Summary:
Now packager only listen to "::", which is IPv6 "Any address".
It failed to run in IPv4 Environment.
defaults to undefined or empty string will fix this.
And I think it's necessary to let user define host by cli argument.
It's also for security reason. When working on a public network, it's much safer to listen with localhost instead of ::, which may let everyone in same network be able to get your code from debugger-ui.
recommit for #1918, fixes#2441
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/5377
Reviewed By: svcscm
Differential Revision: D2842594
Pulled By: martinbigio
fb-gh-sync-id: 575944c5469dac80e99136a7903ea99f5339dba1
Summary:
public
- Tweak OSS server to enable the HMR connection
- Remove client gating code.
- Resolve internal transforms plugins
After this diff, Hot Loading should work on OSS.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D2803620
fb-gh-sync-id: b678180c884d2bfaf454edf9e7abe6b3b3b32ebe
Summary:
public
We should further improve this on the future by showing the actual stacktrace instead of the `HMRClient` one. Also, we need to integrate this with the dev plugin that opens in the default editor the file/line the user clicks on.
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D2798889
fb-gh-sync-id: 2392966908c493e86e11b0d024e7b68156c9066c
Summary:
public
Fixes a terrible bug due to which when Hot Loading enabled when the user reloads we'll serve them the first `hot` bundle he requested. This happened because when HMR enabled we bailed out after sending the HMR updates and didn't rebuild any of the bundles the user requested before. As a consequence, when they reload we'd sent him the first and only one we ever built.
The fix is to tweak the hmr listener to return a promise. This way we can run the remaining code on the file change listener just after the HMR stuff finishes. We need to do it this way to avoid the remaining stuff to compete for CPU with the HMR one and give the best possible experience when HMR is enabled.
Reviewed By: davidaurelio
Differential Revision: D2811382
fb-gh-sync-id: 906932d71f35467485cf8a865a8d59f4d2ff41a0
Summary:
public
We're not planning to accept file removals in the short term on the HMR interface so lets bail when a file is removed (before this this we were throwing when trying to get the shallow dependencies).
Reviewed By: yungsters
Differential Revision: D2810534
fb-gh-sync-id: f2733382f4a2619e22bdf1163aa4180694fff9f8
Summary:
public
We want to support Hot Loading on the packager itself instead of on the transformer. This will allow us to enable it on OSS (and for any scripting language, yay!).
For now to enable Hot Loading the packager's internals transforms need to be manually enabled (start packager with `--enable-internal-transforms`). I think the internal pipeline should always be enabled as it doesn't affect performance if there're no transforms and the user can disable Hot Loading through the setting on the app though. I'll tweak this on a follow up commit.
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D2801343
fb-gh-sync-id: 563984d77b10c3925fda6fd5616b814cdbea2c66
Summary:
public
Requires are transformed when building the bundle but we forgot doing so when building the HMR one.
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D2801319
fb-gh-sync-id: ae70612945ab81a05154b14d6b756ef390770542
Summary:
public
Before this diff we were only accepting the module that was modified but the user. This works fine as long as the user doesn't modify the dependencies a module has but once he starts doing so the HMR runtime may fail when updating modules' code because they might might a few dependencies. For instance, if the user changes the `src` a `Image` has to reference an image (using the new asset system) that wasn't on the original bundle the user will get a red box. This diff addresses this by diffing the modules the app currently has with the new ones it should have and including all of them on the HMR update. Note this diffing is only done when the we realize the module that was modified changed it's dependencies so there's no additional overhead on this change.
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D2796325
fb-gh-sync-id: cac95f2e995310634c221bbbb09d9f3e7bc03e8d
Summary:
public
This diff introduces an internal transforms pipeline that integrates with the external one. This has been a feature we've been looking to implement for a long time to use babel instead of `replace` with regexps on many parts of the packager.
Also, to split the bundle we'll need to run one transform. Internally for Facebook we can run the system-import transform altogether withe the other ones. For OSS we offer `transformer.js` which people can use out of the box if they're writing ES6 code. For those people, `transformer.js` will also run the internal transforms`. However they might want to tune the transforms, or even write the code on another language that compiles to Javascript and use a complete different transformer. On those cases we'll need to run the external transforms first and pipe the output through the internal transforms. Note that the order it's important as the internal transforms assume the code is written in JS, though the original code could be on other scripting languages (CoffeeScript, TypeScript, etc).
Reviewed By: davidaurelio
Differential Revision: D2725109
fb-gh-sync-id: d764e209c78743419c4cb97068495c771372ab90
Summary:
public
Before this this when a file was changed besides sending the HMR update we rebuild every single bundle that the packager had build (to serve it faster when the user hit cmd+r). Since when hot loading is enabled we don't do cmd+r all this work was pointless (except for when you're developing multiple apps using the same packager instance at the same time, which we can assume is very uncommon). As a consequence, the HMR update was competing with the rebundling job making HMR quite slow (i.e.: on one huge internal app it took up to 6s for the HMR changes to get applied).
So, this diff tweaks the file change listener so that we don't rebundle nor invoke the fileWatchers (use for live reload which is also useless when hot load is enabled) when hot loading is enabled. Also, it makes the HMR listener more high pri than the other listeners so that the HMR dev experience is as good as it can get.
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D2793827
fb-gh-sync-id: 724930db9f44974c15ad3f562910b0885e44efde
Summary:
public
Compute the dependencies of the bundle entry file just before sending HMR updates. In case the file that was changed doesn't belong to the bundle bail.
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D2793736
fb-gh-sync-id: f858e71b0dd5fe4f5b2307a22c6cef627eb66a22
Summary:
public
Implement all the necessary glue code for several diffs submitted before to get Hot Loading work end to end:
- Simplify `HMRClient`: we don't need to make it stateful allowing to enable and disable it because both when we enable and disable the interface we need to reload the bundle.
- On the native side we introduced a singleton to process the bundle URL. This new class might alter the url to include the `hot` attribute. I'm not 100% sure this is the best way to implement this but we cannot use `CTLSettings` for this as it's are not available on oss and I didn't want to contaminate `RCTBridge` with something specific to hot loading. Also, we could potentially use this processor for other things in the future. Please let me know if you don't like this approach or you have a better idea :).
- Use this processor to alter the default bundle URL and request a `hot` bundle when hot loading is enabled. Also make sure to enable the HMR interface when the client activates it on the dev menu.
- Add packager `hot` option.
- Include gaeron's `react-transform` on Facebook's JS transformer.
The current implementation couples a bit React Native to this feature because `react-transform-hmr` is required on `InitializeJavaScriptAppEngine`. Ideally, the packager should accept an additional list of requires and include them on the bundle among all their dependencies. Note this is not the same as the option `runBeforeMainModule` as that one only adds a require to the provided module but doesn't include all the dependencies that module amy have that the entry point doesn't. I'll address this in a follow up task to enable asap hot loading (9536142)
I had to remove 2 `.babelrc` files from `react-proxy` and `react-deep-force-update`. There's an internal task for fixing the underlaying issue to avoid doing this horrible hack (t9515889).
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D2790806
fb-gh-sync-id: d4b78a2acfa071d6b3accc2e6716ef5611ad4fda
Summary:
public
This diff adds infra to both the Packager and the running app to have a WebSocket based connection between them. This connection is toggled by a new dev menu item, namely `Enable/Disable Hot Loading`.
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D2787621
fb-gh-sync-id: d1dee769348e4830c28782e7b650d025f2b3a786
Summary:
Passing around a `getTransformOptions` function doesn't really work with the CLI utils, so I'm changing this to `getTransformOptionsModulePath` instead, which can easily be injected in through `rn-cli.config.js`.
public
Reviewed By: martinbigio
Differential Revision: D2785789
fb-gh-sync-id: c9fdc358cb5d0db27e0d02496e44c013c77f3d5f
Summary:
Here are some small fixes for issues we've encountered with very large RN projects (mostly huge dependency trees in `node_modules`).
cc amasad martinbigio
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/4880
Reviewed By: svcscm
Differential Revision: D2782834
Pulled By: mkonicek
fb-gh-sync-id: e316a62b84ba796b80ac819431414ebf27f7b566
Summary:
The JavaScript ecosystem doesn't have the notion of a built-in native module loader. Even Node is decoupled from its module loader. The module loader system is just JS that runs on top of the global `process` object which has all the built-in goodies.
Additionally there is no such thing as a global require. That is something unique to our providesModule system. In other module systems such as node, every require is contextual. Even registered npm names are localized by version.
The only global namespace that is accessible to the host environment is the global object. Normally module systems attaches itself onto the hooks provided by the host environment on the global object.
Currently, we have two forms of dispatch that reaches directly into the module system. executeJSCall which reaches directly into require. Everything now calls through the BatchedBridge module (except one RCTLog edge case that I will fix). I propose that the executors calls directly onto `BatchedBridge` through an instance on the global so that everything is guaranteed to go through it. It becomes the main communication hub.
I also propose that we drop the dynamic requires inside of MessageQueue/BatchBridge and instead have the modules register themselves with the bridge.
executeJSCall was originally modeled after the XHP equivalent. The XHP equivalent was designed that way because the act of doing the call was the thing that defined a dependency on the module from the page. However, that is not how React Native works.
The JS side is driving the dependencies by virtue of requiring new modules and frameworks and the existence of dependencies is driven by the JS side, so this design doesn't make as much sense.
The main driver for this is to be able to introduce a new module system like Prepack's module system. However, it also unlocks the possibility to do dead module elimination even in our current module system. It is currently not possible because we don't know which module might be called from native.
Since the module system now becomes decoupled we could publish all our providesModule modules as npm/CommonJS modules using a rewrite script. That's what React Core does.
That way people could use any CommonJS bundler such as Webpack, Closure Compiler, Rollup or some new innovation to create a JS bundle.
This diff expands the executeJSCalls to the BatchedBridge's three individual pieces to make them first class instead of being dynamic. This removes one layer of abstraction. Hopefully we can also remove more of the things that register themselves with the BatchedBridge (various EventEmitters) and instead have everything go through the public protocol. ReactMethod/RCT_EXPORT_METHOD.
public
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D2717535
fb-gh-sync-id: 70114f05483124f5ac5c4570422bb91a60a727f6
Summary: The packager was adding compression middleware too late in the stack. This makes things a little faster especially if you're loading through dynamic DNS for example.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/4121
Reviewed By: svcscm
Differential Revision: D2664373
Pulled By: frantic
fb-gh-sync-id: 46cce81ff6d9e4e71e1718d7e96b58449c248bc1
Summary: public
Currently works only on OSX and supports Sublime (2/3) and Atom.
The idea is to get the list of running processes and try to find some well-known
editors there.
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D2642865
fb-gh-sync-id: d346902662354b2f633651a9bc54368146133651
Summary: RubyMine's command line launcher `mine` supports the same syntax as `mate` for jumping to line numbers. This patch adds it to the list.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/3883
Reviewed By: svcscm
Differential Revision: D2615422
Pulled By: pcottle
fb-gh-sync-id: 79a70f524f852ba8eb4803e6abc6970abbf02b61
Summary: This check to see if `require` exists was bad as it throws an error for an
undefined reference in case it doesn't exist.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/3845
Reviewed By: svcscm
Differential Revision: D2613368
Pulled By: martinbigio
fb-gh-sync-id: 7b1d0f38e4af9bce81356a613d6105f2c00c7ed7
Summary: public
Changes were made on the packager that broke the CPU profile upload route,
fix it.
Reviewed By: martinbigio
Differential Revision: D2585184
fb-gh-sync-id: 206744f92d403d6851a69891dfac0c4c11bf1b7e
Summary: Currently on error I have following output:
```
ERROR Packager can't listen on port 8081
Most likely another process is already using this port
Run the following command to find out which process:
lsof -n -i4TCP:8081
You can either shut down the other process:
kill -9 <PID>
or run packager on different port.
See http://facebook.github.io/react-native/docs/troubleshooting.html
for common problems and solutions.
/Users/nucleartux/Work/projects/react-native/local-cli/server/server.js:90
if (error.code === 'EADDRINUSE') {
^
TypeError: Cannot read property 'code' of undefined
at process.<anonymous> (/Users/nucleartux/Work/projects/react-native/local-cli/server/server.js:104:14)
at emitOne (events.js:77:13)
at process.emit (events.js:169:7)
at process._fatalException (node.js:211:26)
```
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/3765
Reviewed By: svcscm
Differential Revision: D2595537
Pulled By: martinbigio
fb-gh-sync-id: e11ec2e6e8794bf5fe7570e27cd327777d8b300c
Summary: public
This is not only to put the files on a place where it makes more sense but also to allow to use ES6 features on them as `/packager` is not whitelisted on `babel`.
Reviewed By: mkonicek
Differential Revision: D2577267
fb-gh-sync-id: b69a17c0aad349a3eda987e33d1778d97a8e1549
Summary: public
We cannot remove `local-cli` because is referenced by the global cli explicitly. If we do so, people would have to upgrate this global thin cli which will cause some pain. So, lets move `private-cli` commands into `local-cli` instead.
Reviewed By: frantic
Differential Revision: D2571983
fb-gh-sync-id: 712c29430203660fb6f0d5f23813cb2a7156ee48