* Adding method Realm.Sync.User.authenticate()
* Adding JWT provider support to Realm.Sync.User.authenticate()
* Adding password provider support to Realm.Sync.User.authenticate()
being open with a different schema version
In order to correctly open read-only synchronized Realms, `Realm.open`
would open the Realm without specifying a schema or schema version, wait
for any remote changes to be downloaded (if appropriate), and then
re-open the Realm with the specified schema and schema version. This
would lead to an exception about the Realm being open with a different
schema version if the Realm had previously been opened with a different
schema version, due to the way `RealmCoordinator` caches information
about the schema of open Realms.
We address this by making two changes:
1. `Realm.open` for non-synchronized Realms no longer goes through
`_waitForDownload`. This means the dance described above where the Realm
is opened twice is not used for local Realms.
2. `_waitForDownload` no longer keeps the `Realm` alive until after its
callback has returned. It instead keeps the `SyncSession` alive. This is
sufficient to avoid the connection being torn down and having to
reconnect when `_waitForDownload`'s callback later opens the Realm with
the correct schema and schema version, while also allowing for
`RealmCoordinator`'s cached information to be cleared when the
schemaless Realm is closed prior to the Realm being reopened.
In addition, tests have been added that reproduced the problem in both a
local and sync context.
* Expose an object's internal object ID, and allow fetching an object by its object ID
* Throw an exception if methods related to object IDs are used on non-synced Realms.
* Use `std::stoull` to ensure we can return the entire range of possible values.
* Add tests for _objectId() / _objectForObjectId().
* Adding change log
* Skip ObjectIdTests.testSynced for non-Node.
* Fix an unused variable warning in js_sync.hpp
* Add support for aggregates on arrays of primitives
* Update documentation and typescript declarations
* Update collection.js
There's no reason for `_waitForDownload` to be responsible for
constructing a new Realm instance when we can instead use the
constructor for that. This eliminates the potential for different
handling of the Realm configuration between `_waitForDownload` and `new
Realm`, which was responsible for various issues (#1391, #1392, #1393).
In turn, this requires that `_waitForDownload` become an instance method.
In addition, we update `Realm.openAsync` and `getSpecialPurposeRealm` to
delegate to `Realm.open` rather than reimplementing equivalent logic
themselves.
Finally, the private mechanism for registering a download progress
handler as part of the sync configuration (`_onDownloadProgress`) is
removed in favor of the public API (`progress()` on the promise returned
by `Realm.open`).
* origin/master: (23 commits)
Fix api doc error
fix progress notifications registrations
Fix typo in Github issue template
Fix port conflict between RN >= 0.48 and RPC server (#1294)
Disable testAddListener when running in chrome
Ensure RN has an event loop running for async tests
Make permission tests better handle server delays
Fix race conditions in testAddListener
Separate build and test steps in xcode to reduce chance of hitting "Early unexpected exit"
Ignore errors when sourcing nvm.sh
Don't forward arguments to nvh.sh
Skip sourcing nvm.sh if it's already available
Fix some shellcheck warnings
Ensure node 6.5.0 is installed on CI
Build realm from source for each test-runner test
Improve error reporting for incorrect argument counts for Realm methods
Use the same error messages in the RPC code as the regular code
Silence an unused variable warning when building with sync disabled
Check the exception message in all Realm tests which assert an exception is thrown
Don't discard the actual error message in validated_get_X
...
The test was resolving the promise long before it actually finished running,
leading to it not testing what it was trying to test and sometimes crashing.
Report the expected and actual arg counts for too many arguments, and behave
more like normal JS when too few are supplied (i.e. complain about the next
argument being undefined rather than just saying 'Invalid arguments').