- Use actions to notify the rest of the app that
a mic or camera error has occurred
- Use middleware to respond to those notifications
of errors by showing in-app notifications and
notifying the external api
* feat(screenshare): support remote wireless screensharing
- Pass events to the ProxyConnectionService so it can
handle establishing a peer connection so a remote
participant, not in the conference, can send a
video stream to the local participant to use as a
local desktop stream.
- Modify the existing start screensharing flow to accept
a desktop stream instead of always trying to create one.
* adjust ProxyConnectionService for lib review changes
Spot will need a way to submit call feedback using the iframe
api. For now expose a method on conference.js to submit that
feedback. Exposing on conference.js looks to be the existing
pattern... Also add an event to notify consumers of the iframe
api that feedback was submitted, as postMessage is async
and the notification can at least give some guarantee maybe.
I haven't updated documentation yet as I'm not confident
about this api.
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+.
We broke external_api.min.js by importing react/features/util which
imported react/features/base/lib-jitsi-meet.
1. To reduce the risks of such a breakage until we add
external_api.min.js to the torture tests, import as little as
possible in modules/API/external/external_api.js.
2. Use the global JitsiMeetJS on Web in react/features/base/util.
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.
We seemed to be using the names "film strip" and "filmstrip" (and,
consequently, their source code-conscious forms such as film-strip,
FilmStrip, etc.) In order to comply with our coding style which requires
a consistent one name for a given abstraction, choose one name and
rename the uses of the other name.
Wikipedia has a definition of a "filmstrip", I couldn't find a "film
strip". I guess our abstraction can be seen as what's described there.
When I google "film strip", I get results about "filmstrip" at the top.
That's why I chose "filmstrip".
Certain uses of "film strip" such as interfaceConfig.filmStripOnly and
in the external API I left untouched in an attempt to preserve
compatibility.
I wasn't sure whether CSS was tangled in compatibility so I made a
choice and renamed there was well.