Summary: @public
RCTNetworking currently relies on network responses to include an accurate text encoding, otherwise it is unable to convert the response data to text unless it's encoded as UTF8.
See: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/issues/1780#issuecomment-139334294 for details.
This diff makes use of a new feature in iOS8 to detect the encoding of the text authomatically
Reviewed By: @sahrens
Differential Revision: D2443446
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.
Summary:
The bridge implementation on React Android does not currently support boxed numeric/boolean types (the equivalent of NSNumber arguments on iOS), nor does Java support Objective-C's nil messaging system that transparently casts nil to zero, false, etc for primitive types.
To avoid platform incompatibilities, we now treat all primitive arguments as non-nullable rather than silently converting NSNull -> nil -> 0/false.
We also now enforce that NSNumber * objects must be explicitly marked as `nonnull` (this restriction may be lifted in future if/when Android supports boxed numbers).
Other object types are still assumed to be nullable unless specifically annotated with `nonnull`.
Summary:
This diff implements highlighting of tapped text subranges for the iOS `<Text>` component, styled to match how iOS webkit views highlight links (translucent grey overlay with rounded corners).
Highlighting is enabled by default for any `<Text>` component which has an onPress handler. To disable the highlight, add `suppressHighlighting={true}` to the component props.
Summary:
Added Gzip function to RCTUtils. This uses dlopen to load the zlib library at runtime so there's no need to link it into your project.
The main reason for this feature is to support gzipping of HTTP request bodies. Now, if you add 'Content-Encoding:gzip' to your request headers when using XMLHttpRequest, your request body will be automatically gzipped on the native side before sending.
(Note: Gzip decoding of *response* bodies is handled automatically by iOS, and was already available).
Summary:
As discussed with @nicklockwood in the issue https://github.com/facebook/react-native/issues/1780, the error should be changed to a warning to not break fetch() to send a POST to a remote API without wanting to parse the reply. E.g. google sends back an empty 1x1px gif when POSTing something to google analytics.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1860
Github Author: "philipp.krone" <kronep@googlemail.com>
Summary:
Trivial change to fix the lowercase response headers set for XHR responses.
What would happen is the first iterated header wouldn't be part of `_lowerCaseResponseHeaders`.
Also it would mutate the original `responseHeaders` object, mixing lowercase headers with the original values.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1876
Github Author: Jean Regisser <jean.regisser@gmail.com>
Summary:
@tadeuzagallo - We discussed this ~a week ago when I was putting together the 0.7.0-rc release, only got around to creating the PR for it now so it's properly sync'd.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1865
Github Author: Brent Vatne <brentvatne@gmail.com>
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 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:
@public
Previously, our XMLHttpRequest implementation would only update the readyState when the download was fully completed. This diff adds support for receiving incremental data updates as the download happens, which can be monitored by adding the onreadystatechange event handler.
As a performance optimization, incremental data updates are only sent if the onreadystatechanged handler has been set in the JS, otherwise it just sends the whole data block once download is complete, as before.
Test Plan:
* Run the UIExplorer XMLHttpRequest example (in both OSS and Catalyst) to see incremental downloads working.
* Run the Movies app to see regular (non-incremental) downloads in action
* Run any network-based app in Catalyst shell to verify RKDataManager still works
Summary:
@public
For some reason we were manually JSON-encoding the RCTDataManager responses, and then decoding them again on the JS side. Since all data sent over the bridge is JSON-encoded anyway, this is pretty pointless.
Test Plan:
* Test Movies app in OSS, which uses RCTDataManager
* Test any code that uses RKHTTPQueryGenericExecutor to make network requests (e.g. Groups)
* Test the Groups photo upload feature, which uses RKHTTPQueryWithImageUploadExecutor
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:
HTTP headers are case-insensitive, so we should treat them that way when they're being set on `XMLHttpRequest`.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1381
Github Author: Philipp von Weitershausen <philikon@fb.com>
Test Plan: Imported from GitHub, without a `Test Plan:` line.
Summary:
`XMLHttpRequest.getResponseHeader` is case-insensitive, therefor the React-Native implementation needs to mimic this behavior as to not break libraries that are dependent on this.
There is a corresponding issue in `superagent` but this is the root cause (https://github.com/visionmedia/superagent/issues/636).
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1138
Github Author: Ryan Pastorelle <rpastorelle@yahoo.com>
Test Plan: Imported from GitHub, without a `Test Plan:` line.