react-native/RNTester
Kevin Gozali d5cfda51c4 iOS OSS cocoapods: removed deps on RCTFabric for now
Summary: There are new patterns that require some upgrades to Folly version we're using for the cocoapods/gradle. Until the upgrade happens, Fabric target doesn't need to be included in the normal RNTester podfile (it was there for sanity build check).

Reviewed By: shergin

Differential Revision: D8151782

fbshipit-source-id: 8d83355d65b1eeeab865585f2ae75ac835bdf826
2018-05-24 14:57:55 -07:00
..
RNTester
RNTester-tvOS
RNTester.xcodeproj
RNTesterIntegrationTests
RNTesterPods.xcodeproj
RNTesterUnitTests
android/app
js
.gitignore
Podfile
Podfile.lock
README.md

README.md

RNTester

The RNTester showcases React Native views and modules.

Running this app

Before running the app, make sure you ran:

git clone https://github.com/facebook/react-native.git
cd react-native
npm install

Running on iOS

Mac OS and Xcode are required.

  • Open RNTester/RNTester.xcodeproj in Xcode
  • Hit the Run button

See Running on device if you want to use a physical device.

Running on iOS with CocoaPods

Similar to above, you can build the app via Xcode with help of CocoaPods.

  • Install CocoaPods
  • Run cd RNTester; pod install
  • Open the generated RNTesterPods.xcworkspace (this is not checked in). Do not open RNTesterPods.xcodeproj directly.

Running on Android

You'll need to have all the prerequisites (SDK, NDK) for Building React Native installed.

Start an Android emulator (Genymotion is recommended).

cd react-native
./gradlew :RNTester:android:app:installDebug
./scripts/packager.sh

Note: Building for the first time can take a while.

Open the RNTester app in your emulator.

See Running on Device in case you want to use a physical device.

Running with Buck

Follow the same setup as running with gradle.

Install Buck from here.

Run the following commands from the react-native folder:

./gradlew :ReactAndroid:packageReactNdkLibsForBuck
buck fetch rntester
buck install -r rntester
./scripts/packager.sh

Note: The native libs are still built using gradle. Full build with buck is coming soon(tm).

Built from source

Building the app on both iOS and Android means building the React Native framework from source. This way you're running the latest native and JS code the way you see it in your clone of the github repo.

This is different from apps created using react-native init which have a dependency on a specific version of React Native JS and native code, declared in a package.json file (and build.gradle for Android apps).