Ei kuvausta

Custom-iOS.md 8.3KB

NOTE: This document was imported from the original WebView documentation. While it may prove useful, it has not been adapted to React Native WebView yet.

While the built-in web view has a lot of features, it is not possible to handle every use-case in React Native. You can, however, extend the web view with native code without forking React Native or duplicating all the existing web view code.

Before you do this, you should be familiar with the concepts in native UI components. You should also familiarise yourself with the native code for web views, as you will have to use this as a reference when implementing new features—although a deep understanding is not required.

Native Code

Like for regular native components, you need a view manager and an web view.

For the view, you’ll need to make a subclass of RCTWebView.

// RCTCustomWebView.h
#import <React/RCTWebView.h>

@interface RCTCustomWebView : RCTWebView

@end

// RCTCustomWebView.m
#import "RCTCustomWebView.h"

@interface RCTCustomWebView ()

@end

@implementation RCTCustomWebView { }

@end

For the view manager, you need to make a subclass RCTWebViewManager. You must still include:

  • (UIView *)view that returns your custom view
  • The RCT_EXPORT_MODULE() tag
// RCTCustomWebViewManager.h
#import <React/RCTWebViewManager.h>

@interface RCTCustomWebViewManager : RCTWebViewManager

@end

// RCTCustomWebViewManager.m
#import "RCTCustomWebViewManager.h"
#import "RCTCustomWebView.h"

@interface RCTCustomWebViewManager () <RCTWebViewDelegate>

@end

@implementation RCTCustomWebViewManager { }

RCT_EXPORT_MODULE()

- (UIView *)view
{
  RCTCustomWebView *webView = [RCTCustomWebView new];
  webView.delegate = self;
  return webView;
}

@end

Adding New Events and Properties

Adding new properties and events is the same as regular UI components. For properties, you define an @property in the header. For events, you define a RCTDirectEventBlock in the view’s @interface.

// RCTCustomWebView.h
@property (nonatomic, copy) NSString *finalUrl;

// RCTCustomWebView.m
@interface RCTCustomWebView ()

@property (nonatomic, copy) RCTDirectEventBlock onNavigationCompleted;

@end

Then expose it in the view manager’s @implementation.

// RCTCustomWebViewManager.m
RCT_EXPORT_VIEW_PROPERTY(onNavigationCompleted, RCTDirectEventBlock)
RCT_EXPORT_VIEW_PROPERTY(finalUrl, NSString)

Extending Existing Events

You should refer to RCTWebView.m in the React Native codebase to see what handlers are available and how they are implemented. You can extend any methods here to provide extra functionality.

By default, most methods aren’t exposed from RCTWebView. If you need to expose them, you need to create an Objective C category, and then expose all the methods you need to use.

// RCTWebView+Custom.h
#import <React/RCTWebView.h>

@interface RCTWebView (Custom)
- (BOOL)webView:(__unused UIWebView *)webView shouldStartLoadWithRequest:(NSURLRequest *)request navigationType:(UIWebViewNavigationType)navigationType;
- (NSMutableDictionary<NSString *, id> *)baseEvent;
@end

Once these are exposed, you can reference them in your custom web view class.

// RCTCustomWebView.m

// Remember to import the category file.
#import "RCTWebView+Custom.h"

- (BOOL)webView:(__unused UIWebView *)webView shouldStartLoadWithRequest:(NSURLRequest *)request
 navigationType:(UIWebViewNavigationType)navigationType
{
  BOOL allowed = [super webView:webView shouldStartLoadWithRequest:request navigationType:navigationType];

  if (allowed) {
    NSString* url = request.URL.absoluteString;
    if (url && [url isEqualToString:_finalUrl]) {
      if (_onNavigationCompleted) {
        NSMutableDictionary<NSString *, id> *event = [self baseEvent];
        _onNavigationCompleted(event);
      }
    }
  }

  return allowed;
}

Setting Client Certificate Authentication Credential

If you open webpages that needs a Client Certificate for Authentication, you can create a credential and pass it to the webview:

[RNCWKWebView setClientAuthenticationCredential:credential];

This can be paired with a call from Javascript to pass a string label for the certificate stored in keychain and use native calls to fetch the certificate to create a credential object. This call can be made anywhere that makes sense for your application (e.g. as part of the user authentication stack). The only requirement is to make this call before displaying any webviews.

JavaScript Interface

To use your custom web view, you’ll need to create a class for it. Your class must:

  • Export all the prop types from WebView.propTypes
  • Return a WebView component with the prop nativeConfig.component set to your native component (see below)

To get your native component, you must use requireNativeComponent: the same as for regular custom components. However, you must pass in an extra third argument, WebView.extraNativeComponentConfig. This third argument contains prop types that are only required for native code.

import React, {Component, PropTypes} from 'react';
import {WebView, requireNativeComponent, NativeModules} from 'react-native';
const {CustomWebViewManager} = NativeModules;

export default class CustomWebView extends Component {
  static propTypes = WebView.propTypes;

  render() {
    return (
      <WebView
        {...this.props}
        nativeConfig={{
          component: RCTCustomWebView,
          viewManager: CustomWebViewManager,
        }}
      />
    );
  }
}

const RCTCustomWebView = requireNativeComponent(
  'RCTCustomWebView',
  CustomWebView,
  WebView.extraNativeComponentConfig
);

If you want to add custom props to your native component, you can use nativeConfig.props on the web view. For iOS, you should also set the nativeConfig.viewManager prop with your custom WebView ViewManager as in the example above.

For events, the event handler must always be set to a function. This means it isn’t safe to use the event handler directly from this.props, as the user might not have provided one. The standard approach is to create a event handler in your class, and then invoking the event handler given in this.props if it exists.

If you are unsure how something should be implemented from the JS side, look at WebView.ios.js in the React Native source.

export default class CustomWebView extends Component {
  static propTypes = {
    ...WebView.propTypes,
    finalUrl: PropTypes.string,
    onNavigationCompleted: PropTypes.func,
  };

  static defaultProps = {
    finalUrl: 'about:blank',
  };

  _onNavigationCompleted = (event) => {
    const {onNavigationCompleted} = this.props;
    onNavigationCompleted && onNavigationCompleted(event);
  };

  render() {
    return (
      <WebView
        {...this.props}
        nativeConfig={{
          component: RCTCustomWebView,
          props: {
            finalUrl: this.props.finalUrl,
            onNavigationCompleted: this._onNavigationCompleted,
          },
          viewManager: CustomWebViewManager,
        }}
      />
    );
  }
}

Just like for regular native components, you must provide all your prop types in the component to have them forwarded on to the native component. However, if you have some prop types that are only used internally in component, you can add them to the nativeOnly property of the third argument previously mentioned. For event handlers, you have to use the value true instead of a regular prop type.

For example, if you wanted to add an internal event handler called onScrollToBottom, you would use,

const RCTCustomWebView = requireNativeComponent(
  'RCTCustomWebView',
  CustomWebView,
  {
    ...WebView.extraNativeComponentConfig,
    nativeOnly: {
      ...WebView.extraNativeComponentConfig.nativeOnly,
      onScrollToBottom: true,
    },
  }
);