The session restore page keeps its restore list within a text input field
so that the values are persisted even if the page is refreshed. When form
elements were loaded with the prototype cache we didn't call
DoneCreatingElement after creating the element, which means the form values
weren't restored.
The list of elements that require DoneCreatingElement and DoneAddingChildren
to be called was in three (now four) different places, so I moved them to
a central spot in nsIContent to share in all locations. This also highlighted
that the check for <output> nodes is missing from the XML content sink.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D44866
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
The session restore page keeps its restore list within a text input field
so that the values are persisted even if the page is refreshed. When form
elements were loaded with the prototype cache we didn't call
DoneCreatingElement after creating the element, which means the form values
weren't restored.
The list of elements that require DoneCreatingElement and DoneAddingChildren
to be called was in three (now four) different places, so I moved them to
a central spot in nsIContent to share in all locations. This also highlighted
that the check for <output> nodes is missing from the XML content sink.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D44866
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
ReferrerPolicy gets tossed back and forth as a uint32_t and
ReferrerPolicy enum in header file. Expose ReferrerPolicyValues from
webidl file and use consistently in native code.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D41954
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This is mostly straight-forward cleanup, but there's a behavior change which
was an oversight from bug 1386840, the regular mObservers stuff didn't pass the
right thing (was passing only mWasAlternate rather than whether it was
deferred).
I think that as a result, only in XML documents (since nsXMLContentSink is the
only thing that adds itself as a global CSS loader observer that ever looks at
this boolean), we may end up breaking this assert:
https://searchfox.org/mozilla-central/rev/9ae20497229225cb3fa729a787791f424ff8087b/dom/base/nsContentSink.cpp#183
(If there are any sheets with non-matching media queries and such).
But I couldn't find a test-case that broke it (tried SVG / XHTML), and in other
documents like pure XML you cannot specify a media query...
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D41091
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This is split from the previous changeset since if we include dom/ the file size is too
large for phabricator to handle.
This is an autogenerated commit to handle scripts loading mochitest harness files, in
the simple case where the script src is on the same line as the tag.
This was generated with https://bug1544322.bmoattachments.org/attachment.cgi?id=9058170
using the `--part 2` argument.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D27457
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Switch to managing the buffer lifetime with a UniquePtr. This will make handling errors simpler in the next patch.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D20579
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Replacing js and text occurences of asyncOpen2
Replacing open2 with open
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D16885
--HG--
rename : layout/style/test/test_asyncopen2.html => layout/style/test/test_asyncopen.html
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
***
Bug 1514594: Part 3a - Change ChromeUtils.import to return an exports object; not pollute global. r=mccr8
This changes the behavior of ChromeUtils.import() to return an exports object,
rather than a module global, in all cases except when `null` is passed as a
second argument, and changes the default behavior not to pollute the global
scope with the module's exports. Thus, the following code written for the old
model:
ChromeUtils.import("resource://gre/modules/Services.jsm");
is approximately the same as the following, in the new model:
var {Services} = ChromeUtils.import("resource://gre/modules/Services.jsm");
Since the two behaviors are mutually incompatible, this patch will land with a
scripted rewrite to update all existing callers to use the new model rather
than the old.
***
Bug 1514594: Part 3b - Mass rewrite all JS code to use the new ChromeUtils.import API. rs=Gijs
This was done using the followng script:
https://bitbucket.org/kmaglione/m-c-rewrites/src/tip/processors/cu-import-exports.jsm
***
Bug 1514594: Part 3c - Update ESLint plugin for ChromeUtils.import API changes. r=Standard8
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D16747
***
Bug 1514594: Part 3d - Remove/fix hundreds of duplicate imports from sync tests. r=Gijs
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D16748
***
Bug 1514594: Part 3e - Remove no-op ChromeUtils.import() calls. r=Gijs
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D16749
***
Bug 1514594: Part 3f.1 - Cleanup various test corner cases after mass rewrite. r=Gijs
***
Bug 1514594: Part 3f.2 - Cleanup various non-test corner cases after mass rewrite. r=Gijs
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D16750
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 359574ee3064c90f33bf36c2ebe3159a24cc8895
extra : histedit_source : b93c8f42808b1599f9122d7842d2c0b3e656a594%2C64a3a4e3359dc889e2ab2b49461bab9e27fc10a7
Summary: Really sorry for the size of the patch. It's mostly automatic
s/nsIDocument/Document/ but I had to fix up in a bunch of places manually to
add the right namespacing and such.
Overall it's not a very interesting patch I think.
nsDocument.cpp turns into Document.cpp, nsIDocument.h into Document.h and
nsIDocumentInlines.h into DocumentInlines.h.
I also changed a bunch of nsCOMPtr usage to RefPtr, but not all of it.
While fixing up some of the bits I also removed some unneeded OwnerDoc() null
checks and such, but I didn't do anything riskier than that.
This makes the code much simpler, and also likely much more efficient, since
it does not involve creating a sandbox, and the resulting copies and
cross-compartment-wrapper overhead.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D14213
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : d5def81411c651314fb10d19749ffe1642d78dcb
We have a few places where C++ calls ChromeUtils::Import directly.
I fixed these to pass the target object directly instead of an empty Optional<>.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D14180
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
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/D13073
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
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/D13073
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
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/D13073
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Everything that goes in a PLDHashtable (and its derivatives, like
nsTHashtable) needs to inherit from PLDHashEntryHdr. But through a lack
of enforcement, copy constructors for these derived classes didn't
explicitly invoke the copy constructor for PLDHashEntryHdr (and the
compiler didn't invoke the copy constructor for us). Instead,
PLDHashTable explicitly copied around the bits that the copy constructor
would have.
The current setup has two problems:
1) Derived classes should be using move construction, not copy
construction, since anything that's shuffling hash table keys/entries
around will be using move construction.
2) Derived classes should take responsibility for transferring bits of
superclass state around, and not rely on something else to handle that.
The second point is not a huge problem for PLDHashTable (PLDHashTable
only has to copy PLDHashEntryHdr's bits in a single place), but future
hash table implementations that might move entries around more
aggressively would have to insert compensation code all over the
place. Additionally, if moving entries is implemented via memcpy (which
is quite common), PLDHashTable copying around bits *again* is
inefficient.
Let's fix all these problems in one go, by:
1) Explicitly declaring the set of constructors that PLDHashEntryHdr
implements (and does not implement). In particular, the copy
constructor is deleted, so any derived classes that attempt to make
themselves copyable will be detected at compile time: the compiler
will complain that the superclass type is not copyable.
This change on its own will result in many compiler errors, so...
2) Change any derived classes to implement move constructors instead of
copy constructors. Note that some of these move constructors are,
strictly speaking, unnecessary, since the relevant classes are moved
via memcpy in nsTHashtable and its derivatives.
This switches over the few remaining usages of the deprecated
BeginWriting/EndWriting(iterator&) functions to the more standard
BeginWriting/EndWriting() functions.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 3c54621d4921eb45157ec4edce0b693bdd7f02d5
There are surprisingly many of them.
(Plus a couple of unnecessary checks after `new` calls that were nearby.)
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 47b6d5d7c5c99b1b50b396daf7a3b67abfd74fc1
Correctness improvements:
* UTF errors are handled safely per spec instead of dangerously truncating
strings.
* There are fewer converter implementations.
Performance improvements:
* The old code did exact buffer length math, which meant doing UTF math twice
on each input string (once for length calculation and another time for
conversion). Exact length math is more complicated when handling errors
properly, which the old code didn't do. The new code does UTF math on the
string content only once (when converting) but risks allocating more than
once. There are heuristics in place to lower the probability of
reallocation in cases where the double math avoidance isn't enough of a
saving to absorb an allocation and memcpy.
* Previously, in UTF-16 <-> UTF-8 conversions, an ASCII prefix was optimized
but a single non-ASCII code point pessimized the rest of the string. The
new code tries to get back on the fast ASCII path.
* UTF-16 to Latin1 conversion guarantees less about handling of out-of-range
input to eliminate an operation from the inner loop on x86/x86_64.
* When assigning to a pre-existing string, the new code tries to reuse the
old buffer instead of first releasing the old buffer and then allocating a
new one.
* When reallocating from the new code, the memcpy covers only the data that
is part of the logical length of the old string instead of memcpying the
whole capacity. (For old callers old excess memcpy behavior is preserved
due to bogus callers. See bug 1472113.)
* UTF-8 strings in XPConnect that are in the Latin1 range are passed to
SpiderMonkey as Latin1.
New features:
* Conversion between UTF-8 and Latin1 is added in order to enable faster
future interop between Rust code (or otherwise UTF-8-using code) and text
node and SpiderMonkey code that uses Latin1.
MozReview-Commit-ID: JaJuExfILM9