* master:
Fix typo in README
Improve clarity of schema parsing and serialization
Add test that checks schema validation
Update README with new Schema API
Cleanup some code and comments to make it consistent
Convert tests to create objects with property objects
Update example apps with new schema API
Remove confusion between propTypes and objectTypes
Simplify object schema info returned from RPC
RPC now keeps object keys in the same order
Change schema API to take properties as an object
Add method to clear mutation listeners in RPC client
Plug small leak from not releasing a JSStringRef
Make RJSStringForValue use consistent exception style
Improve error messages inside RJSUtil
The top-level package.json explicitly includes the directories it needs (vendor/.npmignore cuts down the cruft). The publish-beta.sh script essentially uses `npm pack` to package up the NPM module and then push it into an orphaned `beta` branch.
The target dependencies are discovered implicitly, and removing the use of explicitly defined dependencies actually resolved a very odd bug with Xcode when building ReactExample.app for a device.
This module has build errors with Release configuration and is not necessary. When in Chrome debugging mode, a warning will be issued about missing the RCTSnapshot module though, which is why we linked against it in the first place.
It embeds RealmJS and GCDWebServers frameworks. This fixes#58, where there were issues with building for devices rather than just the simulator.
Some changes were made so that RealmReact.m didn't need to be weakly linked to libReact.a since that would actually cause any executable that uses this framework from being able to compile with bitcode.
The idea is that we will have an NPM module that should always be required to use the Realm JS API. It will handle the underlying implementation details depending on which environment it is being run in (i.e. JavaScriptCore, Chrome, Node).
The focus here was on stubbing out the machinery required to get React Native Chrome debugging working with the Realm API by leveraging synchronous requests. The app itself will need to run a web server that responds to these requests.