Summary: public
We were calling constantsToExport twice for every ViewManager, and including two copies of the values in __fbBatchedBridgeConfig. This diff removes the copy from UIManager and then puts it back on the JS side.
Reviewed By: tadeuzagallo
Differential Revision: D2665625
fb-gh-sync-id: 147ec4bfb404835e3875964476ba233d619c28aa
Summary: public
After reloading the JS side of the profiler wasn't being reenabled.
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D2602258
fb-gh-sync-id: 5de8afb829e9fa8225600e2b0ff9e00313ac1d4c
Summary: public
Call the native bindings explicitly from BridgeProfiling instead of polyfill'ing `console.profile` with
a function that has a different signature.
Reviewed By: vjeux
Differential Revision: D2602313
fb-gh-sync-id: 9295eff9458f2caa35b7e982c0f7c06dbe65fd09
Summary: public
Use arrays instead of dictionaries for encoding module method information.
This further reduces UIExplorer startup JSON from 16104 bytes to 14119 (12% reduction)
Reviewed By: javache
Differential Revision: D2570057
fb-gh-sync-id: 4a53a9ead4365a136e7caeb650375733e1c24c0e
Summary: public
We're sending a lot of module config data when the app first starts, and much of this is redundant.
UIExplorer current sends 19061 bytes of module config JSON. This diff reduces that to 16104 (15% saving) by stripping modules that have no methods or constants, and removing method types unless method is async.
Reviewed By: tadeuzagallo, javache
Differential Revision: D2570010
fb-gh-sync-id: 8c0abbd1cdee3264b37a4f52e852008caaffb9c5
Summary: @public
Take a step back and de-batch the bridge calls so we can have better profiling data and a better starting point to work on future optimisations. Also gave a 10~15% win on first render.
Reviewed By: @javache
Differential Revision: D2493674
fb-gh-sync-id: 05165fdd00645bdf43e844bb0c4300a2f63e7038
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:
This will throw an error message with the problematic callback module/method. Previously we would get an invariant in this case when we try to access `callback.apply` later in the method.
Summary:
@public
After refactoring the MessageQueue a guard was missing on around `batchedUpdates`
call.
Test Plan: Introduce an error on `getInitialState` of `AdsManagerTabsModalView.ios.js`
Summary:
### TL/DR:
```
a="function() {return [22]}"
a.substring(a.indexOf("{")+1,a.indexOf("}")-1) // "return [22"
a.substring(a.indexOf("{")+1,a.indexOf("}")) // "return [22]"
```
### In long: why it is broken now and why it worked before:
I've installed latest iOS 9 and started to see really strange issues when code is minified:
```
Invariant Violation: Application app has not been registered."
2015-06-18 16:29:05.898 [error][tid:com.facebook.React.JavaScript] "Error: Unexpected identifier 'transformMatrix'. Expected ']' to end a subscript expression
```
After some investigation it turns out that new Safari returned a bit different string representation for a MatrixOps.unroll. On old safari:
`function(e,t,n,r,o,i,a,s,u,c,l,p,d,h,f,m,g){t=e[0],n=e[1],r=e[2],o=e[3],i=e[4],a=e[5],s=e[6],u=e[7],c=e[8],l=e[9],p=e[10],d=e[11],h=e[12],f=e[13],m=e[14],g=e[15];}`
while using latest iOS:
`function (e,t,n,r,o,i,a,s,u,c,l,p,d,h,f,m,g){t=e[0],n=e[1],r=e[2],o=e[3],i=e[4],a=e[5],s=e[6],u=e[7],c=e[8],l=e[9]
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1672
Github Author: Artem Yarulin <artem.yarulin@fessguid.com>
Test Plan: Imported from GitHub, without a `Test Plan:` line.
Summary:
@public
Add PerformanceLogger to keep track of JS download, initial script execution and
full TTI.
Test Plan:
The Native side currently calls `addTimespans` when it's finish initializing
with the six values (start and end for the three events), so I just checked it
with a `PerformanceLogger.logTimespans()` at the end of the function.
```
2015-06-18 16:47:19.096 [info][tid:com.facebook.React.JavaScript] "ScriptDownload: 48ms"
2015-06-18 16:47:19.096 [info][tid:com.facebook.React.JavaScript] "ScriptExecution: 106ms"
2015-06-18 16:47:19.096 [info][tid:com.facebook.React.JavaScript] "TTI: 293ms"
```
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
This removes the last piece of data that was still stored on the DATA section,
`RCT_IMPORT_METHOD`. JS calls now dynamically populate a lookup table simultaneously
on JS and Native, instead of creating a mapping at load time.
Test Plan: Everything still runs, tests are green.
Summary:
@public
`[Bridge] Add support for JS async functions to RCT_EXPORT_METHOD` was imported but broke some internal code, reverting the `MessageQueue` that caused the issues and add a test, since the method is not used yet.
Test Plan: Run the test o/
Summary:
Adds support for JS async methods and helps guide people writing native modules w.r.t. the callbacks. With this diff, on the native side you write:
```objc
RCT_EXPORT_METHOD(getValueAsync:(NSString *)key
resolver:(RCTPromiseResolver)resolve
rejecter:(RCTPromiseRejecter)reject)
{
NSError *error = nil;
id value = [_nativeDataStore valueForKey:key error:&error];
// "resolve" and "reject" are automatically defined blocks that take
// any object (nil is OK) and an NSError, respectively
if (!error) {
resolve(value);
} else {
reject(error);
}
}
```
On the JS side, you can write:
```js
var {DemoDataStore} = require('react-native').NativeModules;
DemoDataStore.getValueAsync('sample-key').then((value) => {
console.log('Got:', value);
}, (error) => {
console.error(error);
// "error" is an Error object whose message is the NSError's description.
// The NSError's code and domain are also set, and the native trace i
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1232
Github Author: James Ide <ide@jameside.com>
Test Plan: Imported from GitHub, without a `Test Plan:` line.
Summary:
This allows you to select the displayed owner hierarchy, and see the styles,
props, and position.
@public
Test Plan:
Open the inspector, select something in the middle of the page. Click the
breadcrumb train in the inspector, and verify that:
- styles are reflected
- margin/padding/box is correct
- the highlight updates to show the selected item
See video as well.
[Video](https://www.latest.facebook.com/pxlcld/mqnl)
Screenshot
{F22518618}
Summary:
@public
Right now the profiler shows how long the executor took on JS but doesn't show
how long each of the batched calls took, this adds a *very* high level view of JS
execution (still doesn't show properly calls dispatched with setImmediate)
Also added a global property on JS to avoid trips to Native when profiling is
disabled.
Test Plan:
Run the Profiler on any app
{F22491690}
Summary:
Wraps the setImmediate handlers in a `batchUpdates` call before they are synchronously executed at the end of the JS execution loop.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/1242
Github Author: James Ide <ide@jameside.com>
Test Plan:
Added two `setImmediate` calls to `componentDidMount` in UIExplorerApp. Each handler calls `setState`, and `componentWillUpdate` logs its state. With this diff, we can see the state updates are successfully batched.
```javascript
componentDidMount() {
setImmediate(() => {
console.log('immediate 1');
this.setState({a: 1});
});
setImmediate(() => {
console.log('immediate 2');
this.setState({a: 2});
});
},
componentWillUpdate(nextProps, nextState) {
console.log('componentWillUpdate with next state.a =', nextState.a);
},
```
**Before:**
"immediate 1"
"componentWillUpdate with next state.a =", 1
"immediate 2"
"componentWillUpdate with next state.a =", 2
**After:**
"immediate 1"
"immediate 2"
"componentWillUpdate with next state.a =", 2
Addresses the batching issue in #1232. cc @vjeux @spicyj