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
Windows doesn't like more than one thread (at the same time?) calling SHGetFileInfoW. So we use the same thread to avoid this.
We also need to call CoInitialize on the thread we do this.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D28423
This mutex only protects the iothread, not the rest of the decodepool. There is a different monitor for that in DecodePoolImpl.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D28420
If class A is derived from class B, then an instance of class A can be
converted to B via a static cast, so a slower QI is not needed.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D6861
--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
When we shutdown the decode pool threads, it does not do a simple join
with the main thread. It will actually process the main thread event
loop, which can cause a bad series of events. The refresh tick could
still be running and advancing our animated images, causing the animated
decoders to continue running, which in turn prevents the decoder threads
from finishing shutting down, and the main thread from joining them.
Now we check on each frame whether or not the decoder should just stop
decoding more frames because the decode pool has started shutdown. If it
has, it will stop immediately.
These threads should not have deep stacks, and as we can have a number
of them running simultaneously, it's beneficial to set the stack size to
something reasonably low.
The image decoding thread pool can grow to be quite large, up to 32
threads, depending on the number of processors on the system. If the
user is not actively browsing, these threads are occupying resources
which could be reused elsewhere. After the timeout period, it will
release up to half of the threads in the pool.
Currently imagelib's DecodePool spawns the maximum number of threads
during startup, based on the number of processors. This patch changes it
to spawn a single thread on startup (which cannot fail), and more up to
the maximum as jobs are added to the queue. A thread will only be
spawned if there is a backlog present when a new job is added. This
typically results in fewer threads allocated in the parent process, as
well as deferred spawning in the content processes.
Originally image decoding tasks were processed in a FILO ordering, due
to that being the most efficient way to use an nsTArray as a queue. This
patch changes the decoding pool to use an std::queue to promise FIFO
ordering (relative to the priority of the tasks). This will allow the
first images to be requested to be the first images displayed.
The image decoding thread pool can grow to be quite large, up to 32
threads, depending on the number of processors on the system. If the
user is not actively browsing, these threads are occupying resources
which could be reused elsewhere. After the timeout period, it will
release up to half of the threads in the pool.
Currently imagelib's DecodePool spawns the maximum number of threads
during startup, based on the number of processors. This patch changes it
to spawn a single thread on startup (which cannot fail), and more up to
the maximum as jobs are added to the queue. A thread will only be
spawned if there is a backlog present when a new job is added. This
typically results in fewer threads allocated in the parent process, as
well as deferred spawning in the content processes.
It's easy to mess up the scoping so that (a) the label is pushed and then
immediately popped, and/or (b) the string doesn't live long enough. It's also
easy to do a utf16-to-utf8 conversion unnecessarily when the profiler is
inactive. This patch splits that macro into three new ones that are harder to
mess up.
- AUTO_PROFILER_LABEL_DYNAMIC_CSTR: same as current.
- AUTO_PROFILER_LABEL_DYNAMIC_NSCSTRING: for nsCStrings.
- AUTO_PROFILER_LABEL_DYNAMIC_LOSSY_NSSTRING: for nsStrings.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 3e2bbec4737b696e1c86579ae54be4cb3186c100
Currently the Gecko Profiler defines a moderate amount of stuff when
MOZ_GECKO_PROFILER is undefined. It also #includes various headers, including
JS ones. This is making it difficult to separate Gecko's media stack for
inclusion in Servo.
This patch greatly simplifies how things are exposed. The starting point is:
- GeckoProfiler.h can be #included unconditionally;
- everything else from the profiler must be guarded by MOZ_GECKO_PROFILER.
In practice this introduces way too many #ifdefs, so the patch loosens it by
adding no-op macros for a number of the most common operations.
The net result is that #ifdefs and macros are used a bit more, but almost
nothing is exposed in non-MOZ_GECKO_PROFILER builds (including
ProfilerMarkerPayload.h and GeckoProfiler.h), and understanding what is exposed
is much simpler than before.
Note also that in BHR, ThreadStackHelper is now entirely absent in
non-MOZ_GECKO_PROFILER builds.
This patch makes the following changes to the macros.
- Removes PROFILER_LABEL_FUNC. It's only suitable for use in functions outside
classes, due to PROFILER_FUNCTION_NAME not getting class names, and it was
mostly misused.
- Removes PROFILER_FUNCTION_NAME. It's no longer used, and __func__ is
universally available now anyway.
- Combines the first two string literal arguments of PROFILER_LABEL and
PROFILER_LABEL_DYNAMIC into a single argument. There was no good reason for
them to be separate, and it forced a '::' in the label, which isn't always
appropriate. Also, the meaning of the "name_space" argument was interpreted
in an interesting variety of ways.
- Adds an "AUTO_" prefix to PROFILER_LABEL and PROFILER_LABEL_DYNAMIC, to make
it clearer they construct RAII objects rather than just being function calls.
(I myself have screwed up the scoping because of this in the past.)
- Fills in the 'js::ProfileEntry::Category::' qualifier within the macro, so
the caller doesn't need to. This makes a *lot* more of the uses fit onto a
single line.
The patch also makes the following changes to the macro uses (beyond those
required by the changes described above).
- Fixes a bunch of labels that had gotten out of sync with the name of the
class and/or function that encloses them.
- Removes a useless PROFILER_LABEL use within a trivial scope in
EventStateManager::DispatchMouseOrPointerEvent(). It clearly wasn't serving
any useful purpose. It also serves as extra evidence that the AUTO_ prefix is
a good idea.
- Tweaks DecodePool::SyncRunIf{Preferred,Possible} so that the labelling is
done within them, instead of at their callsites, because that's a more
standard way of doing things.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 318d1bc6fc1425a94aacbf489dd46e4f83211de4
This patch reduces the differences between builds where the profiler is enabled
and those where the profiler is disabled. It does this by removing numerous
MOZ_GECKO_PROFILER checks.
These changes have the following consequences.
- Various functions and classes are now defined in all builds, and so can be
used unconditionally: profiler_add_marker(), profiler_set_js_context(),
profiler_clear_js_context(), profiler_get_pseudo_stack(), AutoProfilerLabel.
(They are effectively no-ops in non-profiler builds, of course.)
- The no-op versions of PROFILER_* are now gone. The remaining versions are
almost no-ops when the profiler isn't built.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 8fb5e8757600210c2f77865694d25162f0b7698a
The Decode call may result in synchronously creating the surface, but we only check again if the surface is there for FLAG_SYNC_DECODE, not FLAG_SYNC_DECODE_IF_FAST.
All of the decoding we do during painting is of the type FLAG_SYNC_DECODE_IF_FAST, which means it would be useless to do that decoding synchronously during painting because the paint doesn't benefit from the result of that decoding.
Looking at the history of this code it looks like https://hg.mozilla.org/mozilla-central/rev/435df926eb10 (part 6 of bug 1119774) was where this bug was introduced. Before that changeset we always did another LookupFrameInternal call after the Decode (called WantDecodedFrames back then). But that changeset changed it to only be done for standard sync decodes, not "sync decode if fast".
nsThreadManager::get() can return a reference. This lets us remove some
redundant assertions.
nsThreadArray elements can be NotNull<>s.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : fd49010167101bc15f7f6d01bf95fd63b81d60fb
This patch makes most Run() declarations in subclasses of nsIRunnable have the
same form: |NS_IMETHOD Run() override|.
As a result of these changes, I had to add |override| to a couple of other
functions to satisfy clang's -Winconsistent-missing-override warning.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 815d0018b0b13329bb5698c410f500dddcc3ee12