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Framework; see mozilla/content/xtf/readme.txt. r=bryner, sr=jst. Code is not enabled by default (requires --enable-xtf configure option).
165 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
165 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
XTF: An eXtensible Tag Framework
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================================
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XTF allows you to extend Mozilla by implementing new XML elements in
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XPCOM modules. It is not a C++-version of XBL: XTF elements can be
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written in any XPCOM-compatible language. I myself tend to write most
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elements in JavaScript.
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XTF support needs to be explicitly switched on for Mozilla builds by
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specifying the configure option '--enable-xtf' (add "ac_add_options
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--enabl-xtf" to your .mozconfig).
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To serve a particular namespace "urn:mycompany:mynamespace" with your
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own XTF elements, create an XPCOM component that implements the
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interface nsIXTFElementFactory, and register it with the component
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manager under the contract id
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"@mozilla.org/xtf/element-factory;1?namespace=urn:mycompany:mynamespace".
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Whenever Mozilla encounters a tag in your namespace it will call your
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factory's 'createElement()' function. This function should either
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return a new xtf element (an object implementing 'nsIXTFElement' and
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some other interfaces, depending on type and required features), or
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'null'. In the later case, the implementation will build a generic XML
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element.
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All interfaces relevant to XTF factory modules and XTF elements can be
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found in mozilla/content/xtf/public/. The implementation code itself
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is mainly spread over the directories mozilla/content/xtf/ and
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mozilla/layout/xtf/.
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Binding outermost elements (document elements)
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==============================================
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Binding of outermost elements is not (yet) supported. Depending on
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what you use xtf elements for, this might or might not be a
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problem. If you use xtf to implement a whole new language, rather than
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just widgets that will get used in html, xul, or svg docs, then you'll
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probably want to wrap up your documents in an xml element for which
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you provide some style (e.g. via a ua style sheet), so that things get
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displayed instead of pretty printed. This outermost element can be in
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your xtf-served namespace, as long as your xtf factory returns a
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failure for this element's tagname. The implementation will then
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generate a generic XML element for this element.
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XTF and XUL
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===========
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When using XTF elements in XUL documents, note that the owner document
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(both wrapper.ownerDocument & wrapper.elementNode.ownerDocument) will
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be null at the time of the onCreated() call. (For XML and SVG
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documents, at least wrapper.ownerDocument should be non-null.) This
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is unfortunate, since it is often advantageous to build the visual
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content tree at the time of the onCreated() call and not wait until
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the visual content is explicitly requested, so that attributes set on
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the xtf element can be mapped directly to elements in the visual
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content tree. It is possible to build the content tree using a
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different document than the ultimate target document, but this in turn
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leads to some subtleties with XBL-bound content - see below.
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XTF and XBL
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===========
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XTF elements generally behave well in conjunction with XBL. There are
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a few issues when using XBL-bound elements in an XTFVisual's
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visualContent that arise from the fact that XBL bindings are attached
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to elements at layout-time rather than content-tree contruction time:
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Accessing an XBL-bound element's interfaces or JS object before
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layout-time usually doesn't yield the expected result. E.g. a listbox
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won't have the members 'appendItem', 'clearSelection', etc. before
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layout-time, even if QI'ed for nsIDOMXULMenuListElement. Worse, if the
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visual content has been constructed in a different document (because
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the target doc wasn't available at the time of content tree
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construction time - see above), then the JS object obtained before
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layout time will be different to the one that will ultimately receive
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the bound implementation, i.e. even QI'ing at a later stage will
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fail. To work around these issues, XBL-bound content should a) either
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be build as late as possible (i.e. when requested by the wrapper with
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a call to nsIXTFVisual::GetVisualContent()) or b) if this is not a
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possibility (e.g. because you would like to map attributes directly
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into the visual content tree), all JS object references to the element
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should be re-resolved at the time of the first layout (listen in to
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DidLayout() notifications).
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Bugs
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====
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1.
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For xtf elements written in JS (and possibly C++ as well),
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constructing a visual's visualContent using the same document as the
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visual's leads to some nasty reference cycle which prevents the
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wrapper, inner xtf element, anonymous content and possibly the whole
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document from ever getting destroyed. A workaround is to construct the
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visualContent in a different document (e.g. setting the document in
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nsXMLContentBuilder to null, or not setting the document at all, will
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lead to new content being build in a new temporary document).
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2.
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XBL-bound elements behave strangely if *any* XUL content underneath
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them is accessed from JS too early.
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Example:
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<groupbox>
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<caption><xtf:foo/></caption>
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<label value="label text"/>
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</groupbox>
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If the JS-implemented xtf element 'foo' accesses any xul content
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before it receives the 'didLayout' notification, the groupbox will not
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be properly build (it will not contain the label text). 'Accessing xul
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content' includes any operation that leads to a js wrapper being
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constructed for a xul element. E.g. if the xtf element listens in to
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parentChanged-notifications, a wrapper will be build for the
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notification's 'parent' parameter and groupbox construction
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mysteriously fails.
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3.
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Some XUL interfaces can't be used via XPCOM and thus might not work as
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expected. E.g. menulist's
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nsIDOMXULSelectControlElement::insertItemAt() is supposed to return an
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element of type nsIDOMXULSelectControlItemElement. However, since
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menulist's XBL implementation of insertItemAt creates a xul element
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which will only be bound when the next asynchronous layout occurs,
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QI'ing to nsIDOMXULSelectControlItemElement fails. The result is that
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the method call always fails when invoked through XPCOM. A pragmatic
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solution would be to change the XUL interface signatures to return
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nsIDOMXULElement instead of nsIDOMXULSelectControlItemElement.
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4.
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QI'ing a JS-implemented xtf element's wrapper from JS as in
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element.QueryInterface(Components.interface.nsIXTFPrivate);
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occasionally hits the assertion
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###!!! ASSERTION: tearoff not empty in dtor:
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'!(GetInterface()||GetNative()||GetJSObject())',
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file /home/alex/devel/mozilla/js/src/xpconnect/src/xpcinlines.h, line 627
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with the result that the QI succeeds (i.e. doesn't throw an exception)
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but the interface methods/properties aren't available on the element
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after the QI, even though element implements the given interface.
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This seems to happen if GC kicks in *afer* the xtf element is being
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queried for its interface ( resulting in the creation of an
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nsXTFInterfaceAggregator) but *before* the nsXTFInterfaceAggregator
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has been wrapped for JS use by XPCConvert::NativeData2JS().
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The workaround is to a) either expose the interface via
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getScriptingInterfaces (in which case it will be available to JS
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callers automatically), or b) call QI until the interface is correctly
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installed, e.g.:
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while (!element.inner)
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element.QueryInterface(Components.interface.nsIXTFPrivate);
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With this code the QI should succeed in the first or second iteration.
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07. October 2004 Alex Fritze <alex@croczilla.com>
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