gecko-dev/ipc/mscom/Interceptor.cpp

444 строки
13 KiB
C++
Исходник Обычный вид История

/* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 8; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- */
/* vim: set ts=8 sts=2 et sw=2 tw=80: */
/* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
* License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
* file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */
#define INITGUID
#include "mozilla/Move.h"
#include "mozilla/mscom/DispatchForwarder.h"
#include "mozilla/mscom/Interceptor.h"
#include "mozilla/mscom/InterceptorLog.h"
#include "mozilla/mscom/MainThreadInvoker.h"
#include "mozilla/mscom/Registration.h"
#include "mozilla/mscom/Utils.h"
#include "MainThreadUtils.h"
#include "mozilla/Assertions.h"
#include "mozilla/DebugOnly.h"
#include "nsDirectoryServiceDefs.h"
#include "nsDirectoryServiceUtils.h"
#include "nsThreadUtils.h"
namespace mozilla {
namespace mscom {
/* static */ HRESULT
Interceptor::Create(STAUniquePtr<IUnknown> aTarget, IInterceptorSink* aSink,
REFIID aIid, void** aOutput)
{
MOZ_ASSERT(aOutput && aTarget && aSink);
if (!aOutput) {
return E_INVALIDARG;
}
*aOutput = nullptr;
if (!aTarget || !aSink) {
return E_INVALIDARG;
}
RefPtr<WeakReferenceSupport> intcpt(new Interceptor(Move(aTarget), aSink));
return intcpt->QueryInterface(aIid, aOutput);
}
Interceptor::Interceptor(STAUniquePtr<IUnknown> aTarget, IInterceptorSink* aSink)
: WeakReferenceSupport(WeakReferenceSupport::Flags::eDestroyOnMainThread)
, mTarget(Move(aTarget))
, mEventSink(aSink)
, mMutex("mozilla::mscom::Interceptor::mMutex")
, mStdMarshal(nullptr)
{
MOZ_ASSERT(aSink);
MOZ_ASSERT(!IsProxy(mTarget.get()));
RefPtr<IWeakReference> weakRef;
if (SUCCEEDED(GetWeakReference(getter_AddRefs(weakRef)))) {
aSink->SetInterceptor(weakRef);
}
}
Interceptor::~Interceptor()
{
// This needs to run on the main thread because it releases target interface
// reference counts which may not be thread-safe.
MOZ_ASSERT(NS_IsMainThread());
for (uint32_t index = 0, len = mInterceptorMap.Length(); index < len; ++index) {
MapEntry& entry = mInterceptorMap[index];
entry.mInterceptor = nullptr;
entry.mTargetInterface->Release();
}
}
HRESULT
Interceptor::GetClassForHandler(DWORD aDestContext, void* aDestContextPtr,
CLSID* aHandlerClsid)
{
if (aDestContextPtr || !aHandlerClsid ||
aDestContext == MSHCTX_DIFFERENTMACHINE) {
return E_INVALIDARG;
}
MOZ_ASSERT(mEventSink);
Bug 1303060: Changes to a11y to enable the serving of a COM handler; r=tbsaunde MozReview-Commit-ID: GTQF3x1pBtX A general outline of the COM handler (a.k.a. the "smart proxy"): COM handlers are pieces of code that are loaded by the COM runtime along with a proxy and are layered above that proxy. This enables the COM handler to interpose itself between the caller and the proxy, thus providing the opportunity for the handler to manipulate an interface's method calls before those calls reach the proxy. Handlers are regular COM components that live in DLLs and are declared in the Windows registry. In order to allow for the specifying of a handler (and an optional payload to be sent with the proxy), the mscom library allows its clients to specify an implementation of the IHandlerProvider interface. IHandlerProvider consists of 5 functions: * GetHandler returns the CLSID of the component that should be loaded into the COM client's process. If GetHandler returns a failure code, then no handler is loaded. * GetHandlerPayloadSize and WriteHandlerPayload are for obtaining the payload data. These calls are made on a background thread but need to do their work on the main thread. We declare the payload struct in IDL. MIDL generates two functions, IA2Payload_Encode and IA2Payload_Decode, which are used by mscom::StructToStream to read and write that struct to and from buffers. * The a11y payload struct also includes an interface, IGeckoBackChannel, that allows the handler to communicate directly with Gecko. IGeckoBackChannel currently provides two methods: one to allow the handler to request fresh cache information, and the other to provide Gecko with its IHandlerControl interface. * MarshalAs accepts an IID that specifies the interface that is about to be proxied. We may want to send a more sophisticated proxy than the one that is requested. The desired IID is returned by this function. In the case of a11y interfaces, we should always return IAccessible2_3 if we are asked for one of its parent interfaces. This allows us to eliminate round trips to resolve more sophisticated interfaces later on. * NewInstance, which is needed to ensure that all descendent proxies are also imbued with the same handler code. The main focus of this patch is as follows: 1. Provide an implementation of the IHandlerProvider interface; 2. Populate the handler payload (ie, the cache) with data; 3. Modify CreateHolderFromAccessible to specify the HandlerPayload object; 4. Receive the IHandlerControl interface from the handler DLL and move it into the chrome process. Some more information about IHandlerControl: There is one IHandlerControl per handler DLL instance. It is the interface that we call in Gecko when we need to dispatch an event to the handler. In order to ensure that events are dispatched in the correct order, we need to dispatch those events from the chrome main thread so that they occur in sequential order with calls to NotifyWinEvent. --HG-- extra : rebase_source : acb44dead7cc5488424720e1bf58862b7b30374f
2017-04-05 00:23:55 +03:00
return mEventSink->GetHandler(WrapNotNull(aHandlerClsid));
}
HRESULT
Interceptor::GetUnmarshalClass(REFIID riid, void* pv, DWORD dwDestContext,
void* pvDestContext, DWORD mshlflags,
CLSID* pCid)
{
return mStdMarshal->GetUnmarshalClass(riid, pv, dwDestContext, pvDestContext,
mshlflags, pCid);
}
HRESULT
Interceptor::GetMarshalSizeMax(REFIID riid, void* pv, DWORD dwDestContext,
void* pvDestContext, DWORD mshlflags,
DWORD* pSize)
{
HRESULT hr = mStdMarshal->GetMarshalSizeMax(riid, pv, dwDestContext,
pvDestContext, mshlflags, pSize);
if (FAILED(hr)) {
return hr;
}
DWORD payloadSize = 0;
Bug 1303060: Changes to a11y to enable the serving of a COM handler; r=tbsaunde MozReview-Commit-ID: GTQF3x1pBtX A general outline of the COM handler (a.k.a. the "smart proxy"): COM handlers are pieces of code that are loaded by the COM runtime along with a proxy and are layered above that proxy. This enables the COM handler to interpose itself between the caller and the proxy, thus providing the opportunity for the handler to manipulate an interface's method calls before those calls reach the proxy. Handlers are regular COM components that live in DLLs and are declared in the Windows registry. In order to allow for the specifying of a handler (and an optional payload to be sent with the proxy), the mscom library allows its clients to specify an implementation of the IHandlerProvider interface. IHandlerProvider consists of 5 functions: * GetHandler returns the CLSID of the component that should be loaded into the COM client's process. If GetHandler returns a failure code, then no handler is loaded. * GetHandlerPayloadSize and WriteHandlerPayload are for obtaining the payload data. These calls are made on a background thread but need to do their work on the main thread. We declare the payload struct in IDL. MIDL generates two functions, IA2Payload_Encode and IA2Payload_Decode, which are used by mscom::StructToStream to read and write that struct to and from buffers. * The a11y payload struct also includes an interface, IGeckoBackChannel, that allows the handler to communicate directly with Gecko. IGeckoBackChannel currently provides two methods: one to allow the handler to request fresh cache information, and the other to provide Gecko with its IHandlerControl interface. * MarshalAs accepts an IID that specifies the interface that is about to be proxied. We may want to send a more sophisticated proxy than the one that is requested. The desired IID is returned by this function. In the case of a11y interfaces, we should always return IAccessible2_3 if we are asked for one of its parent interfaces. This allows us to eliminate round trips to resolve more sophisticated interfaces later on. * NewInstance, which is needed to ensure that all descendent proxies are also imbued with the same handler code. The main focus of this patch is as follows: 1. Provide an implementation of the IHandlerProvider interface; 2. Populate the handler payload (ie, the cache) with data; 3. Modify CreateHolderFromAccessible to specify the HandlerPayload object; 4. Receive the IHandlerControl interface from the handler DLL and move it into the chrome process. Some more information about IHandlerControl: There is one IHandlerControl per handler DLL instance. It is the interface that we call in Gecko when we need to dispatch an event to the handler. In order to ensure that events are dispatched in the correct order, we need to dispatch those events from the chrome main thread so that they occur in sequential order with calls to NotifyWinEvent. --HG-- extra : rebase_source : acb44dead7cc5488424720e1bf58862b7b30374f
2017-04-05 00:23:55 +03:00
hr = mEventSink->GetHandlerPayloadSize(WrapNotNull(&payloadSize));
*pSize += payloadSize;
return hr;
}
HRESULT
Interceptor::MarshalInterface(IStream* pStm, REFIID riid, void* pv,
DWORD dwDestContext, void* pvDestContext,
DWORD mshlflags)
{
HRESULT hr = mStdMarshal->MarshalInterface(pStm, riid, pv, dwDestContext,
pvDestContext, mshlflags);
if (FAILED(hr)) {
return hr;
}
Bug 1303060: Changes to a11y to enable the serving of a COM handler; r=tbsaunde MozReview-Commit-ID: GTQF3x1pBtX A general outline of the COM handler (a.k.a. the "smart proxy"): COM handlers are pieces of code that are loaded by the COM runtime along with a proxy and are layered above that proxy. This enables the COM handler to interpose itself between the caller and the proxy, thus providing the opportunity for the handler to manipulate an interface's method calls before those calls reach the proxy. Handlers are regular COM components that live in DLLs and are declared in the Windows registry. In order to allow for the specifying of a handler (and an optional payload to be sent with the proxy), the mscom library allows its clients to specify an implementation of the IHandlerProvider interface. IHandlerProvider consists of 5 functions: * GetHandler returns the CLSID of the component that should be loaded into the COM client's process. If GetHandler returns a failure code, then no handler is loaded. * GetHandlerPayloadSize and WriteHandlerPayload are for obtaining the payload data. These calls are made on a background thread but need to do their work on the main thread. We declare the payload struct in IDL. MIDL generates two functions, IA2Payload_Encode and IA2Payload_Decode, which are used by mscom::StructToStream to read and write that struct to and from buffers. * The a11y payload struct also includes an interface, IGeckoBackChannel, that allows the handler to communicate directly with Gecko. IGeckoBackChannel currently provides two methods: one to allow the handler to request fresh cache information, and the other to provide Gecko with its IHandlerControl interface. * MarshalAs accepts an IID that specifies the interface that is about to be proxied. We may want to send a more sophisticated proxy than the one that is requested. The desired IID is returned by this function. In the case of a11y interfaces, we should always return IAccessible2_3 if we are asked for one of its parent interfaces. This allows us to eliminate round trips to resolve more sophisticated interfaces later on. * NewInstance, which is needed to ensure that all descendent proxies are also imbued with the same handler code. The main focus of this patch is as follows: 1. Provide an implementation of the IHandlerProvider interface; 2. Populate the handler payload (ie, the cache) with data; 3. Modify CreateHolderFromAccessible to specify the HandlerPayload object; 4. Receive the IHandlerControl interface from the handler DLL and move it into the chrome process. Some more information about IHandlerControl: There is one IHandlerControl per handler DLL instance. It is the interface that we call in Gecko when we need to dispatch an event to the handler. In order to ensure that events are dispatched in the correct order, we need to dispatch those events from the chrome main thread so that they occur in sequential order with calls to NotifyWinEvent. --HG-- extra : rebase_source : acb44dead7cc5488424720e1bf58862b7b30374f
2017-04-05 00:23:55 +03:00
return mEventSink->WriteHandlerPayload(WrapNotNull(pStm));
}
HRESULT
Interceptor::UnmarshalInterface(IStream* pStm, REFIID riid,
void** ppv)
{
return mStdMarshal->UnmarshalInterface(pStm, riid, ppv);
}
HRESULT
Interceptor::ReleaseMarshalData(IStream* pStm)
{
return mStdMarshal->ReleaseMarshalData(pStm);
}
HRESULT
Interceptor::DisconnectObject(DWORD dwReserved)
{
return mStdMarshal->DisconnectObject(dwReserved);
}
Interceptor::MapEntry*
Interceptor::Lookup(REFIID aIid)
{
mMutex.AssertCurrentThreadOwns();
for (uint32_t index = 0, len = mInterceptorMap.Length(); index < len; ++index) {
if (mInterceptorMap[index].mIID == aIid) {
return &mInterceptorMap[index];
}
}
return nullptr;
}
HRESULT
Interceptor::GetTargetForIID(REFIID aIid,
InterceptorTargetPtr<IUnknown>& aTarget)
{
MutexAutoLock lock(mMutex);
MapEntry* entry = Lookup(aIid);
if (entry) {
aTarget.reset(entry->mTargetInterface);
return S_OK;
}
return E_NOINTERFACE;
}
// CoGetInterceptor requires type metadata to be able to generate its emulated
// vtable. If no registered metadata is available, CoGetInterceptor returns
// kFileNotFound.
static const HRESULT kFileNotFound = HRESULT_FROM_WIN32(ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND);
HRESULT
Interceptor::CreateInterceptor(REFIID aIid, IUnknown* aOuter, IUnknown** aOutput)
{
// In order to aggregate, we *must* request IID_IUnknown as the initial
// interface for the interceptor, as that IUnknown is non-delegating.
// This is a fundamental rule for creating aggregated objects in COM.
HRESULT hr = ::CoGetInterceptor(aIid, aOuter, IID_IUnknown, (void**)aOutput);
if (hr != kFileNotFound) {
return hr;
}
// In the case that CoGetInterceptor returns kFileNotFound, we can try to
// explicitly load typelib data from our runtime registration facility and
// pass that into CoGetInterceptorFromTypeInfo.
RefPtr<ITypeInfo> typeInfo;
bool found = RegisteredProxy::Find(aIid, getter_AddRefs(typeInfo));
// If this assert fires then we have omitted registering the typelib for a
// required interface. To fix this, review our calls to mscom::RegisterProxy
// and mscom::RegisterTypelib, and add the additional typelib as necessary.
MOZ_ASSERT(found);
if (!found) {
return kFileNotFound;
}
hr = ::CoGetInterceptorFromTypeInfo(aIid, aOuter, typeInfo, IID_IUnknown,
(void**)aOutput);
// If this assert fires then the interceptor doesn't like something about
// the format of the typelib. One thing in particular that it doesn't like
// is complex types that contain unions.
MOZ_ASSERT(SUCCEEDED(hr));
return hr;
}
/**
* This method contains the core guts of the handling of QueryInterface calls
* that are delegated to us from the ICallInterceptor.
*
* @param aIid ID of the desired interface
* @param aOutInterceptor The resulting emulated vtable that corresponds to
* the interface specified by aIid.
*/
HRESULT
Interceptor::GetInterceptorForIID(REFIID aIid, void** aOutInterceptor)
{
if (!aOutInterceptor) {
return E_INVALIDARG;
}
if (aIid == IID_IUnknown) {
// Special case: When we see IUnknown, we just provide a reference to this
RefPtr<IInterceptor> intcpt(this);
intcpt.forget(aOutInterceptor);
return S_OK;
}
REFIID interceptorIid = mEventSink->MarshalAs(aIid);
RefPtr<IUnknown> unkInterceptor;
IUnknown* interfaceForQILog = nullptr;
// (1) Check to see if we already have an existing interceptor for
// interceptorIid.
{ // Scope for lock
MutexAutoLock lock(mMutex);
MapEntry* entry = Lookup(interceptorIid);
if (entry) {
unkInterceptor = entry->mInterceptor;
interfaceForQILog = entry->mTargetInterface;
}
}
// (1a) A COM interceptor already exists for this interface, so all we need
// to do is run a QI on it.
if (unkInterceptor) {
// Technically we didn't actually execute a QI on the target interface, but
// for logging purposes we would like to record the fact that this interface
// was requested.
InterceptorLog::QI(S_OK, mTarget.get(), aIid, interfaceForQILog);
return unkInterceptor->QueryInterface(interceptorIid, aOutInterceptor);
}
// (2) Obtain a new target interface.
// (2a) First, make sure that the target interface is available
// NB: We *MUST* query the correct interface! ICallEvents::Invoke casts its
// pvReceiver argument directly to the required interface! DO NOT assume
// that COM will use QI or upcast/downcast!
HRESULT hr;
STAUniquePtr<IUnknown> targetInterface;
IUnknown* rawTargetInterface = nullptr;
hr = QueryInterfaceTarget(interceptorIid, (void**)&rawTargetInterface);
targetInterface.reset(rawTargetInterface);
InterceptorLog::QI(hr, mTarget.get(), aIid, targetInterface.get());
MOZ_ASSERT(SUCCEEDED(hr) || hr == E_NOINTERFACE);
if (FAILED(hr)) {
return hr;
}
// We *really* shouldn't be adding interceptors to proxies
MOZ_ASSERT(aIid != IID_IMarshal);
// (3) Create a new COM interceptor to that interface that delegates its
// IUnknown to |this|.
// Raise the refcount for stabilization purposes during aggregation
RefPtr<IUnknown> kungFuDeathGrip(static_cast<IUnknown*>(
static_cast<WeakReferenceSupport*>(this)));
hr = CreateInterceptor(interceptorIid, kungFuDeathGrip,
getter_AddRefs(unkInterceptor));
if (FAILED(hr)) {
return hr;
}
// (4) Obtain the interceptor's ICallInterceptor interface and register our
// event sink.
RefPtr<ICallInterceptor> interceptor;
hr = unkInterceptor->QueryInterface(IID_ICallInterceptor,
(void**)getter_AddRefs(interceptor));
if (FAILED(hr)) {
return hr;
}
hr = interceptor->RegisterSink(mEventSink);
if (FAILED(hr)) {
return hr;
}
// (5) Now that we have this new COM interceptor, insert it into the map.
{ // Scope for lock
MutexAutoLock lock(mMutex);
// We might have raced with another thread, so first check that we don't
// already have an entry for this
MapEntry* entry = Lookup(interceptorIid);
if (entry && entry->mInterceptor) {
unkInterceptor = entry->mInterceptor;
} else {
// MapEntry has a RefPtr to unkInterceptor, OTOH we must not touch the
// refcount for the target interface because we are just moving it into
// the map and its refcounting might not be thread-safe.
IUnknown* rawTargetInterface = targetInterface.release();
mInterceptorMap.AppendElement(MapEntry(interceptorIid,
unkInterceptor,
rawTargetInterface));
}
}
return unkInterceptor->QueryInterface(interceptorIid, aOutInterceptor);
}
HRESULT
Interceptor::QueryInterfaceTarget(REFIID aIid, void** aOutput)
{
// NB: This QI needs to run on the main thread because the target object
// is probably Gecko code that is not thread-safe. Note that this main
// thread invocation is *synchronous*.
MainThreadInvoker invoker;
HRESULT hr;
auto runOnMainThread = [&]() -> void {
MOZ_ASSERT(NS_IsMainThread());
hr = mTarget->QueryInterface(aIid, aOutput);
};
if (!invoker.Invoke(NS_NewRunnableFunction(runOnMainThread))) {
return E_FAIL;
}
return hr;
}
HRESULT
Interceptor::QueryInterface(REFIID riid, void** ppv)
{
return WeakReferenceSupport::QueryInterface(riid, ppv);
}
HRESULT
Interceptor::ThreadSafeQueryInterface(REFIID aIid, IUnknown** aOutInterface)
{
if (aIid == IID_INoMarshal) {
// This entire library is designed around marshaling, so there's no point
// propagating this QI request all over the place!
return E_NOINTERFACE;
}
if (aIid == IID_IStdMarshalInfo) {
// Do not indicate that this interface is available unless we actually
// support it. We'll check that by looking for a successful call to
// IInterceptorSink::GetHandler()
CLSID dummy;
Bug 1303060: Changes to a11y to enable the serving of a COM handler; r=tbsaunde MozReview-Commit-ID: GTQF3x1pBtX A general outline of the COM handler (a.k.a. the "smart proxy"): COM handlers are pieces of code that are loaded by the COM runtime along with a proxy and are layered above that proxy. This enables the COM handler to interpose itself between the caller and the proxy, thus providing the opportunity for the handler to manipulate an interface's method calls before those calls reach the proxy. Handlers are regular COM components that live in DLLs and are declared in the Windows registry. In order to allow for the specifying of a handler (and an optional payload to be sent with the proxy), the mscom library allows its clients to specify an implementation of the IHandlerProvider interface. IHandlerProvider consists of 5 functions: * GetHandler returns the CLSID of the component that should be loaded into the COM client's process. If GetHandler returns a failure code, then no handler is loaded. * GetHandlerPayloadSize and WriteHandlerPayload are for obtaining the payload data. These calls are made on a background thread but need to do their work on the main thread. We declare the payload struct in IDL. MIDL generates two functions, IA2Payload_Encode and IA2Payload_Decode, which are used by mscom::StructToStream to read and write that struct to and from buffers. * The a11y payload struct also includes an interface, IGeckoBackChannel, that allows the handler to communicate directly with Gecko. IGeckoBackChannel currently provides two methods: one to allow the handler to request fresh cache information, and the other to provide Gecko with its IHandlerControl interface. * MarshalAs accepts an IID that specifies the interface that is about to be proxied. We may want to send a more sophisticated proxy than the one that is requested. The desired IID is returned by this function. In the case of a11y interfaces, we should always return IAccessible2_3 if we are asked for one of its parent interfaces. This allows us to eliminate round trips to resolve more sophisticated interfaces later on. * NewInstance, which is needed to ensure that all descendent proxies are also imbued with the same handler code. The main focus of this patch is as follows: 1. Provide an implementation of the IHandlerProvider interface; 2. Populate the handler payload (ie, the cache) with data; 3. Modify CreateHolderFromAccessible to specify the HandlerPayload object; 4. Receive the IHandlerControl interface from the handler DLL and move it into the chrome process. Some more information about IHandlerControl: There is one IHandlerControl per handler DLL instance. It is the interface that we call in Gecko when we need to dispatch an event to the handler. In order to ensure that events are dispatched in the correct order, we need to dispatch those events from the chrome main thread so that they occur in sequential order with calls to NotifyWinEvent. --HG-- extra : rebase_source : acb44dead7cc5488424720e1bf58862b7b30374f
2017-04-05 00:23:55 +03:00
if (FAILED(mEventSink->GetHandler(WrapNotNull(&dummy)))) {
return E_NOINTERFACE;
}
RefPtr<IStdMarshalInfo> std(this);
std.forget(aOutInterface);
return S_OK;
}
if (aIid == IID_IMarshal) {
// Do not indicate that this interface is available unless we actually
// support it. We'll check that by looking for a successful call to
// IInterceptorSink::GetHandler()
CLSID dummy;
Bug 1303060: Changes to a11y to enable the serving of a COM handler; r=tbsaunde MozReview-Commit-ID: GTQF3x1pBtX A general outline of the COM handler (a.k.a. the "smart proxy"): COM handlers are pieces of code that are loaded by the COM runtime along with a proxy and are layered above that proxy. This enables the COM handler to interpose itself between the caller and the proxy, thus providing the opportunity for the handler to manipulate an interface's method calls before those calls reach the proxy. Handlers are regular COM components that live in DLLs and are declared in the Windows registry. In order to allow for the specifying of a handler (and an optional payload to be sent with the proxy), the mscom library allows its clients to specify an implementation of the IHandlerProvider interface. IHandlerProvider consists of 5 functions: * GetHandler returns the CLSID of the component that should be loaded into the COM client's process. If GetHandler returns a failure code, then no handler is loaded. * GetHandlerPayloadSize and WriteHandlerPayload are for obtaining the payload data. These calls are made on a background thread but need to do their work on the main thread. We declare the payload struct in IDL. MIDL generates two functions, IA2Payload_Encode and IA2Payload_Decode, which are used by mscom::StructToStream to read and write that struct to and from buffers. * The a11y payload struct also includes an interface, IGeckoBackChannel, that allows the handler to communicate directly with Gecko. IGeckoBackChannel currently provides two methods: one to allow the handler to request fresh cache information, and the other to provide Gecko with its IHandlerControl interface. * MarshalAs accepts an IID that specifies the interface that is about to be proxied. We may want to send a more sophisticated proxy than the one that is requested. The desired IID is returned by this function. In the case of a11y interfaces, we should always return IAccessible2_3 if we are asked for one of its parent interfaces. This allows us to eliminate round trips to resolve more sophisticated interfaces later on. * NewInstance, which is needed to ensure that all descendent proxies are also imbued with the same handler code. The main focus of this patch is as follows: 1. Provide an implementation of the IHandlerProvider interface; 2. Populate the handler payload (ie, the cache) with data; 3. Modify CreateHolderFromAccessible to specify the HandlerPayload object; 4. Receive the IHandlerControl interface from the handler DLL and move it into the chrome process. Some more information about IHandlerControl: There is one IHandlerControl per handler DLL instance. It is the interface that we call in Gecko when we need to dispatch an event to the handler. In order to ensure that events are dispatched in the correct order, we need to dispatch those events from the chrome main thread so that they occur in sequential order with calls to NotifyWinEvent. --HG-- extra : rebase_source : acb44dead7cc5488424720e1bf58862b7b30374f
2017-04-05 00:23:55 +03:00
if (FAILED(mEventSink->GetHandler(WrapNotNull(&dummy)))) {
return E_NOINTERFACE;
}
if (!mStdMarshalUnk) {
HRESULT hr = ::CoGetStdMarshalEx(static_cast<IWeakReferenceSource*>(this),
SMEXF_SERVER,
getter_AddRefs(mStdMarshalUnk));
if (FAILED(hr)) {
return hr;
}
}
if (!mStdMarshal) {
HRESULT hr = mStdMarshalUnk->QueryInterface(IID_IMarshal,
(void**)&mStdMarshal);
if (FAILED(hr)) {
return hr;
}
// mStdMarshal is weak, so drop its refcount
mStdMarshal->Release();
}
RefPtr<IMarshal> marshal(this);
marshal.forget(aOutInterface);
return S_OK;
}
if (aIid == IID_IInterceptor) {
RefPtr<IInterceptor> intcpt(this);
intcpt.forget(aOutInterface);
return S_OK;
}
if (aIid == IID_IDispatch) {
STAUniquePtr<IDispatch> disp;
IDispatch* rawDisp = nullptr;
HRESULT hr = QueryInterfaceTarget(aIid, (void**)&rawDisp);
if (FAILED(hr)) {
return hr;
}
disp.reset(rawDisp);
return DispatchForwarder::Create(this, disp, aOutInterface);
}
return GetInterceptorForIID(aIid, (void**)aOutInterface);
}
ULONG
Interceptor::AddRef()
{
return WeakReferenceSupport::AddRef();
}
ULONG
Interceptor::Release()
{
return WeakReferenceSupport::Release();
}
} // namespace mscom
} // namespace mozilla