js::Class op are often all null. And when they're not all null, they're often
duplicated among classes. By pulling them out into their own struct, and using a
(possibly null) pointer in js::Class, we can save 114 KiB per process on
64-bit, and half that on 32-bit.
* * *
imported patch separate-ClassOps-2
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : bd751bf247e9491c1966a123dbeffa573657dfb1
This patch makes NativeProperties variable-length and reduces static data by
110,336 bytes on 64-bit, and half that on 32-bit.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 2etZ5AnEhgO
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 6a167b64df7da3c6940114782fe08337f04a694d
js::ObjectOps is often all null. When it's not all null, it's often duplicated
many times among classes. By pulling it out into its own struct, and using a
(possibly null) pointer in js::Class, we can save 208 KiB per process on
64-bit, and half that on 32-bit.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 5be8fe45f652392571b8a6d7b63777cbafba6ae4
nsWrapperCache expects the object it stores to have an ObjectMoved op that will
notify the wrapper cache when the object is moved. SpiderMonkey promises don't
have a way to do this.
The XPCConvert changes are needed to allow code that passes around Promise
objects as nsISupports to continue working instead of ending up with
double-wrapped nsISupports (XPCWrappedNative for an nsISupports XPCWrappedJS)
around the SpiderMonkey Promise.
This is not quite as strong as being able to assert that all codepaths that might
lead to failure call one of the above methods, but being able to assert that
would involve a lot of extra noise at callsites. Or at least changing the
signature of StealNSResult to use an outparam and return a boolean indicating
whether the ErrorResult was failure or not, or something, so StealNSResult
can be usefully called on successful ErrorResults too.
The bulk of this commit was generated with a script, executed at the top
level of a typical source code checkout. The only non-machine-generated
part was modifying MFBT's moz.build to reflect the new naming.
CLOSED TREE makes big refactorings like this a piece of cake.
# The main substitution.
find . -name '*.cpp' -o -name '*.cc' -o -name '*.h' -o -name '*.mm' -o -name '*.idl'| \
xargs perl -p -i -e '
s/nsRefPtr\.h/RefPtr\.h/g; # handle includes
s/nsRefPtr ?</RefPtr</g; # handle declarations and variables
'
# Handle a special friend declaration in gfx/layers/AtomicRefCountedWithFinalize.h.
perl -p -i -e 's/::nsRefPtr;/::RefPtr;/' gfx/layers/AtomicRefCountedWithFinalize.h
# Handle nsRefPtr.h itself, a couple places that define constructors
# from nsRefPtr, and code generators specially. We do this here, rather
# than indiscriminantly s/nsRefPtr/RefPtr/, because that would rename
# things like nsRefPtrHashtable.
perl -p -i -e 's/nsRefPtr/RefPtr/g' \
mfbt/nsRefPtr.h \
xpcom/glue/nsCOMPtr.h \
xpcom/base/OwningNonNull.h \
ipc/ipdl/ipdl/lower.py \
ipc/ipdl/ipdl/builtin.py \
dom/bindings/Codegen.py \
python/lldbutils/lldbutils/utils.py
# In our indiscriminate substitution above, we renamed
# nsRefPtrGetterAddRefs, the class behind getter_AddRefs. Fix that up.
find . -name '*.cpp' -o -name '*.h' -o -name '*.idl' | \
xargs perl -p -i -e 's/nsRefPtrGetterAddRefs/RefPtrGetterAddRefs/g'
if [ -d .git ]; then
git mv mfbt/nsRefPtr.h mfbt/RefPtr.h
else
hg mv mfbt/nsRefPtr.h mfbt/RefPtr.h
fi
--HG--
rename : mfbt/nsRefPtr.h => mfbt/RefPtr.h