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:
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