- modify line wrap up to 80 chars; (tw=80)
- modify size of tab to 2 chars everywhere; (sts=2, sw=2)
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 7eedce0311b340c9a5a1265dc42d3121cc0f32a0
extra : amend_source : 9cb4ffdd5005f5c4c14172390dd00b04b2066cd7
This is a best effort attempt at ensuring that the adverse impact of
reformatting the entire tree over the comments would be minimal. I've used a
combination of strategies including disabling of formatting, some manual
formatting and some changes to formatting to work around some clang-format
limitations.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D13193
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
When bug 1508393 landed, it not only enabled producing of full frames
on the decoder threads, it also enabled recycling of old animated image
frame buffers it would have otherwise discarded. It reuses the contents
of the buffer where possible given we know what pixels changed between
the old frame and the frame we want to produce. However where this
calculation was done was incorrect. We originally calculated it when we
advanced the frame, but at that point there is no guarantee that we have
all of the necessary information; we may have fallen behind on decoding.
As such, we move the calculation to where we actually perform the
recycling. At this point we are guaranteed to have all the necessary
frames between the recycling and display queues.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D12903
WebRender takes longer than OMTP to release its hold on the current
frame. This is because it is in a separate process and holds onto the
surface in between rendering frames, rather than getting a reference for
each repaint. This patch makes us less aggressive about taking the most
recent surface placed in the recycling queue out to avoid blocking on
waiting for the surface to be released.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D10903
Also, fix a minor bug where when we discard an animated image that is a
full frame animated image, we need to reset
AnimationState::mCompositedFrameInvalid to false, just like we do for
animated images blended by FrameAnimator. This is because it is used as
part of our state checking in FrameAnimator::GetCompositedFrame before
we are willing to yield frame data.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D12362
Bug 1249474 suggested that we add image/webp to the front of the Accept
header for images, to indicate to servers that we actually support WebP.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D8120
Redecode errors break the state machine of FrameAnimator, since the
decoder and the animation state are now out of sync. Going forward this
tight coupling should be eliminated, as the decoder will produce full
frames and the animator can just take the current frame without worrying
about its relative position. For the moment, we should just not reset an
animation if it hit a redecode error (likely due to OOM) just like how
we already stop advancing the animation before the reset.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D11046
Behavior-wise this only removes the HasAttr(src) check, and adds the IsEmpty()
check to the alt attribute value, since this function is only called for <img>
and <input>.
But it also cleans up a bit.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D11194
Behavior-wise this only removes the HasAttr(src) check, and adds the IsEmpty()
check to the alt attribute value, since this function is only called for <img>
and <input>.
But it also cleans up a bit.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D11194
--HG--
extra : source : 803b224d52a0940b4fb4b3b9cffc6a1fa6e5d4ee
Behavior-wise this only removes the HasAttr(src) check, and adds the IsEmpty()
check to the alt attribute value, since this function is only called for <img>
and <input>.
But it also cleans up a bit.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D11194
There were two unrelated buffering problems in nsWebPDecoder. The first
was with the decoder contract. We are expected to loop until the
iterator is unable to provide more data, and wait for the SourceBuffer
to reschedule us, where as nsWebPDecoder::DoDecode only did one pass.
Thus when something yielded wanting more data, we would just wait
forever.
The second was the integration with the libwebp API. We are expected to
retry when we receive SUSPENDED from the decoder, as it decided to yield
pixels instead of continuing to decode as many as possible.
The tests did not cover the first problem because multi chunk decoder
tests do not use SourceBuffer scheduling. This is an oversight. They now
will write a chunk of data, let the SourceBuffer reschedule the decoder,
and repeat until all of the data has been written.
The tests did not cover the second problem because all of the reference
WebP images are too small. This patch adds a new test with a large WebP
image (converted from a Mozilla all hands photo of lanyards). This
should actually trigger the SUSPEND behaviour of libwebp.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D10817
For decoders which produce unpaletted partial frames (APNG, WebP), the
surface format should always be BGRA. These frames while partial, are
the same size as the output size of the animated image. When
FrameAnimator performs the blend with the compositing frame, it expects
all pixels we don't care about to be set to fully transparent. If it is
BGRX, they will be set to solid white instead.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D10753
This patch makes ImageContainer create a SharedSurfacesAnimation object
when it detects that we are using shared surfaces and are producing full
frames.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D7505
First we did not handle the SourceBufferIterator::WAITING state which
can happen when we get woken up but there is no data to read from the
SourceBufferIterator. StreamingLexer handled this properly by yielding
with NEED_MORE_DATA, and properly scheduling the decoder to resume. This
patch does the same in the WebP decoder.
Second nsWebPDecoder::GetType was not implemented. This meant it would
return DecoderType::UNKNOWN, and would fail to recreate the decoder if
we are discarding frames and need to restart from the beginning. In
addition to implementing that method, this patch also corrects an assert
in DecoderFactory::CloneAnimationDecoder which failed to check for WebP
as a supported animated decoder.
This patch also modestly improves the logging output and library method
checks.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D10624
We should only assert that the caller is requesting the first frame or
we have advanced to or beyond the expected initial frame, when we
successfully return a frame. This is because FrameAnimator will request
on refresh ticks for the current frame again, until it observes it. If
decoding is still behind, then we likely still have frames to
auto-advance, and we will trip the assert.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D9507
This is what we have been working towards in all of the previous parts
in the series. This subclasses AnimationFrameDiscardingQueue to save the
discarded frames for recycling by the decoder, if the frame is marked as
supporting recycling.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D7516
AnimatedFrameDiscardingQueue subclasses AnimationFrameBuffer to allow a
cleaner abstraction over the behaviour change when we cross the
threshold of too high a memory footprint for an animated image. The next
patch will build on top of this to provide an abstraction to reuse the
discarded frames.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D7515
This patch makes AnimationSurfaceProvider use the new abstractions
provided by AnimationFrameBuffer and AnimationFrameRetainedBuffer to
provide storage and lifetime management of decoders and the produced
frames. We initially start out with an implementation that will just
keep every frame forever, like our historical behaviour. The next patch
will add support for discarding.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D7514
In the next few patches, AnimationFrameBuffer will be reworked to split
the discarding behaviour from the retaining behaviour. Once implemented
as separate classes, it will allow easier reuse of the discarding code
for recycling.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D7513
The owner for the decoder may implement IDecoderFrameRecycler to allow
the decoder to request a recycled frame instead of allocating a new one.
If none are available, it will fallback to allocating a new frame.
Not only may the IDecoderFrameRecycler not have any frames available for
recycling, the recycled frame itself may still be in use by other
entities outside of imagelib. Additionally it may still be required by
BlendAnimationFilter to restore the previous frame's data. It may even
be the same frame as to restore. In the worst case, we will simply
choose to allocate an entirely new frame, just like before.
When we allocate a new frame, that means the old frame we tried to
recycle will be taken out of circulation and not reused again,
regardless of why it failed.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D7512
Beyond the necessary reinitialization methods, we need to protect
ourselves from recycling a frame that some other entity in the browser
is still using. Generally speaking the animated surface will only be
used in imgFrame::Draw since we don't layerize animated images, which
will be safe. However with OMTP or blob recordings, we could retain a
reference to the surface outside the current stack context. Additional
if something calls RasterImage::GetImageContainer(AtSize) or
RasterImage::GetFrame(AtSize), it may also have a reference to the
surface for an indetermine period of time.
As such, if an imgFrame is a candidate for recycling, it will wrap
imgFrame::mLockedSurface in a RecyclingSourceSurface. Its job is to
track how many consumers there are still of the surface, so that after
we advance the animation, the decoder will know if there are still
outstanding consumers.
If the surface is still in use, it will block for a finite period of
time (the refresh interval) before giving up on reclaiming the surface,
and will allocate a new surface. The old surface can then remain in
circulation for as long as necessary without further blocking the
animation progression, since we stop recycling that surface/imgFrame.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D7511