These provide the ability to integrate the SDK with some other application
loggers.
At the time this was written we use Timber on Android and CocoaLumberjack on iOS.
In addition to the integration capabilities, a LogBridge React Native module
provides log transports for JavaScript code, thus centralizing all logs on the
native loggers.
This commit refactors device selection (more heavily on iOS) to make it
consistent across platforms.
Due to its complexity I couldn't break out each step into separate commits,
apologies to the reviewer.
Changes made to device handling:
- speaker is always the default, regardless of the mode
- "Phone" shows as a selectable option, even in video call mode
- "Phone" is not displayed when wired headphones are present
- Shared device picker between iOS and Android
- Runtime device updates while the picker is open
RTCAudioSession is a thin wrapper around AVAudioSession provided by the WebRTC
framework. It makes some use-cases easier, and leads us closer to manual audio
unit management, which we will likely need in the near future.
When we are in the default state (ie, not in a meeting) we shouldn't override
the AVAudioSession category and mode. It's a singleton and we might be bothering
other components of the host app which use it.
There is no reason for them to run on the main thread, it's safe to call
AVFoundation functions on threads other than the main thread.
The previous code made an incorrect claim about the thread in which the audio
route change notification selector is called: it's called on a secondary thread:
https://developer.apple.com/documentation/avfoundation/avaudiosessionroutechangenotification
Fixes the following warning:
~~~
Module XXX requires main queue setup since it overrides `constantsToExport` but doesn't implement `requiresMainQueueSetup`. In a future release React Native will default to initializing all native modules on a background thread unless explicitly opted-out of.
~~~
For AppInfo and AuioMode, there is no need to initialize anything in the UI
thread, so just return NO.
1. Aligns the project structure of Jitsi Meet SDK for iOS with that for
Android for better comprehension.
2. The command `react-native run-ios` uses the last Xcode project or
workspace in the list of these sorted in alphabetical order. Which
limits our freedom in naming. Thus having only an Xcode project in
the root directory of the iOS project structure gives us back the
freedom in naming.
3. Allows the Podspec to work for the app project in addition to the sdk
project because we need Crashlytics in the app which is integrated
via Cocoapods as well.
4. Further removes references to JitsiKit in the source code for the
sake of consistent naming.