Summary: Updated networking and geolocation to use the new events system.
Reviewed By: bestander
Differential Revision: D3346129
fbshipit-source-id: 957716e54d7af8c4a6783f684098e92e92f19654
Summary: Updated networking and geolocation to use the new events system.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D3339945
fbshipit-source-id: 01d307cf8a0aea3a404c87c6205132c42290abb1
Summary: Updated networking and geolocation to use the new events system.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D3339945
fbshipit-source-id: f1332fb2aab8560e4783739e223c1f31d583cfcf
Summary:
Modules which call JS methods directly, or use `sendDeviceEventWithName:`, can trigger effects in JS without ever being referenced from the JS code. This breaks some assumptions in my earlier diff about when modules can be lazily loaded.
Pending a better solution, I've put explicit `init` methods in these modules to ensure they are eagerly initialized (the downside to this is that they'll still be initialized even if they are never used).
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D3258232
fb-gh-sync-id: f925bc2e5339c1fbfcc244d4613062c5ab848fc2
fbshipit-source-id: f925bc2e5339c1fbfcc244d4613062c5ab848fc2
Summary:
public
In 9baff8f437 (diff-8d9841e5b53fd6c9cf3a7f431827e319R331), I incorrectly assumed that iOS was wrapping promises in an extra Array. What was really happening is that all the callers were doing this. I removed the wrapping in the callers and the special case handling MessageQueue.
Now one can pass whatever object one wants to resolve and it will show properly in the resolve call on the js side. This fixes issue https://github.com/facebook/react-native/issues/5851
Reviewed By: nicklockwood
Differential Revision: D2921565
fb-gh-sync-id: 9f81e2a87f6a48e9197413b843e452db345a7ff9
shipit-source-id: 9f81e2a87f6a48e9197413b843e452db345a7ff9
Summary:
A promise based API for handling Link for Android and iOS. Refer #4971
The iOS part doesn't handle errors. Will need someone with iOS knowledge to do that.
cc skevy ide brentvatne mkonicek vjeux nicklockwood
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/5336
Reviewed By: svcscm
Differential Revision: D2866664
Pulled By: androidtrunkagent
fb-gh-sync-id: 67e68a827e6b85886bfa84e79b897f079e78b1b5
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: This adds workarounds for the code that was preventing React from compiling when linked against an iOS App Extension target.
Some iOS APIs are unavailable to App Extensions, and Xcode's static analysis will catch attempts to use methods that have been flagged as unavailable.
React currently uses two APIs that are off limits to extensions: `[UIApplication sharedApplication]` and `[UIAlertView initWith ...]`.
This commit adds a helper function to `RCTUtils.[hm]` called `RCTRunningInAppExtension()`, which returns `YES` if, at runtime, it can be determined that we're running in an app extension (by checking whether the path to `[NSBundle mainBundle]` has the `"appex"` path extension).
It also adds a `RCTSharedApplication()` function, which will return `nil` if running in an App Extension. If running in an App, `RCTSharedApplication()` calls `sharedApplication` by calling `performSelector:` on the `UIApplication` class. This passes the static analysis check, and, in my opinion, obeys the "spirit of th
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1895
Reviewed By: @svcscm
Differential Revision: D2224128
Pulled By: @nicklockwood