Summary:
public
Standardises the image decoding logic for all image sources, meaning we get the benefits of efficient downscaling of images from all sources, not just ALAssets.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D2647083
fb-gh-sync-id: e41456f838e4c6ab709b1c1523f651a86ff6e623
Summary:
public
This diff adds a `getSize()` method to `Image` to retrieve the width and height of an image prior to displaying it. This is useful when working with images from uncontrolled sources, and has been a much-requested feature.
In order to retrieve the image dimensions, the image may first need to be loaded or downloaded, after which it will be cached. This means that in principle you could use this method to preload images, however it is not optimized for that purpose, and may in future be implemented in a way that does not fully load/download the image data.
A fully supported way to preload images will be provided in a future diff.
The API (separate success and failure callbacks) is far from ideal, but until we agree on a unified standard, this was the most conventional way I could think of to implement it. If it returned a promise or something similar, it would be unique among all such APIS in the framework.
Please note that this has been a long time coming, in part due to much bikeshedding about what the API should look like, so while it's not unlikely that the API may change in future, I think having *some* way to do this is better than waiting until we can define the "perfect" way.
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D2797365
fb-gh-sync-id: 11eb1b8547773b1f8be0bc55ddf6dfedebf7fc0a
Summary: public
The `bridge.modules` dictionary provides access to all native modules, but this API requires that every module is initialized in advance so that any module can be accessed.
This diff introduces a better API that will allow modules to be initialized lazily as they are needed, and deprecates `bridge.modules` (modules that use it will still work, but should be rewritten to use `bridge.moduleClasses` or `-[bridge moduleForName/Class:` instead.
The rules are now as follows:
* Any module that overrides `init` or `setBridge:` will be initialized on the main thread when the bridge is created
* Any module that implements `constantsToExport:` will be initialized later when the config is exported (the module itself will be initialized on a background queue, but `constantsToExport:` will still be called on the main thread.
* All other modules will be initialized lazily when a method is first called on them.
These rules may seem slightly arcane, but they have the advantage of not violating any assumptions that may have been made by existing code - any module written under the original assumption that it would be initialized synchronously on the main thread when the bridge is created should still function exactly the same, but modules that avoid overriding `init` or `setBridge:` will now be loaded lazily.
I've rewritten most of the standard modules to take advantage of this new lazy loading, with the following results:
Out of the 65 modules included in UIExplorer:
* 16 are initialized on the main thread when the bridge is created
* A further 8 are initialized when the config is exported to JS
* The remaining 41 will be initialized lazily on-demand
Reviewed By: jspahrsummers
Differential Revision: D2677695
fb-gh-sync-id: 507ae7e9fd6b563e89292c7371767c978e928f33
Summary: public
A missing return statement in RCTImageLoader meant that cached images would be loaded twice - once from cache and again from the source.
This was mostly innocuous, causing only a slight perf regression due to the image cache being effectively disabled, however in some cases (such as RCTImageEditingManager.cropImage) it caused the success callback to fire twice, resulting in a crash.
Reviewed By: fkgozali
Differential Revision: D2684956
fb-gh-sync-id: 7580a6fbfe00a30807951803e04bfcdbee3bb80a
Summary: public
I had previously assumed (based on past experience and common wisdom) that `[UIImage imageWithData:]` was safe to call concurrently and/or off the main thread, but it seems that may not be the case (see https://github.com/AFNetworking/AFNetworking/pull/2815).
This diff replaces `[UIImage imageWithData:]` with ImageIO-based decoding wherever possible, and ensures that it is called on the main thread wherever that's not possible/convenient.
I've also serialized access to the `NSURLCache` inside `RCTImageLoader`, which was causing a separate-but-similar crash when loading images.
Reviewed By: fkgozali
Differential Revision: D2678369
fb-gh-sync-id: 74d033dafcf6c412556e4c96f5ac5d3432298b18
Summary: public
Removed redundant calls to [RCTNetwork canHandleRequest] in release mode when loading images, and improved perf for handler lookups when running in debug mode.
Reviewed By: tadeuzagallo
Differential Revision: D2663307
fb-gh-sync-id: 13285154c1c3773b32dba7894d86d14992e2fd7d
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: public
The image loader was previously returning on the main thread, which could lead to poor performance due to various call sites doing further image processing (resizing, cropping, etc.) directly in the completion block.
This diff modifies the loader to return on a background thread (the same one used to load the image), and updates the call sites to dispatch to the explicit thread they need.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D2549774
fb-gh-sync-id: fed73b7c163fdf67ff65bae72ab1986327e75815
Summary: public
Added RCTDataRequestHandler, which is responsible for loading data URLs. This moves the logic for data URL handling out of RCTImageDownloader (no longer needed) and into the RCTNetwork library, where it makes more sense.
This also means that it is now possible to load data URLs via XHR, and use them for purposes other than just images.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D2540964
fb-gh-sync-id: 4f0418bd6b9186f047cc8297276bb970795af104
Summary: @public
This diff unifies the logic for detecting when images refer to XCAsset files into a single function (RCTXCAssetNameForURL) and uses it for both +[RCTConvert UIImage:] and RCTImageLoader.
I've also tightened the definition of XCAssets so that it only applies to images inside .car files, not any image inside the main bundle. This avoids using the +[UIImage imageNamed:] when not strictly necessary, which is desirable since that method is not thread-safe, and has undocumented caching behavior that is difficult to reason about.
Reviewed By: @javache
Differential Revision: D2526400
fb-gh-sync-id: 7199c2a44f1d55ff236d2c38a0a9368739b993d5
Summary: @public
This diff implements inline image support for <Text> nodes. Images are specified using <Image> tags, however all properties of the image are currently ignored apart from the source (including width/height styles).
Images are loaded asyncronously, and will trigger a text re-layout when they have loaded.
Reviewed By: @javache
Differential Revision: D2507725
fb-gh-sync-id: 59d0696d00a1bc531915cc35242a16b2dec96e85
Summary:
GIF images are currently loaded as a CAKeyframeAnimation, however returning this animation directly from RCTImageLoader was dangerous, as any code that expected a UIImage would crash.
This diff changes RCTGIFImageLoader to return a UIImage of the first frame, with the keyframe animation attached as an associated object. This way, code that is not expecting an animation will still work correctly.
Summary:
Update to https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1969
--
Recent improvements allow RCTImageLoader to select a more appropriate sized image based on the layout dimensions. Sizes:
- asset.thumbnail
- asset.aspectRatioThumbnail
- asset.defaultRepresentation.fullScreenImage
- asset.defaultRepresentation.fullResolutionImage
Prior, only the fullResolutionImage was used. This was memory intensive and resulted in crashes when loading several large images at once. The updated implementation works well, but can be made more efficient:
Consider loading 10 8MP (3264x2448) images in 150x150 pixel containers. The target size (150x150) is larger than asset.thumbnail (approx 100x100), therefore the fullScreenImage representation is used instead (approx 1334x1000).
This commit will scale the asset to the minimum size required while taking into account original aspect ratio and device scale. Memory usage is considerably lower and many more images can be loaded in
sequence without having to worry
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/2008
Github Author: Adam Roth <adamjroth@gmail.com>
Summary:
RCTNetworkImageView and RCTStaticImage had significant overlap in functionality, but each had a different subset of features and bugs.
This diff merges most of the functionality of RCTNetworkImageView into RCTStaticImage, eliminating some bugs in the former, such as constant redrawing when properties were changed.
I've also removed the onLoadAbort event for now (as it wasn't implemented), and renamed the other events to match the web specs for `<img>` and XHMLHttpRequest. The API is essentially what Adobe proposed here: http://blogs.adobe.com/webplatform/2012/01/13/html5-image-progress-events/
The following features have not yet been ported from RCTNetworkImageView:
- Background color compositing. It's not clear that this adds much value and it increases memory consumption, etc.
- Image request cancelling when images are removed from view. Again, it's not clear if this is a huge benefit, but if it is it should be combined with other optimisations, such as unloading offscreen images.
(Note that this only affects the open source fork. For now, internal apps will still use FBNetworkImageView for remote images.)
Summary:
Merged RCTStaticImage with our internal RKStaticImage and ported over logic where assets are loaded at the optimal size and reloaded if the view size changes.
Summary:
This PR adds 4 native events to NetworkImage.
![demo](http://zippy.gfycat.com/MelodicLawfulCaecilian.gif)
Using these events I could wrap `Image` component into something like:
```javascript
class NetworkImage extends React.Component {
getInitialState() {
return {
downloading: false,
progress: 0
}
}
render() {
var loader = this.state.downloading ?
<View style={this.props.loaderStyles}>
<ActivityIndicatorIOS animating={true} size={'large'} />
<Text style={{color: '#bbb'}}>{this.state.progress}%</Text>
</View>
:
null;
return <Image source={this.props.source}
onLoadStart={() => this.setState({downloading: true}) }
onLoaded={() => this.setState({downloading: false}) }
onLoadProgress={(e)=> this.setState({progress: Math.round(100 * e.nativeEvent.written / e.nativeEvent.total)});
onLoadError={(e)=> {
alert('the image cannot be downloaded because: ', JSON.stringify(e));
this.setState({downloading: false});
}}>
{loader}
</Image>
}
}
```
Useful on slow connections and server errors.
There are dozen lines of Objective C, which I don't have experience with. There are neither specific tests nor documentation yet. And I do realize that you're already working right now on better `<Image/>` (pipeline, new asset management, etc.). So this is basically a proof concept of events for images, and if this idea is not completely wrong I could improve it or help somehow.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1318
Github Author: Dmitriy Loktev <unknownliveid@hotmail.com>
Summary:
@public
This is a refactor of @philikon's original diff that decouples the dependencies between the Network and Image modules, and replaces RCTDataQueryExecutor with a more useful abstraction.
I've introduced the RCTURLRequestHandler protocol, which is a new type of bridge module used for loading data using an NSURLRequest. RCTURLRequestHandlers can be registered using RCT_EXPORT_MODULE() and are then available at runtime for use by the RCTDataManager, which will automatically select the appropriate handler for a given request based on the handler's self-reported capabilities.
The currently implemented handlers are:
- RCTHTTPRequestHandler - the standard open source HTTP request handler that uses NSURLSession
- RKHTTPRequestHandler - the internal FB HTTP request handler that uses FBNetworking
- RCTImageRequestHandler - a handler for loading local images from the iOS asset-library
Depends on D2108193
Test Plan:
- Internal apps still work
- OSS port still compiles, Movies app and a sample Parse app still work
- uploading image to Parse using the above code snippet works
- tested `FormData` with string and image parameters using http://www.posttestserver.com/
Summary:
With this in place, it's possible to upload a picture from the `CameraRoll` to Parse, for instance:
xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.onload = function() {
data = JSON.parse(xhr.responseText);
var parseFile = new Parse.File(data.name);
parseFile._url = data.url;
callback(parseFile);
};
xhr.setRequestHeader('X-Parse-Application-Id', appID);
xhr.setRequestHeader('X-Parse-JavaScript-Key', appKey);
xhr.open('POST', 'https://api.parse.com/1/files/image.jpg');
// assetURI as provided e.g. by the CameraRoll API
xhr.send(new NativeFile(assetURI));
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1357
Github Author: Philipp von Weitershausen <philikon@fb.com>
Test Plan: Imported from GitHub, without a `Test Plan:` line.
Summary:
@public
Our background color propagation mechanism is designed to make rendering of translucent content more efficient by pre-blending against an opaque background. Currently this only works for text however, because images are not composited into their background even if the background color is opaque.
This diff precomposites network images with their background color when the background is opaque, allowing them to take advantage of this performance optimization.
I've also added some logic to correctly crop the downloaded image when the resizeMode is "cover" or "contain" - previously it was only correct for "stretch".
Before:{F22437859}
After:{F22437862}
Test Plan: Run the UIExplorer "<ListView> - Paging" example with "color blended layers" enabled and observe that the images appear in green now, instead of red as they did before.