Pass sandbox parameters to content processes on the command line allowing for early sandbox startup.
Pref'd off behind "security.sandbox.content.mac.earlyinit" until it's ready to be enabled by default.
Once early startup is enabled by default and considered stable, the original sandbox startup code can be removed.
Depends on D6719
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D6720
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Pass sandbox parameters to content processes on the command
line allowing for early sandbox startup. Limited to Nightly
until confirmed to be stable and ready to ride the trains.
Enable early sandbox startup by default on Nightly and use
pref "security.sandbox.content.mac.earlyinit" to disable
early startup for debugging purposes.
Once early startup is stable, the original sandbox startup
code can be removed.
Depends on D6719
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D6720
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Pass sandbox parameters to content processes on the command
line allowing for early sandbox startup. Limited to Nightly
until confirmed to be stable and ready to ride the trains.
Enable early sandbox startup by default on Nightly and use
pref "security.sandbox.content.mac.earlyinit" to disable
early startup for debugging purposes.
Once early startup is stable, the original sandbox startup
code can be removed.
Depends on D6719
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D6720
--HG--
extra : moz-landing-system : lando
Last attempt, a few years ago, blatantly failed because nautilus (the
GNOME file manager) can't start PIE executables, which look like shared
libraries, and that it thus considers not being executables.
Downstreams don't actually have the problem, because users won't be
launching Firefox from a file manager, but for mozilla.org builds, it is
a problem because users would download, then extract, and then likely
try to run the Firefox executable from a file manager.
So for mozilla.org builds, we still need to find a way around the
nautilus problem.
A .desktop file could be a solution, but .desktop files have not
actually been designed for this use case, which leads to:
- having to use an awful one-liner shell wrapper to derive the path
to the executable from that of the .desktop file,
- not even being able to associate an icon,
- the .desktop file not being copiable to a location where .desktop
files would normally go, because it would then fail to find the
executable.
Another possibility is to go back to using a shell wrapper, but that's
not entirely appealing.
What we chose here is similar, where we have a small `firefox` wrapper
that launches the real `firefox-bin` (which is still leftover from those
old times where we had a shell wrapper, for reasons).
The small `firefox` wrapper is a minimalist C executable that just
finds the path to the `firefox-bin` executable and executes it with the
same args it was called with. The wrapper is only enabled when the
MOZ_NO_PIE_COMPAT environment variable is set, which we only take into
account on Linux. The variable is only really meant to be used for
mozilla.org builds, for the nautilus problem. Downstreams will just pick
the default, which is changed to build PIE.
On other platforms, PIE was already enabled by default, so we just
remove the --enable-pie configure flag.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D5109
Enable browser.tabs.drawInTitlebar on platforms where CAN_DRAW_IN_TITLEBAR is set instead of the UNIX_BUT_NOT_MAC hack.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 9lko61izj4r
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 98c1d9b8a89ec91c119634724187c614ea1d04f2
This was awkward because it doesn't want to end up under dist/bin/browser,
but DIST_SUBDIR is exported here. firefox.exe doesn't want to end up under
dist/bin/browser either, so we unset DIST_SUBDIR for this directory and
move the files that need it to a different directory.
MozReview-Commit-ID: Jr1RLUIj0HM
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 37bbea6792196895316c081176b64db233fe62e1
The geckodriver binary is not being moved to correct directory which is required
to be able to run web platform tests successfully.
MozReview-Commit-ID: HTxnACX2FLR
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 816dc27bfad7d9e93ca1074f9ab05ba1c0bb578b
Going further from the previous changes, all libfuzzer_main really does
is call the init function, and then proceed to call the fuzzer driver
with the testing function.
So instead of calling that function for it to do all that, the
LibFuzzerRunner can just call the init function itself, and then
call the fuzzer driver with the testing function.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 2eb1a2ae763ef21827471cd32addceacefc1ac5d
This patch adds the gpsd location provider to |nsGeolocationService|.
On release builds, the new provider is *not* used by default, as GPS
is slow to start and unreliable indoors. To enable gpsd, users with a
supported GPS receiver must set the preference 'geo.location.use_gpsd'
to 'true'.
On non-release builds, the gpsd location provider is enabled by default
to give it some testing.
MozReview-Commit-ID: I0tj1GmmFNP
This removes the unnecessary setting of c-basic-offset from all
python-mode files.
This was automatically generated using
perl -pi -e 's/; *c-basic-offset: *[0-9]+//'
... on the affected files.
The bulk of these files are moz.build files but there a few others as
well.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 2pPf3DEiZqx
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 0a7dcac80b924174a2c429b093791148ea6ac204
The original changeset that is being backed out had comment:
Bug 1023941 - Part 1: Static-link the CRT into firefox.exe.
MozReview-Commit-ID: FPqXvdajdo3
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 9bdc9c7e1a34419c6812a5908f29f568fb9fe94b