When a built-in root certificate has its trust changed from the default value,
the platform has to essentially create a copy of it in the read/write
certificate database with the new trust settings. At that point, the desired
behavior is that the platform still considers that certificate a built-in root.
Before this patch, this would indeed happen for the duration of that run of the
platform, but as soon as it restarted, the certificate in question would only
appear to be from the read/write database, and thus was not considered a
built-in root. This patch changes the test of built-in-ness to explicitly
search the built-in certificate slot for the certificate in question. If found,
it is considered a built-in root.
MozReview-Commit-ID: HCtZpPQVEGZ
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 759e9c5a7bb14f14a77e62eae2ba40c085f04ccd
They were behind WANT_MOZILLA_CONFIG_OS_VERSION, which nothing has been
setting ever since the ifdef was changed from
MOZILLA_CONFIG_IGNORE_OS_VERSION... in 2000. Not that anything was
setting MOZILLA_CONFIG_IGNORE_OS_VERSION either... well, at least not in
Gecko.
Our STL wrappers do various different things, one of which is including
mozalloc.h for infallible operator new. mozalloc.h includes stdlib.h,
which, in libstdc++ >= 6 is now itself a wrapper around cstdlib, which
circles back to our STL wrapper.
But of the things our STL wrappers do, including mozalloc.h is not one
that is necessary for cstdlib. So skip including mozalloc.h in our
cstdlib wrapper.
Additionally, some C++ sources (in media/mtransport) are including
headers in an extern "C" block, which end up including stdlib.h, which
ends up including cstdlib because really, this is all C++, and our
wrapper pre-includes <new> for mozalloc.h, which fails because templates
don't work inside extern "C". So, don't pre-include <new> when we're not
including mozalloc.h.
When a built-in root certificate has its trust changed from the default value,
the platform has to essentially create a copy of it in the read/write
certificate database with the new trust settings. At that point, the desired
behavior is that the platform still considers that certificate a built-in root.
Before this patch, this would indeed happen for the duration of that run of the
platform, but as soon as it restarted, the certificate in question would only
appear to be from the read/write database, and thus was not considered a
built-in root. This patch changes the test of built-in-ness to explicitly
search the built-in certificate slot for the certificate in question. If found,
it is considered a built-in root.
MozReview-Commit-ID: HCtZpPQVEGZ
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 898ef37459723f1d8479cfdc58658ccb00e782a9
We can just generate xpidllex.py/xpidlyacc.py in the current directory
rather than one directory higher, and specify this directory as an
include path to xpidl-process.py
MozReview-Commit-ID: KLoGjudc4Y8
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 8dda268c6490cdfb8b896de9da5b789208584193
Nothing uses this variable. blame suggests that it was used for HP-UX
once upon a time. The companion variable, MOZ_POST_PROGRAM_COMMAND, is
only used by HP-UX, but as we're not wholesale removing HP-UX
support (yet), we should leave MOZ_POST_PROGRAM_COMMAND alone.
One can run individual tests with python testfile.py Class.method. But
the output for tests only shows the method so looking at a test output
is not enough to tell how to run one particular test. Moreover, there
are many cases where a test file contains multiple classes, and we fail
to identify the difference between those classes.
Python's unittest has decorators to mark tests as skipped or expecting
to fail. Mozunit runner fails to print anything for them.
While here, somehow unify the output for TEST-UNEXPECTED-FAIL.
This leaves known failures silent about the failure. It would be better
to only show them with a flag, like -v, and to leave it to a followup.
Python's unittest separates errors and failures, where the former is
uncaught exceptions and the latter uncaught assertions. We were only
printing the former, making the mozunit runner output useless to debug
failures due to assertions in the code being tested.
I would usually edit the test to temporarily switch to unittest.main().
Enough is enough, handle failures properly.
At the same time, instead of printing all the errors one after the other
at the end, print them right after the TEST-UNEXPECTED-FAIL message.
The behavior is not entirely idempotent (most notably for
buildconfig.html), but this can be improved later if necessary.
It is idempotent where it matters.
This allows to get rid of config/makefiles/rcs.mk and its uses.
ALLOW_COMPILERS_WARNINGS is set in moz.build files, which end up producing backend.mk files, which are loaded as part of config/rules.mk.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : 75643ff0a30be733216d5572668a52ab365d7c59
-Zi is already set through MOZ_DEBUG_FLAGS, which is set from
--enable-debug-symbols, which is the default, and if someone goes all
the way to explicitly disable them, we might as well not silently
override their decision.
-Od disables optimization, and the given reason was for sane stack
traces, but the fact is we're currently building debug builds, which
have been optimized by default for a while, and are the only ones with
DMD enabled by default, without overriding with -Od and are apparently
happy with it.
-DNDEBUG is already set through MOZ_DEBUG_DEFINES, and -UDEBUG is not
doing anything useful, since nothing is setting DEBUG on the command
line, nor does the compiler by default.
The flag is used to create .sbr files, which bscmake subsequently uses to
create .bsc files. These files and related tools are, aiui, the ancestors
of Intellisense.
The -FR C*FLAGS are added to the build if MOZ_BROWSE_INFO or MOZ_BSCFILE
are set in the recursive make backend. While the former has an AC_SUBST,
the latter does not, so in practice, only the former can be set by
supported methods, and would need to be set in a mozconfig. At that
rate, people who do want those flags can add them in the C*FLAGS on
their own.
Developers are probably better served by the VisualStudio backend
anyways.
We don't really care to set those in js/src/configure because the JS
engine doesn't use ObjC. We also don't care to preserve the += behavior
because there were no AC_SUBST in the first place, so it's unlikely
anyone has an override in their mozconfig and expects it to work.
FasterMake needs some RecursiveMake install manifests to have been
processed before doing its work, so we can actually end up processing
them twice because of the going back and forth from FasterMake in the
hybrid build system.
Set the dependency at the RecursiveMake level when doing an hybrid
build.
--HG--
extra : commitid : 7nD60DTsoHz
extra : rebase_source : 61b5803732b0ecdff421e4e15a2086d4eae7a937
extra : amend_source : c0ae62708b2019888ea320c3793d4ea3f6d6d460
Recent changes in bug 1239217 added the faster backend to the default
build mechanism for artifact builds. This seems to have uncovered a
difference in behavior between GNU Make 3.81 and newer. Starting with
GNU Make 3.82, pattern rules are selected according to shortest stem.
Before, they are used in definition order.
So, we change the order of the pattern rules so the longest prefixes are
first. This should result in the same behavior on various GNU Make
implementations.
--HG--
extra : commitid : GVAzwgjaChF
extra : rebase_source : e0765bcf80ad93b7b193f8d4218f4c6f90dbb843
extra : amend_source : d06092dde64d22be476ef1f9e0232eda87d48325
The current rule is only for "backend.RecursiveMakeBackend", but, with
the current default of generating both the RecursiveMake and FasterMake
backends, the command creates/refreshes both backends. This is, in fact,
how the FasterMake backend is refreshed in most cases.
Moreover, with an hybrid backends, the generated file is not
"backend.RecursiveMakeBackend" anymore, so we need a more generic way to
handle this.
Furthermore, it's not necessarily desirable for all backends to have a
dependency file to handle the dependencies to refresh the backend, so
generate a plain list instead. This has the side effect of making `mach
build-backend --diff` more readable for changes to that file.
Finally, make the backend.* files created like any other backend file,
such that its diff appears in the `mach build-backend --diff` output.
The FasterMake build system is meant to be invoked through `mach build
faster`, which does it already, or, in the near future, as part of an
hybrid build system, which will deal with it as well. People doing
`make -C objdir/faster` won't have the backend automatically refreshed,
but that's not a supported way to use it anyways.
While it would be possible to move those things in the export tier, it
is still interesting to have reporting for them separately, especially
considering I expect things to gradually move from the other tiers to
this new one.
While not entirely obvious, the recurse_pre-export target doesn't imply
actual recursion as long as the RecursiveMake backend doesn't emit
traversal information for it, so nothing will actually happen on this
target, but the interesting part is that it runs, per the generic
config/recurse.mk rules for tiers, between BUILDSTATUS TIER_START and
BUILDSTATUS TIER_FINISH, so that all its dependencies are accounted
as being part of the pre-export tier.
GENERATED_FILES impacts the export tier through the config/rules.mk
definitions, now moved to the backend itself, so that everything is
close to each other.
Turns out the claim in bug 1234439 that the FasterMake backend knows
about all the chrome manifest entries is wrong, and there's still one
that is added "manually" with buildlist.py, and during mach build
faster, that can happen before or after the corresponding chrome
manifests are written out by install manifest processing.
While the real fix here would be to make the build system totally
aware of those "manifest interfaces.manifest" entries, for now, it's
simpler to add dependencies to work around the race condition.
Collecting the list of object files compiled, while not ideal, will give us
some indication of how much work was involved in the build. This will help
with analyzing the data.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : e9861ed5c0766e3ee8038dbec0b9267022c523eb
Limit ourselves to include paths for now, because there are tricky things
involved in making this globally.
While here, use shell_quote instead of manual quoting for those paths.
This might seem like going in the opposite direction of what we tend to do
to move to moz.build land, but those flags are irrelevant in many situations
and are better separated out.
MOZ_DEBUG_DEFINES are essentially defines used everywhere. So treat them as
feeding the initial value for DEFINES in each moz.build sandbox. This allows
the kind overrides that was done in the past by resetting MOZ_DEBUG_DEFINES
in Makefiles.
The only affected symbols are
_PR_<architecture>_Atomic{Decrement,Set,Add,Increment}, they are not exposed in
public headers, have a different name on each architecture, and have a public
API: PR_Atomic{Decrement,Set,Add,Increment}.
Currently, one needs to define DEFFILE or LD_VERSION_SCRIPT appropriately,
and somehow deal with the fact that their input format is different, which
currently relies on manual invocations of the convert_def_file script, with
awkward aggregations.
This simplifies the problem by using a simple list of symbols, with
preprocessing, allowing #includes.
Currently, only css files added through jar manifests are treated this way.
There is really no reason for the discrepancy, but there are actually no css
files added directly through moz.build, so this was never a problem.
On the other hand, it makes things simpler in a world where jar manifests are
treated as if they were entirely described in moz.build (which is where the
FasterMake backend is heading).
Using TEST_DIRS is nothing more than a shortcut for
if CONFIG['ENABLE_TESTS']:
DIRS += [...]
As such, we might as well remove it being a separate variable, and use some
Context magic to just fill DIRS when ENABLE_TESTS is set.
The security/manager/ssl/tests/unit/moz.build change ensures that the order
of DIRS before the change is kept, not because it matters, but because it
allows to confirm that nothing else is modified by this change.
Bug 1191230 added override lines with # characters to chrome manifests
for Windows.
So far, chrome manifests were handled with buildlist.py like in the
RecursiveMake backend, fed with Make variables. Without proper quoting,
those Make variables are just truncated by Make on the first # character,
and this results in mach build faster failing because of that.
However, the reason why chrome manifests were handled with buildlist.py
originally is that not all chrome manifest entries were known to the
FasterMake backend, but they now all are.
So instead of relying on Make variables and buildlist.py, we can now
rely on the newly added install manifests feature allowing to create files
with a given content.