once)
The local jwt token needs to be aquired via the right endpoint. The
endpoint defines how our rtcBackendIdentity is computed. Based on us
using sticky events or state events we also need to use the right
endpoint. This cannot be done generically in the connection manager. The
jwt token now is computed in the localTransport and the resolved sfu
config is passed to the connection manager.
Add JWT endpoint version and SFU config support Pin matrix-js-sdk to a
specific commit and update dev auth image tag. Propagate SFU config and
JWT endpoint choice through local transport, ConnectionManager and
Connection; add JwtEndpointVersion enum and LocalTransportWithSFUConfig
type. Add NO_MATRIX_2 auth error and locale string, thread
rtcBackendIdentity through UI props, and include related test, CSS and
minor imports updates
On second glance, the way that we determined a media tile to be 'waiting for media' was too implicit for my taste. It would appear on a surface reading to depend on whether a participant was currently publishing any video. But in reality, the 'video' object was always defined as long as a LiveKit participant existed, so in reality it depended on just the participant. We should show this relationship more explicitly by moving the computation into the view model, where it can depend on the participant directly.
Previously we had a ViewModel class which was responsible for little more than creating an ObservableScope. However, since this ObservableScope would be created implicitly upon view model construction, it became a tad bit harder for callers to remember to eventually end the scope (as you wouldn't just have to remember to end ObservableScopes, but also to destroy ViewModels). Requiring the scope to be specified explicitly by the caller also makes it possible for the caller to reuse the scope for other purposes, reducing the number of scopes mentally in flight that need tending to, and for all state holders (not just view models) to be handled uniformly by helper functions such as generateKeyed$.