Summary:
[This is a preview diff for getting RN's tests to pass with a future version of jest that supports io.js and other future versions of Node. This can be merged once the diff to update jest is merged upstream and published.]
Updates the tests in small ways so they run on io.js with two updates:
- The Cache test which relies on Promises uses `runAllImmediates` for modern versions of Node because bluebird uses `setImmediate` instead of `process.nextTick` for Node >0.10.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1382
Github Author: James Ide <ide@jameside.com>
Test Plan: Run `npm test` with the latest version of jest.
Summary:
Another Pull Request implementing the changes in issue #468 - Enabled Packager to run on Windows
This change relates to the blacklist fixes. It includes the path conversion for blacklist and changes to the default watched directory. It has no impact on Mac OSX.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/893
Github Author: Joe Wood <joewood>
Test Plan: Imported from GitHub, without a `Test Plan:` line.
Summary:
@public
Now that watchman perf issue was fixed we can enable watchman-based fs crawling which is faster than node.
This showed an existing issue with some files missing from the blacklist which I addressed.
Test Plan:
./fbrnios.sh run
click around and scroll all the apps
Summary:
This is an edited re-submission of #1458 because I'm stupid.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1497
Github Author: Johannes Lumpe <johannes@johanneslumpe.de>
Test Plan: Imported from GitHub, without a `Test Plan:` line.
Summary:
@public
We have a function that detects whether a give file is to be treated as a node_modules. If so it doesn't have access to the haste module map. There is an exception to this rule which is a few modules that are allowed to do that. Currently thats react-native, react-tools, and parse.
The current implementation had a bug where if you had `react-native` (or react-tools etc) in the name before the actual package root then the detection will be off. This fixes the problem by starting from the `lastIndexOf('node_modules')` directory, that way nothing confuses us.
Test Plan:
./runJestTests.sh
export OSS, patch, run e2e test
Summary:
@public
The current output of console.log is extremely bad. If you pass NaN, it shows up as null (super confusing I know -_-), if you pass a cyclical object, it just says that it is cyclic and that's it. It doesn't print up the first few levels which are NOT cyclical and would be really helpful.
It turns out that nodejs console.log pretty printer is really awesome and can be easily extracted as a few hundred lines. This is going to be such a productivity boost that I think it's the right tradeoff to embed it like this
Test Plan:
```
var a = {kikoo: {lol: 1}}
a.kikoo.nice = a;
console.log(a);
> { kikoo: { lol: 1, nice: [Circular] } }
console.log(NaN)
> NaN
```
Summary:
Similarly to npm-installed react, this change makes changes to the packager so that it understands that it's been installed via Cocoapods and determines the project and asset roots properly (from the main application directory).
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1568
Github Author: Jarek Potiuk <jarek@potiuk.com>
Test Plan: Imported from GitHub, without a `Test Plan:` line.
Summary:
@public
corrected small typo in the 500 response from the packager server
Test Plan: add throw to promise function prior to error handler, run packager, cache a bundle with bundle extension URI, open /debug/packages, see clean 500 error
Summary:
@public
Fixes#773, #1055
The resolver was getting a bit unwieldy because a lot has changed since the initial writing (porting node-haste).
This also splits up a large complex file into the following:
* Makes use of classes: Module, AssetModule, Package, and AssetModule_DEPRECATED (`image!` modules)
* DependencyGraph is lazy for everything that isn't haste modules and packages (need to read ahead of time)
* Lazy makes it fast, easier to reason about, and easier to add new loaders
* Has a centralized filesystem wrapper: fast-fs (ffs)
* ffs is async and lazy for any read operation and sync for directory/file lookup which makes it fast
* we can easily drop in different adapters for ffs to be able to build up the tree: watchman, git ls-files, etc
* use es6 for classes and easier to read promise-based code
Follow up diffs will include:
* Using new types (Module, AssetModule etc) in the rest of the codebase (currently we convert to plain object which is a bit of a hack)
* using watchman to build up the fs
* some caching at the object creation level (we are recreating Modules and Packages many times, we can cache them)
* A plugin system for loaders (e.g. @tadeuzagallo wants to add a native module loader)
Test Plan:
* ./runJestTests.sh react-packager
* ./runJestTests.sh PackagerIntegration
* Export open source and run the e2e test
* reset cache
* ./fbrnios.sh run and click around
Summary:
@public
We cached based on url, which wasn't unique becuase some options would be defaulted. This was obvious when starting the server via fbrnios which tries to warmup the bundle.
And then when the device woke up it will send a request (that is identical in reality) but would miss the cache.
This changes the cache key into a JSON stringification of the options.
Test Plan:
* ./runJestTests.sh
* ./fbrnios.sh run
Summary:
Before this diff every time you reload in debug mode Chrome window
is actiavated. Looks like that behaviour is pretty annoying.
Fixes#689
@public
Test Plan:
```
$ ./packager/launchChromeDevTools.applescript 'https://www.facebook.com/'
```
First time it opens a new tab and activates Chrome, running this again does
not activate Chrome if the tab already exists.
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
Fixes#1431Fixes#1005
Files with no newlines and a comment at the end of the file would've caused a syntax error in the bundle:
```js
__d('module', function() {
hi();
// wow })
```
This fixes the issue by inserting a new lines before `})`.
Test Plan:
* ./runJestTests.sh
* ./runJestTests.sh PackagerIntegration
* open app to the playground app
* add an error
* observe that the redbox has the correct lines
Summary:
@public
Fixes#773
This fixes `.json` name resolution. And also reads `package.json` when doing a directory module resolution.
The algorithm can be found here: https://nodejs.org/api/modules.html
I'll probably start including the node (or browserify) modules test in later diffs to make sure we're fully compliant.
Test Plan:
* ./runJestTests.sh
* ./runJestTests.sh PackagerIntegration
* open playground and require a json file
* test redbox
Summary:
@public
Fixes issue #1055
For some historical reason we used to strip the extension of the module name before passing it to `resolveDependency` which is completly capable of handling all kinds of names. The fix is one line, but added a few tests for this.
Test Plan:
* ./runJestTests.sh
* ./runJestTests.sh PacakgerIntegration
* Open app and click around
Summary:
@public
The packager's resolver started out imitating node-haste, which meant that we didn't support nested modules. Now this is a problem. Bigger projects are bound to have versions of different versions of the same package at different levels of the dependency tree. This
makes loading dependencies lazy for node_modules and implements the node resolution algorithm. However, it also mantains that some
modules are still "haste" format, which currently defaults to "react-native" and "react-tools".
Finally, this means ~5 seconds speed up on every server start. This should also have a big impact on open source users with projects with big node_modules.
Test Plan:
1- test the app with --reset-cache
2- click around test and production apps
3- update the OSS library
4- create a new project
5- npm install multiple modules
6- create some version conflict in your project
7- make sure we do the "right" thing
8- test file changes to make sure it works