JSC wasn't the cause for the crash we were hunting after all. RN doesn't set
HErmes as the default, neither does Expo, so the jury is still out on Hermes,
and it looks like JSC is still the safest bet.
In addition, the way Hermes is packaged (as a standalone AARs, instead of a
local "Maven repo") complicates the SDK build and can make the resulting build
bloated.
This is done at the app level, not the SDK.
Currently 2 Firebase services are used:
- Crashlytics
- Dynamic Links
They are enabled in tandem, if the appropriate Google services file
(GoogleService-Info.plist on iOS or google-services.json on Android) is found.
Each service needs to be individually enabled in the Firebase console.
Note that Android 9 Pie (API 28) disallows HTTP requests by default, so an
exception was needed in the app in order for the Metro bundler to work in debug
mode.
Glide (which is used by react-native-fast-image) can cause trouble if the host
app (the one using the SDK) is using Glide already.
To avoid this, don't use the builtin AppGlideModule (as the docs recommend) and
let apps define it.
The JSC version used by React Native is about 3 years old, and doesn't implement
things like Symbol or Typed Arrays, which require polyfills. These polyfills are
sometimes a los less performant, as is the case for Typed Arrays.
Bumping an updated JSC version makes both platforms consistent when it comes to
the JavaScript platform.
[Android] Make sure we use the react-native version in node_modules
Releases are also published to jcenter, and due to how the dependency is
declared, we are picking the latest release from there, which is arguably not
what we want.
Android Studio won't build the app otherwise. Since the gradle plugin 3.0 beta7,
the minimum supported build tools version is 26.0.2, so set it to that. Also
bump compileSdkVersion to 26 since they need to match (in the major number, that
is).
The target API is still 25. Android Oreo (26) brought some changes in overlay
permissions which I haven't figured out yet.