several fields from OpenURI interface and allows us to remove the private
post data interface. Now the nsIURILoader interface doesn't need to take
all of the arguments necessary to create a channel.
r=rpotts.
remove protocol scheme check before using the uri loader. this
means that all urls will run through the uriloader regardless of
type when it gets turned on.
webshell:
doContent and canHandleContent now take a nsURILoaderCommand
modify the handle link click event method to pass in
in the nsIURILoader::viewUserClick command to the uri loader
r=travis
// to distinguish between incoming urls that are a result of user
// clicks vs. normal views, view source and requires new window
nsIURIContentListener.idl--> doContent and canHandleContent now take a nsIURILoadCommand enum
nsURILoader.cpp --> changes to account for load command enum.
AsyncRead pass in the window context as the url context
(waterson will need this for his chrome cache work)
if we can't find a content handler for the content then go
back to the original window that loaded the url and force
them to handle the content...this is a HACK to force us to run
through the old code path for handling unknown content types
until the new version is online.
r=travis
changes to support aWindowContext parameter and to remove
the content listener and progress sink as arguments. Instead,
use an interface requestor on the window context to get these.
I was also able to take out the capabilities class as well.
r=travis
removed content listener and progress sink interfaces from
OpenURI and friends. Instead, pass in a nsISupports window
context. We can use the requestor interface to ask the
window context for the content listener and progress sink.
This reduced the number of arguments to OpenURI by one.
And eventually we'll query the window context for a
docshell / webshell interface which we could pass around.
r=travis
is a mailto url. why? because it works so well for mailto =). No sense
in only allowing people turning uri dispatching on to get the benefits.
r=travis.
CanHandleContent now has an out parameter for desired content type.
Minor re-write of uri loder logic to incorporate stream conversion. If the content listener passes back
a desired content type that is different from the content type that we asked it to handle, we'll
automatically invoke a stream converter. This allows a doc shell which wants to handle say message/rfc822
to request that content be in the form of text/xul (i.e. if it was presenting the content).
Revamp the uri loader to excusively use AsyncRead instead of AsyncOpen and AsyncRead. With these changes,
we now only need to add the ability to retarget to our protocol channels instead of requiring both
retargeting and AsyncOpen support.
In order to do this, the DocumentOpenInfo object needed to become a nsIStreamListener instead of just
a stream observer.
Clean up OpenURI api. get rid of the verb, the channel context and the loadgroup as required arguments
to OpenURI.
Add nsUriLoaderEventSinkGetter class. Many method signatures
changed to match the changes to nsIURILoader::OpenURI.
Clean up OpenURI api. get rid of the verb, the channel context and the loadgroup as required arguments
to OpenURI.
Add the notion of a open uri context as an in and an out parameter. The open uri context is a cookie which
the caller can later give back to the uri loader when running another url in the same context. It's an ISupports
right now and the type should be opaque to the caller.
Don't require the caller to pass in an event sink getter. We can generate this for them. Do give them the ability
to pass in a nsIProgressEventSink. Note: this parameter is actually going to get changed into a nsIProgressListener
real soon as well. So don't get to used to it.