'}); * zone.run(() => { * crypto.randomBytes(() => { * console.log('crypto.randomBytes() callback is invoked in the zone', Zone.current.name); * // since the callback of `crypto.randomBytes()` runs in the same zone * // when it is called, so the output is 'crypto.randomBytes() callback is invoked in the * // zone myZone'. * }); * }); * ``` * * If you set `__Zone_disable_crypto = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch the `crypto` API and the above code * outputs 'crypto '. */ __Zone_disable_crypto?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the `Object.defineProperty()` API. * * Note: This configuration is available only in the legacy bundle (dist/zone.js). This module is * not available in the evergreen bundle (zone-evergreen.js). * * In the legacy browser, the default behavior of `zone.js` is to monkey patch * `Object.defineProperty()` and `Object.create()` to try to ensure PropertyDescriptor parameter's * configurable property to be true. This patch is only needed in some old mobile browsers. * * If you set `__Zone_disable_defineProperty = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch the `Object.defineProperty()` API and does not * modify desc.configurable to true. * */ __Zone_disable_defineProperty?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the browser `registerElement()` API. * * NOTE: This configuration is only available in the legacy bundle (dist/zone.js), this * module is not available in the evergreen bundle (zone-evergreen.js). * * In the legacy browser, the default behavior of `zone.js` is to monkey patch the * `registerElement()` API to make asynchronous callbacks of the API in the same zone when * `registerElement()` is called. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * const proto = Object.create(HTMLElement.prototype); * proto.createdCallback = function() { * console.log('createdCallback is invoked in the zone', Zone.current.name); * }; * proto.attachedCallback = function() { * console.log('attachedCallback is invoked in the zone', Zone.current.name); * }; * proto.detachedCallback = function() { * console.log('detachedCallback is invoked in the zone', Zone.current.name); * }; * proto.attributeChangedCallback = function() { * console.log('attributeChangedCallback is invoked in the zone', Zone.current.name); * }; * * const zone = Zone.current.fork({name: 'myZone'}); * zone.run(() => { * document.registerElement('x-elem', {prototype: proto}); * }); * ``` * * When these callbacks are invoked, those callbacks will be in the zone when * `registerElement()` is called. * * If you set `__Zone_disable_registerElement = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch `registerElement()` API and the above code * outputs ''. */ __Zone_disable_registerElement?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the browser legacy `EventTarget` API. * * NOTE: This configuration is only available in the legacy bundle (dist/zone.js), this module * is not available in the evergreen bundle (zone-evergreen.js). * * In some old browsers, the `EventTarget` is not available, so `zone.js` cannot directly monkey * patch the `EventTarget`. Instead, `zone.js` patches all known HTML elements' prototypes (such * as `HtmlDivElement`). The callback of the `addEventListener()` will be in the same zone when * the `addEventListener()` is called. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * const zone = Zone.current.fork({name: 'myZone'}); * zone.run(() => { * div.addEventListener('click', () => { * console.log('div click event listener is invoked in the zone', Zone.current.name); * // the output is 'div click event listener is invoked in the zone myZone'. * }); * }); * ``` * * If you set `__Zone_disable_EventTargetLegacy = true` before importing `zone.js` * In some old browsers, where `EventTarget` is not available, if you set * `__Zone_disable_EventTargetLegacy = true` before importing `zone.js`, `zone.js` does not monkey * patch all HTML element APIs and the above code outputs 'clicked '. */ __Zone_disable_EventTargetLegacy?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the browser `timer` APIs. * * By default, `zone.js` monkey patches browser timer * APIs (`setTimeout()`/`setInterval()`/`setImmediate()`) to make asynchronous callbacks of those * APIs in the same zone when scheduled. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * const zone = Zone.current.fork({name: 'myZone'}); * zone.run(() => { * setTimeout(() => { * console.log('setTimeout() callback is invoked in the zone', Zone.current.name); * // since the callback of `setTimeout()` runs in the same zone * // when it is scheduled, so the output is 'setTimeout() callback is invoked in the zone * // myZone'. * }); * }); * ``` * * If you set `__Zone_disable_timers = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch `timer` API and the above code * outputs 'timeout '. * */ __Zone_disable_timers?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the browser `requestAnimationFrame()` API. * * By default, `zone.js` monkey patches the browser `requestAnimationFrame()` API * to make the asynchronous callback of the `requestAnimationFrame()` in the same zone when * scheduled. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * const zone = Zone.current.fork({name: 'myZone'}); * zone.run(() => { * requestAnimationFrame(() => { * console.log('requestAnimationFrame() callback is invoked in the zone', Zone.current.name); * // since the callback of `requestAnimationFrame()` will be in the same zone * // when it is scheduled, so the output will be 'requestAnimationFrame() callback is invoked * // in the zone myZone' * }); * }); * ``` * * If you set `__Zone_disable_requestAnimationFrame = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch the `requestAnimationFrame()` API and the above code * outputs 'raf '. */ __Zone_disable_requestAnimationFrame?: boolean; /** * * Disable the monkey patching of the browser's `queueMicrotask()` API. * * By default, `zone.js` monkey patches the browser's `queueMicrotask()` API * to ensure that `queueMicrotask()` callback is invoked in the same zone as zone used to invoke * `queueMicrotask()`. And also the callback is running as `microTask` like * `Promise.prototype.then()`. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * const zone = Zone.current.fork({name: 'myZone'}); * zone.run(() => { * queueMicrotask(() => { * console.log('queueMicrotask() callback is invoked in the zone', Zone.current.name); * // Since `queueMicrotask()` was invoked in `myZone`, same zone is restored * // when 'queueMicrotask() callback is invoked, resulting in `myZone` being console logged. * }); * }); * ``` * * If you set `__Zone_disable_queueMicrotask = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch the `queueMicrotask()` API and the above code * output will change to: 'queueMicrotask() callback is invoked in the zone '. */ __Zone_disable_queueMicrotask?: boolean; /** * * Disable the monkey patch of the browser blocking APIs(`alert()`/`prompt()`/`confirm()`). */ __Zone_disable_blocking?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the browser `EventTarget` APIs. * * By default, `zone.js` monkey patches EventTarget APIs. The callbacks of the * `addEventListener()` run in the same zone when the `addEventListener()` is called. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * const zone = Zone.current.fork({name: 'myZone'}); * zone.run(() => { * div.addEventListener('click', () => { * console.log('div event listener is invoked in the zone', Zone.current.name); * // the output is 'div event listener is invoked in the zone myZone'. * }); * }); * ``` * * If you set `__Zone_disable_EventTarget = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch EventTarget API and the above code * outputs 'clicked '. * */ __Zone_disable_EventTarget?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the browser `FileReader` APIs. */ __Zone_disable_FileReader?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the browser `MutationObserver` APIs. */ __Zone_disable_MutationObserver?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the browser `IntersectionObserver` APIs. */ __Zone_disable_IntersectionObserver?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the browser onProperty APIs(such as onclick). * * By default, `zone.js` monkey patches onXXX properties (such as onclick). The callbacks of onXXX * properties run in the same zone when the onXXX properties is set. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * const zone = Zone.current.fork({name: 'myZone'}); * zone.run(() => { * div.onclick = () => { * console.log('div click event listener is invoked in the zone', Zone.current.name); * // the output will be 'div click event listener is invoked in the zone myZone' * } * }); * ``` * * If you set `__Zone_disable_on_property = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch onXXX properties and the above code * outputs 'clicked '. * */ __Zone_disable_on_property?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the browser `customElements` APIs. * * By default, `zone.js` monkey patches `customElements` APIs to make callbacks run in the * same zone when the `customElements.define()` is called. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * class TestCustomElement extends HTMLElement { * constructor() { super(); } * connectedCallback() {} * disconnectedCallback() {} * attributeChangedCallback(attrName, oldVal, newVal) {} * adoptedCallback() {} * } * * const zone = Zone.fork({name: 'myZone'}); * zone.run(() => { * customElements.define('x-elem', TestCustomElement); * }); * ``` * * All those callbacks defined in TestCustomElement runs in the zone when * the `customElements.define()` is called. * * If you set `__Zone_disable_customElements = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch `customElements` APIs and the above code * runs inside zone. */ __Zone_disable_customElements?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the browser `XMLHttpRequest` APIs. * * By default, `zone.js` monkey patches `XMLHttpRequest` APIs to make XMLHttpRequest act * as macroTask. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * const zone = Zone.current.fork({ * name: 'myZone', * onScheduleTask: (delegate, curr, target, task) => { * console.log('task is scheduled', task.type, task.source, task.zone.name); * return delegate.scheduleTask(target, task); * } * }) * const xhr = new XMLHttpRequest(); * zone.run(() => { * xhr.onload = function() {}; * xhr.open('get', '/', true); * xhr.send(); * }); * ``` * * In this example, the instance of XMLHttpRequest runs in the zone and acts as a macroTask. The * output is 'task is scheduled macroTask, XMLHttpRequest.send, zone'. * * If you set `__Zone_disable_XHR = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch `XMLHttpRequest` APIs and the above onScheduleTask callback * will not be called. * */ __Zone_disable_XHR?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the browser geolocation APIs. * * By default, `zone.js` monkey patches geolocation APIs to make callbacks run in the same zone * when those APIs are called. * * Consider the following examples: * * ``` * const zone = Zone.current.fork({ * name: 'myZone' * }); * * zone.run(() => { * navigator.geolocation.getCurrentPosition(pos => { * console.log('navigator.getCurrentPosition() callback is invoked in the zone', * Zone.current.name); * // output is 'navigator.getCurrentPosition() callback is invoked in the zone myZone'. * } * }); * ``` * * If set you `__Zone_disable_geolocation = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch geolocation APIs and the above code * outputs 'getCurrentPosition '. * */ __Zone_disable_geolocation?: boolean; /** * Disable the monkey patch of the browser `canvas` APIs. * * By default, `zone.js` monkey patches `canvas` APIs to make callbacks run in the same zone when * those APIs are called. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * const zone = Zone.current.fork({ * name: 'myZone' * }); * * zone.run(() => { * canvas.toBlob(blog => { * console.log('canvas.toBlob() callback is invoked in the zone', Zone.current.name); * // output is 'canvas.toBlob() callback is invoked in the zone myZone'. * } * }); * ``` * * If you set `__Zone_disable_canvas = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch `canvas` APIs and the above code * outputs 'canvas.toBlob '. */ __Zone_disable_canvas?: boolean; /** * Disable the `Promise` monkey patch. * * By default, `zone.js` monkey patches `Promise` APIs to make the `then()/catch()` callbacks in * the same zone when those callbacks are called. * * Consider the following examples: * * ``` * const zone = Zone.current.fork({name: 'myZone'}); * * const p = Promise.resolve(1); * * zone.run(() => { * p.then(() => { * console.log('then() callback is invoked in the zone', Zone.current.name); * // output is 'then() callback is invoked in the zone myZone'. * }); * }); * ``` * * If you set `__Zone_disable_ZoneAwarePromise = true` before importing `zone.js`, * `zone.js` does not monkey patch `Promise` APIs and the above code * outputs 'promise then callback '. */ __Zone_disable_ZoneAwarePromise?: boolean; /** * Define event names that users don't want monkey patched by the `zone.js`. * * By default, `zone.js` monkey patches EventTarget.addEventListener(). The event listener * callback runs in the same zone when the addEventListener() is called. * * Sometimes, you don't want all of the event names used in this patched version because it * impacts performance. For example, you might want `scroll` or `mousemove` event listeners to run * the native `addEventListener()` for better performance. * * Users can achieve this goal by defining `__zone_symbol__UNPATCHED_EVENTS = ['scroll', * 'mousemove'];` before importing `zone.js`. */ __zone_symbol__UNPATCHED_EVENTS?: string[]; /** * Define the event names of the passive listeners. * * To add passive event listeners, you can use `elem.addEventListener('scroll', listener, * {passive: true});` or implement your own `EventManagerPlugin`. * * You can also define a global variable as follows: * * ``` * __zone_symbol__PASSIVE_EVENTS = ['scroll']; * ``` * * The preceding code makes all scroll event listeners passive. */ __zone_symbol__PASSIVE_EVENTS?: string[]; /** * Disable wrapping uncaught promise rejection. * * By default, `zone.js` wraps the uncaught promise rejection in a new `Error` object * which contains additional information such as a value of the rejection and a stack trace. * * If you set `__zone_symbol__DISABLE_WRAPPING_UNCAUGHT_PROMISE_REJECTION = true;` before * importing `zone.js`, `zone.js` will not wrap the uncaught promise rejection. */ __zone_symbol__DISABLE_WRAPPING_UNCAUGHT_PROMISE_REJECTION?: boolean; } /** * Interface of `zone-testing.js` test configurations. * * You can define the following configurations on the `window` or `global` object before * importing `zone-testing.js` to change `zone-testing.js` default behaviors in the test runner. */ interface ZoneTestConfigurations { /** * Disable the Jasmine integration. * * In the `zone-testing.js` bundle, by default, `zone-testing.js` monkey patches Jasmine APIs * to make Jasmine APIs run in specified zone. * * 1. Make the `describe()`/`xdescribe()`/`fdescribe()` methods run in the syncTestZone. * 2. Make the `it()`/`xit()`/`fit()`/`beforeEach()`/`afterEach()`/`beforeAll()`/`afterAll()` * methods run in the ProxyZone. * * With this patch, `async()`/`fakeAsync()` can work with the Jasmine runner. * * If you set `__Zone_disable_jasmine = true` before importing `zone-testing.js`, * `zone-testing.js` does not monkey patch the jasmine APIs and the `async()`/`fakeAsync()` cannot * work with the Jasmine runner any longer. */ __Zone_disable_jasmine?: boolean; /** * Disable the Mocha integration. * * In the `zone-testing.js` bundle, by default, `zone-testing.js` monkey patches the Mocha APIs * to make Mocha APIs run in the specified zone. * * 1. Make the `describe()`/`xdescribe()`/`fdescribe()` methods run in the syncTestZone. * 2. Make the `it()`/`xit()`/`fit()`/`beforeEach()`/`afterEach()`/`beforeAll()`/`afterAll()` * methods run in the ProxyZone. * * With this patch, `async()`/`fakeAsync()` can work with the Mocha runner. * * If you set `__Zone_disable_mocha = true` before importing `zone-testing.js`, * `zone-testing.js` does not monkey patch the Mocha APIs and the `async()/`fakeAsync()` can not * work with the Mocha runner any longer. */ __Zone_disable_mocha?: boolean; /** * Disable the Jest integration. * * In the `zone-testing.js` bundle, by default, `zone-testing.js` monkey patches Jest APIs * to make Jest APIs run in the specified zone. * * 1. Make the `describe()`/`xdescribe()`/`fdescribe()` methods run in the syncTestZone. * 2. Make the `it()`/`xit()`/`fit()`/`beforeEach()`/`afterEach()`/`before()`/`after()` methods * run in the ProxyZone. * * With this patch, `async()`/`fakeAsync()` can work with the Jest runner. * * If you set `__Zone_disable_jest = true` before importing `zone-testing.js`, * `zone-testing.js` does not monkey patch the jest APIs and `async()`/`fakeAsync()` cannot * work with the Jest runner any longer. */ __Zone_disable_jest?: boolean; /** * Disable monkey patch the jasmine clock APIs. * * By default, `zone-testing.js` monkey patches the `jasmine.clock()` API, * so the `jasmine.clock()` can work with the `fakeAsync()/tick()` API. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * describe('jasmine.clock integration', () => { * beforeEach(() => { * jasmine.clock().install(); * }); * afterEach(() => { * jasmine.clock().uninstall(); * }); * it('fakeAsync test', fakeAsync(() => { * setTimeout(spy, 100); * expect(spy).not.toHaveBeenCalled(); * jasmine.clock().tick(100); * expect(spy).toHaveBeenCalled(); * })); * }); * ``` * * In the `fakeAsync()` method, `jasmine.clock().tick()` works just like `tick()`. * * If you set `__zone_symbol__fakeAsyncDisablePatchingClock = true` before importing * `zone-testing.js`,`zone-testing.js` does not monkey patch the `jasmine.clock()` APIs and the * `jasmine.clock()` cannot work with `fakeAsync()` any longer. */ __zone_symbol__fakeAsyncDisablePatchingClock?: boolean; /** * Enable auto running into `fakeAsync()` when installing the `jasmine.clock()`. * * By default, `zone-testing.js` does not automatically run into `fakeAsync()` * if the `jasmine.clock().install()` is called. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * describe('jasmine.clock integration', () => { * beforeEach(() => { * jasmine.clock().install(); * }); * afterEach(() => { * jasmine.clock().uninstall(); * }); * it('fakeAsync test', fakeAsync(() => { * setTimeout(spy, 100); * expect(spy).not.toHaveBeenCalled(); * jasmine.clock().tick(100); * expect(spy).toHaveBeenCalled(); * })); * }); * ``` * * You must run `fakeAsync()` to make test cases in the `FakeAsyncTestZone`. * * If you set `__zone_symbol__fakeAsyncAutoFakeAsyncWhenClockPatched = true` before importing * `zone-testing.js`, `zone-testing.js` can run test case automatically in the * `FakeAsyncTestZone` without calling the `fakeAsync()`. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * describe('jasmine.clock integration', () => { * beforeEach(() => { * jasmine.clock().install(); * }); * afterEach(() => { * jasmine.clock().uninstall(); * }); * it('fakeAsync test', () => { // here we don't need to call fakeAsync * setTimeout(spy, 100); * expect(spy).not.toHaveBeenCalled(); * jasmine.clock().tick(100); * expect(spy).toHaveBeenCalled(); * }); * }); * ``` * */ __zone_symbol__fakeAsyncAutoFakeAsyncWhenClockPatched?: boolean; /** * Enable waiting for the unresolved promise in the `async()` test. * * In the `async()` test, `AsyncTestZone` waits for all the asynchronous tasks to finish. By * default, if some promises remain unresolved, `AsyncTestZone` does not wait and reports that it * received an unexpected result. * * Consider the following example: * * ``` * describe('wait never resolved promise', () => { * it('async with never resolved promise test', async(() => { * const p = new Promise(() => {}); * p.then(() => { * // do some expectation. * }); * })) * }); * ``` * * By default, this case passes, because the callback of `p.then()` is never called. Because `p` * is an unresolved promise, there is no pending asynchronous task, which means the `async()` * method does not wait. * * If you set `__zone_symbol__supportWaitUnResolvedChainedPromise = true`, the above case * times out, because `async()` will wait for the unresolved promise. */ __zone_symbol__supportWaitUnResolvedChainedPromise?: boolean; } /** * The interface of the `zone.js` runtime configurations. * * These configurations can be defined on the `Zone` object after * importing zone.js to change behaviors. The differences between * the `ZoneRuntimeConfigurations` and the `ZoneGlobalConfigurations` are, * * 1. `ZoneGlobalConfigurations` must be defined on the `global/window` object before importing * `zone.js`. The value of the configuration cannot be changed at runtime. * * 2. `ZoneRuntimeConfigurations` must be defined on the `Zone` object after importing `zone.js`. * You can change the value of this configuration at runtime. * */ interface ZoneRuntimeConfigurations { /** * Ignore outputting errors to the console when uncaught Promise errors occur. * * By default, if an uncaught Promise error occurs, `zone.js` outputs the * error to the console by calling `console.error()`. * * If you set `__zone_symbol__ignoreConsoleErrorUncaughtError = true`, `zone.js` does not output * the uncaught error to `console.error()`. */ __zone_symbol__ignoreConsoleErrorUncaughtError?: boolean; }