Consequently, this removes:
- MOZ_LIBPRIO, which is now always enabled.
- non_msvc_compiler, which is now always true.
- The cl.py wrapper, since it's not used anymore.
- CL_INCLUDES_PREFIX, which was only used for the cl.py wrapper.
- NONASCII, which was only there to ensure CL_INCLUDES_PREFIX still
worked in non-ASCII cases.
This however keeps a large part of detecting and configuring for MSVC,
because we still do need it for at least headers, libraries, and midl.
Depends on D19614
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D19615
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Currently the [ref] and [ptr] types share the same underlying
implementation. This is unfortunate, and can cause correctness problems
with outparam refs (as an example).
By using the same tools used to allow other larger objects (such as
jsid, nsTArray, and nsString) to be stored directly in the nsXPTCVariant
object, this patch directly stores the nsID in the nsXPTCVariant object
when calling from JS into C++.
Using this new strategy avoids an nsID* allocation every time we pass
one over XPConnect, and should also allow us to simplify callers.
In addition, some special casing is added to xpidl to make it possible
to use the nsid reference type objects directly inside of Array<T>,
which will allow us to remove `[array] nsIIDPtr` callers.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D19175
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This commit hooks up nsFrameLoader in the child process to use the
PRemoteFrame protocol to support remote iframes. This is only activated
when a special pref is set, and the iframe has a marker attribute on it.
For example:
<iframe fission/>
In the future, we should unify nsFrameLoader to operate on a common
interface between the parent process top-level browser, and child
process subframe case. This commit just adds a new member that can
be used instead of mRemoteBrowser, when appropriate. IsRemoteFrame()
will return true for both cases.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D17444
--HG--
extra : source : e33b9de7283e5fb6441e118b25af8d4ac3411bf2
extra : intermediate-source : 697a9159e0d260118ee6ebd34948d187a8c5359f
Old Confluence does not aware of conflated model keypress event (see UI Events
spec, https://w3c.github.io/uievents/#determine-keypress-keyCode).
Additionally, Confluence can be hosted with any domains. Therefore, we cannot
use blacklist to disable the conflated model keypress event only on it.
This patch checks whether current or parent document is Confluence with JS
module, called KeyPressEventModelCheckerChild. For kicking this module,
nsHTMLDocument dispatches an custom event, CheckKeyPressEventModel, when it
becomes editable only first time. Finally, if it's a Confluence instance, the
module let PresShell know that we need to use split model keypress event in it.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D17907
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
We already take steps in `IndexOf` to avoid bounds checks--by using
direct pointer accesses--and we should do the same thing for binary
searches as well.
This changes the policy to use the pref and permissions rather than a boolean flag. Using permissions gets us proper settings on startup without introducing any new overhead. Going this way flips our tests around so rather than testing an override to turn off private browsing support, we test overrides to enable private browsing support.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D14482
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This patch removes the datetimebox binding and always use
UA Widget for the job.
Depends on D17571
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D17572
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This patch removes the XBL videocontrols binding and make <video>
to always use the UA Widget to generate controls.
DevTools tests that look for NAC is switched to use <input type=file>.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D17571
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This patch implements -moz-gtk-csd-hide-titlebar-by-default media query
to check if the system titlebar should be disabled by default on Linux systems
(it's already disabled on Window/Mac).
It also removes explicit definition of browser.tabs.drawInTitlebar preference on Linux.
When browser.tabs.drawInTitlebar is missing the -moz-gtk-csd-hide-titlebar-by-default
is used to obtain the titlebar state. When browser.tabs.drawInTitlebar is set
in about:config or by Customize menu, the user peference is used instead of the default.
It also fixes a -moz-gtk-csd-available media query,
it was always true regardless the actual system setting.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D16036
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
The VisualViewport events are all nice and shiny, but unfortunately not quite
what is needed for the session store.
Firstly, the spec wants the "scroll" event to be fired only when the *relative*
offset between visual and layout viewport changes. The session store however
records the absolute offset and as such is interested in when *that* changes.
Secondly, again as per the spec the events don't bubble, and with the default
DOMEventTargetHelper implementation they don't escape the VisualViewport during
capturing, either. This means that any event listener must be added directly on
the VisualViewport itself in order to capture any events.
This might have been intended because the events use the same names as the
normal "scroll"/"resize" events, and as such you cannot specify separate event
listeners for VisualViewport and non-VisualViewport "scroll" events if both
events end up being dispatched to the same element (you can only try to filter
after the fact by looking at the originalTarget of the event).
At the same time, the VisualViewport is attached to the inner Window, and so
each time you navigate, you also get a different VisualViewport object.
All of this might be totally fine from the perspective of a page script, because
in that case you won't care anyway about what happens when the current page goes
away.
From the session store perspective on the other hand (especially Fennec's non-
e10s session store design), this is rather unfortunate because we don't want to
have to keep registering event listeners
a) manually for each subframe
b) each time the page navigates
The event target chain problem could be solved by letting the scroll events
escape the VisualViewport during the capturing phase (which the spec doesn't say
anything about), but this would mean that any scroll listener attached to a
window/browser/... that uses capturing will now catch both layout and visual
viewport scroll events.
In some cases this might even be beneficial, but in others (e.g. bug 1498812
comment 21) I'd like to specifically decide which kind of scroll event to
capture. Having to look at event.originalTarget to distinguish the two kinds
might be defensible in test code, but in case this distinction would be needed
in production code as well, given the existence of a C++-based filtering helper
in nsSessionStoreUtils for another use case where (scroll) events need to be
filtered, JS-based scroll event filtering might be a bad idea.
Additionally, in any case this wouldn't solve the fundamental conflict between
the spec and the session store about *when* the "scroll" event should be fired
in the first place.
Hence I'd like to introduce a separate set of events with distinct event names,
which will be dispatched according to the requirements of our internal users
(i.e. currently the session store). To avoid potential web compatibility issues
down the road, for now these events will be dispatched only to event listeners
registered in the system group (allowing *all* Chrome event listeners cannot be
done because checking the Chrome status of each event target might be too
expensive for frequently dispatched events).
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D14046
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This is a best effort attempt at ensuring that the adverse impact of
reformatting the entire tree over the comments would be minimal. I've used a
combination of strategies including disabling of formatting, some manual
formatting and some changes to formatting to work around some clang-format
limitations.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D13371
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Clang format does not always reflow comments correctly to get them
within 80 columns.
The major categories of failures I have noticed in xpcom/ are:
- Comments that are lists. I fixed these by manually getting them so
they'll be within 80 columns after clang-format runs.
- Comments intermixed with lists of things like enums, initializers,
or even fields in a class. It doesn't seem to associate the comment
with the item in the list correctly. The worst cases of these happen
when it changes initializer lists from having commas at the start of
each item to having them at the end. In the initializer comma cases,
I fixed them by making the commas at the end, so clang-format won't
mix things up. For other cases, I often moved the comment for an
item onto its own line, because it was not possible to have both the
comment and the item on the same line and stay within 80 columns.
- One odd case is nsEnumeratorUtils.cpp, where the end of line comment
after a NS_DECL macro confused clang-format and made it stop
realizing that the NS_DECL thing was a complete statement. I also
added a blank line to that file before a declaration because I think
that is better.
Depends on D13183
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D13184
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Clang format makes this code look pretty bad, but I think it is safe
to just remove it.
Depends on D13182
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D13183
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
We're paying two function calls from Gecko_AddRefAtom /
Gecko_ReleaseAtom for no good reason, plus it's simple enough it's probably
worth to inline it anyway for C++ callers.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D12860
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
The core loop of Iterator::Next() requires multiple branches, one to
check for entry liveness and one to check for wraparound. We can
rewrite this to use masking instead, as well as iterating only over the
hashes, and reconstructing the entry pointer when we know we've reached
a live entry. This change cuts the time taken on the collections
benchmark by the iteration portion in half.
As discussed in the previous commit message, PLDHashTable's storage
wastes space for common entry types. This commit reorganizes the
storage to store all the hashes packed together, followed by all the
entries, which eliminates said waste.
PLDHashTable requires that all items stored therein inherit from
PLDHashEntryHdr:
struct PLDHashEntryHdr {
// PLDHashNumber is a uint32_t.
PLDHashNumber mKeyHash; // Cached hash key for object.
};
class MyType : public PLDHashEntryHdr {
// Data members, etc.
};
PLDHashEntryHdr::mKeyHash is used to cache the computed hash value of
the entry, so we aren't rehashing entries on every lookup/add/etc.
Because of structure layout requirements on 64-bit platforms, the data
members of MyType will typically start at offset 8:
MyType, offset 0: mKeyHash
MyType, offset 4: padding required by alignment
MyType, offset 8: first data member of MyType
MyType, offset N: ...
The padding at offset 4 is dead, unused space.
We'd like to change this state of affairs by having PLDHashTable manage
the cached hash key itself, which would eliminate the dead space in the
object and would enable packing the table storage more tightly. But
PLDHashTable pervasively assumes that its internal storage is an array
of PLDHashEntryHdrs (with an associated object size to account for
subclassing).
As a first step to laying out the hash table storage differently, we
have to make the internals of PLDHashTable not access PLDHashEntryHdr
items directly, but layer an abstraction on top. We call this
abstraction "slots": a slot represents storage for the cached hash key
and the associated entry, and can produce a PLDHashEntryHdr* on demand.
The only place where this is used where the const-ness matters is in
AddressEntry, and that use const_cast's away the const-ness. So let's
just ditch the method that attempts to return const pointers.
This change is satisfying insofar as it removes a load from every
iteration step over the hashtable, but it doesn't seem to affect
our collection benchmarks in any way. The change does not make
iterators any larger, as there is padding at the end of the iterator
structure on both 32- and 64-bit platforms.
This refactors the observer service code to improve readability, uses MOZ_TRY
and other checking macros wherever possible to simplify error handling and
replaces the ObserverRef class with the more generic nsMaybeWeakPtr class.
This cuts away some code and halves the amount of memory needed to store an
event listener. The external behavior is almost unchanged save for some error
codes which are now more specific.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D11646
--HG--
extra : source : 10d910aa9f31435116a718bafe8a2b71c61fe23d
We only use its value in one place, and said value is easily computable
from readily available information. This change makes iterators
slightly smaller.