Taylor Brandstetter 32eb03a1fb Get rid of NetworkMonitorBase helper class.
All it provides is a method to call a signal on the network thread,
so it's not worth the added complexity. Implementations of
NetworkMonitorInterface must hop to the network thread anyway to
guard their members.

Also added some thread annotations to AndroidNetworkMonitor.

Bug: webrtc:9883
Change-Id: I64bb82ea593433f3a52871dbb75eb2ac4f47d69c
Reviewed-on: https://webrtc-review.googlesource.com/c/src/+/181420
Commit-Queue: Taylor <deadbeef@webrtc.org>
Reviewed-by: Anders Carlsson <andersc@webrtc.org>
Reviewed-by: Karl Wiberg <kwiberg@webrtc.org>
Reviewed-by: Sami Kalliomäki <sakal@webrtc.org>
Cr-Commit-Position: refs/heads/master@{#32087}
2020-09-11 18:22:14 +00:00
..
2020-02-19 13:37:36 +00:00
2017-09-15 04:25:06 +00:00
2018-03-01 20:22:48 +00:00

This directory holds a Java implementation of the webrtc::PeerConnection API, as
well as the JNI glue C++ code that lets the Java implementation reuse the C++
implementation of the same API.

To build the Java API and related tests, make sure you have a WebRTC checkout
with Android specific parts. This can be used for linux development as well by
configuring gn appropriately, as it is a superset of the webrtc checkout:
fetch --nohooks webrtc_android
gclient sync

You also must generate GN projects with:
--args='target_os="android" target_cpu="arm"'

More information on getting the code, compiling and running the AppRTCMobile
app can be found at:
https://webrtc.org/native-code/android/

To use the Java API, start by looking at the public interface of
org.webrtc.PeerConnection{,Factory} and the org.webrtc.PeerConnectionTest.

To understand the implementation of the API, see the native code in src/jni/pc/.