element-web-Github/src/Skinner.js

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/*
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Copyright 2015, 2016 OpenMarket Ltd
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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
*/
class Skinner {
constructor() {
this.components = null;
}
getComponent(name) {
if (this.components === null) {
throw new Error(
"Attempted to get a component before a skin has been loaded."+
" This is probably because either:"+
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" a) Your app has not called sdk.loadSkin(), or"+
" b) A component has called getComponent at the root level",
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);
}
Implementation of new potential skinning mechanism With a switch to Only One Webpack™ we need a way to help developers generate the component index without a concurrent watch task. The best way to do this is to have developers import their components, but how do they do that when we support skins? The answer in this commit is to change skinning. Skinning now expects to receive your list of overrides instead of the react-sdk+branded components. For Riot this means we send over *only* the Vector components and not Vector+react-sdk. Components can then be annotated with the `replaceComponent` decorator to have them be skinnable. The decorator must take a string with the dot path of the component because we can't reliably calculate it ourselves, sadly. The decorator does a call to `getComponent` which is where the important part of the branded components not including the react-sdk is important: if the branded app includes the react-sdk then the decorator gets executed before the skin has finished loading, leading to all kinds of fun errors. This is also why the skinner lazily loads the react-sdk components to avoid importing them too early, breaking the app. The decorator will end up receiving null for a component because of the getComponent loop mentioned: the require() call is still in progress when the decorator is called, therefore we can't error out. All usages of getComponent() within the app are safe to not need such an error (the return won't be null, and developers shouldn't use getComponent() after this commit anyways). The AuthPage, being a prominent component, has been converted to demonstrate this working. Changes to riot-web are required to have this work. The reskindex script has also been altered to reflect these skinning changes - it no longer should set the react-sdk as a parent. The eventual end goal is to get rid of `getComponent()` entirely as it'll be easily replaced by imports.
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const doLookup = (components) => {
if (!components) return null;
let comp = components[name];
// XXX: Temporarily also try 'views.' as we're currently
// leaving the 'views.' off views.
if (!comp) {
comp = components['views.' + name];
}
return comp;
};
// Check the skin first
let comp = doLookup(this.components);
// If that failed, check against our own components
if (!comp) {
Implementation of new potential skinning mechanism With a switch to Only One Webpack™ we need a way to help developers generate the component index without a concurrent watch task. The best way to do this is to have developers import their components, but how do they do that when we support skins? The answer in this commit is to change skinning. Skinning now expects to receive your list of overrides instead of the react-sdk+branded components. For Riot this means we send over *only* the Vector components and not Vector+react-sdk. Components can then be annotated with the `replaceComponent` decorator to have them be skinnable. The decorator must take a string with the dot path of the component because we can't reliably calculate it ourselves, sadly. The decorator does a call to `getComponent` which is where the important part of the branded components not including the react-sdk is important: if the branded app includes the react-sdk then the decorator gets executed before the skin has finished loading, leading to all kinds of fun errors. This is also why the skinner lazily loads the react-sdk components to avoid importing them too early, breaking the app. The decorator will end up receiving null for a component because of the getComponent loop mentioned: the require() call is still in progress when the decorator is called, therefore we can't error out. All usages of getComponent() within the app are safe to not need such an error (the return won't be null, and developers shouldn't use getComponent() after this commit anyways). The AuthPage, being a prominent component, has been converted to demonstrate this working. Changes to riot-web are required to have this work. The reskindex script has also been altered to reflect these skinning changes - it no longer should set the react-sdk as a parent. The eventual end goal is to get rid of `getComponent()` entirely as it'll be easily replaced by imports.
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// Lazily load our own components because they might end up calling .getComponent()
comp = doLookup(require("./component-index").components);
}
Implementation of new potential skinning mechanism With a switch to Only One Webpack™ we need a way to help developers generate the component index without a concurrent watch task. The best way to do this is to have developers import their components, but how do they do that when we support skins? The answer in this commit is to change skinning. Skinning now expects to receive your list of overrides instead of the react-sdk+branded components. For Riot this means we send over *only* the Vector components and not Vector+react-sdk. Components can then be annotated with the `replaceComponent` decorator to have them be skinnable. The decorator must take a string with the dot path of the component because we can't reliably calculate it ourselves, sadly. The decorator does a call to `getComponent` which is where the important part of the branded components not including the react-sdk is important: if the branded app includes the react-sdk then the decorator gets executed before the skin has finished loading, leading to all kinds of fun errors. This is also why the skinner lazily loads the react-sdk components to avoid importing them too early, breaking the app. The decorator will end up receiving null for a component because of the getComponent loop mentioned: the require() call is still in progress when the decorator is called, therefore we can't error out. All usages of getComponent() within the app are safe to not need such an error (the return won't be null, and developers shouldn't use getComponent() after this commit anyways). The AuthPage, being a prominent component, has been converted to demonstrate this working. Changes to riot-web are required to have this work. The reskindex script has also been altered to reflect these skinning changes - it no longer should set the react-sdk as a parent. The eventual end goal is to get rid of `getComponent()` entirely as it'll be easily replaced by imports.
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// Just return nothing instead of erroring - the consumer should be smart enough to
// handle this at this point.
if (!comp) {
Implementation of new potential skinning mechanism With a switch to Only One Webpack™ we need a way to help developers generate the component index without a concurrent watch task. The best way to do this is to have developers import their components, but how do they do that when we support skins? The answer in this commit is to change skinning. Skinning now expects to receive your list of overrides instead of the react-sdk+branded components. For Riot this means we send over *only* the Vector components and not Vector+react-sdk. Components can then be annotated with the `replaceComponent` decorator to have them be skinnable. The decorator must take a string with the dot path of the component because we can't reliably calculate it ourselves, sadly. The decorator does a call to `getComponent` which is where the important part of the branded components not including the react-sdk is important: if the branded app includes the react-sdk then the decorator gets executed before the skin has finished loading, leading to all kinds of fun errors. This is also why the skinner lazily loads the react-sdk components to avoid importing them too early, breaking the app. The decorator will end up receiving null for a component because of the getComponent loop mentioned: the require() call is still in progress when the decorator is called, therefore we can't error out. All usages of getComponent() within the app are safe to not need such an error (the return won't be null, and developers shouldn't use getComponent() after this commit anyways). The AuthPage, being a prominent component, has been converted to demonstrate this working. Changes to riot-web are required to have this work. The reskindex script has also been altered to reflect these skinning changes - it no longer should set the react-sdk as a parent. The eventual end goal is to get rid of `getComponent()` entirely as it'll be easily replaced by imports.
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return null;
}
// components have to be functions.
const validType = typeof comp === 'function';
if (!validType) {
throw new Error(`Not a valid component: ${name} (type = ${typeof(comp)}).`);
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}
return comp;
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}
load(skinObject) {
if (this.components !== null) {
throw new Error(
"Attempted to load a skin while a skin is already loaded"+
"If you want to change the active skin, call resetSkin first");
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}
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this.components = {};
const compKeys = Object.keys(skinObject.components);
for (let i = 0; i < compKeys.length; ++i) {
const comp = skinObject.components[compKeys[i]];
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this.addComponent(compKeys[i], comp);
}
}
addComponent(name, comp) {
let slot = name;
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if (comp.replaces !== undefined) {
if (comp.replaces.indexOf('.') > -1) {
slot = comp.replaces;
} else {
slot = name.substr(0, name.lastIndexOf('.') + 1) + comp.replaces.split('.').pop();
}
}
this.components[slot] = comp;
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}
reset() {
this.components = null;
}
}
// We define one Skinner globally, because the intention is
// very much that it is a singleton. Relying on there only being one
// copy of the module can be dicey and not work as browserify's
// behaviour with multiple copies of files etc. is erratic at best.
// XXX: We can still end up with the same file twice in the resulting
// JS bundle which is nonideal.
// See https://derickbailey.com/2016/03/09/creating-a-true-singleton-in-node-js-with-es6-symbols/
// or https://nodejs.org/api/modules.html#modules_module_caching_caveats
// ("Modules are cached based on their resolved filename")
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if (global.mxSkinner === undefined) {
global.mxSkinner = new Skinner();
}
export default global.mxSkinner;
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