This is more consistent with what the Rust bits of the style system do, and
removes a pointer from ComputedStyle which is always nice.
This also aligns the Rust bits with the C++ bits re. not treating xul pseudos as
anonymous boxes. See the comment in nsTreeStyleCache.cpp regarding those.
Can't wait for XUL trees to die.
Depends on D19001
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D19002
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Each nsStaticAtomSetup contains a pointer to a static atom, and also a pointer
to the canonical pointer to that static atom. Which is pretty weird! The
notable thing thing about it is that these structs are in an array, and that
gives us the only way to iterate over all static atoms in a single class, for
registration and lookups.
But thanks to various other recent changes to the implementation of static
atoms, we can now put the static atoms themselves into an array, which can be
iterated over. So this patch does that. With that done, nsStaticAtomSetup is no
longer necessary.
According to the `size` utility, on Linux64 this reduces the size of libxul.so
by the following amounts:
> text: 62008 bytes
> data: 20992 bytes
> bss: 21040 bytes
> total: 104040 bytes
- The bss reduction is one word per atom, because the canonical static atom
pointers (e.g. nsGkAtoms::foo) have moved from .bss to .data, because they're
now initialized at compile time instead of runtime.
- The data reduction is one word per atom, because we remove two words per atom
for the nsStaticAtomSetup removal, but gain one word per atom from the
previous bullet point.
- I'm not sure about the text reduction. It's three words per atom. Maybe
because there is one less relocation per atom?
Other notable things in the patch:
- nsICSSAnonBoxPseudo and nsICSSPseudoElement now inherit from nsStaticAtom,
not nsAtom, because that's more precise.
- Each static atoms array now has an enum associated with it, which is used in
various ways.
- In the big comment about the macros at the top of nsStaticAtom.h, the pre-
and post-expansion forms are now shown interleaved. The interleaving reduces
duplication and makes the comment much easier to read and maintain. The
comment also has an introduction that explains the constraints and goals of
the implementation.
- The SUBCLASS macro variations are gone. There are few enough users of these
macros now that always passing the atom type has become simpler.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1GmfKidLjaU
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 2352590101fc6693ba388f885ca4714a42963943
For nsCSSAnonBoxes.cpp, nsCSSPseudoElements.cpp, nsDirectoryService.cpp, the
corresponding .h file includes nsStaticAtom.h. For the other files in this
patch, nsStaticAtom.h is not needed at all.
MozReview-Commit-ID: IpMmbXwZHhu
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 46d0a6b40a41ee233adad7c205cf907fa27de34a
Putting all the non-inheriting entries first means we don't have to play games
at the inclusion sites. This is a small win now, but will help a lot with bug
1449395.
MozReview-Commit-ID: JNt7yFKs6br
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 84ee0e78fc2c94f5bd73dbc35a8f27269a455ee3
Currently static atoms are stored on the heap, but their char buffers are
stored in read-only static memory.
This patch changes the representation of nsStaticAtom (thus making it a
non-trivial subclass of nsAtom). Instead of a pointer to the string, it now has
an mStringOffset field which is a 32-bit offset to the string. (This requires
placement of the string and the atom within the same object so that the offset
is known to be small. The docs and macros in nsStaticAtom.h handle that.)
Static and dynamic atoms now store their chars in different ways: nsStaticAtom
stores them inline, nsDynamicAtom has a pointer to separate storage. So
`mString` and GetStringBuffer() move from nsAtom to nsDynamicAtom.
The change to static atoms means they can be made constexpr and stored in
read-only memory instead of on the heap. On 64-bit this reduces the per-process
overhead by 16 bytes; on 32-bit the saving is 12 bytes. (Further reductions
will be possible in follow-up patches.)
The increased use of constexpr required multiple workarounds for MSVC.
- Multiple uses of MOZ_{PUSH,POP}_DISABLE_INTEGRAL_CONSTANT_OVERFLOW_WARNING to
disable warnings about (well-defined!) overflow of unsigned integer
arithmetic.
- The use of -Zc:externConstexpr on all files defining static atoms, to make
MSVC follow the C++ standard(!) and let constexpr variables have external
linkage.
- The use of -constexpr:steps300000 to increase the number of operations
allowed in a constexpr value, in order to handle gGkAtoms, which requires
hashing ~2,500 atom strings.
The patch also changes how HTML5 atoms are handled. They are now treated as
dynamic atoms, i.e. we have "dynamic normal" atoms and "dynamic HTML5 atoms",
and "dynamic atoms" covers both cases, and both are represented via
nsDynamicAtom. The main difference between the two kinds is that dynamic HTML5
atoms still aren't allowed to be used in various operations, most notably
AddRef()/Release(). All this also required moving nsDynamicAtom into the header
file.
There is a slight performance cost to all these changes: now that nsStaticAtom
and nsDynamicAtom store their chars in different ways, a conditional branch is
required in the following functions: Equals(), GetUTF16String(),
WeakAtom::as_slice().
Finally, in about:memory the "explicit/atoms/static/atom-objects" value is no
longer needed, because that memory is static instead of heap-allocated.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 4AxPv05ngZy
These functions no longer perform any refcounting, so the existing names are
misleading.
MozReview-Commit-ID: LX55e0bUP8N
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 89a3da577325286c1d31723acfd4153754f49703
This function captures a common usage pattern, generalizing the existing
IsMember() function.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 5Pt7kqyGD6Y
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : b03e4cc8f5a4a25da9236420f4b64493664b70e0
It seems silly to have a tiny utils class with a single function in its own
module. This patch moves it into nsStaticAtom.h/nsAtomTable.cpp. It also
renames nsAtomListUtils as nsStaticAtomUtils. Finally, it uses templates to
remove the need for the `aCount` parameter at callsites.
MozReview-Commit-ID: DvJVoZFv89c
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 1f1dd27d56e46c71c30c10102ac6132a721e23d1
Because (a) that name better indicates that it's a pointer to a pointer, and
(b) because nsStaticAtom::mString is going to be renamed as mAtom in bug
1411469.
MozReview-Commit-ID: D5tuNOstMgr
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 9344eeea0288c8c52c069ce21e8bc55f6e0f3f6f
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: EuRsDue63tK
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 3356d4b80ff6213935192e87cdbc9103fec6084c
There are four things that must be provided for every static atom, two of which
have a macro:
- the atom pointer declaration (no macro);
- the atom pointer definition (no macro);
- the atom char buffer (NS_STATIC_ATOM_BUFFER);
- the StaticAtomSetup struct (NS_STATIC_ATOM_SETUP).
This patch introduces new macros for the first two things: NS_STATIC_ATOM_DECL
and NS_STATIC_ATOM_DEFN, and changes the arguments of the existing two macros
to make them easier to use (e.g. all the '##' concatenation now happens within
the macros).
One consequence of the change is that all static atoms must be within a class,
so the patch adds a couple of classes where necessary (DefaultAtoms, TSAtoms).
The patch also adds a big comment explaining how the macros are used, and what
their expansion looks like. This makes it a lot easier to understand how static
atoms work. Correspondingly, the patch removes some small comments scattered
around the macro use points.
MozReview-Commit-ID: wpRyrEOTHE
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 9f85d477b4d06c9a9e710c757de1f1476edb6efe
Because it's the type we use to set up static atoms at startup, not the static
atom itself.
The patch accordingly renames some parameters, variables, and NS_STATIC_ATOM,
for consistency.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1a0KvhYNNw2
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 5c66e5b2dfe053a368bf3584d957198aec4cce91
(Path is actually r=froydnj.)
Bug 1400459 devirtualized nsIAtom so that it is no longer a subclass of
nsISupports. This means that nsAtom is now a better name for it than nsIAtom.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 91U22X2NydP
--HG--
rename : xpcom/ds/nsIAtom.h => xpcom/ds/nsAtom.h
extra : rebase_source : ac3e904a21b8b48e74534fff964f1623ee937c67