I don't think anyone is using this anymore. It would be good to assert that there
are no leaks, but that doesn't pass for me in a local build, and I don't have time
to chase it.
Having the Impl suffix isn't really necessary, and if we start creating
instances of these classes directly, it's also rather ugly. Let's get
rid of them.
As well as adding MOZ_MUST_USE to a number of functions, this patch:
- Changes the return type of nsObserverList::GetObserverList() from |nsresult|
to |void|, because it always returned NS_OK and none of the callers checked
the result.
- Removes an unnecessary |new| check in nsSupportsArray::Enumerate().
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 3a93124ef2a7db3929119194ceacbc56bc80d2c6
A few callers of NS_NewISupportsArray() didn't use the return value to detect
failure, but instead checked if the |array| argument was null after the call.
This is inconsistent with the majority of the calls to NS_NewISupportsArray().
This patch changes them to be checked in the normal way.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : bf91836d7c3b159833c303a3716f4d9366f8b76a
It's always NS_OK. The patch also removes an unnecessary failure check as a
result.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 3a0c30f9ca0e838682204ed1a8d46d6ab35e20b8
This makes things clearer and removes some unnecessary nsresult checks.
The patch also:
- removes some unnecessary |new| and moz_xmalloc() checks;
- adds MOZ_MUST_USE to some fallible nsVariant methods.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : fd0bd0c55c22ebf194246ec9997fe971cf282e69
It's an annotation that is used a lot, and should be used even more, so a
shorter name is better.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1VS4Dney4WX
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : b26919c1b0fcb32e5339adeef5be5becae6032cf
This required reordering a bunch of stuff, so I took the opportunity to do a
big reordering. The new order:
- class CheckStaticAtomSizes;
- class DynamicAtom, class StaticAtom, their methods;
- gAtomTable and related functions;
- ~DynamicAtom() (here because it depends on gAtomTable stuff);
- gStaticAtomTable and related functions;
- exported functions.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 5fd4bf9a3f0c628dc3f74c0d8a81aadf48fd6dd7
This avoids the need for some virtual function calls and also will help lead to
distinct representations for dynamic and static atoms.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 16bbe6f1e1309ee3e4fab7a0d222e638178a2a9c
This patch changes things so that dynamic atoms and static atoms have distinct
implementations. This is a step towards allowing dynamic atoms and static atoms
to have different layouts in memory, which will allow static atoms to be
represented more compactly.
Specifically, the patch does the following.
- It renames AtomImpl as DynamicAtom and PermanentAtomImpl as StaticAtom, and
the latter is no longer a subclass of the former. This required duplicating
some methods from the former into the latter: ScriptableToString(),
ToUTF8String(), ScriptableEquals(), IsStaticAtom(). (This duplication will
disappear in the future if the representations of dynamic atoms and static
atoms diverge. Indeed, SizeOfIncludingThis() is already different in the two
classes.)
- It replaces all mentions of "permanent"/"non-permanent" atoms with
"static"/"dynamic".
- In ~DynamicAtom() it removes the check that causes gAtomTable to be deleted
when it becomes empty. This will only happen at shutdown and so doesn't seem
useful.
- It documents better various things, especially the basics of the
dynamic/static split, the transmutation of dynamic atoms to static atoms, and
the details of the SizeOf functions.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : dbf903012e70ebf1a43de1e1088db1bc1b8dd4f4
The former is only used inconsequentially in tests. The second is not used at
all.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 4cfe11f933f1fe8f788e823c5107941085cef92c
This patch brings the behavior of this method into line with the comment that
describes it and other methods in this class that have a similar test.
I discovered this bug while exercising this code from animation code and was
getting test failures due to returning -Infinity instead of the expected
Infinity.
This patch removes NameTableEntry::mString. This requires adding mNameArray to
NameTableKey so that we can index off it in matchNameKeysCaseInsensitive().
This change saves 41.5 KiB per process.
Be warned. Do not attemp to change the .js "test" source code in ./js
They are meant to check
- the outdated 0666 octal constant is still parsed correctly,
- the outdated 0666 octal constant raises syntax error flag
in strict mode, etc.
So leave them alone.
When people write:
array.AppendElement(nsDependentString(...));
(resp. nsDependentCString), it's not clear whether they expect the newly
constructed dependent string to live in the array, or whether they're
just making a nsString-like holder whose contents can be freely copied
into the array's newly-created nsString. Sometimes the latter is what
you prefer, and sometimes the former. In all cases, however, the latter
behavior is what you get.
Let's try to make that behavior more explicit by pre-constructing
nsString elements and then using Assign to show that copying is taking
place. This patch involves no functional change in behavior (it ought
to be epsilon faster due to using AppendElements, rather than repeatedly
calling AppendElement).
The bulk of this commit was generated with a script, executed at the top
level of a typical source code checkout. The only non-machine-generated
part was modifying MFBT's moz.build to reflect the new naming.
CLOSED TREE makes big refactorings like this a piece of cake.
# The main substitution.
find . -name '*.cpp' -o -name '*.cc' -o -name '*.h' -o -name '*.mm' -o -name '*.idl'| \
xargs perl -p -i -e '
s/nsRefPtr\.h/RefPtr\.h/g; # handle includes
s/nsRefPtr ?</RefPtr</g; # handle declarations and variables
'
# Handle a special friend declaration in gfx/layers/AtomicRefCountedWithFinalize.h.
perl -p -i -e 's/::nsRefPtr;/::RefPtr;/' gfx/layers/AtomicRefCountedWithFinalize.h
# Handle nsRefPtr.h itself, a couple places that define constructors
# from nsRefPtr, and code generators specially. We do this here, rather
# than indiscriminantly s/nsRefPtr/RefPtr/, because that would rename
# things like nsRefPtrHashtable.
perl -p -i -e 's/nsRefPtr/RefPtr/g' \
mfbt/nsRefPtr.h \
xpcom/glue/nsCOMPtr.h \
xpcom/base/OwningNonNull.h \
ipc/ipdl/ipdl/lower.py \
ipc/ipdl/ipdl/builtin.py \
dom/bindings/Codegen.py \
python/lldbutils/lldbutils/utils.py
# In our indiscriminate substitution above, we renamed
# nsRefPtrGetterAddRefs, the class behind getter_AddRefs. Fix that up.
find . -name '*.cpp' -o -name '*.h' -o -name '*.idl' | \
xargs perl -p -i -e 's/nsRefPtrGetterAddRefs/RefPtrGetterAddRefs/g'
if [ -d .git ]; then
git mv mfbt/nsRefPtr.h mfbt/RefPtr.h
else
hg mv mfbt/nsRefPtr.h mfbt/RefPtr.h
fi
--HG--
rename : mfbt/nsRefPtr.h => mfbt/RefPtr.h
Leave a typedef for compatibility. nsVariant will be defined as a
separate class in the next patch.
Also, remove an obsolete comment and fix some whitespace.
There are many sub-classes of nsExpirationTracker. In order to distinguish them
nicely in the logging of timer firings, it's necessary to manually name each
one. (This wouldn't be necessary if there was a way to stringify template
parameters, but there isn't.)
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 89b99e9dbb2a806bd21145d04a5e023794643b61
The patch removes 455 occurrences of FAIL_ON_WARNINGS from moz.build files, and
adds 78 instances of ALLOW_COMPILER_WARNINGS. About half of those 78 are in
code we control and which should be removable with a little effort.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 82e3387abfbd5f1471e953961d301d3d97ed2973
After this change, we have ShallowSizeOf{In,Ex}cludingThis(), which don't do
anything to measure children. (They can be combined with iteration to measure
children.)
And we still have the existing single-arg SizeOf{In,Ex}cluding() functions,
which work if the entry type itself defines SizeOfExcludingThis().
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : f93de9b789c21b1b148bed9de795f663f77c9dd9
After this change, we have PLDHashTable::ShallowSizeOf{In,Ex}cludingThis(),
which don't do anything to measure children. (They can be combined with
iteration to measure children.)
This patch also removes the PL_DHashTableSizeOf{In,Ex}cludingThis() functions.
They're not necessary because the methods can be used instead.
Finally, the patch deliberately converts some SizeOfExcludingThis() calls to
SizeOfIncludingThis(). These are all done on heap pointers so this change is
valid.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : b1d51096a8e7dcac29d7efd92e28938836ff5481
nsCheapSet is used little enough that I didn't bother creating an iterator for
it.
I removed the dependency on PLDHashOperator by introducing nsCheapSetOperator,
which is equivalent.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 8a15ae2ee0949a241f6417bfab614affbec2987c
nsDiscriminatedUnion owns memory without using smart pointers, so implementing anything
that would copy or move around one of these will require some care. Just forbid these
for now.
The existing nsDiscriminateUnions either always call Cleanup() when they
are about to go away, or they only handle scalar values so it is safe to
call Cleanup() on them without worrying about another discriminated union
having taken over any memory owned by this union.
This change splits PLDHashTable::Iterator::NextEntry() into two separate
functions, which allow you to get the current element and advance the iterator
separately, which means you can use a for-loop to iterate instead of a
while-loop.
As part of this change, the internals of PLDHashTable::Iterator were
significantly changed and simplified (and modelled after js::HashTable's
equivalent code). It's no longer duplicating code from PL_DHashTableEnumerator.
The chaos mode code was a casualty of this, but given how unreliable that code
has proven to be (see bug 1173212, bug 1174046) this is for the best. (We can
reimplement chaos mode once PLDHashTable::Iterator is back on more solid
footing again, if we think it's important.)
All these changes will make it much easier to add an alternative Iterator that
removes elements, which was turning out to be difficult with the prior code.
In order to make the for-loop header usually fit on a single line, I
deliberately renamed a bunch of things to have shorter names.
In summary, you used to write this:
PLDHashTable::Iterator iter(&table);
while (iter.HasMoreEntries()) {
auto entry = static_cast<FooEntry*>(iter.NextEntry());
// ... do stuff with |entry| ...
}
// iter's scope extends beyond here
and now you write this:
for (auto iter = table.Iter(); !iter.Done(); iter.Next()) {
auto entry = static_cast<FooEntry*>(iter.Get());
// ... do stuff with |entry| ...
}
// iter's scope doesn't reach here
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : fa5cac2fc50b1ab7624030bced4763131280f4d8
The old code attempted to deal with any OOMs during this enumeration --
OOMs are possible because it's growing an nsCOMArray -- but failed to do so
correctly.
- It didn't check the return value of AppendObject().
- It did check that EntryCount() matched the return value of
PL_DHashTableEnumerate(), but that's always (and vacuously) true.
The new code just returns NS_ERROR_OUT_OF_MEMORY if AppendObject() fails; this
is trivial now that it uses an iterator and doesn't have to call out to another
function.
This is straightforward mapping of PR_LOG levels to their LogLevel
counterparts:
PR_LOG_ERROR -> LogLevel::Error
PR_LOG_WARNING -> LogLevel::Warning
PR_LOG_WARN -> LogLevel::Warning
PR_LOG_INFO -> LogLevel::Info
PR_LOG_DEBUG -> LogLevel::Debug
PR_LOG_NOTICE -> LogLevel::Debug
PR_LOG_VERBOSE -> LogLevel::Verbose
Instances of PRLogModuleLevel were mapped to a fully qualified
mozilla::LogLevel, instances of PR_LOG levels in #defines were mapped to a
fully qualified mozilla::LogLevel::* level, and all other instances were
mapped to us a shorter format of LogLevel::*.
Bustage for usage of the non-fully qualified LogLevel were fixed by adding
|using mozilla::LogLevel;| where appropriate.
|mOps| is always non-null now, and there's no longer any distinction between
and uninitialized and initialized table. Yay.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 3d1fb72aee4dd21ff20db0ff3166d4e932ade897
This is straightforward mapping of PR_LOG levels to their LogLevel
counterparts:
PR_LOG_ERROR -> LogLevel::Error
PR_LOG_WARNING -> LogLevel::Warning
PR_LOG_WARN -> LogLevel::Warning
PR_LOG_INFO -> LogLevel::Info
PR_LOG_DEBUG -> LogLevel::Debug
PR_LOG_NOTICE -> LogLevel::Debug
PR_LOG_VERBOSE -> LogLevel::Verbose
Instances of PRLogModuleLevel were mapped to a fully qualified
mozilla::LogLevel, instances of PR_LOG levels in #defines were mapped to a
fully qualified mozilla::LogLevel::* level, and all other instances were
mapped to us a shorter format of LogLevel::*.
Bustage for usage of the non-fully qualified LogLevel were fixed by adding
|using mozilla::LogLevel;| where appropriate.
This is straightforward mapping of PR_LOG levels to their LogLevel
counterparts:
PR_LOG_ERROR -> LogLevel::Error
PR_LOG_WARNING -> LogLevel::Warning
PR_LOG_WARN -> LogLevel::Warning
PR_LOG_INFO -> LogLevel::Info
PR_LOG_DEBUG -> LogLevel::Debug
PR_LOG_NOTICE -> LogLevel::Debug
PR_LOG_VERBOSE -> LogLevel::Verbose
Instances of PRLogModuleLevel were mapped to a fully qualified
mozilla::LogLevel, instances of PR_LOG levels in #defines were mapped to a
fully qualified mozilla::LogLevel::* level, and all other instances were
mapped to us a shorter format of LogLevel::*.
Bustage for usage of the non-fully qualified LogLevel were fixed by adding
|using mozilla::LogLevel;| where appropriate.
CLOSED TREE
Backed out changeset 12ce98475c6e (bug 1119980)
Backed out changeset bdb8d05f8870 (bug 1119980)
Backed out changeset a68a18840492 (bug 1119980)
This patch simplifies nsStaticCaseInsensitiveNameTable greatly by taking
advantage of the following observations.
- |new| is infallible, so |new nsStaticCaseInsensitiveNameTable()| calls don't
need their return value checked.
- nsStaticCaseInsensitiveNameTable::Init() checks if any of the added entries
differ only in case, so the callers of that function don't need to do the
same check.
- nsStaticCaseInsensitiveNameTable::Init() never returns false because
moz_xmalloc() is infallible. (Its callers never check the return value
anyway.) So it can be merged into the constructor. And
~nsStaticCaseInsensitiveNameTable() need not null-check |mNameArray|.
- PLDHashTable now has an initializing constructor and destructor, so these can
be used in nsStaticCaseInsensitiveNameTable, thus avoiding manual
PLD_HashTable{Init,Finish}() calls.
This patch converts easy cases, i.e. where the PL_DHashTableInit() call occurs
in a constructor and the PL_DHashTableFinish() call occurs in a destructor.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : d8dc450f80ac23b8455141b471cc9ae823e1e384
Due to Android startup regressions (bug 1163066) and plugin crashes (bug
1165155).
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 380f79e67dff4c4eaa2614f286a4d0669666b652
This patch converts easy cases, i.e. where the PL_DHashTableInit() call occurs
in a constructor and the PL_DHashTableFinish() call occurs in a destructor.
They are kept around for the sake of the standalone glue, which is used
for e.g. webapprt, which doesn't have direct access to jemalloc, and thus
still needs a wrapper to go through the xpcom function list and get to
jemalloc from there.
It's no longer needed now that entry storage isn't allocated there. (The other
possible causes of failures in that function are less interesting and simply
crashing is a reasonable thing to do for them.)
This also makes PL_DNewHashTable() infallible, so I removed some
now-unnecessary checks of its result.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 4c6ab0c449bc18e8bace8bf036b5bd78d3a2f1c4
The QI in xpc_TryUnmarkWrappedGrayObject() might somehow trigger a GC,
which in turn could destroy an observer, that would in turn call
RemoveObserver() which mutates the hash table that we're enumerating.
I kept all the existing PL_DHashTableAdd() calls fallible, in order to be
conservative, except for the ones in nsAtomTable.cpp which already were
followed immediately by an abort on failure.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 526d96ab65e4d7d71197b90d086d19fbdd79b7b5
I kept all the existing PL_DHashTableAdd() calls fallible, in order to be
conservative, except for the ones in nsAtomTable.cpp which already were
followed immediately by an abort on failure.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : eeba14d732077ef2e412f4caca852de6b6b85f55
Because it's no longer needed now that entry storage isn't allocated there.
(The other possible causes of failures are much less interesting and simply
crashing is a reasonable thing to do for them.)
This also makes PL_DNewHashTable() infallible.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 848cc9bbdfe434525857183b8370d309f3acbf49