It's possible for the YouTube api to return zero broadcasts
or broadcasts without any streams--streams are what are
associated with stream keys. In this case, instead of showing
an empty selector or no selector, show a message with a link
to where the stream key can be obtained.
Provide a client-side notice if the YouTube live stream key
looks like it might be in the wrong format. Normally the
stream key looks like 4 groups of 4 numbers and letters,
each separated by a dash. The warning does not block submission
in case YouTube changes their stream key format.
Updating react-native-fast-image brings a couple of interesting changes:
- onLoad is not called for cached images (reported and ignored upstream)
- load progress not working if component not displayed (on Android)
In order to fix this, a combination of 2 approaches was used:
- onLoadEnd / onError are used to detect if the image is loaded
- off-screen rendering is used on Android to get progress events
While implementing the above, yours truly noticed the complexity was increasing
way too much, so some extra refactoring was also performed:
- componentWillReceiveProps is dropped
- an auxiliary component (AvatarContent) is used for the actual content of the
Avatar, with the former passing the key prop to the latter
Using the key prop ensures AvatarContent will be recreated if the URI changes,
which is not a bad idea anyway, since the new image needs to be downloaded.
* Replaces smileys and the logic of replacing links/emails.
Now using react-emoji-render and react-linkify.
* Fixes heart emoji.
It is known that current implementation doesn't work with ascii emojis that contain < or >, like >:( >:-( </3 <\3 <3. Making those work may bring some xss issues.
* Adds '_blank' and 'noopener noreferrer' to the replaced links.
* Fixes package-lock links (http vs https).
* Fixes comments.
The upstream package has been unmaintained for 2 years now, and making the litle
changes needed as React Native needs them is getting old. The actual
funcionality is a couple of one-liners plus tons of boliterplate, which gets
reduced by quite a bit if we just embed it. So here it goes.
It doesn't seem like videoTrack needs to be set onto state
if it can be accessed directly from props. Removing the state
automatically removes the deprecated componentWillReceiveProps.
Filmstrip remote thumbnails display under certain conditions, as
defined in filmstrip/functions.web.js. Previously the raw
participant count was used, which included fake participants.
Using the selector getParticipantCount excludes fake participants,
causing YouTube thumbnails to remain hidden in a 1-on-1 call.
- Derive the showOverlay state. When the sidebar should be hidden,
the internal showOverlay state should remain true until the
animation hides it. When the sidebar should show, the showOverlay
state should become true immediately.
- Use PureComponent to prevent additional animation triggers
instead of explicitly checking changes to the "show" prop.
Based on react-native docs, looks like animations should be
started after mount. Updating animation states I'm not certain
on so I moved it to componentDidUpdate and tested with the
live streaming label to ensure the component still animated fine.
To kill componentWillMount, call destroyLocalTrack after mount.
Navigation to the blank page was synthetically forced and no
UI issues were noticed, possibly because destroyLocalTrack may
already be async so destruction may already have been occurring
after mount.