Summary:
This kills fastfs in favor of Jest's hasteFS. It gets rid of a ton of code, including the mocking code in ResolutionRequest which we don't need any more. Next step after this is to rewrite HasteMap, ModuleCache, Module/Package. We are getting closer to a nicer and faster world! :)
Here is what I did:
* Use Jest's HasteFS instead of fastfs. A fresh instance is received every time something changes on the FS.
* HasteFS is not shared with everything any more. Only one reference is kept in DependencyGraph and there are a few smaller functions that are passed around (getClosestPackage and dirExists). Note: `dirExists` now does fs access instead of an offline check. This sucks but stat calls aren't slow and aren't going to be a bottleneck in ResolutionRequest, I promise! When it is time to tackle a ResolutionRequest rewrite with jest-resolve, this will go away. "It gets worse before it gets better" :) The ModuleGraph equivalent does *not* do fs access and retains the previous way of doing things because we shouldn't do online fs access there.
* Add flow annotations to ResolutionRequest. This required a few tiny hacks for now because of ModuleGraph's duck typing. I'll get rid of this soon.
* Updated ModuleGraph to work with the new code, also created a mock HasteFS instance there.
* I fixed a few tiny mock issues for `fs` to make the tests work; I had to add one tiny little internal update to `dgraph._hasteFS._files` because the file watching in the tests isn't real. It is instrumented through some function calls, therefore the hasteFS instance doesn't get automatically updated. One way to solve this is to add `JestHasteMap.emit('change', …)` for testing but I didn't want to cut a Jest release just for that. #movefast
(Note: I will likely land this in 1.5 weeks from now after my vacation and I have yet to fully test all the product flows. Please give me feedback so I can make sure this is solid!)
Reviewed By: davidaurelio
Differential Revision: D4204082
fbshipit-source-id: d6dc9fcb77ac224df4554a59f0fce241c01b0512
Summary:
This is the next incremental step to rewrite node-haste. I apologize for the size of this diff but there is really no smaller way to do this. The current architecture passes a single file watcher instance into many classes that each subscribe to file changes. It's really hard to keep track of this. The new implementation reduces the listeners to two (will eventually be just one!) - one in DependencyGraph and one in it's parent's parent's parent (ugh! This doesn't make any sense). This should make it much more straightforward to understand what happens when a file changes.
I was able to remove a bunch of tests because jest's watcher takes care of things like ignore patterns. Some of the tests were specifically testing for whether the change events were invoked and they are now much more straightforward as well by manually invoking the `processFileChange` methods.
(Relanding a fixed version of D4161662)
Reviewed By: kentaromiura
Differential Revision: D4194378
fbshipit-source-id: 8c008247a911573f6b5f6b0b374d50d38f62a4f5
Summary: In addition to adding flow in that file, I also had to fix `Module.js` and others to make everything compatible together.
Reviewed By: davidaurelio
Differential Revision: D4118829
fbshipit-source-id: 4f6dbc515741c38817cc4c9757e981fabb03915a
Summary: I originally added fastpath to node-haste to speed up `path` operations by an order of magnitude. Now we are exclusively using Node 6 at FB so we don't need to ship this thing any more.
Reviewed By: bestander
Differential Revision: D4029092
fbshipit-source-id: 064cf67f4f79ce4f2774fb4e430d22eef4a95434
Summary:
Since jest stopped using node-haste a while ago, we are the only client left.
This brings back node-haste back to fbsource to allow us to iterate faster.
Reviewed By: bestander
Differential Revision: D3641341
fbshipit-source-id: a859f8834765723a3515e2cf265581b9dd83997c