Summary: This change drops the year from the copyright headers and the LICENSE file.
Reviewed By: yungsters
Differential Revision: D9727774
fbshipit-source-id: df4fc1e4390733fe774b1a160dd41b4a3d83302a
Summary:
Includes React Native and its dependencies Fresco, Metro, and Yoga. Excludes samples/examples/docs.
find: ^(?:( *)|( *(?:[\*~#]|::))( )? *)?Copyright (?:\(c\) )?(\d{4})\b.+Facebook[\s\S]+?BSD[\s\S]+?(?:this source tree|the same directory)\.$
replace: $1$2$3Copyright (c) $4-present, Facebook, Inc.\n$2\n$1$2$3This source code is licensed under the MIT license found in the\n$1$2$3LICENSE file in the root directory of this source tree.
Reviewed By: TheSavior, yungsters
Differential Revision: D7007050
fbshipit-source-id: 37dd6bf0ffec0923bfc99c260bb330683f35553e
Summary:
To make React Native play nicely with our internal build infrastructure we need to properly namespace all of our header includes.
Where previously you could do `#import "RCTBridge.h"`, you must now write this as `#import <React/RCTBridge.h>`. If your xcode project still has a custom header include path, both variants will likely continue to work, but for new projects, we're defaulting the header include path to `$(BUILT_PRODUCTS_DIR)/usr/local/include`, where the React and CSSLayout targets will copy a subset of headers too. To make Xcode copy headers phase work properly, you may need to add React as an explicit dependency to your app's scheme and disable "parallelize build".
Reviewed By: mmmulani
Differential Revision: D4213120
fbshipit-source-id: 84a32a4b250c27699e6795f43584f13d594a9a82
Summary: This leaves no optional methods on `RCTJavaScriptExecutor`, which is certainly a good thing.
Reviewed By: majak
Differential Revision: D3518915
fbshipit-source-id: e606b9076c3299f81a225a181ea244148a1832cb
Summary: It's not widely used, and you can do something equivalent anyway by using existing public API.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D3518896
fbshipit-source-id: 6995a5d840aecfff4ffd78ac43f3f592a4f47f91
Summary:
public
This exposes a proper API for adding synchronous callbacks to JS, as an optional feature of the executor.
This is based on nicklockwood's work in D2764492, but avoids refactoring bridge/executor interactions for the time being, since we agree on this API and can move the actual callsites around later.
Reviewed By: nicklockwood
Differential Revision: D2799506
fb-gh-sync-id: af209d9a0be927f3404205feb16e59745cc37aec
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: public
Benchmarking our startup path has shown we spend a lot of time decoding strings (iPhone 4S / iPhone 5):
* reading a 2MB JS bundle: 35ms / 15ms
* decoding is to an `NSString`: 186ms / 78ms
* transforming that to a `JSString`: 29ms / 10ms
Instead of going through an `NSString` transformation, we generate a null-terminated bundle (0.1ms / 0.05ms to copy the data) and use `JSStringCreateWithUTF8CString` (121ms / 53ms) to generate the string. That makes decoding 70% faster.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D2541140
fb-gh-sync-id: 09a016b8edfd46a9b62682c76705564d2024e75e
Summary:
Remove `RCTGetExecutorID` and `RCTSetExecutorID`, it wasn't used anymore since
the bridge was refactored into `RCTBridge` and `RCTBatchedBridge`.
Summary:
When `RCTGetExecutorID` was a static function in the header file, it would return nil when the app was running with ASan enabled even though directly calling `objc_getAssociatedObject(executor, RCTJavaScriptExecutorID)` returned the correct ID as an NSNumber. Moving this function into the .m file fixes this issue.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1712
Github Author: James Ide <ide@jameside.com>
Test Plan: Run the UIExplorer with ASan enabled in Xcode 7. Before this diff, the app would just hang since the executor was unable to read a valid ID and so it would bail out from running JS. With this diff the executor runs the JS and the UIExplorer works fine.
Summary:
@public
I've increased the warning levels in the OSS frameworks, which caught a bunch of minor issues. I also fixed some new errors in Xcode 7 relating to designated initializers and TLS security.
Test Plan:
* Test the sample apps and make sure they still work.
* Run tests.
Summary:
@public
This is the first of a few diffs that change the way the executors are handled
by the bridge.
For they are just promoted to modules, so they are automatically loaded by the bridge.
Test Plan:
Tested on UIExplorer, Catalyst and MAdMan.
Tested all the 3 executors, everything looks fine.