This is a preexisting issue that makes nsMultiplexInputStream multiple-inherit
from nsIInputStream: once via nsIMultipartInputStream and once via
nsIAsyncInputStream. This causes problems once we end up with more multiplex
streams that are async streams, because then some assingments to
nsCOMPtr<nsIInputStream> start asserting. This patch just removes the footgun
by getting rid of the multiple inheritance.
This is a preexisting issue that makes nsMultiplexInputStream multiple-inherit
from nsIInputStream: once via nsIMultipartInputStream and once via
nsIAsyncInputStream. This causes problems once we end up with more multiplex
streams that are async streams, because then some assingments to
nsCOMPtr<nsIInputStream> start asserting. This patch just removes the footgun
by getting rid of the multiple inheritance.
This fixes improper usages of Find where an offset was actually being use for
the boolean ignore case flag. It also fixes a few instances of passing in a
literal wchar_t to our functions where a NS_LITERAL_STRING or char16_t should
be used instead.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 5de1e9335895d65e6db06c510e8887d27be3390f
extra : source : f762f605dd83fc6331161a33e1ef5d54cafbd08d
ISO C++ forbids converting a string constant to 'wchar_t*' [-Werror=write-strings]
Either change it to a nullptr (which has same intent) or pass through a static
MozReview-Commit-ID: CSunOCyO9PN
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : bfdabc1f463eca75987c6561f7c3ea60acf0340f
This fixes improper usages of Find where an offset was actually being use for
the boolean ignore case flag. It also fixes a few instances of passing in a
literal wchar_t to our functions where a NS_LITERAL_STRING or char16_t should
be used instead.
After all the previous work, we can now base64 decode nsString types
without intermediate conversion steps to nsCString, which is faster and
more memory-efficient.
The current nsString decoding routine indirectly relies on the various
checks this routine performs; making it generic over string types
ensures that we can eventually call it directly from the nsString
decoding routine.
The existing Base64URL code converts from `const char` to `uint8_t`.
We're going to want versions that convert from character types to
character types, so make the decode routines accept generic input and
output types.
The decoding logic is the same for Base64 and Base64URL; we might as
well reuse the routines that we already have for Base64URL decoding so
we don't make mistakes in the logic.
These tables are nearly identical to the ones for base64url decoding,
but ideally will be slightly more readable, since things are broken up
into sets of eight entries at a time.
After all the previous work, we can base64 encoding nsString values
directly into nsString values, without having to go through intermediate
nsCString values. Since this routine backs base64 routines exposed to
the web, this change should help with OOMs that we see associated with
base64 encoding.
The nsACString -> nsACString encode routine has several checks in it for
correct operation, and the nsAString -> nsAString encode routine relies
on those checks happening via the nsACString -> nsACString routine.
Once we start encoding nsAStrings directly, we'll still need those
checks, and the easiest way to ensure they happen is to move the core
base64 encode logic for strings into a templated helper.
One less use of NSPR is a good thing. The failure cases that
PL_Base64Encode would have caught for us are:
1. "Truncation".
2. Integer overflow when computing destination string length.
3. Malloc failures.
The first one only gets checked if we pass in zero for the source
length, which we never do. The latter two only get checked if we pass
in a null pointer for the destination, which we never do. So removing
the error handling PL_Base64Encode implies here is a good thing.
This is straightforward, with only two notable things.
- `#include "nsXPIDLString.h" is replaced with `#include "nsString.h"`
throughout, because all nsXPIDLString.h did was include nsString.h. The
exception is for files which already include nsString.h, in which case the
patch just removes the nsXPIDLString.h inclusion.
- The patch removes the |xpidl_string| gtest, but improves the |voided| test to
cover some of its ground, e.g. testing Adopt(nullptr).
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 452cc4a08046a1adb1a8099a7e85a1917de5add8
These are all easy cases where an nsXPIDLCString local variable is set via
getter_Copies() and then is null checked. The patch uses IsVoid() to replace
the null checks (and get() and EqualsLiteral() calls to replace any implicit
conversions).
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 484ad42a7816b34b86afbe072e04ba131c1619c6
The existing functions work with C strings but almost all the call sites use
Mozilla strings.
The replacement function has the following properties.
- It works with Mozilla strings, which makes it much simpler and also improves
the call sites.
- It appends to the destination string because that's what a lot of the call
sites need. For those that don't, we can just append to an empty string.
- It is declared outside the |extern "C"| section because there is no need for
it to be in that section.
Note: there is no 16-bit variant of nsAppendEscapedHTML(). This is because
there are only two places that need 16-bit variants, both rarely executed,
and so converting to and from 8-bit is good enough.
The patch also adds some testing of the new function, renaming
TestEscapeURL.cpp as TestEscape.cpp in the process, because that file is now
testing other kinds of escaping.
--HG--
rename : xpcom/tests/gtest/TestEscapeURL.cpp => xpcom/tests/gtest/TestEscape.cpp
extra : rebase_source : 51145ae2c9b0b4573c7ea0c342dcb246f9f14fb9
It's silly to use prmem.h within Firefox code given that in our configuration
its functions are just wrappers for malloc() et al. (Indeed, in some places we
mix PR_Malloc() with free(), or malloc() with PR_Free().)
This patch removes all uses, except for the places where we need to use
PR_Free() to free something allocated by another NSPR function; in those cases
I've added a comment explaining which function did the allocation.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 0f781bca68b5bf3c4c191e09e277dfc8becffa09