* Adds initial documentation for sipgw jibri.
Also explains enabling the people search service and the request/response that are made around sipgw jibri service.
* Fixes add people dialog to invite users and rooms.
No invitation is sent when there is nobody to invite.
* Reuse some recording strings, by using arguments.
* Make sure web also dispatches CONFERENCE_WILL_JOIN.
* Introduces new feature videosipgw.
* Fixes lint errors.
* Renames methods to use people, chatRooms and videoRooms.
* Updates to latest lib-jitsi-meet (dc3397b18b).
It was decided along with the mute participant dialog reactification
that these types of warning messages should not be toggleable--that
they should simply always display because there is no undo action.
As such, the component NotificationWithToggle is no longer needed.
After looking at the jquery-ui documentation, I believe it
is being used only in one place, when toggling the smiley
menu. That toggling has been quickly replaced with a normal
jquery call.
Note: @atlassian/aui also uses jquery-ui but killing that
off will be more difficult due to its CSS being used.
* feat(keyboard-shortcuts): show help in a react dialog
- Move shortcut help dom declaration to a react component
- Let open/close logic be handled by AtlasKit Dialog
- Remove static html for help from index.html
- Consolidate keyboard shortcut css
* squash: use lozenge for key styling
* squash: use different iteration style
* squash: update package-lock for lozenge
It seems to me that npm 5 starting adding github: as the protocol of
dependencies in package.json which are from GitHub. I personally don't
know which npm version supports these and whether we care about such a
support. Anyway, having some use github: and most not is not consistent.
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+.
This commit adds initial support for CallKit on supported platforms: iOS >= 10.
Since the call flow in Jitsi Meet is basically making outgoing calls, only
outgoing call support is currently handled via CallKit.
Features:
- "Green bar" when in a call.
- Native CallKit view when tapping on the call label on the lock screen.
- Support for audio muting from the native CallKit view.
- Support for recent calls (audio-only calls logged as Audio calls, others show
as Video calls).
- Call display name is room name.
- Graceful downgrade on systems without CallKit support.
Limitations:
- Native CallKit view cannot be shown for audio-only calls (this is a CallKit
limitaion).
- The video button in the CallKit view will start a new video call to the same
room, and terminate the previous one.
- No support for call hold.
As https://facebook.github.io/react/docs/typechecking-with-proptypes.html
says, React.PropTypes have moved into the npm package prop-types since
React v15.5. I've already failed to update certain devDependencies
because they mandate the use of prop-types so I'd rather we (gradually
at least) move to prop-types rather than face a lot of work later on.
Avatars are cached to the filesystem and loaded from there when requested again.
The cache is cleaned after a conference ends and on application startup
(defensive move).
In addition, implement a fully local avatar system, which is used as a fallback
when loading a remote avatar fails. It can also be forced using a prop.
The fully local avatars use a user icon as a mask and apply a background color
qhich is picked by hashing the URI passed to the avatar. If no URI is passed a
random color is chosen.
A grace period of 1 second is also implemented so a default local avatar will be
rendered if an Avatar component is mounted but has no URI. If a URI is specified
later on, it will be loaded and displayed. In case loading the remote avatar
fails, the locally generated one will be used.
- Create a notification component for displaying a toggle.
- Create an action for showing the component if allowed by
the local storage setting and for saving the setting to
local storage.
- Remove all notifications having a timeout by default so the
device error notification must be dismissed manually.
- Split the camera and mic error dialog into two separate
notifications.
* feat(notifications): implement a react/redux notification system
* squash into impl explicit timeout, style
* ref(notifications): convert toastr notifications to use react
* ref(toastr): remove library
* squash into conversion: pass timeout
* squash into clean remove from debian patch
Apparently iOS doesn't like dangling background tasks very much, so update the
background timers plugin with a version which fixes this.
https://github.com/ocetnik/react-native-background-timer/pull/38
Also accomodate for the API changes upstream.
Credits to @lyubomir for finding the needle in the haystack.
The functionality around logging including logging_config.js i.e.
loggingConfig and the other classes and/or functions that initialize
loggers for Jits Meet truly deserves a feature of its own. Start getting
in that direction on both Web and mobile by introducing
features/base/logging and bringing loggingConfig to mobile.
AtlasKit Dropdown was recently updated to support fitting the
width of its container. However, AtlasKit Button, the trigger
element currently used for the dropdowns, does not fit the width
of AtlasKit Dropdown and stll has text overflowing out of its
button when there is an iconBefore prop passed in. Instead of
using AtlasKit Button, use a div and mimic the button look. This
allows the "button" to fit the container width and can display
ellipsized text within itself.
Instead of using AtlasKit Single-Select, use Dropdown. Dropdown
differs in that an icon can be specified for the trigger element,
whereas Single-Select currently supports icons for all elements,
and Dropdown can show all options incuding the already-selected
option.
This change does introduce the issue of the trigger element not
taking up 100% width of the parent. Supporting such would involve
overriding AtlasKit CSS. The compromise made here was to do a
generic override of max-width so the trigger elements at least
stay within the parent and aligning the trigger elements to the
right.
The Device Selection modal consists of:
- DeviceSelection, an overly smart component responsible for
triggering stream creation and cleanup.
- DeviceSelector for selector elements.
- VideoInputPreview for displaying a video preview.
- AudioInputPreview for displaying a volume meter.
- AudioOutputPreview for a test sound output link.
Store changes include is primarily storing the list of
available devices in redux. Other app state has been left
alone for future refactoring.
babel does not modify existing builtins by default. That means
some newer methods, such as Array.prototype.includes, may not
be available unless babel-polyfill is used.
It's no longer needed for building since Node >= 6 already has the minimum
required ES6 syntax. In addition, drop it from app.js since we use Webpack with
the Babel loader to transpile ES5 to ES6.
@atlaskit components will all require styled-components in the
future. Including it now will remove the unmet peer
dependency warning during npm install and prevent future build
breakages that might occur from using a new @atlaskit component
that requires it.
Pull Request #1449
Turns out React Native's timers (setTimeout / setInterval) don't run while the
app is in the background: https://github.com/facebook/react-native/issues/167
This patch replaces the global timer functions with those from the
react-native-background-timer package, which work in the background.
These timers won't magically make an application work in the background, but
they will run if an application already happens to run in the background. That's
our case while in a conference, so these timers will run, allowing XMPP pings to
be sent and the conference to stay up as long as the user desires.
- Use 1 name for 1 abstraction. Instead of useFullScreen and enabled use
fullScreen.
- Comments are correct English sentences so no double spaces between
senteces, no capitalization of the work On midsentence.
- Write as little source code as possible if readability is preserved.
- Utilize Facebook's Flow.
- The name of a private function must start with _ and the jsdoc should
state that the function is private.
The implementation varies across platforms, with the same goal: allow the app to
use the entire screen real state while in a conference.
On Android we use immersive mode, which will hide the status and navigation bars.
https://developer.android.com/training/system-ui/immersive.html
On iOS the status bar is hidden, with a slide effect.
Starting version 4.x clean-css is split into two packages and we should depend on clean-css-cli for versions 4 and above. Tested it and we have currently some problem with it like fonts and images got referenced under css folder. So sticking version to 3.x for now.
A bug was discovered in d17cc9fa which would raise a failure to push
into the browser's history if a base href was defined. Fix the failure
by removing react-router. Anyway, the usage of react-router was
incorrect because the app must hit the server infrastructure when it
enters a room because the server will choose the very app version then.
In preparation for and as another early step in rewriting the Web
version of jitsi-meet using React, use Haste resolver which is able to
distinguish among platform-independent files, Web-specific and
mobile-specific ones.
Additionally, (1) make sure that Babel is capable of understanding React
files and (2) introduce React as a dependency.
The purpose is to repeatedly take small steps towards our goal and merge
them before they get in conflict with the separate ongoing advancement
of the Web version of jitsi-meet.
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.
React Native's module bundler (aka packager) has its default Babel
preset - react-native/babel-preset - which it uses in the absence of a
custom .babelrc. Unfortunately, the default may be tripped by the
presence of a .babelrc in dependencies. Additionally, if the default
does not get tripped, the npm install of lib-jitsi-meet as a dependency
may fall into a recursion in which Babel attempts to transpile
react-native/babel-preset. To reduce the risks of stumbling upon such
problems, move Babel's configuration inside the Webpack configuration
file.
Since the library lib-jitsi-meet does not publish its binaries, it is
always been necessary to produce the binaries i.e. lib-jitsi-meet.js and
lib-jitsi-meet.js as part of the npm install step. Which means that any
modifications to the devDependencies of lib-jitsi-meet's package.json
always have to be reflected in jitsi-meet's package.json. Because
Webpack replaced Browserify in lib-jitsi-meet, Webpack has to become a
devDependency of jitsi-meet.
Since the library lib-jitsi-meet does not publish its binaries, it is
always been necessary to produce the binaries i.e. lib-jitsi-meet.js and
lib-jitsi-meet.js as part of the npm install step. Which means that any
modifications to the devDependencies of lib-jitsi-meet's package.json
always have to be reflected in jitsi-meet's package.json. Because
Webpack replaced Browserify in lib-jitsi-meet, Webpack has to become a
devDependency of jitsi-meet.
Using "compatible version" as ^... matches latest version 1.12.0 and not 1.10.5 (matches >=1.10.5 < 2.0.0) and this prevents it building from source with latest nodejs on clean environment.