There's no good reason why these can't be code constants.
Especially given that, due to a bug, changes to the
"idle_queue.{min,long}_period" constants were not being passed onto the C++
code!
Here's why: those two prefs were specified as integers in all.js. But we used
AddFloatVarCache() to set up the reading of those prefs. libpref fakes floats
by storing them as strings and then converting them to floats when they are
read.
Which means that AddFloatVarCache() used to fail to get the value from all.js
-- because there's a type mismatch, int vs. string -- and instead use the
fallback default. That value is the same as the one in all.js, which is lucky.
But if someone changed the value in about:config to 100 (an integer), a similar
failure would have occured and the value used by the C++ code wouldn't be
updated!
Also note that idle_queue.max_timer_thread_bound did not have a value in
all.js.
What a mess!
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 86f8fa905163803eb95007609c029e18c2c4f586
There's no good reason why these should't just be constants. The patch also
appends "MiB" to some of the C++ values to make their meaning clearer.
This patch fixes one outright bug, and one inconsistency.
The bug is due to a prefname mismatch:
- ContentPrefs.cpp and AvailableMemoryTracker.cpp use
"memory.low_virtual_mem_threshold_mb".
- all.js uses "memory.low_virtual_memory_threshold_mb".
Which means that "memory.low_virtual_memory_threshold_mb" showed up in
about:config, but if you changed it nothing would happen because the callback
listened for changes to to "memory.low_virtual_mem_threshold_mb"!
Now for the inconsistency. The above means we actually use a value of 256 for
the virtual memory threshold, even though all.js says 128. But we *do* use a
value of 128 for the commit space threshold, because that's what all.js says
and that prefname is used correctly everywhere. The patch changes the commit
space threshold to 256 for consistency with the virtual memory threshold.
What a mess!
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : d3842c732efa9ab0e90eeb6a4f341aeb289589ed
This was originally added for b2g, where the pref had a different value.
Bug 1398033 enabled it everywhere.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : c8bb03190cd00d25e6c2ec62a99ed8e911e08197
This removes dead code using headlessClient and lastRunCrashID in crash
reporting. headlessClient is unconditional now. nsIXULRuntime.lastRunCrashID
is not used anymore so remove code for implementing it.
MozReview-Commit-ID: AU4bUeIx3O0
Use MOZ_CRASH, MOZ_CRASH_UNSAFE_OOL, or MOZ_CRASH_UNSAFE_PRINTF instead.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1kCCHMlgbGP
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 2f07ced16bccebf30cd3b2b5fea35e9868d32dad
extra : source : 0bf2c8425b828e71de55dd175fd0dad635b4e67d
MOZ_CRASH_UNSAFE_PRINTF causes data collection because crash strings are annotated to crash-stats and are publicly visible. Firefox data stewards must do data review on usages of this macro. However, all the crash strings this patch collects with MOZ_CRASH_UNSAFE_PRINTF are already collected with NS_RUNTIMEABORT.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 5ujXa9MHH5Z
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 1367e6ac3c6085341e36cb0859d91417245ea472
extra : source : 3edeb64a40afd79d5c01ae0f0d3ab2777a2e744b
It's no longer needed, now that legacy extensions aren't supported.
Pieces removed include the following.
- The "load-extension-default" observer notification.
- The code for reading defaults/preferences/*.js from extensions.
- The unit test for this stuff.
- A crash reporter annotation relating to very long prefs set by add-ons.
- All references to "ExtPrefDL".
MozReview-Commit-ID: KMBoYn3uZ3x
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 4dc8ffd425c6cdf06806409090c4f9d04a64930b
This was created for B2G and isn't really useful otherwise. It only works on
Linux, and it's behind the memory.system_memory_reporter pref, which is false
by default.
The patch also removes LinuxUtils.{h,cpp}, which is no longer used.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : b97a018be11a79f83855a73b88020bfa86e60f78
And remove unreachable code after MOZ_CRASH_UNSAFE_OOL().
MOZ_CRASH_UNSAFE_OOL causes data collection because crash strings are annotated to crash-stats and are publicly visible. Firefox data stewards must do data review on usages of this macro. However, all the crash strings this patch collects with MOZ_CRASH_UNSAFE_OOL are already collected with NS_RUNTIMEABORT.
MozReview-Commit-ID: IHmJfuxXSqw
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 031f30934b58a7b87f960e57179641d44aefe5c5
extra : source : fe9f638a56a53c8721eecc4273dcc074c988546e
And remove unreachable code after MOZ_CRASH().
MozReview-Commit-ID: 6ShBtPRKYlF
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 0fe45a59411bda663828336e2686707b550144ae
extra : source : 8473fd7333d2abe1ea1cc176510c292a5b34df45
Now that xpcom strings use templates we can combine their `ArenaStrdup`
implementations. `nsTStringRepr` is used so as to allow handling of both
`nsTLiteralString` and `nsTSubstring` types.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : e77891da589f320507b45f524a3203b3dc9f38e6
extra : histedit_source : 79d3b9a1add191563e0985f0c0e416bd29f24351
This adds support for duplicating both raw `char*` strings and raw `char16_t*`
strings by making the character type generic.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : bb5245ed71161c8c785684e5a56ac894f03874ea
extra : histedit_source : e94eb738a3982f0cb63a894a0cdfbdf0be2b9cad
Removes the XPCOM interface for nsIDOMHTMLMenuItemElement, replacing it
with binding class usage.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 9HtCmwKyV1W
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : d56ee91a46d48c9d8698765b520a585361813a26
It's a sub-class of nsAtom, useful for cases where you know you are dealing
exclusively with static atoms. The nice thing about it is that you can use
raw nsStaticAtom pointers instead of RefPtr<>. (In fact, the AddRef/Release
implementations ensure that we'll crash if we use RefPtr<nsStaticAtom>.)
MozReview-Commit-ID: 4Q6QHX5h44V
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : e4237f85b4821b684db0ef84d1f9c5e17cdee428
We can save the entry in the hashtable, and then re-use that entry as a
starting point for removing from the hashtable, should that become
necessary. This saves us having to rehash things, at a minimum.
Right now, NS_GENERIC_FACTORY_SINGLETON_CONSTRUCTOR expects singleton
constructors to return already-addrefed raw pointers, and while it accepts
constructors that return already_AddRefed, most existing don't do so.
Meanwhile, the convention elsewhere is that a raw pointer return value is
owned by the callee, and that the caller needs to addref it if it wants to
keep its own reference to it.
The difference in convention makes it easy to leak (I've definitely caused
more than one shutdown leak this way), so it would be better if we required
the singleton getters to return an explicit already_AddRefed, which would
behave the same for all callers.
This also cleans up several singleton constructors that left a dangling
pointer to their singletons when their initialization methods failed, when
they released their references without clearing their global raw pointers.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 9peyG4pRYcr
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 2f5bd89c17cb554541be38444672a827c1392f3f
Defining Get() in the declaration of InputEventStatistics implicitly
sticks an "inline" on the function, which is not what we want: inlining
it spreads around a lot of static initialization code. Providing an
out-of-line definition is much better in terms of code size.
It's easy to mess up the scoping so that (a) the label is pushed and then
immediately popped, and/or (b) the string doesn't live long enough. It's also
easy to do a utf16-to-utf8 conversion unnecessarily when the profiler is
inactive. This patch splits that macro into three new ones that are harder to
mess up.
- AUTO_PROFILER_LABEL_DYNAMIC_CSTR: same as current.
- AUTO_PROFILER_LABEL_DYNAMIC_NSCSTRING: for nsCStrings.
- AUTO_PROFILER_LABEL_DYNAMIC_LOSSY_NSSTRING: for nsStrings.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 3e2bbec4737b696e1c86579ae54be4cb3186c100
There are four things that must be provided for every static atom, two of which
have a macro:
- the atom pointer declaration (no macro);
- the atom pointer definition (no macro);
- the atom char buffer (NS_STATIC_ATOM_BUFFER);
- the StaticAtomSetup struct (NS_STATIC_ATOM_SETUP).
This patch introduces new macros for the first two things: NS_STATIC_ATOM_DECL
and NS_STATIC_ATOM_DEFN, and changes the arguments of the existing two macros
to make them easier to use (e.g. all the '##' concatenation now happens within
the macros).
One consequence of the change is that all static atoms must be within a class,
so the patch adds a couple of classes where necessary (DefaultAtoms, TSAtoms).
The patch also adds a big comment explaining how the macros are used, and what
their expansion looks like. This makes it a lot easier to understand how static
atoms work. Correspondingly, the patch removes some small comments scattered
around the macro use points.
MozReview-Commit-ID: wpRyrEOTHE
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 9f85d477b4d06c9a9e710c757de1f1476edb6efe
Because it's the type we use to set up static atoms at startup, not the static
atom itself.
The patch accordingly renames some parameters, variables, and NS_STATIC_ATOM,
for consistency.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1a0KvhYNNw2
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 5c66e5b2dfe053a368bf3584d957198aec4cce91
In order to properly disable template functions with `std::enable_if` we need
to use the resulting type. This only works if we use a dependent type in the
template params, hence the need to shadow the `T` param.
Proper usage is now of the form:
template<typename Q = T, typename EnableIfChar = CharOnlyT<Q>>
Foo();
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : da7855403d9e683d06d3858e26805e9d8e338208
We were extracting elements from the queue and unnecessarily refcounting
them, rather than transferring the owning reference out of the queue and
out to the caller.
This lets us replace moz_xstrdup() of string literals with AssignLiteral(),
among other improvements.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 9994d8ccb4f196cf63564b0dac2ae6c4370defb4
Renames are because another location also defined that
variable. Unused definitions are eliminated.
The .eslintrc.js file makes eslint expect XPCShell global variables.
MozReview-Commit-ID: Fafm5o45bme
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : ab71132a60e90bd30f34766bd828b18dd608f8b3
These were generated with |./mach eslint --fix xpcom| with the
.eslintignore and xpcom/tests/unit/.eslintrc.js changes from the next
patch.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 8pKkICSK3JQ
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : bbc98050928f27160d8ca63d38aa0c383be95878
This is non-standard, and eslint can't parse it correctly, so remove
it.
MozReview-Commit-ID: EsfZSyoECB0
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 561d194e0c466d98d054b2303916be196f983b1b
This change requires introducing nsID::Clone(). Because it's infallible, the
patch also removes some redundant failure-handling code. (nsMemory::Clone() is
also infallible, so this code was redundant even before this change.)
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : ef22757d3fa814320490bf7e19e822b8f0c4bdc3
The new code is slightly less efficient because it requires measuring the
string length, but these strings are all short so it shouldn't matter.
Note that the case in DataToString() is a little different. The std::min() that
was there appears to be excessive caution -- this code is always printf'ing
some kind of number, so 32 chars should never be reached -- but it was bogus
anyway, because if 32 was exceeded then (a) we would have overflowed `buf`, and
(b) we'd be returning a non-null-terminated string.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : b666ad72c09d8c32b98bb9abc9dce1bd0c912c9b
They are equivalent -- both infallible, both requiring measuring the length of
the string -- but moz_xstrdup is much more readable. (One place deals with
16-bit strings and so uses NS_strdup instead, which is also infallible.)
The patch also removes some failure-path code that will never execute due to
the infallibility.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 115574cf55db90b60e6bee59e5dc6ee409374159
There should be no functional change here, but we rely upon the new
structure in the next patch in the series. This separates out the
notions of removing a request from the load group (which is always
final, and must be executed outside of synchronous calls from the owner
of the imgRequestProxy) and wanting to readd a request to the load group
as a background request (for multipart images).
The most important addition is mForceDispatchLoadGroup which if true
when imgRequestProxy::RemoveFromLoadGroup is called, will dispatch the
removal from the load group instead of executing it inline. This ensures
safety for any callers (e.g. to CancelAndForgetObserver) as above.