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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. |
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gradle/wrapper | ||
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README.md | ||
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settings.gradle |
README.md
Jitsi Meet SDK for Android
Sample applications using the SDK
If you want to see how easy integrating the Jitsi Meet SDK into a native application is, take a look at the sample applications repository.
Build your own, or use a pre-build SDK artifacts/binaries
Jitsi conveniently provides a pre-build SDK artifacts/binaries in its Maven repository. When you do not require any modification to the SDK itself or any of its dependencies, it's suggested to use the pre-build SDK. This avoids the complexity of building and installing your own SDK artifacts/binaries.
Use pre-build SDK artifacts/binaries
In your project, add the Maven repository
https://github.com/jitsi/jitsi-maven-repository/raw/master/releases
and the
dependency org.jitsi.react:jitsi-meet-sdk
into your build.gradle
files.
The repository typically goes into the build.gradle
file in the root of your project:
allprojects {
repositories {
google()
jcenter()
maven {
url "https://github.com/jitsi/jitsi-maven-repository/raw/master/releases"
}
}
}
Dependency definitions belong in the individual module build.gradle
files:
dependencies {
// (other dependencies)
implementation ('org.jitsi.react:jitsi-meet-sdk:2.+') { transitive = true }
}
Build and use your own SDK artifacts/binaries
Show building instructions
Start by making sure that your development environment is set up correctly.
A note on dependencies: Apart from the SDK, Jitsi also publishes a binary Maven artifact for some of the SDK dependencies (that are not otherwise publicly available) to the Jitsi Maven repository. When you're planning to use a SDK that is built from source, you'll likely use a version of the source code that is newer (or at least different) than the version of the source that was used to create the binary SDK artifact. As a consequence, the dependencies that your project will need, might also be different from those that are published in the Jitsi Maven repository. This might lead to build problems, caused by dependencies that are unavailable.
If you want to use a SDK that is built from source, you will likely benefit from composing a local Maven repository that contains these dependencies. The text below describes how you create a repository that includes both the SDK as well as these dependencies. For illustration purposes, we'll define the location of this local Maven repository as /tmp/repo
In source code form, the Android SDK dependencies are locked/pinned by package.json and package-lock.json of the Jitsi Meet project. To obtain the data, execute NPM in the jitsi-meet project directory:
npm install
This will pull in the dependencies in either binary format, or in source code format, somewhere under /node_modules/
Third-party React Native modules, which Jitsi Meet SDK for Android depends on, are download by NPM in source code or binary form. These need to be assembled into Maven artifacts, and then published to your local Maven repository. A script is provided to facilitate this. From the root of the jitsi-meet project repository, run:
./android/scripts/release-sdk.sh /tmp/repo
This will build and publish the SDK, and all of its dependencies to the specified Maven repository (/tmp/repo
) in
this example.
You're now ready to use the artifacts. In your project, add the Maven repository that you used above (/tmp/repo
) into your top-level build.gradle
file:
allprojects {
repositories {
maven { url "file:/tmp/repo" }
google()
jcenter()
}
}
You can use your local repository to replace the Jitsi repository (maven { url "https://github.com/jitsi/jitsi-maven-repository/raw/master/releases" }
) when you published all subprojects. If you didn't do that, you'll have to add both repositories. Make sure your local repository is listed first!
Then, define the dependency org.jitsi.react:jitsi-meet-sdk
into the build.gradle
file of your module:
implementation ('org.jitsi.react:jitsi-meet-sdk:+') { transitive = true }
Note that there should not be a need to explicitly add the other dependencies, as they will be pulled in as transitive
dependencies of jitsi-meet-sdk
.
Using the API
Jitsi Meet SDK is an Android library which embodies the whole Jitsi Meet experience and makes it reusable by third-party apps.
First, add Java 1.8 compatibility support to your project by adding the
following lines into your build.gradle
file:
compileOptions {
sourceCompatibility JavaVersion.VERSION_1_8
targetCompatibility JavaVersion.VERSION_1_8
}
To get started, extends your android.app.Activity
from
org.jitsi.meet.sdk.JitsiMeetActivity
:
package org.jitsi.example;
import org.jitsi.meet.sdk.JitsiMeetActivity;
public class MainActivity extends JitsiMeetActivity {
}
Alternatively, you can use the org.jitsi.meet.sdk.JitsiMeetView
class which
extends android.view.View
.
Note that this should only be needed when JitsiMeetActivity
cannot be used for
some reason. Extending JitsiMeetView
requires manual wiring of the view to
the activity, using a lot of boilerplate code. Using the Activity instead of the
View is strongly recommended.
Show example
package org.jitsi.example;
import android.os.Bundle;
import android.support.v4.app.FragmentActivity;
import org.jitsi.meet.sdk.JitsiMeetView;
import org.jitsi.meet.sdk.ReactActivityLifecycleCallbacks;
// Example
//
public class MainActivity extends FragmentActivity implements JitsiMeetActivityInterface {
private JitsiMeetView view;
@Override
protected void onActivityResult(
int requestCode,
int resultCode,
Intent data) {
JitsiMeetActivityDelegate.onActivityResult(
this, requestCode, resultCode, data);
}
@Override
public void onBackPressed() {
JitsiMeetActivityDelegate.onBackPressed();
}
@Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
view = new JitsiMeetView(this);
JitsiMeetConferenceOptions options = new JitsiMeetConferenceOptions.Builder()
.setRoom("https://meet.jit.si/test123")
.build();
view.join(options);
setContentView(view);
}
@Override
protected void onDestroy() {
super.onDestroy();
view.dispose();
view = null;
JitsiMeetActivityDelegate.onHostDestroy(this);
}
@Override
public void onNewIntent(Intent intent) {
JitsiMeetActivityDelegate.onNewIntent(intent);
}
@Override
public void onRequestPermissionsResult(
final int requestCode,
final String[] permissions,
final int[] grantResults) {
JitsiMeetActivityDelegate.onRequestPermissionsResult(requestCode, permissions, grantResults);
}
@Override
protected void onResume() {
super.onResume();
JitsiMeetActivityDelegate.onHostResume(this);
}
@Override
protected void onStop() {
super.onStop();
JitsiMeetActivityDelegate.onHostPause(this);
}
}
JitsiMeetActivity
This class encapsulates a high level API in the form of an Android FragmentActivity
which displays a single JitsiMeetView
. You can pass a URL as a ACTION_VIEW
on the Intent when starting it and it will join the conference, and will be
automatically terminated (finish() will be called on the activity) when the
conference ends or fails.
JitsiMeetView
The JitsiMeetView
class is the core of Jitsi Meet SDK. It's designed to
display a Jitsi Meet conference (or a welcome page).
join(options)
Joins the conference specified by the given JitsiMeetConferenceOptions
.
leave()
Leaves the currently active conference. If the welcome page is enabled it will go back to it, otherwise a black window will be shown.
dispose()
Releases all resources associated with this view. This method MUST be called
when the Activity holding this view is going to be destroyed, usually in the
onDestroy()
method.
getListener()
Returns the JitsiMeetViewListener
instance attached to the view.
setListener(listener)
Sets the given listener (class implementing the JitsiMeetViewListener
interface) on the view.
JitsiMeetConferenceOptions
This object encapsulates all the options that can be tweaked when joining a conference.
Example:
JitsiMeetConferenceOptions options = new JitsiMeetConferenceOptions.Builder()
.setServerURL(new URL("https://meet.jit.si"))
.setRoom("test123")
.setAudioMuted(false)
.setVideoMuted(false)
.setAudioOnly(false)
.setWelcomePageEnabled(false)
.build();
See the JitsiMeetConferenceOptions
implementation for all available options.
JitsiMeetActivityDelegate
This class handles the interaction between JitsiMeetView
and its enclosing
Activity
. Generally this shouldn't be consumed by users, because they'd be
using JitsiMeetActivity
instead, which is already completely integrated.
All its methods are static.
onActivityResult(...)
Helper method to handle results of auxiliary activities launched by the SDK. Should be called from the activity method of the same name.
onBackPressed()
Helper method which should be called from the activity's onBackPressed
method.
If this function returns true
, it means the action was handled and thus no
extra processing is required; otherwise the app should call the parent's
onBackPressed
method.
onHostDestroy(...)
Helper method which should be called from the activity's onDestroy
method.
onHostResume(...)
Helper method which should be called from the activity's onResume
or onStop
method.
onHostStop(...)
Helper method which should be called from the activity's onSstop
method.
onNewIntent(...)
Helper method for integrating the deep linking functionality. If your app's
activity is launched in "singleTask" mode this method should be called from the
activity's onNewIntent
method.
onRequestPermissionsResult(...)
Helper method to handle permission requests inside the SDK. It should be called from the activity method of the same name.
onUserLeaveHint()
Helper method for integrating automatic Picture-in-Picture. It should be called
from the activity's onUserLeaveHint
method.
This is a static method.
JitsiMeetViewListener
JitsiMeetViewListener
provides an interface apps can implement to listen to
the state of the Jitsi Meet conference displayed in a JitsiMeetView
.
onConferenceJoined
Called when a conference was joined.
The data
Map
contains a "url" key with the conference URL.
onConferenceTerminated
Called when a conference was terminated either by user choice or due to a failure.
The data
Map
contains an "error" key with the error and a "url" key
with the conference URL. If the conference finished gracefully no error
key will be present.
onConferenceWillJoin
Called before a conference is joined.
The data
Map
contains a "url" key with the conference URL.
ProGuard rules
When using the SDK on a project some proguard rules have to be added in order to avoid necessary code being stripped. Add the following to your project's rules file: https://github.com/jitsi/jitsi-meet/blob/master/android/app/proguard-rules.pro
Picture-in-Picture
JitsiMeetView
will automatically adjust its UI when presented in a
Picture-in-Picture style scenario, in a rectangle too small to accommodate its
"full" UI.
Dropbox integration
To setup the Dropbox integration, follow these steps:
- Add the following to the app's AndroidManifest.xml and change
<APP_KEY>
to your Dropbox app key:
<activity
android:configChanges="keyboard|orientation"
android:launchMode="singleTask"
android:name="com.dropbox.core.android.AuthActivity">
<intent-filter>
<action android:name="android.intent.action.VIEW" />
<category android:name="android.intent.category.BROWSABLE" />
<category android:name="android.intent.category.DEFAULT" />
<data android:scheme="db-<APP_KEY>" />
</intent-filter>
</activity>
- Add the following to the app's strings.xml and change
<APP_KEY>
to your Dropbox app key:
<string name="dropbox_app_key"><APP_KEY></string>