Commit Graph

14 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Dvornikov a93b7a2da0 Added stubs for some native modules
Reviewed By: javache

Differential Revision: D5111649

fbshipit-source-id: eef2f84556611dec01978d845b89fa145ec5d4db
2017-06-01 08:31:19 -07:00
Adam Comella e544563bd2 BREAKING: Android: Support withCredentials flag in XHRs
Summary:
Corresponding iOS PR: #12275

Respect the withCredentials XMLHttpRequest flag for sending cookies with requests. This can reduce payload sizes where large cookies are set for domains.

This should fix #5347.

This is a breaking change because it alters the default behavior of XHR. Prior to this change, XHR would send cookies by default. After this change, by default, XHR does not send cookies which is consistent with the default behavior of XHR on web for cross-site requests. Developers can restore the previous behavior by passing `true` for XHR's `withCredentials` argument.

**Test plan (required)**

Verified in a test app that XHR works properly when specifying `withCredentials` as `true`, `false`, and `undefined`. Also, my team uses this change in our app.

Adam Comella
Microsoft Corp.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/12276

Differential Revision: D4673646

Pulled By: ericvicenti

fbshipit-source-id: 924c230c9df72071b3cf9151c3ac201905ac28a5
2017-04-10 22:46:12 -07:00
Philipp von Weitershausen 16bb6e87ba XHR: support typed arrays for request payloads
Summary:
Support `xhr.send(data)` for typed arrays.

**Test plan:** run UIExplorer example on iOS and Android.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/11904

Differential Revision: D4425551

fbshipit-source-id: 065ab5873407a406ca4a831068ab138606c3361b
2017-01-20 18:43:27 -08:00
Philipp von Weitershausen 08c375f828 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 04:58:37 -07:00
Spencer Ahrens 4d6c1e55d7 Bring back trackingName
Reviewed By: yungsters

Differential Revision: D3501805

fbshipit-source-id: be7e1a76c022d050542af797dda49b3cf14340bb
2016-07-11 17:58:21 -07:00
Nick Lockwood b71db11554 Update RCTNetworking, RCTNetInfo and RCTLocationManager to use new events system
Summary: Updated networking and geolocation to use the new events system.

Reviewed By: bestander

Differential Revision: D3346129

fbshipit-source-id: 957716e54d7af8c4a6783f684098e92e92f19654
2016-05-25 04:28:36 -07:00
Konstantin Raev 2de0323182 Reverted commit D3339945
Summary: Updated networking and geolocation to use the new events system.

Reviewed By: javache

Differential Revision: D3339945

fbshipit-source-id: 01d307cf8a0aea3a404c87c6205132c42290abb1
2016-05-24 12:43:30 -07:00
Nick Lockwood 3f08fe4b7f Update RCTNetworking, RCTNetInfo and RCTLocationManager to use new events system
Summary: Updated networking and geolocation to use the new events system.

Reviewed By: javache

Differential Revision: D3339945

fbshipit-source-id: f1332fb2aab8560e4783739e223c1f31d583cfcf
2016-05-24 10:29:00 -07:00
Alex Roman 1303e6d039 Implement XHR timeout for Android and IOS natively.
Summary:
Opening this in a separate PR but the discussion can be viewed on #4832.

Basically, this is a native implementation and is a bit more elegant. The consensus on my previous PR was that it should be done natively rather than in JS.

There's now no maximum valid timeout value and a timeout of 0 will never time out.

ontimeout isn't implemented (yet) in this PR.

cc nicklockwood ide philikon
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/5038

Reviewed By: svcscm

Differential Revision: D2838743

Pulled By: nicklockwood

fb-gh-sync-id: 774f864ac35082bf522f7665f4311bd3affbe82c
2016-01-18 08:10:59 -08:00
Alexander Blom 274c5c78c4 Support cookies on Android
Summary: This adds a persistent cookie store that shares cookies with WebView.

Add a `ForwardingCookieHandler` to OkHttp that uses the underlying Android webkit `CookieManager`.
Use a `LazyCookieHandler` to defer initialization of `CookieManager` as this will in turn trigger initialization of the Chromium stack in KitKat+ which takes some time. This was we will incur this cost on a background network thread instead of during startup.
Also add a `clearCookies()` method to the network module.

Add a cookies example to the XHR example. This example should also work for iOS (except for the clear cookies part). They are for now just scoped to Android.

Closes #2792.

public

Reviewed By: andreicoman11

Differential Revision: D2615550

fb-gh-sync-id: ff726a35f0fc3c7124d2f755448fe24c9d1caf21
2015-11-23 03:21:31 -08:00
Alexander Blom 532c9112b4 Send HEADERS_RECEIVED and LOADING events on Android
Summary: Send part of the response body every 100 ms if the client has set onreadystatechange. This
is done by using the same events as the iOS code and removing the callback that Android previously
used.

Reconsolidate iOS and Android implementations.

Closes #3772

(The previous commit was reverted)

public

Reviewed By: astreet

Differential Revision: D2658153

fb-gh-sync-id: b1a32d22db7cc2995c673edd31f4bbaf16ca36cb
2015-11-17 06:31:31 -08:00
Nathan Spaun 39ec693866 revert D2631410
Differential Revision: D2655673

fb-gh-sync-id: 115247373767690e63a0d6ce812a578d26b47289
2015-11-13 17:51:30 -08:00
Alexander Blom 4d4c48d32b Send HEADERS_RECEIVED and LOADING events on Android
Summary: Send part of the response body every 100 ms if the client has set onreadystatechange. This
is done by using the same events as the iOS code and removing the callback that Android previously
used.

Reconsolidate iOS and Android implementations.

Closes #3772

public

Reviewed By: mkonicek

Differential Revision: D2647005

fb-gh-sync-id: d006e566867fa47d5f8dff71219cb390bcb8e15a
2015-11-13 07:28:28 -08:00
Martin Konicek 42eb5464fd Release React Native for Android
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.
2015-09-14 18:13:39 +01:00