NullPrincipal::Create() (will null OA) may cause an OriginAttributes bypass.
We change Create() so OriginAttributes is no longer optional, and rename
Create() with no arguments to make it more explicit about what the caller is doing.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 7DQGlgh1tgJ
When SetSize etc. are called before OnChromeLoaded has been invoked,
the functions assume that the window initialization code wants to size
the window specifically, and thus ignore the values from the <window>
element.
However, bug 1439875 changes the behavior so that SizeShell is also
invoked before OnChromeLoaded, which confuses the functions above, and
causes some of the attributes not to be loaded properly.
This patch adds a separate flag to avoid ignoring those attributes when
those functions are invoked as part of SizeShell itself.
It can cause extra reflow if the window is opened in maximized state,
and thus the new whitelist items. They may be fixed by bug 1448199.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 7jT8w9KGmzy
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : d970be5b1ae0588f6b0b63e2bd6a711853c82478
I want this behind a pref so that I can investigate other bugs without building
locally.
MozReview-Commit-ID: FWbGUxNbbm
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 546ace867858f17b543bd11ef908c10fa63a022f
When SetSize etc. are called before OnChromeLoaded has been invoked,
the functions assume that the window initialization code wants to size
the window specifically, and thus ignore the values from the <window>
element.
However, bug 1439875 changes the behavior so that SizeShell is also
invoked before OnChromeLoaded, which confuses the functions above, and
causes some of the attributes not to be loaded properly.
This patch adds a separate flag to avoid ignoring those attributes when
those functions are invoked as part of SizeShell itself.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 7jT8w9KGmzy
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 7bcc0b1fe96207561fbfd255c976cce695c1da8f
The only subtle thing is the mCenterAfterLoad stuff, which is gated after a
mChromeLoaded.
Other than that it follows the same pattern as bug 345560.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 8qDiA2yn9DB
The only subtle thing is the mCenterAfterLoad stuff, which is gated after a
mChromeLoaded.
Other than that it follows the same pattern as bug 345560.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 8qDiA2yn9DB
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 8ad309e3f449cea1536bfbff8e8b1585fefbc186
extra : source : f582644f846cee16b554d694d24b4eb8ca3c5106
The only subtle thing is the mCenterAfterLoad stuff, which is gated after a
mChromeLoaded.
Other than that it follows the same pattern as bug 345560.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 8qDiA2yn9DB
The only subtle thing is the mCenterAfterLoad stuff, which is gated after a
mChromeLoaded.
Other than that it follows the same pattern as bug 345560.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 8qDiA2yn9DB
It seems that the layout system assumes those attributes are for size of
the <window> element, i.e. inner window size, not outer window size.
See for example nsContainerFrame::SyncWindowProperties. It reads
{min,max}{width,height} attributes from the element via
nsIFrame::GetXUL{Min,Max}Size, and passes them into SetSizeConstraints.
The latter inflates the sizes with window decoration size before calling
into widget code. It can also be seen that various XUL size related
methods on nsBox and nsIFrame put the same assumption.
The test test_windowminmaxsize.xul apparently puts the same assumption
as the layout system on the meaning of those properties.
(Another test test_resize_move_windows.xul, which tests effectiveness of
features of window.open, also fails if we size the window earlier than
current in bug 1439875, and doesn't fail with this patch on top. It may
indicate that it makes use of the same assumption, but I can't really
figure out how it does so.)
MozReview-Commit-ID: IdMwDc59Ltg
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : ae46c23e450f556cc4608b512890c4e27cf8623e
This patch was autogenerated by my decomponents.py
It covers almost every file with the extension js, jsm, html, py,
xhtml, or xul.
It removes blank lines after removed lines, when the removed lines are
preceded by either blank lines or the start of a new block. The "start
of a new block" is defined fairly hackily: either the line starts with
//, ends with */, ends with {, <![CDATA[, """ or '''. The first two
cover comments, the third one covers JS, the fourth covers JS embedded
in XUL, and the final two cover JS embedded in Python. This also
applies if the removed line was the first line of the file.
It covers the pattern matching cases like "var {classes: Cc,
interfaces: Ci, utils: Cu, results: Cr} = Components;". It'll remove
the entire thing if they are all either Ci, Cr, Cc or Cu, or it will
remove the appropriate ones and leave the residue behind. If there's
only one behind, then it will turn it into a normal, non-pattern
matching variable definition. (For instance, "const { classes: Cc,
Constructor: CC, interfaces: Ci, utils: Cu } = Components" becomes
"const CC = Components.Constructor".)
MozReview-Commit-ID: DeSHcClQ7cG
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : d9c41878036c1ef7766ef5e91a7005025bc1d72b
This was done using the following script:
37e3803c7a/processors/chromeutils-import.jsm
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1Nc3XDu0wGl
--HG--
extra : source : 12fc4dee861c812fd2bd032c63ef17af61800c70
extra : intermediate-source : 34c999fa006bffe8705cf50c54708aa21a962e62
extra : histedit_source : b2be2c5e5d226e6c347312456a6ae339c1e634b0
This was done using the following script:
37e3803c7a/processors/chromeutils-import.jsm
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1Nc3XDu0wGl
--HG--
extra : source : 12fc4dee861c812fd2bd032c63ef17af61800c70
This was done using the following script:
37e3803c7a/processors/chromeutils-import.jsm
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1Nc3XDu0wGl
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : c004a023389f1f6bf3d2f3efe93c13d423b23ccd
These were originally exposed directly as static methods on nsGlobalWindow, but
as they are clearly associated with either the inner or outer window, it makes
more sense for them to be called as such.
MozReview-Commit-ID: LFq8EfnhDlo
This is a large patch which tries to switch many of the external consumers of
nsGlobalWindow to instead use the new Inner or Outer variants.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 99648Lm46T5
Because nsAString is nicer to work with than char16_t*. The patch relatedly
changes nsIEmbeddingSiteWindow::title and nsIWindowMediator::updateWindowTitle
as well.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 0bf332dec3e09af6c39c676f8795b368768a6046
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
This is similar like the previous patch, but for the 8-bit string variants.
Also, it changes assignment to Adopt() in GetCString() and GetDefaultCString()
to avoid an extra copy.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : eba805c3a7b809d5ccd6e853b1c9010db9477667
This patch replaces four functions of the name AssignWithConversion which
are essentially wrappers around CopyASCIItoUTF16 and LossyCopyUTF16toASCII
with direct calls to the latter two functions. The replaced functions are:
void nsCString::AssignWithConversion( const nsAString& aData )
void nsString::AssignWithConversion( const nsACString& aData )
void nsTString_CharT::AssignWithConversion(
const incompatible_char_type* aData,
int32_t aLength = -1);
The last of the three exists inside the double-included nsTString* world and
so describes two functions, giving four in total.
This has two advantages:
* it removes code
* at the call points, it makes clear (from the replacement name) which
conversion is being carried out. The generic name "AssignWithConversion"
doesn't make that obvious -- one had to infer it from the types.
The patch also removes two commented out lines from
editor/composer/nsComposerCommands.cpp, that appear to be related. They are
at top level, where they would never have compiled. They look like
leftovers from some previous change.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : fb47bf450771c3c9ee3341dd14520f5da69ec4f5
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