Android uses a SurfaceView to render video, which is not quite a View, so the
fade-in animation (which varies the opacity) doesn't work.
Instead, add an opaque black view covering the video, which transitions to
transparent. This creates much smoother transitions on Android, while behaving
the same.
In addition, I removed the flip animation for local tracks, which is no longer
used, since the camera is switched without changing tracks.
* ref: Restructures the pinned/unpinned events.
* ref: Refactors the "audio only disabled" event.
* ref: Refactors the "stream switch delay" event.
* ref: Refactors the "select participant failed" event.
* ref: Refactors the "initially muted" events.
* ref: Refactors the screen sharing started/stopped events.
* ref: Restructures the "device list changed" events.
* ref: Restructures the "shared video" events.
* ref: Restructures the "start muted" events.
* ref: Restructures the "start audio only" event.
* ref: Restructures the "sync track state" event.
* ref: Restructures the "callkit" events.
* ref: Restructures the "replace track".
* ref: Restructures keyboard shortcuts events.
* ref: Restructures most of the toolbar events.
* ref: Refactors the API events.
* ref: Restructures the video quality, profile button and invite dialog events.
* ref: Refactors the "device changed" events.
* ref: Refactors the page reload event.
* ref: Removes an unused function.
* ref: Removes a method which is needlessly exposed under a different name.
* ref: Refactors the events from the remote video menu.
* ref: Refactors the events from the profile pane.
* ref: Restructures the recording-related events.
Removes events fired when recording with something other than jibri
(which isn't currently supported anyway).
* ref: Cleans up AnalyticsEvents.js.
* ref: Removes an unused function and adds documentation.
* feat: Adds events for all API calls.
* fix: Addresses feedback.
* fix: Brings back mistakenly removed code.
* fix: Simplifies code and fixes a bug in toggleFilmstrip
when the 'visible' parameter is defined.
* feat: Removes the resolution change application log.
* ref: Uses consistent naming for events' attributes.
Uses "_" as a separator instead of camel case or ".".
* ref: Don't add the user agent and conference name
as permanent properties. The library does this on its own now.
* ref: Adapts the GA handler to changes in lib-jitsi-meet.
* ref: Removes unused fields from the analytics handler initializaiton.
* ref: Renames the google analytics file and add docs.
* fix: Fixes the push-to-talk events and logs.
* npm: Updates lib-jitsi-meet to 515374c8d383cb17df8ed76427e6f0fb5ea6ff1e.
* fix: Fixes a recently introduced bug in the google analytics handler.
* ref: Uses "value" instead of "delay" since this is friendlier to GA.
* feat(audio-only): be able to lock a browser into capturing audio only
* squash: try to make string more clear about audio only support
* squash: final strings
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.
Filmstrip only mode displays a device selection dialog that
does not have access to the redux/connect. However, the current
VideoTrack extends from AbstractVideoTrack, which assumes a
redux connection. The fix is to move video display logic into
a separate component and have device selection use that, while
the existing VideoTrack remains connected to redux but
uses the new video display component.
* ref: video muted state
Get rid of 'videoMuted' flag in conference.js
* ref: audio muted state
Get rid of 'audioMuted' flag in conference.js
* fix(conference.js|API): early audio/video muted updates
* ref(conference.js): rename isVideoMuted
Rename isVideoMuted to isLocalVideoMuted to be consistent with
isLocalAudioMuted.
* doc|style(conference.js): comments and space after if
* ref: move 'setTrackMuted' to functions
* fix(tracks/middleware): no-lonely-if
* ref(features/toolbox): get rid of last argument
* ref(defaultToolbarButtons): rename var
Simplify the code by using a bitfied instead of a couple of boolean flags. This
allows us to mute the video from multiple places and only make the unmute
effective once they have all unmuted.
Alas, this cannot be applied to the web without a massive refactor, because it
uses the track muted state as the source of truth instead of the media state.
Make toolbar's microphone button enabled whenever there are any
'audioinput' devices available and allow to add audio during
the conference even if microphone permissions were denied on startup.
Because on web video track is stored both in redux and in 'localVideo'
field, video is attempted to be unmuted twice when turning off the audio
only mode. This will crash the app with 'unmute operation is already in
progress'. This commit will prevent from taking action from the web
world if the video track already exists and will make the redux side
rollback unmuted status in case unmute fails.
* feat(local-video): convert to react
- Create a VideoTrack component for displaying a video element.
This mirrors native also having a VideoTrack component.
- The VideoTrack component does not let React update it to prevent
the video element from re-rendering, which could cause flickers
and would not work with temasys's overriding of the video element.
- VideoTrack extends AbstractVideoTrack to mirror native
implementation and to get the dispatch of the onplaying event.
- Remove the onclick handler on the video element. Honestly, I
didn't get it to work, and did not try, but it is also unnecessary
because another handler already exists on the video wrapper.
* ref(device-selection): VideoInputPreview uses VideoTrack to show video
* squash into conversion: change css selectors
* squash into conversion: mix in abstract props
* squash into conversion: change shouldComponentUpdate check
* squash: update comment about why triggerOnPlayingUpdate is used
Dynamically enables/disables the toolbar video button. Prior to that
commit if we would start with no video there would be no way to enable
it later on.
Introduce certain React Components which may be used to write
cross-platform source code such as Audio like Web's audio, Container
like Web's div, Text like Web's p, etc.
Use the curstom _switchCamera API provided by react-native-webrtc to toggle the
camera instead of destroying the current track and creating a new one.
_switchCamera is implemented at a low level, so the track perceives no changes,
thus being a lot faster and less involved since the capturer doesn't need to be
destroyed and re-created.
In addition, don't mirror the video for the back camera.
Ref: https://github.com/oney/react-native-webrtc/pull/235
The toolbar's mute buttons depict respective features/base/media states.
However, (un)muting is practically carried out by features/base/tracks.
When the mobile app enters a conference configured to invite the joining
participant to mute themselves, the tracks would be muted but the
toolbar's mute buttons would not reflect that.
As a step toward merging jitsi-meet-react with jitsi-meet to share as
much source code as possible between mobile and Web, merge the part of
jitsi-meet-react's source tree which supports mobile inside the
jitsi-meet source tree and leave jitsi-meet-react's Web support in the
source code revision history but don't have it in master anymore because
it's different from jitsi-meet's Web support. In other words, the two
projects are mechanically merged at the file level and don't really
share source code between mobile and Web.
As an intermediate step on the path to merging jitsi-meet and
jitsi-meet-react, import the whole source code of jitsi-meet-react as it
stands at
2f23d98424
i.e. the lastest master at the time of this import. No modifications are
applied to the imported source code in order to preserve a complete
snapshot of it in the repository of jitsi-meet and, thus, facilitate
comparison later on. Consequently, the source code of jitsi-meet and/or
jitsi-meet-react may not work. For example, jitsi-meet's jshint may be
unable to parse jitsi-meet-react's source code.