Summary:
This pull request adds an example to the Dimensions documentations. Specifically, it gives an example of how to get the height and width from the window.
I'm submitting this documentation because discovering this information cost me some time and my hope is to save other folks time by having this info right in the docs generated from the comments in this file.
Let me know if you need anything else.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/4211
Reviewed By: svcscm
Differential Revision: D2719953
Pulled By: androidtrunkagent
fb-gh-sync-id: 86d18e3847066211a013a50ce2f2a3e2032f5052
Summary:
public
The `DialogModule` requires `android.support.v4.app.FragmentManager` which means
every app that wants to use Dialogs would need to have its Activity extend the legacy
`android.support.v4.app.FragmentActivity`.
This diff makes the `DialogModule` work with both the Support `FragmentManager`
(for AdsManager & potentially other fb apps) and the `android.app.FragmentManager`
(for new apps with no legacy dependencies).
Also wrap the native module in the same `Alert` API that we have on iOS and provide
a cross-platform example. In my opinion the iOS Alert API is quite nice and easy to use.
We still keep `AlertIOS` around because of its `prompt` function which is iOS-specific
and also for backwards compatibility.
Reviewed By: foghina
Differential Revision: D2647000
fb-gh-sync-id: e2280451890bff58bd9c933ab53cd99055403858
Summary:
public
We were adding all the arguments passed to all the JS functions and callbacks
called over the bridge to marker names, and this args can be huge, meaning a lot
of time spent stringifying arguments and therefore less accurate profile results
Reviewed By: nicklockwood
Differential Revision: D2761809
fb-gh-sync-id: 2d0b5b90cc9e59fe491c108b0360b84ab5fee5b7
Summary:
public
Most of the time - especially during app startup - when we call UIManager.manageChildren(), we are actually just adding the first set of children to a newly created view.
This case is already optimized for in the JS code, by memoizing index arrays at various sizes, but this is not especially efficient since it is still sending an array of indices with each call that could be easily inferred on the native side instead.
I've added a hybrid native/JS optimization that improves the performance for this case. It's not a huge win in terms of time saved, but benchmarks show improvements in the ~1% range for several of the app startup metrics.
Reviewed By: tadeuzagallo
Differential Revision: D2757388
fb-gh-sync-id: 74f0cdbba93af2c04d69b192a8c2cc5cf429fa09
Summary:
public
Rename the `BridgeProfiling` JS module to `Systrace`, since it's actually just
an API to Systrace markers.
This should make it clearer as we add more perf tooling.
Reviewed By: jspahrsummers
Differential Revision: D2734001
fb-gh-sync-id: 642848fa7340c545067f2a7cf5cef8af1c8a69a2
Summary:
MessageQueue no longer falls back to require. To do this we need to register all the modules in our internal unit tests. I did this codemod manually.
This is a bit unfortunate boilerplate but there are very few of these modules outside of unit tests. This boilerplate is only a hassle for these test files.
public
Reviewed By: spicyj
Differential Revision: D2736397
fb-gh-sync-id: 59fa4c4e75c538f3577bc9693b93e1b7c4d4d233
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: Request from issue #3893
* Added support for `secure-text` and `login-password` types to AlertIOS.
* Fixed and extended the cancel button highlighting functionality, which was broken at some point
* Added localization for default `OK` and `Cancel` labels when using UIAlertController
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/4401
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D2702052
Pulled By: nicklockwood
fb-gh-sync-id: cce312d7fec949f5fd2a7c656e65c657c4832c8f
Summary: I have disected lint warnings fixes to several PRs. This one fixes lint warnings under Libraries/Utility path.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/4444
Reviewed By: svcscm
Differential Revision: D2705303
Pulled By: spicyj
fb-gh-sync-id: c745ac62cbff30d6bb9478a1d2465fe56b305f0c
Summary: public
RCTUIManager is a public module with several useful methods, however, unlike most such modules, it does not have a JS wrapper that would allow it to be required directly.
Besides making it more cumbersome to use, this also makes it impossible to modify the UIManager API, or smooth over differences between platforms in the JS layer without breaking all of the call sites.
This diff adds a simple JS wrapper file for the UIManager module to make it easier to work with.
Reviewed By: tadeuzagallo
Differential Revision: D2700348
fb-gh-sync-id: dd9030eface100b1baf756da11bae355dc0f266f
Summary: This code generation executes eagerly and these functions are fairly large and takes time to compile.
However, I'm mostly doing this change because it significantly increases the Prepack binary file size.
In theory, there might be a slight impact on the first use of these interpolators but I couldn't really tell.
An alternative would be to create a factory that is called by the components at an appropriate time, or to just refactor the whole thing to use Animated.
I didn't want to dig too deeply for a single component though.
public
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D2687296
fb-gh-sync-id: 6fc8cdf54dfb6f0b50c11db973d67d114bbc7400
Summary: public Add measure() family of methods which allow to easily swizzle methods for profiling
Reviewed By: tadeuzagallo
Differential Revision: D2679904
fb-gh-sync-id: 3724440e1bdaca9e854f4d4124a897a204966dc7
Summary: public
Dynamically profile events from RelayProfiler if available. This will expose time spent in Relay in the systraces.
Reviewed By: tadeuzagallo
Differential Revision: D2674215
fb-gh-sync-id: d5f9d529b86d267a80b0cda2223f6a28a08ac385
Summary: public
We were calling constantsToExport twice for every ViewManager, and including two copies of the values in __fbBatchedBridgeConfig. This diff removes the copy from UIManager and then puts it back on the JS side.
Reviewed By: tadeuzagallo
Differential Revision: D2665625
fb-gh-sync-id: 147ec4bfb404835e3875964476ba233d619c28aa
Summary: public
After reloading the JS side of the profiler wasn't being reenabled.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D2602258
fb-gh-sync-id: 5de8afb829e9fa8225600e2b0ff9e00313ac1d4c
Summary: public
Call the native bindings explicitly from BridgeProfiling instead of polyfill'ing `console.profile` with
a function that has a different signature.
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D2602313
fb-gh-sync-id: 9295eff9458f2caa35b7e982c0f7c06dbe65fd09
Summary: public
Use arrays instead of dictionaries for encoding module method information.
This further reduces UIExplorer startup JSON from 16104 bytes to 14119 (12% reduction)
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D2570057
fb-gh-sync-id: 4a53a9ead4365a136e7caeb650375733e1c24c0e
Summary: public
We're sending a lot of module config data when the app first starts, and much of this is redundant.
UIExplorer current sends 19061 bytes of module config JSON. This diff reduces that to 16104 (15% saving) by stripping modules that have no methods or constants, and removing method types unless method is async.
Reviewed By: tadeuzagallo, javache
Differential Revision: D2570010
fb-gh-sync-id: 8c0abbd1cdee3264b37a4f52e852008caaffb9c5
Summary: @public
Take a step back and de-batch the bridge calls so we can have better profiling data and a better starting point to work on future optimisations. Also gave a 10~15% win on first render.
Reviewed By: @javache
Differential Revision: D2493674
fb-gh-sync-id: 05165fdd00645bdf43e844bb0c4300a2f63e7038
This is an early release and there are several things that are known
not to work if you're porting your iOS app to Android.
See the Known Issues guide on the website.
We will work with the community to reach platform parity with iOS.
Summary:
This will throw an error message with the problematic callback module/method. Previously we would get an invariant in this case when we try to access `callback.apply` later in the method.
Summary:
@public
After refactoring the MessageQueue a guard was missing on around `batchedUpdates`
call.
Test Plan: Introduce an error on `getInitialState` of `AdsManagerTabsModalView.ios.js`
Summary:
### TL/DR:
```
a="function() {return [22]}"
a.substring(a.indexOf("{")+1,a.indexOf("}")-1) // "return [22"
a.substring(a.indexOf("{")+1,a.indexOf("}")) // "return [22]"
```
### In long: why it is broken now and why it worked before:
I've installed latest iOS 9 and started to see really strange issues when code is minified:
```
Invariant Violation: Application app has not been registered."
2015-06-18 16:29:05.898 [error][tid:com.facebook.React.JavaScript] "Error: Unexpected identifier 'transformMatrix'. Expected ']' to end a subscript expression
```
After some investigation it turns out that new Safari returned a bit different string representation for a MatrixOps.unroll. On old safari:
`function(e,t,n,r,o,i,a,s,u,c,l,p,d,h,f,m,g){t=e[0],n=e[1],r=e[2],o=e[3],i=e[4],a=e[5],s=e[6],u=e[7],c=e[8],l=e[9],p=e[10],d=e[11],h=e[12],f=e[13],m=e[14],g=e[15];}`
while using latest iOS:
`function (e,t,n,r,o,i,a,s,u,c,l,p,d,h,f,m,g){t=e[0],n=e[1],r=e[2],o=e[3],i=e[4],a=e[5],s=e[6],u=e[7],c=e[8],l=e[9]
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1672
Github Author: Artem Yarulin <artem.yarulin@fessguid.com>
Test Plan: Imported from GitHub, without a `Test Plan:` line.
Summary:
@public
Add PerformanceLogger to keep track of JS download, initial script execution and
full TTI.
Test Plan:
The Native side currently calls `addTimespans` when it's finish initializing
with the six values (start and end for the three events), so I just checked it
with a `PerformanceLogger.logTimespans()` at the end of the function.
```
2015-06-18 16:47:19.096 [info][tid:com.facebook.React.JavaScript] "ScriptDownload: 48ms"
2015-06-18 16:47:19.096 [info][tid:com.facebook.React.JavaScript] "ScriptExecution: 106ms"
2015-06-18 16:47:19.096 [info][tid:com.facebook.React.JavaScript] "TTI: 293ms"
```
Summary:
@public
The current implementation of `MessageQueue` is huge, over-complicated and spread
across `MethodQueue`, `MethodQueueMixin`, `BatchedBridge` and `BatchedBridgeFactory`
Refactored in a simpler way, were it's just a `MessageQueue` class and `BatchedBridge`
is only an instance of it.
Test Plan:
I had to make some updates to the tests, but no real update to the native side.
There's also tests covering the `remoteAsync` methods, and more integration tests for UIExplorer.
Verified whats being used by Android, and it should be safe, also tests Android tests have been pretty reliable.
Manually testing: Create a big hierarchy, like `<ListView>` example. Use the `TimerMixin` example to generate multiple calls.
Test the failure callback on the `Geolocation` example.
All the calls go through this entry point, so it's hard to miss if it's broken.
Summary:
@public
This removes the last piece of data that was still stored on the DATA section,
`RCT_IMPORT_METHOD`. JS calls now dynamically populate a lookup table simultaneously
on JS and Native, instead of creating a mapping at load time.
Test Plan: Everything still runs, tests are green.
Summary:
@public
`[Bridge] Add support for JS async functions to RCT_EXPORT_METHOD` was imported but broke some internal code, reverting the `MessageQueue` that caused the issues and add a test, since the method is not used yet.
Test Plan: Run the test o/
Summary:
Adds support for JS async methods and helps guide people writing native modules w.r.t. the callbacks. With this diff, on the native side you write:
```objc
RCT_EXPORT_METHOD(getValueAsync:(NSString *)key
resolver:(RCTPromiseResolver)resolve
rejecter:(RCTPromiseRejecter)reject)
{
NSError *error = nil;
id value = [_nativeDataStore valueForKey:key error:&error];
// "resolve" and "reject" are automatically defined blocks that take
// any object (nil is OK) and an NSError, respectively
if (!error) {
resolve(value);
} else {
reject(error);
}
}
```
On the JS side, you can write:
```js
var {DemoDataStore} = require('react-native').NativeModules;
DemoDataStore.getValueAsync('sample-key').then((value) => {
console.log('Got:', value);
}, (error) => {
console.error(error);
// "error" is an Error object whose message is the NSError's description.
// The NSError's code and domain are also set, and the native trace i
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1232
Github Author: James Ide <ide@jameside.com>
Test Plan: Imported from GitHub, without a `Test Plan:` line.
Summary:
This allows you to select the displayed owner hierarchy, and see the styles,
props, and position.
@public
Test Plan:
Open the inspector, select something in the middle of the page. Click the
breadcrumb train in the inspector, and verify that:
- styles are reflected
- margin/padding/box is correct
- the highlight updates to show the selected item
See video as well.
[Video](https://www.latest.facebook.com/pxlcld/mqnl)
Screenshot
{F22518618}
Summary:
@public
Right now the profiler shows how long the executor took on JS but doesn't show
how long each of the batched calls took, this adds a *very* high level view of JS
execution (still doesn't show properly calls dispatched with setImmediate)
Also added a global property on JS to avoid trips to Native when profiling is
disabled.
Test Plan:
Run the Profiler on any app
{F22491690}
Summary:
Wraps the setImmediate handlers in a `batchUpdates` call before they are synchronously executed at the end of the JS execution loop.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1242
Github Author: James Ide <ide@jameside.com>
Test Plan:
Added two `setImmediate` calls to `componentDidMount` in UIExplorerApp. Each handler calls `setState`, and `componentWillUpdate` logs its state. With this diff, we can see the state updates are successfully batched.
```javascript
componentDidMount() {
setImmediate(() => {
console.log('immediate 1');
this.setState({a: 1});
});
setImmediate(() => {
console.log('immediate 2');
this.setState({a: 2});
});
},
componentWillUpdate(nextProps, nextState) {
console.log('componentWillUpdate with next state.a =', nextState.a);
},
```
**Before:**
"immediate 1"
"componentWillUpdate with next state.a =", 1
"immediate 2"
"componentWillUpdate with next state.a =", 2
**After:**
"immediate 1"
"immediate 2"
"componentWillUpdate with next state.a =", 2
Addresses the batching issue in #1232. cc @vjeux @spicyj
Summary:
Adds support for JS async methods and helps guide people writing native modules w.r.t. the callbacks. With this diff, on the native side you write:
```objc
RCT_EXPORT_METHOD(getValueAsync:(NSString *)key
resolver:(RCTPromiseResolver)resolve
rejecter:(RCTPromiseRejecter)reject)
{
NSError *error = nil;
id value = [_nativeDataStore valueForKey:key error:&error];
// "resolve" and "reject" are automatically defined blocks that take
// any object (nil is OK) and an NSError, respectively
if (!error) {
resolve(value);
} else {
reject(error);
}
}
```
On the JS side, you can write:
```js
var {DemoDataStore} = require('react-native').NativeModules;
DemoDataStore.getValueAsync('sample-key').then((value) => {
console.log('Got:', value);
}, (error) => {
console.error(error);
// "error" is an Error object whose message is the NSError's description.
// The NSError's code and domain are also set, and the native trace i
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1232
Github Author: James Ide <ide@jameside.com>
Test Plan: Imported from GitHub, without a `Test Plan:` line.
Summary:
`mountSafeCallback` simply wraps a callback in an `isMounted()` check to prevent crashes when old callbacks are called on unmounted components.
@public
Test Plan:
Added logging and made sure callbacks were getting called through
`mountSafeCallback` and that things worked (e.g. photo viewer rotation etc).
Summary:
Add `AlertIOS.prompt`
It's compatible with the js spec, with the exception that I had to add
a callback param since it's async. Also supports the same button configuration
as `AlertIOS.alert`.
@public
Test Plan:
I've updated the `AlertIOS` example on UIExplorer with every
valid combination of
parameters, so just going through it should be fine.
Summary:
The curly braces seems to be redundant.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/811
Github Author: xcatliu <xcatliu@gmail.com>
Test Plan: Imported from GitHub, without a `Test Plan:` line.