Summary:
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/36391
This include isn't required and was causing issues in the Cocoapods build.
Changelog: [iOS][Fixed] Unbreak cocoapods build
Reviewed By: cipolleschi
Differential Revision: D43870523
fbshipit-source-id: 7e31049d19ef025e9e16284712fb2a80dbdf235e
Summary:
A previous version of this experiment saw crashes on iOS once rolled out. Switching to WeakObject to make sure we're not accessing invalid references, and setting up the ability to experiment with this on iOS.
Changelog: [Internal]
Reviewed By: cipolleschi
Differential Revision: D41552667
fbshipit-source-id: dc0c54edc2ad18c1947941119ffd50038a47c5f6
Summary:
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/36367
* Don't iterate over JSI Value to get args, convert each of the args individually instead
* Make LongLivedObjectCollection constructor private
* allowRelease does not need to be virtual
* Move away from const-ness as a thread-safety indicator
Changelog: [Internal]
Reviewed By: christophpurrer
Differential Revision: D43354535
fbshipit-source-id: eaf8eb931ab6ec307a3dc2690eabeb34bb6afa77
Summary:
[Changelog][Internal]
This adds a method, `emitDeviceEvent` to the C++ API of TurboModules, which allows to make calls to JS's `RCTDeviceEventEmitter.emit` from a C++ TurboModules.
This is a very common pattern, specifically for the VR apps, but not only for them - e.g. Desktop fork also has a [custom implementation for this](https://www.internalfb.com/code/fbsource/third-party/microsoft-fork-of-react-native/react-native-utils/RCTEventEmitter.cpp).
Note that my original intent was to actually backport the latter, however there are some complications with wiring things in a robust way, without exposing too much stuff and relying on singletons or folly::dynamic.
So I ended up adding it to the TurboModule API itself and use the scheduler/JSI facilities instead.
This approach is arguably well self-contained, uses high level APIs, and shouldn't be abusable much.
Since I was trying to avoid usage of folly::dynamic in this case, I used a kind of "value factory" pattern instead in order to send the arguments to the JS thread in a thread safe way (see [the discussion here](https://fb.workplace.com/groups/rn.fabric/permalink/1398711453593610/)).
Reviewed By: christophpurrer
Differential Revision: D43466326
fbshipit-source-id: a3cb8359d08a46421559edd0f854772863cb5c39
Summary:
In 0.71.0-RC.2, we had a regression in `use_frameworks!`.
The `use_frameworks! :linkage => :static` use to work fine with the Old Architecture.
We modified how the `React-bridging` pod is configured and, now those are broken.
This change make sure to use the right imports for React-bridging.
## Changelog
[iOS][Changed] - Fix imports in React Bridging for Old Arch and frameworks
Reviewed By: christophpurrer, cortinico
Differential Revision: D41551103
fbshipit-source-id: 4416fde92fef11eb801daf2302a57fe52732e4ef
Summary:
We ran an experiment to test different implementations of TurboModules HostObjects, as the current one has various inefficiencies, such as re-creating HostFunctions on every property access. The strategy we found to be most efficient and flexible longer-term is to represent the TurboModule with a plain JavaScript object and use a HostObject as its prototype. Whenever a property is accessed through the prototype, we cache the property value on the plain object, so it can be efficiently resolved by the VM for future accesses.
Changelog: [Internal]
Reviewed By: NickGerleman
Differential Revision: D38355134
fbshipit-source-id: 59253091412d0c6827ad7a4b1ac7dc0c7fe89cc2
Summary:
TurboCxxModule doesn't use the the default JSI getter that TurboModule offers, and has custom behaviour for `getConstants` which broke the I18nAssets module in the binding experiment.
Changelog: [Internal]
Reviewed By: ryancat
Differential Revision: D37030917
fbshipit-source-id: 187f159abc76f792ad2c7045dc2852d216ea978d
Summary:
Enables two new experiments (and the current behaviour as default) to speed up access to TurboModule methods from JS.
1) HostObject - Current behaviour
2) Prototype - Connect the TM HostObject via `__proto__`, and cache any methods accessed on the wrapper object.
3) Eager - Eagerly store all methods on the wrapper object, do not expose the HostObject to JS at all (TurboModules no longer need to be HostObjects in this scenario)
Changelog: [Internal]
Reviewed By: JoshuaGross, rubennorte, mdvacca
Differential Revision: D36590018
fbshipit-source-id: c9565eb239eb6aeee0f06b581ff8cd72a92073fc
Summary:
* Make constructor private, all access is through install()
* Use nullability of longLivedObjectCollection_ instead of separate bool disableGlobalLongLivedObjectCollection_
Changelog: [Internal]
Reviewed By: RSNara
Differential Revision: D36592492
fbshipit-source-id: d65e779e1ac9fbe121937c5a20763aefcd589795
Summary:
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/33413
This moves `CallbackWrapper` and `LongLivedObject` into a new "bridging" library. This library is mostly intended for use by the native module system, but can also be used separately to "bridge" native and JS interfaces through higher-level (and safer) abstractions than relying JSI alone.
Changelog:
Internal
Reviewed By: christophpurrer
Differential Revision: D34723341
fbshipit-source-id: 7ca8fa815537152f8163920513b90313540477e3
Summary:
using namespace in header file is a bad practice due to many reasons as well as discouraged by `-Wheader-hygiene` compiler flag which is default for many apps
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5849457/using-namespace-in-c-headers
Changelog:
[General][Fixed] - Fixed compilation warning due to `using namespace` being used as part of header
Reviewed By: nlutsenko
Differential Revision: D34788523
fbshipit-source-id: 2a50fbf2ac3371ff5670c600c7f5ad9055060ad2
Summary:
Not having this disallows including turbo module and extending in places where RTTI is enabled.
There is no additional includes or implementation changes - it merely allows for things to nicely link with other libraries.
Changelog: [General][Fixed] - Allow including TurboModule.h in mixed rtti/no-rtti environment, even if TurboModule.h/cpp is compiled without RTTI.
Reviewed By: appden
Differential Revision: D34637168
fbshipit-source-id: 2e5d9e546bdc5652f06436fec3b12f1aa9daab05
Summary:
JSI callbacks are only destroyed if the callback is called. If the callback is never called, we're potentially leaking a lot of callbacks.
To mitigate this, we add a wrapper object that is owned by the std::function. Whenever the std::function is destroyed, the wrapper is destroyed and it deallocates the callback as well.
Changelog: [Internal]
Reviewed By: RSNara
Differential Revision: D27436402
fbshipit-source-id: d153640d5d7988c7fadaf2cb332ec00dadd0689a
Summary:
Fix warnings about implicit type truncation.
## Changelog
[Internal] [Fixed] - Fix various C++ warnings
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/31002
Test Plan:
Almost all the changes here are simply making explicit conversions which are already occurring. With the exception of a couple of constants being changed from doubles to floats.
With these changes I am able to remove a bunch of warning suppressions in react-native-windows.
Reviewed By: shergin
Differential Revision: D26900502
Pulled By: rozele
fbshipit-source-id: d5e415282815c2212a840a863713287bbf118c10
Summary:
The TurboModuleUtils.h includes "folly/Optional.h" which is not used and creates an unnecessary dependency on Folly.
In this PR we remove this unnecessary include.
It is required for the https://github.com/microsoft/react-native-windows/pull/6804 where we add an experimental support for the C++ TurboModules. While the C++ TurboModules use the same JSI and TurboModule code defined in react-native, we provide a layer that let them to work over the ABI-safe Microsoft.ReactNative.dll boundary. The RNW Nuget distribution with DLL files includes a few source files to create native/turbo modules that work through the ABI-safe API. The TurboModuleUtils.h is one of such files. By removing the dependency on Folly we reduce requirements for the native module code. After this PR is merged we will remove the fork of the TurboModuleUtils.h added in https://github.com/microsoft/react-native-windows/pull/6804.
## Changelog
[Internal] [Fixed] - Remove dependency on Folly in TurboModuleUtils.h
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/30672
Test Plan:
The change does not bring any functional changes. It may only affect code compilation where some code may depend on TurboModuleUtils.h when it needs the "folly/Optional.h". The fix is add the `#include <folly/Optional.h>` there explicitly.
I had run the iOS tests and they passed:
```
yarn
pod install in packages\rn-tester
./scripts/objc-test.sh test
```
Reviewed By: mdvacca
Differential Revision: D25758927
Pulled By: fkgozali
fbshipit-source-id: 347d8f6bc333a3df67095ea0dc7221c818432fab
Summary:
## Android API
```
// Before we initialize TurboModuleManager
ReactFeatureFlags.useTurboModuleJSCodegen = true
```
## iOS API
```
// Before we initialize RCTBridge
RCTEnableTurboModuleJSCodegen(true);
```
## How is the JS Codegen actually enabled?
The above native flags are translated to the following global variable in JavaScript:
```
global.RN$JSTurboModuleCodegenEnabled = true;
```
Then, all our NativeModule specs are transpiled to contain this logic:
```
interface Foo extends TurboModule {
// ...
}
function __getModuleSchema() {
if (!global.RN$JSTurboModuleCodegenEnabled) {
return undefined;
}
// Return the schema of this spec.
return {...};
}
export default TurboModuleRegistry.get<Foo>('foo', __getModuleSchema());
```
Then, in our C++ JavaTurboModule, and ObjCTurboModule classes, we use the TurboModule JS codegen when the jsi::Object schema is provided from JavaScript in the TurboModuleRegistry.get call.
Changelog: [Internal]
Reviewed By: PeteTheHeat
Differential Revision: D24636307
fbshipit-source-id: 80dcd604cc1121b8a69df875bbfc87e9bb8e4814
Summary:
## Previously
- When TurboModules system was on, we'd only log events from the TurboModules system.
- When TurboModules system was off, we'd only log events from the NativeModule system.
This ultimately gives us less data to analyze both systems in production.
## Changes in This Diff
When perf. logging is on, we'll log events from both systems. Each QPL event now include an annotation of which system the event is coming from. Concretely, this will allow us to see how much of the NativeModule system is being exercised in the TurboModule test group.
Changelog: [Internal]
Reviewed By: hramos
Differential Revision: D24232594
fbshipit-source-id: 7dff57bd74fc7ef744d3e06ff174304f25790456
Summary:
This is to prepare for enabling TurboModule on Android. This commit compiles in all the core files (C++) into the ReactAndroid NDK build step. This doesn't yet enable TurboModule by default, just compiling in the infra, just like for iOS.
New shared libs:
* libreact_nativemodule_core.so: The TurboModule Android core
* libreact_nativemodule_manager.so: The TurboModule manager/delegate
To be compatible with `<ReactCommon/` .h include prefix, the files had to move to local `ReactCommon` subdirs.
Changelog: [Internal]
Reviewed By: sammy-SC
Differential Revision: D23805717
fbshipit-source-id: b41c392a592dd095ae003f7b2a689f4add2c37a9