This is a new abstraction that represents the api surface available for
codegen to target. Every kind of document should have an associated
RuntimeTarget or just use the default.
To prevent breakage, our DocumentClassifierBase class will provide a
default API set to implementors (like MVC).
I haven't fundamentally changed how codegen is done yet, I've just hidden
it behind a new abstraction. The RuntimeTarget now is also responsible for
selecting between design time and runtime.
The bulk of the noise here is from splitting a lot of the codegen stuff
into its own files.
This change defines stages for IR processing. The comments in RazorIRPass
really explain the details. I've also made the preliminary changes to the
stuff we've built so far to follow the new conventions.
This is building towards multitargeting for Razor, being able to target
both Razor Pages and Razor MVC Views from the same engine, being able to
target different codegen and methods from within the same engine.
- Previously we'd special case `@section` at code generation time; now we transform the directive into an IR node.
- Changed the expectations of `DefineSection` to not take in a section writer. It's now expected to modify what `Write`, `WriteLiteral` etc. write to when inside of the lambda. This is done today in TagHelpers via `StartTagHelperWritingScope`.
- Updated baseline files to reflect new `DefineSection` expectations.
- Updated IR tests since we no longer leave around `DirectiveIRNode`s.
#901
- Removed existing type names used to track `@functions`, `@section` and `@inherits`.
- Updated parsing logic to reflect existing directive behaviors.
- Added additional IR and syntax tree pass in order to fulfill the default directive expectations.
- Updated tests to to expect new extensible directives parse structure.
#894