Summary:
I am using ReactNative in a hybrid App.
We have a setup like so:
Native Navigation Controller
Native Tab Controller
Native View Controller wrapping React
React Navigation Controller
React View Controller 1
React View Controller 2
Native View Controller 2.
When I pop Native View Controller 2 off the Navigation stack, I get a seg fault on this line:
NSUInteger indexOfFrom = [_currentViews indexOfObject:fromController.navItem];
I believe what's happening:
Your code is listening to Nav Controller transitions, assuming that they are all from React Native Nav Controllers.
You are catching this one instead, which is actually a Native Nav Controller transition.
You start trying to access the pushed/popped view controllers as if they were react native view controllers.
In this case, the view controllers are not react native -> no navItem field -> seg fault.
Solution: if we are catching this transition but it isn't from our react native nav controller, just
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/5495
Reviewed By: svcscm
Differential Revision: D2857473
Pulled By: nicklockwood
fb-gh-sync-id: cc7f0a16e2e0cea56ca9e49bcb87db4ebd3a0905
Summary: public
Added lightweight genarics annotations to make the code more readable and help the compiler catch bugs.
Fixed some type bugs and improved bridge validation in a few places.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D2600189
fb-gh-sync-id: f81e22f2cdc107bf8d0b15deec6d5b83aacc5b56
Summary: releasing the viewControllers referred by _navigationController.viewControllers, which is also releasing the related views
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/3808
Reviewed By: svcscm
Differential Revision: D2604735
Pulled By: javache
fb-gh-sync-id: f202d155f04169f3f0f0ef26365b37b8525b6687
Summary:
Currently, the system for mapping JS event handlers to blocks is quite clean on the JS side, but is clunky on the native side. The event property is passed as a boolean, which can then be checked by the native side, and if true, the native side is supposed to send an event via the event dispatcher.
This diff adds the facility to declare the property as a block instead. This means that the event side can simply call the block, and it will automatically send the event. Because the blocks for bubbling and direct events are named differently, we can also use this to generate the event registration data and get rid of the arrays of event names.
The name of the event is inferred from the property name, which means that the property for an event called "load" must be called `onLoad` or the mapping won't work. This can be optionally remapped to a different property name on the view itself if necessary, e.g.
RCT_REMAP_VIEW_PROPERTY(onLoad, loadEventBlock, RCTDirectEventBlock)
If you don't want to use this mechanism then for now it is still possible to declare the property as a BOOL instead and use the old mechanism (this approach is now deprecated however, and may eventually be removed altogether).
Summary:
Our events all follow a common pattern, so there's no good reason why the configuration should be so verbose. This diff eliminates that redundancy, and gives us the freedom to simplify the underlying mechanism in future without further churning the call sites.
Summary:
@public
I've increased the warning levels in the OSS frameworks, which caught a bunch of minor issues. I also fixed some new errors in Xcode 7 relating to designated initializers and TLS security.
Test Plan:
* Test the sample apps and make sure they still work.
* Run tests.