I have an Angular CLI workspace containing two library projects, foo
and bar
. When I build the second of the two libraries, foo
, the build fails with the following error:
error TS6059: File '/code/projects/bar/src/lib/types.ts' is not under 'rootDir' '/code/projects/foo/src'. 'rootDir' is expected tocontain all source files.
Error: error TS6059: File '/code/projects/bar/src/lib/types.ts' is not under 'rootDir' '/code/projects/foo/src'. 'rootDir' is expected to contain all source files. at Object.<anonymous> (/code/node_modules/ng-packagr/lib/ngc/compile-source-files.js:53:68) at Generator.next (<anonymous>) at /code/node_modules/ng-packagr/lib/ngc/compile-source-files.js:7:71 at new Promise (<anonymous>) at __awaiter (/code/node_modules/ng-packagr/lib/ngc/compile-source-files.js:3:12) at Object.compileSourceFiles (/code/node_modules/ng-packagr/lib/ngc/compile-source-files.js:19:12) at Object.<anonymous> (/code/node_modules/ng-packagr/lib/ng-v5/entry-point/ts/compile-ngc.transform.js:26:32) at Generator.next (<anonymous>) at /code/node_modules/ng-packagr/lib/ng-v5/entry-point/ts/compile-ngc.transform.js:7:71 at new Promise (<anonymous>)
I have reproduced the error in a sandbox repo on GitHub here. I have simplified the code to as much as I can while still experiencing the error. You can reproduce the error by executing npm run build
on the rootDir-expect-all-source-files-error branch. What is the cause of the error? May this be a bug with ng-packagr
or ngc
or tsc
? Or is it simply a configuration issue?
Observations
Below are code changes with which I can make the build pass, but I would like to know what is causing the error with the code as is.
bar.component.ts
Build fails
export class BarComponent {
list = this.barService.list();
constructor(private barService: BarService) {}
}
Build passes
Initialize list property in constructor instead of inline
export class BarComponent {
list;
constructor(private barService: BarService) {
this.list = this.barService.list();
}
}
bar.service.ts
Build fails
import { Injectable } from '@angular/core';
import { List, Item } from './types';
@Injectable({
providedIn: 'root'
})
export class BarService {
private _list: List = [];
constructor() { }
add(item: Item): void {
this._list.push(item);
}
list(): List {
return this._list;
}
}
Build passes
Remove the data types
import { Injectable } from '@angular/core';
@Injectable({
providedIn: 'root'
})
export class BarService {
private _list: any[] = [];
constructor() { }
add(item: any): void {
this._list.push(item);
}
list(): any {
return this._list;
}
}
This looks like the problem that is occurring due to the
import types
which was introduced inTypeScript 2.9
. When emitted these are not being rewired properly see line 3.dist/bar/lib/bar.component.d.ts(5,11):
In the above emitted
dts
,list: import("projects/bar/src/lib/types").Item[];
should be something likeimport("./types").Item[];
instead.A workaround for this can be that from your code instead infering the type, you explicitly set it.
in
bar.component.ts
change the below;to:
This will remove the type import and the consuming library will build.
I also checked a bit with future versions of TypeScript, it is still an issue in TypeScript
3.0.1
, but it looks like it has been addressed indev
version of TypeScript3.1.0
, ie3.1.0-dev.20180813
I had the same issue, but the solution of @Agius did not help.
I had:
In fact I had moved a component from lib2 to lib1, by dragging the folder in WebStorm. By doing this, the references in lib2 to that component were not removed but updated and pointed to the source-folder of lib1. I forgot to remove these references which were no longer needed in lib2. After removing all references to the component in lib2, that library compiled.
I had to remove the references in
Maybe there are more references in your project.