This makes it possible to compile the SDK with Xcode 10 and 11. The problem is
that the Google SDK (used for sign-in) is compiled with Xcode 11. This avoids
the issue.
It was introduced in Xcode 9 and made the default in Xcode 10. We were forcing
the use of the legacy version, which doesn't support some new features that we
wish to enable, such as building the SDK for distribution.
We are downloading code off the Internet and executing it on the user's device,
so run it sandboxed to avoid potential bad actors.
Since it's impossible to eval() safely in JS and React Native doesn't offer
something akin to Node's vm module, here we are rolling our own.
On Android it uses the Duktape JavaScript engine and on iOS the builtin
JavaScriptCore engine. The extra JS engine is *only* used for evaluating the
downloaded code and returning a JSON string which is then passed back to RN.
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.
Will emit new 'network.info' action with the online/offline status and
extra details for native like the network type and
'isConnectionExpensive' flag.
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
It's possible a CallKit event arrives when the React Bridge has been torn down
and there is an assert that checks this. In order to avoid a crash, just skip
the event.
Time has come. We need to enable bitcode. It's optional for iOS targets, but
mandatory for the entire project if there is a watchOS target. Since we have a
watchOS target, it's time to enable it.
Replace the Swift array with an Objective-C one, since it's going to store
Objective-C objects and not Swift objects (or Swift objects which inherit from
NSObject, which is equivalent).
This avoids the need for JMCallKitEventListenerWrapper entirely, since an
NSArray can store NSObjectProtocol objects, unlike a Swift array, which prompted
the creation of the wrapper in the first place.
The SDK will now search for an asset called "CallKitIcon" on the main bundle,
and fallback to a built-in asset it it's not there, allowing SDK users to
customize it by just adding asset with that name.
Ever since we switched to handling track events instead of mute actions this has
been dead code. It was also added in the wrong place, since it's responsibility
of the JS code to solve the ping-pong problem.
NSURLConnection sendSynchronousRequest is deprecated since iOS 9. Replace the
method by whjat's currently on RN master, which implements a modern alternative.
Consolidate all failure cases into a single one: CONFERENCE_TERMINATED. If the
conference ended gracefully no error indicator will be present, otherwise there
will be.
Since the SDK may be embedded with other apps, we need to recognize our custom
URL scheme and universal links in order to tell the user if we will process the
request or not.
Make them configurable with sane defaults.
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.
* feat(Android): implement ConnectionService
Adds basic integration with Android's ConnectionService by implementing
the outgoing call scenario.
* ref(callkit): rename _SET_CALLKIT_SUBSCRIPTIONS
* ref(callkit): move feature to call-integration directory
* feat(ConnectionService): synchronize video state
* ref(AudioMode): use ConnectionService on API >= 26
Not ready yet - few details left mentioned in the FIXMEs
* feat(ConnectionService): add debug logs
Adds logs to trace the calls.
* fix(ConnectionService): leaking ConnectionImpl instances
Turns out there is no callback fired back from the JavaScript side after
the disconnect or abort event is sent from the native. The connection
must be marked as disconnected and removed immediately.
* feat(ConnectionService): handle onCreateOutgoingConnectionFailed
* ref(ConnectionService): merge classes and move to the sdk package
* feat(CallIntegration): show Alert if outgoing call fails
* fix(ConnectionService): alternatively get call UUID from the account
Some Android flavours (or versions ?) do copy over extras to
the onCreateOutgoingConnectionFailed callback. But the call UUID is also
set as the PhoneAccount's label, so eventually it should be available
there.
* ref(ConnectionService): use call UUID as PhoneAccount ID.
The extra is not reliable on some custom Android flavours. It also makes
sense to use unique id for the account instead of the URL given that
it's created on the per call basis.
* fix(ConnectionService): abort the call when hold is requested
Turns out Android P can sometimes request HOLD even though there's no
HOLD capability added to the connection (what!?), so just abort the call
in that case.
* fix(ConnectionService): unregister account on call failure
Unregister the PhoneAccount onCreateOutgoingConnectionFailed. That's
before the ConnectionImpl instance is created which is normally
responsible for doing that.
* fix(AudioModeModule): make package private and run on the audio thread
* address other review comments
This is mostly implemented in the app, with the needed support in the SDK. Since
the app needs to donate intents and deal with creating NSUserActivity objects it
doesn't feel right to do this in a library. Instead, we donate the intents from
the app, but the SDK is ready to extract conference URLs from any intent which
was registered as a conference activity.
This also opens the door for eventually adding Handoff support.