Imports are optimized to be concurrent/async by webpack, which means that when the old index.js referenced the Lifecycle from the react-sdk it caused the app to explode. This is because in another branch the Lifecycle references a class member of a skinnable component, leading to the skinner complaining that the skin hasn't been loaded.
To work around this, we've shoved all the app stuff to a new app.js file, leaving just the skinning and some early bootstrap work in the index.js
This will have done its job now, everyone's had long enough to
install a newer version of Riot and migrate to the new origin.
Laves the code on the backend that handles it for the time being,
as per comment.
Following on from https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-react-sdk/pull/3637
this removes the code dealing with themes in vector/index.js and uses the
code from react-sdk. The two did almost exactly the same thing but in
subtley different ways.
This code can be incredibly subtle though, so doing this a separate
PR.
A thesis presented in two parts. This part has the absolute minimum
logic changes to the themeing code in vector/index.js because I know
how subtle and fragile this code is. However, it also looks like it's
completely duplicated from react-sdk, so in the next part I'm going
to remove that logic and make it use the logic in react-sdk, then we
can see what breaks.
Requires https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-react-sdk/pull/3637
in Electron get config via IPC from main process
which has access to the "local" config.json override file
and can make people happy :D
Remove bunch of duplicated code,
and move comments around to put them in the right place
Signed-off-by: Michael Telatynski <7t3chguy@gmail.com>
Implements the process described here: https://github.com/vector-im/riot-web/issues/9290#issuecomment-481966910
The expectation is that later layers (like the react-sdk) will make use of the `validated_discovery_config` option instead of interpreting the config themselves.
We intentionally block the UI from loading here to avoid races between discovery and the app loading.
App checks at startup for an existing session, if there isn't one,
it will start the tool to check for a login in the file:// origin.
If there is one, it will copy the login over to the vector://vector
origin.
In principle this could also be used to migrate logins between
other origins on the web if this were ever required.
This includes a minified copy of the browserified js-sdk with
a getAllEndToEndSessions() function added to the crypto store
(https://github.com/matrix-org/matrix-js-sdk/pull/812). This is
not great, but for a short-lived tool this seems better than
introducing more entry points into webpack only used for the
electron app.
Looks like this was broken in the webpack 4 upgrade due to the
worker script setter and the bundle being re-ordered in index.html.
* Remove the loop: we only use two scripts now, so import them
explicitly
* Remove outdated olm import code.
* Stop generating a script import for each theme: we were pulling
in 3 js files that did absolutely nothing.
* Fix worker 'onmessage' scope (set it as a global rather than
trying to make it an ES6 module which it isn't).
* Fail hard if the indexeddb worker script isn't set to avoid
this happening again.
Looks like this was broken in the webpack 4 upgrade due to the
worker script setter and the bundle being re-ordered in index.html.
* Remove the loop: we only use two scripts now, so import them
explicitly
* Remove outdated olm import code.
* Stop generating a script import for each theme: we were pulling
in 3 js files that did absolutely nothing.
* Fix worker 'onmessage' scope (set it as a global rather than
trying to make it an ES6 module which it isn't).
* Fail hard if the indexeddb worker script isn't set to avoid
this happening again.
* Turn off node integration in the electron renderer process
* Enable the chromium sandbox to put the renderer into its own process
* Expose just the ipc module with a preload script
* Introduce a little IPC call wrapper so we can call into the
renderer process and await on the result.
* Use this in a bunch of places we previously used direct calls
to electron modules.
* Convert other uses of node, eg. use of process to derive the
platform (just look at the user agent)
* Strip out the desktopCapturer integration which doesn't appear
to have ever worked (probably best to just wait until
getDisplayMedia() is available in chrome at this point:
https://github.com/vector-im/riot-web/issues/4880).