dotty.tools.dotc.transform.sjs
Type members
Classlikes
Adds fake calls to the constructors of local JS classes in calls to
createLocalJSClass
.
Adds fake calls to the constructors of local JS classes in calls to
createLocalJSClass
.
Given a call of the form
scala.scalajs.runtime.createLocalJSClass(classOf[C], jsClassValue, ???)
this phase fills in the ???
with an array of calls to the constructors
of C
, like
[ new C(), new C(???, ???) : Object ]
If the class C
has an outer pointer, as determined by the ExplicitOuter
phase, the calls to the constructor insert a reference to the outer
instance:
[ new C(Enclosing.this), new C(Enclosing.this, ???, ???) : Object ]
The LambdaLift
phase will further expand those constructor calls with
values for captures. The back-end will extract the values of the outer
pointer and/or the captures to introduce them as JS class captures.
Since we need to insert fake new C()
calls, this scheme does not work for
abstract local classes. We therefore reject them as implementation
restriction in PrepJSInterop
.
This phase complements ExplicitJSClasses
. The latter cannot create the
fake new invocations because that would require inventing sound type
arguments for the class' type parameters in order not to break Ycheck.
- Companion:
- object
This phase makes all JS classes explicit (their definitions and references to them).
This phase makes all JS classes explicit (their definitions and references to them).
This phase is the equivalent of the two phases ExplicitInnerJS
and
ExplicitLocalJS
from Scala 2. It performs the following transformations:
(A) For every inner JS class Inner
in a class or trait Outer
, create a
field Outer.Inner$jsclass
to hold the JS class value of Inner
.
(B) For every exposed object Inner
in a static owner Outer
, create an
explicit exposed getter Outer.Inner$jsobject
.
(C) For every local JS class Local
, create a local val Local$jsclass
to hold the JS class value of Local
.
(D) Desugar calls like x.isInstanceOf[C]
into
js.special.instanceof(x, js.constructorOf[C])
when C
is a nested
JS class.
(E) Wrap every new C
call and super[C]
reference of a nested JS class
C
with withContextualJSClassValue(js.constructorOf[C], ...)
.
(F) Desugar calls to js.constructorOf[C]
(including those generated by
the previous transformations) into either runtime.constructorOf
or
access to the $jsclass
fields/vals.
(G) Adjust the NoInits
flag of traits:
- for JS traits, always add the flag
- for Scala trait that contain a JS class, remove the flag
Note that in this comment, and more largely in this phase, by "class" we
mean only class
es. trait
s and object
s are not implied.
(A) Inner$jsclass
fields
Roughly, for every inner JS class of the form:
class Outer {
class Inner extends ParentJSClass
}
this phase creates a field Inner$jsclass
in Outer
to hold the JS class
value for Inner
. The rhs of that field is a call to a magic method, used
to retain information that the back-end will need.
class Outer {
<synthetic> val Inner$jsclass: AnyRef =
createJSClass(classOf[Inner], js.constructorOf[ParentJSClass])
class Inner extends ParentJSClass
}
These fields will be read by code generated in step (F).
A $jsclass
field is also generated for classes declared inside static
JS objects. Indeed, even though those classes have a unique, globally
accessible class value, that class value needs to be exposed as a field
of the enclosing object. In those cases, the rhs of the field is a direct
call to js.constructorOf[Inner]
, which becomes
runtime.constructorOf(classOf[Inner])
.
For the following input:
object Outer extends js.Object {
class InnerClass extends ParentJSClass
}
this phase will generate
object Outer extends js.Object {
@ExposedJSMember @JSName("InnerClass")
val InnerClass$jsclass: AnyRef = runtime.constructorOf(classOf[InnerClass])
}
The $jsclass
fields must also be added to outer classes and traits
coming from separate compilation, therefore this phase is an
InfoTransform
.
(B) Inner$jsobject
exposed getters
For modules declared inside static JS objects, we generate an explicit
exposed getter as well. For non-static objects, dotc already generates a
getter with the @ExposedJSMember
annotation, so we do not need to do
anything. But for static objects, it doesn't, so we have to do it ourselves
here.
For the following input:
object Outer extends js.Object {
object InnerObject extends ParentJSClass
}
this phase will generate
object Outer extends js.Object {
@ExposedJSMember @JSName("InnerObject")
def InnerObject$jsobject: AnyRef = InnerObject
}
(C) Local$jsclass
vals and vars
Similarly to how step (A) creates explicit fields in the enclosing templates of inner JS classes and traits to hold the JS class values, this phase creates local vals for local JS classes in the enclosing statement list.
For every local JS class of the form:
def outer() = {
class Local extends ParentJSClass
}
this phase creates a local val Local$jslass
in the body of outer()
to
hold the JS class value for Local
. The rhs of that val is a call to a
magic method, used to retain information that the back-end will need:
- A reified reference to
class Local
, in the form of aclassOf
- An explicit reference to the super JS class value, i.e., the desugaring
of
js.constructorOf[ParentJSClass]
- An array of fake
new
expressions for all overloaded constructors.
The latter will be augmented by LambdaLift
with the appropriate actual
parameters for the captures of Local
, which will be needed by the
back-end. In code, this looks like:
def outer() = {
class Local extends ParentJSClass
val Local$jsclass: AnyRef = createLocalJSClass(
classOf[Local],
js.constructorOf[ParentJSClass],
???)
}
The third argument ???
is a placeholder, which will be filled in by
AddLocalJSFakeNews
with fake new invocations for the all the constructors
of Local
. We cannot do it at this phase because that would require
inventing sound type arguments for the type parameters of Local
out of
thin air.
If the body of Local
references itself, then the val Local$jsclass
is
instead declared as a var
to work around the cyclic dependency:
def outer() = {
var Local$jsclass: AnyRef = null
class Local extends ParentJSClass {
def newLocal = new Local // self-reference
}
Local$jsclass = createLocalJSClass(...)
}
(D) Insertion of withContextualJSClassValue
calls
For any nested JS class C
, this phase performs the following
transformations:
new C[...Ts](...args)
desugars intowithContextualJSClassValue(js.constructorOf[C], new C[...Ts](...args))
, so that the back-end receives a reified reference to the JS class value.- In the same spirit, for
D extends C
,D.super[C].m[...Ts](...args)
desugars intowithContextualJSClassValue(js.constructorOf[C], D.super[C].m[...Ts](...args))
.
For any nested JS object, their (only) instantiation point of the form
new O$()
is rewritten as
withContextualJSClassValue(js.constructorOf[ParentClassOfO], new O$())
,
so that the back-end receives a reified reference to the parent class of
O
.
A similar treatment is applied on anonymous JS classes, which basically
define something very similar to an object
, although without their own JS
class.
(E) Desugar x.isInstanceOf[C]
for nested JS classes
They are desugared into js.special.instanceof(x, js.constructorOf[C])
.
(F) Desugar js.constructorOf[C]
Finally, this phase rewrites all calls to js.constructorOf[C]
, including
the ones generated by the previous steps. The transformation depends on the
nature of C
:
- If
C
is a statically accessible class, desugar toruntime.constructorOf(classOf[C])
so that the reified symbol survives erasure and reaches the back-end. - If
C
is an inner JS class, it must be of the formpath.D
for some pair (path
,D
), and we desugar it topath.D$jsclass
, using the field created by step (A) (it is an error ifC
is of the formEnclosing#D
). - If
C
is a local JS class, desugar toC$jsclass
, using the local val created by step (C).
- Companion:
- object
Additional extensions for Symbol
s that are only relevant for Scala.js.
Additional extensions for Symbol
s that are only relevant for Scala.js.
Generates JUnit bootstrapper objects for Scala.js.
Generates JUnit bootstrapper objects for Scala.js.
On the JVM, JUnit uses run-time reflection to list and invoke JUnit-related
methods. They are identified by annotations such as @Test
, @Before
,
etc. In Scala.js, there is no such reflection for methods and annotations,
so a different strategy is used: this phase performs the necessary
inspections at compile-time, and generates a so-called bootstrapper object
where all those metadata have been reified.
With an example: given the following JUnit test class:
class MyTest {
@Before def myBefore(): Unit = ...
@Before def otherBefore(): Unit = ...
@Test def syncTest(): Unit = ...
@Test def asyncTest(): Future[Try[Unit]] = ...
@Ignore @Test def ignoredTest(): Unit = ...
}
object MyTest {
@AfterClass def myAfterClass(): Unit = ...
}
this phase generates the following bootstrapper module class:
object MyTest$scalajs$junit$bootstrapper extends Object with Bootstrapper {
def beforeClass(): Unit = {
// nothing, since there is no @BeforeClass method in object MyTest
}
def afterClass(): Unit = {
MyTest.myAfterClass()
}
def before(instance: Object): Unit = {
// typically 0 or 1, but also support 2 or more
instance.asInstanceOf[MyTest].myBefore()
instance.asInstanceOf[MyTest].otherBefore()
}
def after(instance: Object): Unit = {
// nothing, since there is no @After method in class MyTest
}
def tests(): Array[TestMetadata] = Array(
new TestMetadata("syncTest", false, new org.junit.Test()),
new TestMetadata("asyncTest", false, new org.junit.Test()),
new TestMetadata("ignoredTest", true, new org.junit.Test()),
)
def invokeTest(instance: Object, name: String): Future[Unit] = {
val castInstance: MyTest = instance.asInstanceOf[MyTest]
if ("syncTest".equals(name))
Future.successful(scala.util.Success(castInstance.syncTest()))
else if ("asyncTest".equals(name))
castInstance.asyncTest() // asyncTest() already returns a Future[Try[Unit]]
else if ("ignoredTest".equals(name))
Future.successful(scala.util.Success(castInstance.ignoredTest()))
else
throw new NoSuchMethodException(name)
}
def newInstance(): Object = new MyTest()
}
Note that the support for test methods returning Future
s is specific to
Scala.js, and not advertised as a public feature. It is necessary to test
some things in Scala.js itself, but outside users should use a testing
framework with official asynchronous support instead.
Because Booststrapper
is annotated with @EnableReflectiveInstantiation
,
the run-time implementation of JUnit for Scala.js can load the bootstrapper
module using scala.scalajs.reflect.Reflect
, and then use the methods of
Bootstrapper, which are implemented in the bootstrapper object, to perform
test discovery and invocation.
TODO At the moment, this phase does not handle @Test
annotations with
parameters, notably the expected exception class. This should be handled at
some point in the future.
- Companion:
- object
A macro transform that runs after typer and before pickler to perform additional Scala.js-specific checks and transformations necessary for interoperability with JavaScript.
A macro transform that runs after typer and before pickler to perform additional Scala.js-specific checks and transformations necessary for interoperability with JavaScript.
It performs the following functions:
- Sanity checks for the js.Any hierarchy
- Annotate subclasses of js.Any to be treated specially
- Create JSExport methods: Dummy methods that are propagated through the whole compiler chain to mark exports. This allows exports to have the same semantics than methods.
This is the equivalent of PrepJSInterop
in Scala 2, minus the handling
of scala.Enumeration
.
The reason for making this a macro transform is that some functions (in particular all the checks that behave differently depending on properties of classes in the enclosing class chain) are naturally top-down and don't lend themselves to the bottom-up approach of a mini phase.
In addition, the addition of export forwarders must be done before pickling to be signature-compatible with scalac, and there are only macro transforms before pickling.
- Companion:
- object