Also, in many place, we use document uri as referrer. It is not right
for the case srdoc iframe. We should use the last non-srdoc parent
document's uri
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D30191
--HG--
rename : testing/web-platform/tests/referrer-policy/generic/iframe-inheritance.html => testing/web-platform/tests/referrer-policy/generic/inheritance/iframe-inheritance-data.html
rename : testing/web-platform/tests/referrer-policy/generic/iframe-inheritance.html => testing/web-platform/tests/referrer-policy/generic/inheritance/iframe-inheritance-srcdoc.html
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Since unscoped enums implicitly convert to underlying types, we don't have to change everything at once. It is worth enough to introduce auto-numbering, IMO.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D32841
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
The code has mostly moved, but there are a few simplifications:
1) If !GetStreamParser(), then GetChannel() always returns null and hence we
never set isSrcdoc to true. Which is good, because we don't want to apply the
special srcdoc-parsing rules to document.open() stuff. So we just pass false
to setIsSrcdocDocument(): It's the same behavior as before, but a lot clearer.
I've confirmed that code coverage says the "isSrcdoc =
NS_IsSrcdocChannel(channel)" line is unreached in our tests.
2) In the document.write-after-document.open case, aContentType is now always
"text/html" (because that's what document.open sets mContentTypeForWriteCalls
to. So the block checking for it not being "text/html" was dead code (also
confirmed via code coverage results) and I'm just removing it.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D30751
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This also exposes an accessor for whether the parser has a nonzero script nesting level.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D30313
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This excludes dom/, otherwise 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/D27456
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Bug 1478124 and bug 1524687 converted many things to static xpcom
component registration, but somehow left the corresponding C++
initialization.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D26697
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Before bug 938437, we had a rather large and error-prone
nsStaticXULComponents.cpp used to register all modules. That was
replaced with clever use of the linker, which allowed to avoid the mess
that maintaining that file was.
Fast forward to now, where after bug 1524687 and other work that
preceded it, we have a much smaller number of remaining static xpcom
components, registered via this linker hack, and don't expect to add
any new ones. The list should eventually go down to zero.
Within that context, it seems to be the right time to get rid of the
magic, and with it the problems it causes on its own.
Some of those components could probably be trivially be converted to
static registration via .conf files, but I didn't want to deal with the
possible need to increase the number of dummy modules in XPCOMInit.cpp.
They can still be converted as a followup.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D26076
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
A lot of files include `nsIPresShell.h` even though currently they don't
need it. This patch removes the unnecessary inclusions.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D25744
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
A lot of files include `nsIPresShell.h` even though currently they don't
need it. This patch removes the unnecessary inclusions.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D25744
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
If `Document::GetShell()` returns `PresShell*` rather than `nsIPresShell`, it's
a good step to deCOMTaminate `PresShell`.
This patch makes `Document.h` stop including `nsIPresShell.h` since
`nsIPresShell.h` includes `Document.h` indirectly and that causes bustage
when we make `Document::GetShell()` return `PresShell*`.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D25332
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
If `Document::GetShell()` returns `PresShell*` rather than `nsIPresShell`, it's
a good step to deCOMTaminate `PresShell`.
This patch makes `Document.h` stop including `nsIPresShell.h` since
`nsIPresShell.h` includes `Document.h` indirectly and that causes bustage
when we make `Document::GetShell()` return `PresShell*`.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D25332
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Create a new parser (PrototypeDocumentParser) and content sink
(PrototypeDocumentContentSink) that can be used by both XUL and XHTML.
The new parser moves the code from XULDocument that handles creating and
loading a nsXULPrototypeDocument from either the cache or the source
file. Once the parser has finished loading the prototype it notifies the
content sink. The parser is largely a stub and would be better suited
for use as a nsBaseParser, but nsHTMLDocument unfortunately needs an
nsIParser.
The new content sink has the XULDocument code responsible for the
prototype traversal that creates the DOM (XULDocument::ResumeWalk and
friends) and fires off various events.
To unify XUL and XHTML, the XHTML readystate event sequence is used in
XUL. However, the layout path of XHTML loaded from the prototype cache
more closely follows XUL, where frame initializers and layout don't
start until the entire DOM is built.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D21236
--HG--
rename : dom/xul/XULDocument.cpp => dom/prototype/PrototypeDocumentContentSink.cpp
rename : parser/moz.build => dom/prototype/moz.build
rename : parser/moz.build => parser/prototype/moz.build
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
The main behavior changes are:
1) We no longer create a new Window when doing document.open(). We use the
same Window but remove all the event listeners on it and on the existing DOM
tree before removing the document's existing kids.
2) We no longer create a new session history entry. The existing one always
gets replaced instead.
3) We now support document.open on documents that are not in a Window.
The reasons for the various test changes are as follows:
The change to browser_modifiedclick_inherit_principal.js is because we no
longer set the docshell to a wyciwyg URL when document.open() happens and the
test was depending on that to terminate.
browser_wyciwyg_urlbarCopying.js is being removed because it's trying to test
wyciwyg URIs, which no longer exist.
The changes in docshell/test/navigation are because document.open() no longer
affects session history. One of the tests was testing the interactions there
and is being removed; another is being repurposed to just test that
document.open() does not affect history.length.
The change to test_x-frame-options.html is because document.open() now removes
event listeners on the window, which it didn't use to do (and in the specific
case in this test reused the existing inner too, so the listener was still
around in practice). The new behavior matches other browsers.
The removal of test_bug172261.html is because document.open() no longer affects
session history, so you can't go back across it or forward to the "opened"
state, so the situation that test is trying to test no longer exists.
The changes to test_bug255820.html are because reloading a document after
document.open() will now just load the URL of the document that was the entry
document for the open() call, not reload the written content. So there's not
much point testing reload behavior, and in this test it was just reloading the
toplevel test file inside the frames.
The change to test_bug346659.html is because now we no longer create a new
Window on document.open().
The change to test_bug1232829.html is because document.open() (implicit in this
test) no longer adds history entries, so the back() was just leaving the test
page instead of going back across the document.open(). The test is a
crashtest in practice, so might still be testing something useful about how
document.open() interacts with animations.
The change to test_bug715739.html is because the URL of the document after
document.open() is now the URL of the entry document, not a wyciwyg URL, so
reload() has different behavior than it used to.
The change to test_bug329869.html is because now when we go back we're
reloading the original document we had, not doing a wyciwyg load, and the
security info now doesn't include the untrusted script.
The changes to the wpt expectations are removing a bunch of expected failures
now that we pass those tests and disabling some tests that are fundamentally
racy and hence fail randomly. The latter all have github issues filed for the
test problem.
The change to testing/web-platform/tests/common/object-association.js is fixing
tests that were not matching the spec (and were failing in other browsers).
The change to parser-uses-registry-of-owner-document.html is fixing tests that
were not matching the spec (and were failing in other browsers).
The change to document-write.tentative.html is because the test was buggy: it
was using the same iframe element for all its tests and racing loads from some
tests against API calls from other tests, etc. It's a wonder it ever managed
to pass, independent of these patches (and in fact it doesn't pass according to
wpt.fyi data, even in Firefox).
The changes in html/browsers/history/the-history-interface are because
document.open() no longer adds history entries. The test was failing in all
other browsers for the same reason.
The changes in html/browsers/history/the-location-interface are because
reloading a document.open()-created thing now loads the URL of the page that
was the entry document for the open() call. The test was failing in all other
browsers.
The change to reload_document_open_write.html is because we now reload the url
of the document that entered the script that called open() when we reload, not
the written content. Other browsers were failing this test too; Gecko with
the old document.open implementation was the only one that passed.
The change to http-refresh.py is to fix a test bug: it was not returning a
Content-Type header, so we were putting up helper app dialogs, etc.
The change to test_ext_contentscript.js is because we no create a new global
for document.open() calls. Kris Maglione OKed this part.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D17323
--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
The function has been in bionic (Android's libc since the first commit
in the upstream repository), but it's not been in stdlib.h until
recently. As it happens, we have a similar declaration in
xpcom/base/nsUUIDGenerator.cpp.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D19120
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Any time we stop a load of an XML document before we've gotten all the data,
we'll end up in this code with mSink null, because nsParser::Terminate ends up
calling nsExpatDriver::DidBuildModel which nulls out mSink, and not getting all
the data means the XML won't be well-formed.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D16856
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
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 is a big step in order to merge both.
Also allows to remove some very silly casts, though it causes us to add some
ToSupports around to deal with ambiguity of casts from nsIDocument to
nsISupports, and add a dummy nsISupports implementation that will go away later
in the series.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D15352
- modify line wrap up to 80 chars; (tw=80)
- modify size of tab to 2 chars everywhere; (sts=2, sw=2)
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 7eedce0311b340c9a5a1265dc42d3121cc0f32a0
extra : amend_source : 9cb4ffdd5005f5c4c14172390dd00b04b2066cd7
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/D13371
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Referrerpolicy attribute should be taken with high priority order than
mSpeculationReferrerPolicy
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D11636
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This patch removes the following functions:
* nsContentUtils::IsCustomElementsEnabled()
* CustomElementRegistry::IsCustomElementEnabled(JSContext* aCx, JSObject* aObject)
* CustomElementRegistry::IsCustomElementEnabled(nsIDocument* aDoc)
and all references of the pref.
Depends on D11183
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D11249
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This patch removes the following functions:
* nsContentUtils::IsCustomElementsEnabled()
* CustomElementRegistry::IsCustomElementEnabled(JSContext* aCx, JSObject* aObject)
* CustomElementRegistry::IsCustomElementEnabled(nsIDocument* aDoc)
and all references of the pref.
Depends on D11183
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D11249
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This adds a new class for the marquee tag, instead of overloading HTMLDivElement.
It removes some of the XBL that was used to expose properties to web content.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D3824
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
This is a rebase + manual refcounting on some places, + cleanup of the original
patch in the bug.
Co-authored-by: Nicholas Nethercote <nnethercote@mozilla.com>
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D11035
Instead of creating a timer and then setting the timer's target, we can
determine the timer's target and pass it in directly when the timer is
created. This reordering of steps is slightly more efficient, since
SetTarget() is both a virtual call and requires locking, both of which
can be skipped if we know the target at timer creation time.
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
When a custom element is defined we can check whether its class is an instance
of XULElement or HTMLElement and tag the defintion with a namespace accordingly.
This allows us to know the correct namespace for the custom element when
created.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D2680
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
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
This patch was written entirely by the following script:
#!/bin/bash
if [ ! -d "./.hg" ]
then
echo "Not in a source tree." 1>&2
exit 1
fi
find . -regex '.*\(ref\|crash\)test.*\.list' | while read FILENAME
do
echo "Processing ${FILENAME}."
# The following has four substitutions:
# * The first one replaces the *first* argument to fuzzy() when it doesn't
# have a - in it, by replacing it with an explicit 0-N range.
# * The second one does the same for the *second* argument to fuzzy().
# * The third does the same for the *second* argument to fuzzy-if().
# * The fourth does the same for the *third* argument to fuzzy-if().
#
# Note that this is using perl rather than sed because perl doesn't
# support non-greedy matching, which is needed for the first argument to
# fuzzy-if.
perl -pi -e 's/(fuzzy\()([^ ,()-]*)(,[^ ,()]*\))/${1}0-${2}${3}/g;s/(fuzzy\([^ ,()]*,)([^ ,()-]*)(\))/${1}0-${2}${3}/g;s/(fuzzy-if\([^ ]*?,)([^ ,()-]*)(,[^ ,()]*\))/${1}0-${2}${3}/g;s/(fuzzy-if\([^ ]*?,[^ ,()]*,)([^ ,()-]*)(\))/${1}0-${2}${3}/g' "${FILENAME}"
done
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D2974
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Summary:
nsIWebShellServices is only implemented by nsDocShell, and only used
in one place in C++. Move definitions to nsIDocShell, and rename
functions to show they are only used as part of Charset changes.
MozReview-Commit-ID: DOSeE3Doc51
Test Plan: Try run
Reviewers: nika
Tags: #secure-revision
Bug #: 1480628
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D2692
This patch is an automatic replacement of s/NS_NOTREACHED/MOZ_ASSERT_UNREACHABLE/. Reindenting long lines and whitespace fixups follow in patch 6b.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 5UQVHElSpCr
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 4c1b2fc32b269342f07639266b64941e2270e9c4
extra : source : 907543f6eae716f23a6de52b1ffb1c82908d158a
This reduces memory usage because we only need one allocation instead of two
for the dynamic atom and its chars, and because we don't need to store a
refcount and a size. It precludes sharing of chars between dynamic atoms, but
we weren't benefiting much from that anyway.
This reduces per-process memory usage by up to several hundred KiB on my
Linux64 box.
One consequence of this change is that we need to allocate + copy in
DOMString::SetKnownLiveAtom(), which could make some things slower.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : ba4065ea31e509dd985c003614199f73def0596c
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
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
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
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
Most of the noise is from the fact that clang-format on parser/html/*.{h,cpp}
reformatted all sorts of stuff. Not running it caused lots of format changes
from the generator... I guess we changed the format rules since the last time
this got run?
MozReview-Commit-ID: IA2G87zUIKN
The atoms in nsHTMLTags are a subset of nsGkAtoms, which means that
sTagAtomTable[] currently ends up holding duplicate pointers to the same static
atoms.
This patch removes sTagAtomTable[]. The only place that used sTagAtomTable[]
was nsHTMLTags::AddRefTable(). It now instead calls NS_GetStaticAtom() to get
the static atoms registered by nsGkAtoms.
The patch also moves some checking of sTagNames from RegisterAtoms() (which is
removed) to AddRefTable().
All this reduces the number of duplicate static atoms from 148 to 12.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 14qXYeoorFr
* * *
[mq]: foo
MozReview-Commit-ID: AgQbXlcvWrt
By removing the "Atom" suffix, which is redundant.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 4MCX9Icfjrw
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : c3c759a508a8938b59d36dbb20448d2964b98c91
This converts nsHTMLTags hashtables from PLHash to nsDataHashtable which
gives us both type safety and simpler code. Addtionally `gTagTable` now holds
a nsString instead of a raw char16_t pointer, this has the benefit of the
strings knowing their sizes allowing for more efficient comparisons. We avoid
heap allocations in the nsString by using `AssignLiteral` with the string from
the static string array.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 3ab6409de5e933beb868a0b371dff81e56df0810
Now that what we use to decide whether a document is styled by Servo are only
prefs and the doc principal, we don't need to inherit the style backend type,
since unless the pref has changed, the result will be the same.
MozReview-Commit-ID: KBmeBn1cRne
It would be convenient to get nsPresContext from nsIDocument.
MozReview-Commit-ID: Ei6V3UE8XGr
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 8d2a917eb62cf341e4e1810451fd01c01dbc3bad
This macro is identical to NS_INTERFACE_MAP_END and encourages the
reader to think that there's something extra-special threadsafe about QI
implementations that use the macro, when in reality there's nothing of
the sort.
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
Adding <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width"/> to the view-source
document achieves two things when used in a mobile browser, such as Fennec:
1. When word-wrapping is turned off, the page displays at a more readable
initial zoom level.
2. As of now, font inflation (when enabled) kicks in on the document when word-
wrapping is turned on, which leads to the line numbers appearing in a
noticeably smaller font size than the rest of the page.
Adding the above meta viewport header marks the document as "mobile-friendly"
and suppresses font inflation, which means that line numbers will appear
normally even with word-wrapping enabled.
getMathMLSelection() in browser-content.js isn't actually used in Fennec at the
moment, but for consistency we add the meta viewport tag there as well.
MozReview-Commit-ID: K9KVHh7g7TF
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 1054f712f5420efcd89daeaa2c8c200129544b2a
Since we are dealing with the element (nodeInfo->LocalName() and NameAtom() are the same value),
we could use nodeInfo->NameAtom() instead.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 4vIBDEM1Nwv
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 150d5ea982363eb2ef4c5039fae67be1e08884ba