This helper class allows us to create simple channels that open an underlying
input stream when the channel is first opened, using a closure function,
without having to expose the nsBaseChannel class to non-necko code.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 6jiImdMXUp0
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : b8d30a28593940c41109b1352eb0c549213c5f89
Several of our simple channel implementations work naturally with direct
nsIStreamListener output. Currently, these implementations need to create a
pipe, pump data in to that pipe, and then allow nsBaseChannel to pump data out
of the other side of that pipe, into its own stream listener.
This change allows them to output data directly to nsBaseChannel's stream
listener, which removes unnecessary complexity and overhead.
MozReview-Commit-ID: JCGKTt6Kn9x
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 200dd2641bfa703f658c2c5171a68df3a035be0a
They have generic names, and are potentially conflicting with
in-tree headers with the same name (which is true for at least port.h).
There aren't enough users of brotli to want to avoid LOCAL_INCLUDES
in the directories that use it.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 82531ac5961ad80e1b3d0c1484a2f146be194411
If the call to NewChannel2 returns NS_ERROR_NOT_IMPLEMENTED or NS_ERROR_XPC_JSOBJECT_HAS_NO_FUNCTION_NAMED that means the implementation is actually missing, so it is OK to fall back to NewChannel.
If it fails with any other error code, we just return it.
MozReview-Commit-ID: JmgEmPqu6zJ
--HG--
rename : netwerk/test/unit/test_bug894586.js => netwerk/test/unit/test_1351443-missing-NewChannel2.js
extra : rebase_source : 5d41df330a15ad7b679d9bed52e6fbf90bdc4ed8
Historically, we had support for some GNOME VFS protocols through the
gnomevfs library, and this was under extension. This may not have been
built by default when it was introduced, but GNOME upstream moved those
things into Gtk itself, and we then got support for the new Gio-based
protocol, similar to what we had through the gnomevfs library.
Time passes, and we switched off the gnomevfs library entirely, and
enabled the Gio-based protocol handlers by default. We then removed
everything related to the gnomevfs library.
Fast forward to now, and disabling Gio support in Firefox just doesn't
make sense, and leaving the gio protocol handler as an extension doesn't
make sense either.
As it is a protocol handler, its natural place is under
netwerk/protocol, which is where we're moving it here.
The netwerk/protocol subdirectories being handled automatically, we
don't need to add the moved directory in any DIRS variable.
--HG--
rename : extensions/gio/moz.build => netwerk/protocol/gio/moz.build
rename : extensions/gio/nsGIOProtocolHandler.cpp => netwerk/protocol/gio/nsGIOProtocolHandler.cpp
extra : rebase_source : 071a9cb1769f013717357458df24e2fd9570ccf4
Historically, we had support for some GNOME VFS protocols through the
gnomevfs library, and this was under extension. This may not have been
built by default when it was introduced, but GNOME upstream moved those
things into Gtk itself, and we then got support for the new Gio-based
protocol, similar to what we had through the gnomevfs library.
Time passes, and we switched off the gnomevfs library entirely, and
enabled the Gio-based protocol handlers by default. We then removed
everything related to the gnomevfs library.
Fast forward to now, and disabling Gio support in Firefox just doesn't
make sense, and leaving the gio protocol handler as an extension doesn't
make sense either.
As it is a protocol handler, its natural place is under
netwerk/protocol, which is where we're moving it here.
The netwerk/protocol subdirectories being handled automatically, we
don't need to add the moved directory in any DIRS variable.
--HG--
rename : extensions/gio/moz.build => netwerk/protocol/gio/moz.build
rename : extensions/gio/nsGIOProtocolHandler.cpp => netwerk/protocol/gio/nsGIOProtocolHandler.cpp
extra : rebase_source : fe3c9480cee468aa2a24fd34e569b58e4f2c9c9a