This extends on the changes in part 12a and consumes the new PortRef-based API
in all existing process types other than the fork server. The IPDL C++ unit
tests were already broken before this change, and were not updated.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D112777
This extends on the changes in part 12a and consumes the new PortRef-based API
in all existing process types other than the fork server. The IPDL C++ unit
tests were already broken before this change, and were not updated.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D112777
In all those cases, the current nsISerialEventTarget is either the main thread or the MessageChannel's nsISerialEventTarget (since bug 1634846)
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D81966
Currently, there is an outstanding issue where enabling the GPU sandbox breaks
scrolling using the the mouse wheel on laptops with Intel GPUs.
This will enable the GPU sandbox on Nightly for non-Intel GPUs to prevent any
sandbox regressions while we try and figure out what the scrolling issue is.
See Bug 1630860 for more info
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D73923
The inclusions were removed with the following very crude script and the
resulting breakage was fixed up by hand. The manual fixups did either
revert the changes done by the script, replace a generic header with a more
specific one or replace a header with a forward declaration.
find . -name "*.idl" | grep -v web-platform | grep -v third_party | while read path; do
interfaces=$(grep "^\(class\|interface\).*:.*" "$path" | cut -d' ' -f2)
if [ -n "$interfaces" ]; then
if [[ "$interfaces" == *$'\n'* ]]; then
regexp="\("
for i in $interfaces; do regexp="$regexp$i\|"; done
regexp="${regexp%%\\\|}\)"
else
regexp="$interfaces"
fi
interface=$(basename "$path")
rg -l "#include.*${interface%%.idl}.h" . | while read path2; do
hits=$(grep -v "#include.*${interface%%.idl}.h" "$path2" | grep -c "$regexp" )
if [ $hits -eq 0 ]; then
echo "Removing ${interface} from ${path2}"
grep -v "#include.*${interface%%.idl}.h" "$path2" > "$path2".tmp
mv -f "$path2".tmp "$path2"
fi
done
fi
done
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D55443
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This requires replacing inclusions of it with inclusions of more specific prefs
files.
The exception is that StaticPrefsAll.h, which is equivalent to StaticPrefs.h,
and is used in `Codegen.py` because doing something smarter is tricky and
suitable for a follow-up. As a result, any change to StaticPrefList.yaml will
still trigger recompilation of all the generated DOM bindings files, but that's
still a big improvement over trigger recompilation of every file that uses
static prefs.
Most of the changes in this commit are very boring. The only changes that are
not boring are modules/libpref/*, Codegen.py, and ServoBindings.toml.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D39138
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Currently it's completely unclear at use sites that the getters for `once`
static prefs return the pref value from startup, rather than the current pref
value. (Bugs have been caused by this.) This commit improves things by changing
the getter name to make it clear that the pref value obtained is from startup.
This required changing things within libpref so it distinguishes between the
"base id" (`foo_bar`) and the "full id" (`foo_bar` or
`foo_bar_DoNotUseDirectly` or `foo_bar_AtStartup` or
`foo_bar_AtStartup_DoNotUseDirectly`; the name used depends on the `mirror` and
`do_not_use_directly` values in the YAML definition.) The "full id" is used in
most places, while the "base id" is used for the `GetPrefName_*` and
`GetPrefDefault_*` functions.
(This is a nice demonstration of the benefits of the YAML file, BTW. Making
this change with the old code would have involved adding an entry to every
single pref in StaticPrefList.h.)
The patch also rejigs the comment at the top of StaticPrefList.yaml, to clarify
some things.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D38604
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
The patch also removes the layers.mlgpu.enable-container-resizing pref, because
it's dead.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D36159
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : e215d584aed18f865d2e8d00a78e76e9b0323e6e
Previously, the GPU sandbox was enabled and caused the VR service to break.
The VR service has now been moved into its own process, and now the GPU
sandbox should be able to work fine. We will initially apply sandbox level '1'
for a time, and then increase to sandbox level '2' if everything works just
fine.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D18876
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
In order to enable asynchronous launch, destruction of
GeckoChildProcessHost (and its subclasses) has to be delayed until after
launching (or anything else that might be made asynchronous in the
future) has completed, to prevent use-after-free. However, there are
other dependencies on process hosts always being destroyed on the I/O
thread, so refcounting would be difficult to use.
Instead, GeckoChildProcessHost now may not be destroyed directly, but
must go through a method that handles the scheduling.
There are also some minor cleanups to the affected headers (removed
duplicate access modifiers, and made PluginProcessParent final).
Depends on D18010
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D18011
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This was done automatically replacing:
s/mozilla::Move/std::move/
s/ Move(/ std::move(/
s/(Move(/(std::move(/
Removing the 'using mozilla::Move;' lines.
And then with a few manual fixups, see the bug for the split series..
MozReview-Commit-ID: Jxze3adipUh
This patch requires that each instance of IPC's RunnableFunction is
passed in a name, like the non-IPC RunnableFunction.
MozReview-Commit-ID: Atu1W3Rl66S
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : f932d7597a26a3f0c4246b3a95df638860d3d32d
This patch was generated automatically by the "modeline.py" script, available
here: https://github.com/amccreight/moz-source-tools/blob/master/modeline.py
For every file that is modified in this patch, the changes are as follows:
(1) The patch changes the file to use the exact C++ mode lines from the
Mozilla coding style guide, available here:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Mozilla/Developer_guide/Coding_Style#Mode_Line
(2) The patch deletes any blank lines between the mode line & the MPL
boilerplate comment.
(3) If the file previously had the mode lines and MPL boilerplate in a
single contiguous C++ comment, then the patch splits them into
separate C++ comments, to match the boilerplate in the coding style.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 77D61xpSmIl
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : c6162fa3cf539a07177a19838324bf368faa162b
To make the HeadlessCompositorWidget work under Windows as well as Linux, I had
to change the way that I hooked it into the existing CompositorWidget system.
Under GTK, the CompositorWidgetInitData and CompositorWidgetDelegate types
provided the information needed by the headless compositor widget already (the
widget client size). On Windows, however, the definitions of these types
differ, and the client size information is simply retrieved from the platform
APIs when needed.
After this patch, CompositorWidgetDelegate is renamed to
PlatformCompositorWidgetDelegate, and a new base class called
CompositorWidgetDelegate is added with "AsPlatformSpecificDelegate()" and
"AsHeadlessCompositorWidget()" methods. In non-headless mode, widgets use
AsPlatformSpecificDelegate() to access the Windows- and GTK-specific delegate
APIs. In headless mode, AsHeadlessCompositorWidget() is used to access the
singular CompositorWidget implementation for headless. Meanwhile, the
CompositorWidgetInitData IPDL type is made into a union which always contains a
headless-specific HeadlessCompositorWidgetInitData struct and under GTK and
Windows also contains an {X11,Win}CompositorWidgetInitData struct.
This also includes a small patch to ensure that the GPU process and
hardware-accelerated compositing are always disabled under headless mode. These
features weren't activated by default in the Linux environments I tested in, but
did end up activating (and then promptly crashing Firefox) when I tested on
Windows.
MozReview-Commit-ID: CocPoHBDV7H
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 4581fa63aa3a9f32a8dc2672015a35b9be01b20f