This only works automatically on Android >= 8. On other platforms / versions, it
relies on the SDK user on implementing a "reduced UI" mode and reacting to the
"request PIP" delegate method.
- Move the existing components for the static dial in page into
a separate folder for easier reuse.
- Reuse those components for displaying dial-on numbers on the
mobile page for unsupported browsers.
- Modify those components to support having tel protocol
links on the dial-in numbers.
- Have DialInSummary, formerly DialInInfoPage, respect a
passed in className prop for easier styling differences.
* ref(invite): remove InviteDialog
InviteDialog functionality has been moved into InfoDialog.
The InviteButton has been temporarily hacked to show one
of its dropdown options instead as the button. Future
work will bring in a redesigned InviteModal that the button
will open.
* squash: filter invalid options and map valid options
* squash: update strings
On Android we go into "immersive mode" when in a conference, this is our way of
being full-creen. There are occasions, however, in which Android takes us out of
immerfive mode without us (the application / SDK) knowing: when a child activity
is started, a modal window shown, etc.
In order to be resilient to any possible change in the immersive mode, register
a listener which will be called when Android changes it, so we can re-eavluate
if we need it and thus re-enable it.
* feat(info): new dialog design
- Add display of a dial in number.
- Add a static page to show a full list of dial in numbers.
- Add password management.
- Invite modal will be changed soon to remove password and
dial-in.
* squash: add classes for torture tests
* squash: class for local lock for torture tests
* squash: more classes for torture tests
* squash: more classes, work around linter
* squash: remove unused string?
* squash: work around linter and avoid react warnings
* squash: pixel push, add bold
* squash: font size bump
* squash: NumbersTable -> NumbersList
* squash: document response from fetching numbers
* squash: showEdit -> editEnabled, pixel push padding for alignment
* squash: pin -> conferenceID
* squash: prepare to receive defaultCountry from api
When in PiP mode the LargeView will not be large enough to hold the avatar (for
those interested in the details, our avatar's size is 200, and in PiP mode the
app is resized to about 150).
In order to solve it, this PR refactors how the avatar style is passed along,
reducing it to a single "size" prop. With this only prop, the Avatar compononent
will compute the width, height and borderRadius, plus deal with some Android
shenanigans.
In addition, the LargeView component now uses DimensionsDetector to check its
own size and adjust the size prop passed to the Avatar component as needed.
* ref(large-video): reactify background
This is pre-requisite work for disabling the background on
certain browsers, namely Firefox. By moving the component
to react, and in general encapsulating background logic,
selectively disabling the background will be easier.
The component was left for LargeVideo to update so it can
continue to coordinate update timing with the actual large
video display. If the background were moved completely into
react and redux with LargeVideo, then background updates would
occur before large video updates causing visual jank.
* fix(large-video): do not show background for Firefox and temasys
Firefox has performance issues with adding filter effects on
animated elements. On temasys, the background videos weren't
really displaying anyway.
* some props refactoring
Instead of passing in classes to LargeVideoBackground, rely on
explicit props. At some point LargeVideo will have to be reactified
and the relationsihp between it and LargeVideoBackground might
change, so for now make use of props to be explicit about
how LargeVideoBackground can be modified.
Also, set the jitsiTrack to display on LargeVideoBackground to
null if the background is not displayed. This was an existing
optimization, although previously done with pausing and playing.
* squash: use newly exposed RTCBrowserType
* squash: rebase and use new lib browser util
* squash: move hiding logic all into LargeVideo
* squash: remove hiding of background on stream change. hopefully doesnt break anything
Passing around of the component was used when there were two
independent Notification components. Now that there is only
one Notification component, it is not necessary to pass
around the component.
This is only implemented for mobile at the moment, since web doesn't handle
visibility within the Filmstrip component yet, so this should be added right
then, too.
* Handles connection failed event details (passing them to analytics).
* Fixing comments.
* Updates depending versions to be able to test.
* Fixing comments.
* Fixes wrong jsdoc.
We started on the way to responsive UI and its design with aspect ratio
and keeping the filmstrip on the short side of the app's visible
rectangle.
Shortly, we're going to introduce reduced UI for Picture-in-Picture. And
that's where we'll need another dimensions-based detector akin to the
aspect ratio detector.
While the AspectRatioDetector, the up-and-coming ReducedUIDetector, and
their base DimensionsDetector are definitely separate abstractions and
implementations not mixed for the purposes of easy extensibility and
maintenance, the three of them are our building blocks on top of which
we'll build our responsive UI.
Turns out this was a bit more involved than I originally thought due to an
interesting (corner) case: IFF the user was never asked about microphone
permissions and the call starts with audio muted, unmuting from the CallKit
interface won't work (iOS won't show the prompt, it fails immediately) and we
need to sync the mute state back.
If the view gets resized to a 1:1 aspect ratio, remember the previous mode to
avoid flickering when going back to a larger size or different aspect ratio.
If config.enableUserRolesBasedOnToken is true, only let moderators
and non-guests modify the password. Otherwise, only let moderators
edit the password.
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.
Improve the experience when joining a room by removing the need to tap the join
button. The keyboard type has also been set to "go", which translated on the
builtin keyboard button label to be "go" (it's builtin, the operating system
translates it). This works on both Android and iOS.