They never worked on mobile and pose an impediment for makinf config.js more
future proof. Specially if we want to move to a non-executable form of
configuration.
We try to load the configuration with every room change, even when there is no
room. There is a bad (corner) case: when we have no config cached (first boot or
wiped app data). In such case the user is trapped in an infinite loop because we
require the config to show the welcome page, oh well.
Pretend we have a configuration by creating the most minimal one to at least get
to the welcome page.
React Native doesn't define __filename nor __dirname so do it artisanally. In
addition, this helps with centralizing the configuration passed to loggers.
Using anything non-serializable for action types is discouraged:
https://redux.js.org/faq/actions#actions
In fact, this is the Flow definition for dispatching actions:
declare export type DispatchAPI<A> = (action: A) => A;
declare export type Dispatch<A: { type: $Subtype<string> }> = DispatchAPI<A>;
Note how the `type` field is defined as a subtype of string, which Symbol isn’t.
* fix(local-recording): allow config override to enable
Config overrides are not set until some time after
APP_WILL_MOUNT has completed and not in the same execution
context as when APP_WILL_MOUNT is called. So instead
choose recording controller initialization at a later time.
The time chosen is after conference join because the
controller needs the conference instance to work.
* remove redundant conditional check
This feature is intended for spot. Spot can have an
HDMI -> usb adapter hooked up to it. In that case,
attempting to screenshare should use that adapter
as a screensharing source. Jitsi-Meet should pass
a configured screenshare source into lib-jitsi-meet
so it can be used as a source.
* feat: Displays the E2E RTT in the connection stats table.
* fix: Whitelists the ping config properties.
* ref: Addresses feedback.
* npm: Updates lib-jitsi-meet to e097a1189ed99838605d90b959e129155bc0e50a.
* ref: Moves the e2ertt and region to the existing stats object.
BaseApp does all the heavy-lifting related to creating the redux store,
navigation, and so on.
App currently handles URL props and actually triggering navigation based on
them.
* Adds an option to disable features based on token data.
Reverts changes from b84e910086, removes disableDesktopSharing option and an interface_config option.
* Disable recording button based on token features data.
Hide recording if local participant isGuest and roles based on token.
When enableUserRolesBasedOnToken is enabled we were not hiding the record button for guests.
* Adds filtering of jibri iqs and rayo based on features.
Moves feature checking in separate utility function.
Renames utility method.
* Adds a footer text when outbound-call is not feature enabled.
* Fixes comments.
* ref(toolbar): show recording features based on explicit configs
* squash: bring back button configs, use final config names
* squash: update interfaceConfig comment, remove unused config whitelist
* squash: change order of button enabled checks to reduce diff
* squash: fileRecording -> fileRecordings
The visibility of the toolbar can be toggled by interacting with the main screen.
This change allows the toolbar to be configured to be 'always visible'. This voids
the 'toggle' functionality.
Add ability to provide a display name in the configOverwrite object that
when available it will be used to customize the name of the meeting in
callkit screen and recent call list.
Co-authored-by: Daniel Ornelas <daniel.ob64@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Lyubo Marinov <lmarinov@atlassian.com>
This fix is based on storing the location URL object we are loading the
configuration for in the redux store. Once the config has been loaded (or it has
failed, for that matter!) we'll check if the current "config URL" is the same we
set, and discard the old one if they don't match.
Knowledge is power, man!
The config.js cache predates the feature base/known-domains.
Technically, it's also able to recall more domains that the feature
recent-list can (because the latter limits its entries).
With this the RN component and the consumer app can share same CallKit
provider, configuration, and enable to be part of multiple listeners of
the CallKit flow events. The main driver of this is to enable the
consumer app to be able to report an incoming call to the OS before
loading the JitsiMeetView. Once the user answers the call, the app can
instantiate a JitsiMeetView, pass the CallKit call UUIID, and the Jitsi
Meet components will handle the connection and report back to CallKit
that the call has been established.
Moves the things around to be able to override the config with the URL
params specified in the hash part of the location URI to which the app
is navigating to.
They will be stored in redux and the PageReloadOverlay will be displayed.
Note that this commit also introduces a subtle (and yet important!) change:
the location URL is now always set, regardless of the configuration loading or
not. This is needed in order for the retry logic to pick it up.
* Removes unused config logic.
* Whitelists config options that can be overridden using the URL.
* Recorder login with credentials, not supported by externalconnect.
Jibri uses xmpp credentials to login, which is not supported by externalconnect, so we want to skip it till that is supported.
* Whitelist only config.js
* Extracts whitelisting in separate function.
ESLint 4.8.0 discovers a lot of error related to formatting. While I
tried to fix as many of them as possible, a portion of them actually go
against our coding style. In such a case, I've disabled the indent rule
which effectively leaves it as it was before ESLint 4.8.0.
Additionally, remove jshint because it's becoming a nuisance with its
lack of understanding of ES2015+.
* Javadoc introduced @code as a replacement of <code> and <tt> which is
better aligned with other javadoc tags such as @link. Use it in the
Java source code. If we switch to Kotlin, then we'll definitely use
Markdown.
* There are more uses of @code in the JavaScript source code than <tt>
so use @code for the sake of consistency. Eventually, I'd rather we
switch to Markdown because it's easier on my eyes.
* Xcode is plain confused by @code and @link. The Internet says that
Xcode supports the backquote character to denote the beginning and end
of a string of characters which should be formatted for display as
code but it doesn't work for me. <tt> is not rendered at all. So use
the backquote which is rendered itself. Hopefully, if we switch to
Markdown, then it'll be common between JavaScript and Objective-C
source code.
The error is stored in the redux store in base/config so other components can
consult it. It is also broadcasted as a new event in the external API for the
SDK.
This patch loads the config later than we used to, that is, only once we
know the room the user is about to join.
Due to architectural limitations in lib-jitsi-meet, it needs to be
initialized with a configuration in order to properly function. This is
unfortunate because we need to create a video track in the welcome page,
but don't know the room (hence no config) yet. In order to circumvent
this problem an empty configuration is used, which is later swapped with
the appropriate one, once loaded.
Some interesting side-effects of this change are a perceived speed
increase when the app starts or a conference is hangup. They are both
due to the fact that no config needs to be fetched from a remote server
in those cases.
Iterate over objects and copy over primitives and arrays
instead of using _.merge, as merge will not replace a config
entry completely. For arrays in a target object, the arrays
will have its indices replaced. This means if a source array
is empty, the target array will be left alone. Similarly,
if the target array is longer than a source array, there
will be indices not touched in the target array.
Web's ExternalAPI accepts an object with properties as one of its
constructor arguments and from which it generated a URL. Mobile's
JitsiMeetView.loadURLObject is supposed to accept pretty much the same
object.
The counterpart of the external API in the Jitsi Meet Web app uses the
search URL param jwt to heuristically detect that the Web app is very
likely embedded (as an iframe) and, consequently, needs to forcefully
enable itself. It was looking at whether there was a JSON Web Token
(JWT) but that logic got broken when the JWT support was rewritten
because the check started happening before the search URL param jwt was
parsed.
The config object defined by lib-jitsi-meet is not used by
lib-jitsi-meet only, jitsi-meet respects its values as well.
Moreover, jitsi-meet defined classes and/or functions which manipulate
that config object. Consequently, it makes sense to move the config
object and the associated classes and functions in a dedicated feature.