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Builders for Dart modules

Module builders for modular compilation pipelines.
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This package provides generic module builders which can be used to create custom compilation pipelines. It is used by build_web_compilers and build_vm_compilers package which provides standard builders for the web and vm platforms.

Usage #

There should be no need to import this package directly unless you are developing a custom compiler pipeline. See documentation in build_web_compilers and build_vm_compilers for more details on building your Dart code.

Module creation #

The overall process for emitting modules follows these steps:

  1. Emit a .module.library asset for every .dart library containing a description of the directives (imports, exports, and parts), a list of the dart: imports used, and a determination of whether the library is an "entrypoint". Entrypoint libraries are either those which are likely to be directly imported (they are under lib/ but not lib/src/) or which have a main. Only the libraries that can be imported (they aren't part files) will have an output. This step is mainly separated out for better invalidation behavior since the output will change less frequently than the code. The outputs from this step are non differentiated by platform.
  2. Emit package level .meta_module assets. This is an aggregation of the .module.library information with a first run at creating a module structure. The output depends on the algorithm, described below. The outputs from this step are specific to a platform and will indicate which libraries contain unsupported dart: imports for a platform. Conditional imports will also be resolved to a concrete dependency based on the platform. In this step the dependencies of modules references the imported library, which may not match the primary source of the module containing that library.
  3. Emit package level .meta_module.clean assets. This step performs an extra run of the strongly connected components algorithm so that any libraries which are in an import cycle are grouped into a single module. This is done as a separate step so that it can be sure it may read all the .meta_module results across packages in a dependency cycle so that it may resolve import cycles across packages. As modules are merged due to import cycles the new module becomes the union of their sources and dependencies. Dependencies are resolved to the "primary source" of the module containing the imported library.
  4. Emit .module assets which contain a filtered view of the package level meta-module specific to a single module. These are emitted for the "primary source" of each module, as well as each library which is an entrypoint.

Module algorithms #

Fine #

The fine-grained module algorithm is straightforward - any dart library which can be it's own module, is it's own module. Libraries are only grouped into a module when there is an import cycle between them.

The .meta_module step filters unsupported libraries and does no clustering. Import cycles are resolved by the .meta_module.clean step.

Coarse #

The coarse-grained module algorithm attempts to cluster libraries into larger modules without bringing in more code than may be imported by downstream code. It assumes that libraries under lib/src/ won't be imported directly outside of the package. Assuming that external packages only import the libraries outside of lib/src/ then no code outside of the transitive imports will be brought in due to module clustering.

The .meta_module step performs strongly connected components and libraries which are in an import cycle are grouped into modules since they can't be ordered otherwise. Within each top level directory under the package (lib/, test/, etc) the libraries are further bundled into modules where possible. Each "entrypoint" library is always kept in it's own modules (other than in the case of import cycles). Non entrypoint libraries are grouped where possible based on the entrypoints that transitively import them. Any non-entrypoint which is only transitively imported by a single entrypoint is merged into the module for that entrypoint. Any non-entrypoints which are imported by the same set of entrypoints are merged into their own module. The "primary source" for any module is always the lowest alpha-sorted source, regardless of whether it is an entrypoint. As libraries are merged the module becomes the union of their sources and dependencies.