This was done using the following script:
37e3803c7a/processors/chromeutils-import.jsm
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1Nc3XDu0wGl
--HG--
extra : source : 12fc4dee861c812fd2bd032c63ef17af61800c70
extra : intermediate-source : 34c999fa006bffe8705cf50c54708aa21a962e62
extra : histedit_source : b2be2c5e5d226e6c347312456a6ae339c1e634b0
This was done using the following script:
37e3803c7a/processors/chromeutils-import.jsm
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1Nc3XDu0wGl
--HG--
extra : source : 12fc4dee861c812fd2bd032c63ef17af61800c70
This was done using the following script:
37e3803c7a/processors/chromeutils-import.jsm
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1Nc3XDu0wGl
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : c004a023389f1f6bf3d2f3efe93c13d423b23ccd
Historically, we had support for some GNOME VFS protocols through the
gnomevfs library, and this was under extension. This may not have been
built by default when it was introduced, but GNOME upstream moved those
things into Gtk itself, and we then got support for the new Gio-based
protocol, similar to what we had through the gnomevfs library.
Time passes, and we switched off the gnomevfs library entirely, and
enabled the Gio-based protocol handlers by default. We then removed
everything related to the gnomevfs library.
Fast forward to now, and disabling Gio support in Firefox just doesn't
make sense, and leaving the gio protocol handler as an extension doesn't
make sense either.
As it is a protocol handler, its natural place is under
netwerk/protocol, which is where we're moving it here.
The netwerk/protocol subdirectories being handled automatically, we
don't need to add the moved directory in any DIRS variable.
--HG--
rename : extensions/gio/moz.build => netwerk/protocol/gio/moz.build
rename : extensions/gio/nsGIOProtocolHandler.cpp => netwerk/protocol/gio/nsGIOProtocolHandler.cpp
extra : rebase_source : 071a9cb1769f013717357458df24e2fd9570ccf4
Historically, we had support for some GNOME VFS protocols through the
gnomevfs library, and this was under extension. This may not have been
built by default when it was introduced, but GNOME upstream moved those
things into Gtk itself, and we then got support for the new Gio-based
protocol, similar to what we had through the gnomevfs library.
Time passes, and we switched off the gnomevfs library entirely, and
enabled the Gio-based protocol handlers by default. We then removed
everything related to the gnomevfs library.
Fast forward to now, and disabling Gio support in Firefox just doesn't
make sense, and leaving the gio protocol handler as an extension doesn't
make sense either.
As it is a protocol handler, its natural place is under
netwerk/protocol, which is where we're moving it here.
The netwerk/protocol subdirectories being handled automatically, we
don't need to add the moved directory in any DIRS variable.
--HG--
rename : extensions/gio/moz.build => netwerk/protocol/gio/moz.build
rename : extensions/gio/nsGIOProtocolHandler.cpp => netwerk/protocol/gio/nsGIOProtocolHandler.cpp
extra : rebase_source : fe3c9480cee468aa2a24fd34e569b58e4f2c9c9a
This hasn't been used since the removal of the Metro code in bug
1039866, close to two years ago.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 58ec1ce63e4231c8006cafd3424675f14ddbf9f1
This removes the unnecessary setting of c-basic-offset from all
python-mode files.
This was automatically generated using
perl -pi -e 's/; *c-basic-offset: *[0-9]+//'
... on the affected files.
The bulk of these files are moz.build files but there a few others as
well.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 2pPf3DEiZqx
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 0a7dcac80b924174a2c429b093791148ea6ac204
Because --enable-application is the current way to do things, transpose
it to configure.py, but since --enable-application=js doesn't make
sense, make it an alias of a new --enable-project option.
This only partially moves --enable-application out of old-configure.in
because there are a lot of other things intertwined with it.
A new configure option --with-devtools (which sets MOZ_DEVTOOLS) is added to
control whether all DevTools, just the server, or no DevTools are included.
This defaults to just the server.
Applications should also include /devtools within their moz.build tree, so that
DIST_SUBDIR is in effect for all DevTools files if it is used by the app.