react-native/Libraries/Network/__tests__/XMLHttpRequest-test.js

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/**
* Copyright (c) 2013-present, Facebook, Inc.
* All rights reserved.
*
* This source code is licensed under the BSD-style license found in the
* LICENSE file in the root directory of this source tree. An additional grant
* of patent rights can be found in the PATENTS file in the same directory.
*/
'use strict';
jest.unmock('Platform');
const Platform = require('Platform');
let requestId = 1;
function setRequestId(id){
if (Platform.OS === 'ios') {
return;
}
requestId = id;
}
jest
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
.dontMock('event-target-shim')
.setMock('NativeModules', {
Networking: {
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
addListener: function() {},
removeListeners: function() {},
sendRequest(options, callback) {
if (typeof callback === 'function') { // android does not pass a callback
callback(requestId);
}
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
},
abortRequest: function() {},
},
});
const XMLHttpRequest = require('XMLHttpRequest');
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
describe('XMLHttpRequest', function() {
var xhr;
var handleTimeout;
var handleError;
var handleLoad;
var handleReadyStateChange;
var handleLoadEnd;
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
beforeEach(() => {
xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.ontimeout = jest.fn();
xhr.onerror = jest.fn();
xhr.onload = jest.fn();
xhr.onloadend = jest.fn();
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
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xhr.onreadystatechange = jest.fn();
handleTimeout = jest.fn();
handleError = jest.fn();
handleLoad = jest.fn();
handleLoadEnd = jest.fn();
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
handleReadyStateChange = jest.fn();
xhr.addEventListener('timeout', handleTimeout);
xhr.addEventListener('error', handleError);
xhr.addEventListener('load', handleLoad);
xhr.addEventListener('loadend', handleLoadEnd);
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
xhr.addEventListener('readystatechange', handleReadyStateChange);
});
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
afterEach(() => {
xhr = null;
handleTimeout = null;
handleError = null;
handleLoad = null;
handleLoadEnd = null;
handleReadyStateChange = null;
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
});
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
it('should transition readyState correctly', function() {
expect(xhr.readyState).toBe(xhr.UNSENT);
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
xhr.open('GET', 'blabla');
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(xhr.onreadystatechange.mock.calls.length).toBe(1);
expect(handleReadyStateChange.mock.calls.length).toBe(1);
expect(xhr.readyState).toBe(xhr.OPENED);
});
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
it('should expose responseType correctly', function() {
expect(xhr.responseType).toBe('');
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
// Setting responseType to an unsupported value has no effect.
xhr.responseType = 'arrayblobbuffertextfile';
expect(xhr.responseType).toBe('');
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
xhr.responseType = 'arraybuffer';
expect(xhr.responseType).toBe('arraybuffer');
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
// Can't change responseType after first data has been received.
xhr.open('GET', 'blabla');
xhr.send();
expect(() => { xhr.responseType = 'text'; }).toThrow();
});
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
it('should expose responseText correctly', function() {
xhr.responseType = '';
expect(xhr.responseText).toBe('');
expect(xhr.response).toBe('');
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
xhr.responseType = 'arraybuffer';
expect(() => xhr.responseText).toThrow();
expect(xhr.response).toBe(null);
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
xhr.responseType = 'text';
expect(xhr.responseText).toBe('');
expect(xhr.response).toBe('');
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
// responseText is read-only.
expect(() => { xhr.responseText = 'hi'; }).toThrow();
expect(xhr.responseText).toBe('');
expect(xhr.response).toBe('');
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
xhr.open('GET', 'blabla');
xhr.send();
setRequestId(2);
xhr.__didReceiveData(requestId, 'Some data');
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(xhr.responseText).toBe('Some data');
});
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
it('should call ontimeout function when the request times out', function() {
xhr.open('GET', 'blabla');
xhr.send();
setRequestId(3);
xhr.__didCompleteResponse(requestId, 'Timeout', true);
xhr.__didCompleteResponse(requestId, 'Timeout', true);
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(xhr.readyState).toBe(xhr.DONE);
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(xhr.ontimeout.mock.calls.length).toBe(1);
expect(xhr.onloadend.mock.calls.length).toBe(1);
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(xhr.onerror).not.toBeCalled();
expect(xhr.onload).not.toBeCalled();
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(handleTimeout.mock.calls.length).toBe(1);
expect(handleLoadEnd.mock.calls.length).toBe(1);
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(handleError).not.toBeCalled();
expect(handleLoad).not.toBeCalled();
});
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
it('should call onerror function when the request times out', function() {
xhr.open('GET', 'blabla');
xhr.send();
setRequestId(4);
xhr.__didCompleteResponse(requestId, 'Generic error');
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(xhr.readyState).toBe(xhr.DONE);
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(xhr.onreadystatechange.mock.calls.length).toBe(2);
expect(xhr.onerror.mock.calls.length).toBe(1);
expect(xhr.onloadend.mock.calls.length).toBe(1);
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(xhr.ontimeout).not.toBeCalled();
expect(xhr.onload).not.toBeCalled();
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(handleReadyStateChange.mock.calls.length).toBe(2);
expect(handleError.mock.calls.length).toBe(1);
expect(handleLoadEnd.mock.calls.length).toBe(1);
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(handleTimeout).not.toBeCalled();
expect(handleLoad).not.toBeCalled();
});
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
it('should call onload function when there is no error', function() {
xhr.open('GET', 'blabla');
xhr.send();
setRequestId(5);
xhr.__didCompleteResponse(requestId, null);
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(xhr.readyState).toBe(xhr.DONE);
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(xhr.onreadystatechange.mock.calls.length).toBe(2);
expect(xhr.onload.mock.calls.length).toBe(1);
expect(xhr.onloadend.mock.calls.length).toBe(1);
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(xhr.onerror).not.toBeCalled();
expect(xhr.ontimeout).not.toBeCalled();
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(handleReadyStateChange.mock.calls.length).toBe(2);
expect(handleLoad.mock.calls.length).toBe(1);
expect(handleLoadEnd.mock.calls.length).toBe(1);
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(handleError).not.toBeCalled();
expect(handleTimeout).not.toBeCalled();
});
it('should call upload onprogress', function() {
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
xhr.open('GET', 'blabla');
xhr.send();
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
xhr.upload.onprogress = jest.fn();
var handleProgress = jest.fn();
xhr.upload.addEventListener('progress', handleProgress);
setRequestId(6);
xhr.__didUploadProgress(requestId, 42, 100);
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(xhr.upload.onprogress.mock.calls.length).toBe(1);
expect(handleProgress.mock.calls.length).toBe(1);
Add responseType as a concept to RCTNetworking, send binary data as base64 Summary: In preparation for Blob support (wherein binary XHR and WebSocket responses can be retained as native data blobs on the native side and JS receives a web-like opaque Blob object), this change makes RCTNetworking aware of the responseType that JS requests. A `xhr.responseType` of `''` or `'text'` translates to a native response type of `'text'`. A `xhr.responseType` of `arraybuffer` translates to a native response type of `base64`, as we currently lack an API to transmit TypedArrays directly to JS. This is analogous to how the WebSocket module already works, and it's a lot more versatile and much less brittle than converting a JS *string* back to a TypedArray, which is what's currently going on. Now that we don't always send text down to JS, JS consumers might still want to get progress updates about a binary download. This is what the `'progress'` event is designed for, so this change also implements that. This change also follows the XHR spec with regards to `xhr.response` and `xhr.responseText`: - if the response type is `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can be peeked at by the JS consumer. It will be updated periodically as the download progresses, so long as there's either an `onreadystatechange` or `onprogress` handler on the XHR. - if the response type is not `'text'`, `xhr.responseText` can't be accessed and `xhr.response` remains `null` until the response is fully received. `'progress'` events containing response details (total bytes, downloaded so far) are dispatched if there's an `onprogress` handler. Once Blobs are landed, `xhr.responseType` of `'blob'` will correspond to the same native response type, which will cause RCTNetworking to only send a blob ID down to JS, which can then create a `Blob` object from that for consumers. Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/8324 Reviewed By: javache Differential Revision: D3508822 Pulled By: davidaurelio fbshipit-source-id: 441b2d4d40265b6036559c3ccb9fa962999fa5df
2016-07-13 11:53:54 +00:00
expect(xhr.upload.onprogress.mock.calls[0][0].loaded).toBe(42);
expect(xhr.upload.onprogress.mock.calls[0][0].total).toBe(100);
expect(handleProgress.mock.calls[0][0].loaded).toBe(42);
expect(handleProgress.mock.calls[0][0].total).toBe(100);
});
it('should combine response headers with CRLF', function() {
xhr.open('GET', 'blabla');
xhr.send();
setRequestId(7);
xhr.__didReceiveResponse(requestId, 200, {
'Content-Type': 'text/plain; charset=utf-8',
'Content-Length': '32',
});
expect(xhr.getAllResponseHeaders()).toBe(
'Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8\r\n' +
'Content-Length: 32');
});
});