Summary:
At some early stages of Instance initialization, it does not have a `nativeToJsBridge_`. At the same time, `handleMemoryPressure` can be called at any point in time, so we should check the pointer for not being null before calling on it.
Changelog: [Internal] Fabric-specific internal change.
Reviewed By: JoshuaGross, mdvacca
Differential Revision: D21798522
fbshipit-source-id: 6384da88784cceb493cf9810408cbb47777d3f4b
Summary:
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/28851
This diff creates a RuntimeExecutor that uses the bridge and exposes it on CatalystInstanceImpl.
Changelog: [Internal]
Reviewed By: mdvacca, RSNara
Differential Revision: D21051949
fbshipit-source-id: b3977fc14fa19089f33e297d29cedba0d067526d
Summary:
We'll be using a native CallInvoker to dispatch sync and async method calls to ObjC NativeModules. This native CallInvoker will hold a reference to the ObjC NativeModule's method queue.
**Why is the native CallInvoker required for ObjC NativeModules?**
In the case where the ObjC NativeModule neither provides nor requests a method queue, we must create a method queue for it. When we go to invoke a method from JS, for these NativeModules specifically, there is no way to access this method queue. A native CallInvoker is a convenient abstraction that holds on to that method queue. For async calls, we'll just call `CallInvoker::invokeAsync`, and for sync calls, we'll just call `CallInvoker::invokeSync`.
**Why do we need sync call support for native `CallInvoker`?**
In ObjC, sync NativeModule method calls block the JS thread, then execute synchronously on the NativeModule's method queue, and then unblock the JS thread. This is what'll be implemented by `CallInvoker::invokeSync`.
Changelog: [Internal]
Reviewed By: fkgozali
Differential Revision: D20829955
fbshipit-source-id: efb9d5408a1ade81069a943c865f232d4d10acfe
Summary:
Now, instead of accepting a `std::function` that schedules work, and returning a `CallInvoker`, `Instance::getDecoratedNativeCallInvoker` will accept a `CallInvoker` that schedules work, and return a decorated `CallInvoker`.
I think this change will help with readability. It also clarifies that the bridge is adding additional behaviour to the native `CallInvoker`.
Changelog: [Internal]
Reviewed By: mdvacca
Differential Revision: D20826885
fbshipit-source-id: a2c5681d10a4544ee3d2a0d1f1cbd386ef06d0e6
Summary:
This is the first of three PRs related to enabling multi-bundle support in React Native. More details, motivation and reasoning behind it can be found in RFC [here](https://github.com/react-native-community/discussions-and-proposals/issues/152).
Logic responsible for installing globals was pulled out from `loadApplicationScript` to `initializeRuntime` since it should be ran only once, what was left was renamed to `loadBundle`.
It's based on dratwas work from [here](https://github.com/callstack/react-native/tree/feat/multibundle/split-load-application), but applied to current `master` to avoid rebasing 3-months old branch and issues that come with that.
## Changelog
[Internal] [Changed] - split `loadApplicationScript` into `initializeRuntime` and `loadBundle` to enable multi-bundle support in the future
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/27844
Test Plan: Initialized new RN app with CLI, set RN to build from source and verified the still app builds and runs OK using code from this branch.
Reviewed By: rickhanlonii
Differential Revision: D19888605
Pulled By: ejanzer
fbshipit-source-id: 24ace48ffe8978796591fe7c6cf53a61b127cce6
Summary:
## Context
For now, assume TurboModules doesn't exist.
**What happens when we call an async NativeModule method?**
Everytime JS calls an async NativeModule method, we don't immediately execute it. The legacy infra pushes the call into some queue managed by `MessageQueue.js`. This queue is "flushed" or "emptied" by the following events:
- **Flushed:** A C++ -> JS call. NativeModule async methods can called with an `onSuccess` and/or `onFail` callback(s). Calling `NativeToJsBridge::invokeCallback` to invoke one of these callbacks is one way for ObjC++/C++/Java to call into JS. Another way is via JSModule method calls, which are initiated by `NativeToJsBridge::callFunction`.
- **Flushed:** When `JSIExecutor::flush` is called. Since TurboModules don't exist, this only happens when we call `JSIExecutor::loadApplicationScript`.
- **Emptied:** When more than 5 ms have passed, and the queue hasn't been flushed/emptied, on the next async NativeModule method call, we add to the queue. Afterwards, we empty it, and invoke all the NativeModule method calls.
**So, what's the difference between flushed and emptied?**
> Note: These are two terms I just made up, but the distinction is important.
If the queue was "flushed", and it contained at least one NativeModule method call, `JsToNativeBridge` dispatches the `onBatchComplete` event. On Android, the UIManager module is the only module that listens to this event. This `onBatchComplete` event doesn't fire if the queue was "emptied".
**Why does any of this matter?**
1. TurboModules exist.
2. We need the TurboModules infra to have `JsToNativeBridge` dispatch `onBatchComplete`, which depends on:
- **Problem 1:** The queue being flushed on calls into JS from Java/C++/ObjC++.
- **Problem 2:** There being queued up NativeModule async method calls when the queue is flushed.
In D14656466, fkgozali fixed Problem 1 by making every C++/Java/Obj -> JS call from TurboModules also execute `JSIExecutor::flush()`. This means that, with TurboModules, we flush the NativeModule async method call queue as often as we do without TurboModules. So far, so good. However, we still have one big problem: As we convert more NativeModules to TurboModules, the average size of the queue of NativeModule method calls will become smaller and smaller, because more NativeModule method calls will be TurboModule method calls. This queue will more often be empty than not. Therefore, we'll end up dispatching the `onBatchComplete` event less often with TurboModules enabled. So, somehow, when we're about to flush the NativeModule method call queue, we need `JsToNativeBridge` to understand that we've executed TurboModule method calls in the batch. These calls would have normally been queued, which would have led the queue size to be non-zero. So if, during a batch, some TurboModule async method calls were executed, `JsToNativeBridge` should dispatch `onBatchComplete`.
**So, what does this diff do?**
1. Make `Instance` responsible for creating the JS `CallInvoker`.
2. Make `NativeToJsBridge` responsible for creating the native `CallInvoker`. `Instance` calls into `NativeToJsBridge` to get the native `CallInvoker`.
3. Hook up `CatalystInstanceImpl`, the Android bridge, with the new JS `CallInvoker`, and the new native `CallInvoker`. This fixes `onBatchComplete` on Android. iOS work is pending.
Changelog:
[Android][Fixed] - Ensure `onBatchComplete` is dispatched correctly with TurboModules
Reviewed By: mdvacca
Differential Revision: D20717931
fbshipit-source-id: bc3ccbd6c135b7f084edbc6ddb4d1e3c0c7e0875
Summary:
There is a mixed usage of `folly::make_unique` and `std::make_unique`. Soon, `folly::make_unique` may be removed (see [this PR](https://github.com/facebook/folly/pull/1150)). Since `react-native` only supports C++14-compilers and later, switch to always using `std::make_unique`.
## Changelog
[Internal] [Removed] - Replace folly::make_unique with std::make_unique
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/26730
Test Plan:
Running the existing test suite. No change in behavior is expected.
Joshua Gross: buck install -r fb4a, make sure MP Home and forced teardown works okay on android
Reviewed By: shergin
Differential Revision: D18062400
Pulled By: JoshuaGross
fbshipit-source-id: 978ca794c7e972db872a8dcc57c31bdec7451481
Summary:
Co-Authored: zamotany
With React Native 0.59.8 the app keeps crashing with indexed RAM bundle on Android with the following error:
```
2019-05-09 11:58:06.684 2793-2856/? E/AndroidRuntime: FATAL EXCEPTION: mqt_js
Process: com.ramtestapp, PID: 2793
com.facebook.jni.CppException: getPropertyAsObject: property '__fbRequireBatchedBridge' is not an Object
no stack
at com.facebook.react.bridge.queue.NativeRunnable.run(Native Method)
at android.os.Handler.handleCallback(Handler.java:873)
at android.os.Handler.dispatchMessage(Handler.java:99)
at com.facebook.react.bridge.queue.MessageQueueThreadHandler.dispatchMessage(MessageQueueThreadHandler.java:29)
at android.os.Looper.loop(Looper.java:193)
at com.facebook.react.bridge.queue.MessageQueueThreadImpl$4.run(MessageQueueThreadImpl.java:232)
at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:764)
```
After investigation we found that when using any bundle, let it be non-ram, FIle RAM bundle or Index RAM bundle, the `CatalystInstanceImpl.java` is always using `loadScriptsFromAsset`, which is calling `CatalystInstanceImpl::jniLoadScriptFromAssets` in C++. This method when checking if bundle is a RAM bundle, uses `JniJSModulesUnbundle::isUnbundle` which only check for js-modules/UNBUNDLE - file generated when building File RAM bundle. There is no other logic to handle Indexed RAM bundle, so it figures that the bundle is not RAM, cause there is no js-modules/UNBUNDLE file and tries to load as regular bundle and fails.
In this PR we added check if it is indexed RAM bundle in `jniLoadScriptFromAssets` and handle it if it is.
## Changelog
[Android] [Fixed] fix indexed RAM bundle
Solves https://github.com/facebook/react-native/issues/21282
Pull Request resolved: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/24967
Differential Revision: D15575924
Pulled By: cpojer
fbshipit-source-id: 5ea428e0b793edd8242243f39f933d1092b35260
Summary: When calling into JS (e.g. promise resolve/reject, callback) in TurboModule, we bypass the bridge's message queue. At times this causes race condition, where there are a bunch of pending UI operations (in RCTUImanager) waiting to be flushed, but nothing adds calls to the message queue. Usually tapping the screen will trigger the flush because we're sending down touch events to JS.
Reviewed By: JoshuaGross
Differential Revision: D14656466
fbshipit-source-id: cb3a174e97542bf80f0a37b4170b6a8e6780fa35
Summary:
This check is too aggressive. We will consider putting it back once we are
more certain nothing will trigger it.
Differential Revision: D13350907
fbshipit-source-id: 6033bdbfe7adb2a18bdf889c090cf271497605e5
Summary:
In the version of JSC on iOS 11, creating a JSContext on one
thread and using it on another can trigger subtle and nearly
impossible to debug reentrancy-related crashes in the VM (see
https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=186827). In !NDEBUG builds,
check for this case and throw an exception, so it can be detected
early.
Reviewed By: amnn
Differential Revision: D13313264
fbshipit-source-id: ee85435c20e23c8520495ce743d2f91f2eeada5c
Summary: This change drops the year from the copyright headers and the LICENSE file.
Reviewed By: yungsters
Differential Revision: D9727774
fbshipit-source-id: df4fc1e4390733fe774b1a160dd41b4a3d83302a
Summary:
* Cleanup some header files so we use more forward declarations
* Rename Executor to JSExecutor.h
* Move some typedefs to more appropriate locations
Reviewed By: mhorowitz
Differential Revision: D5301913
fbshipit-source-id: e75154797eb3f531d2f42a5e95409f4062b85f91
Summary:
**Motivation**
I'm working on a project that uses React Native and needs to add direct synchronous bindings to native stuff through the JavaScriptCore C API. This is because it's performance-sensitive and would benefit from the quickest JS->C path. It does this using cross-platform C++ code that works on both iOS and Android. Most of the infrastructure for getting access to the JSC context is already in React Native actually, just had to add a few more things.
(lexs you mentioned to tag you in this pull request)
**Test plan**
Modify the JavaScriptCore context through the `JSContextRef` returned (eg. add an object at global scope) and verify that it exists in JavaScript.
Closes https://github.com/facebook/react-native/pull/10399
Differential Revision: D4080945
Pulled By: lexs
fbshipit-source-id: 6659b7a01e09fd84475adde183c1d3aca2d4cf09