This is the last message that WebProgressChild was sending to the
RemoteWebProgress in the parent process, so we can remove the module entirely.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D35091
We now also only access the document when the state is
nsIWebProgress::STATE_STOP. The comments in the previous code indicated that
touching the document inside the event handler when the state is not STATE_STOP
would result in the content creating a new about:blank document to retrieve the
values from. However, it then went on to do this in another location, causing a
document to be created whenever we received an onStateChange event. This should
no longer occur.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D28125
Previously the `WebNavigationChild` would keep track of when triggering its
`nsIWebNavigation`, `goForward`, `goBack`, `gotoIndex`, and `loadURI` methods.
It's `nsIWebNavigation` instance is always an `nsIDocShell` and as part of
porting `OnStateChange` and `OnLocationChange` events from
`WebProgressChild`/`RemoteWebProgress` to `BrowserChild`/`BrowserParent`, this
informations needs to be available from the `BrowserChild`. As it stands, it is
currently an expando property on the `WebProgressChild`.
Instead of introducing yet another XPCOM interface for the WebProgressChild, we
now store this information directly on the `nsDocShell`. Furthermore, instead
of having the `WebNavigationChild` manage this part of the `nsDocShell`'s
state, we can have the `nsDocShell` manage this state itself so it is always
consistent.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D28124
We now also only access the document when the state is
nsIWebProgress::STATE_STOP. The comments in the previous code indicated that
touching the document inside the event handler when the state is not STATE_STOP
would result in the content creating a new about:blank document to retrieve the
values from. However, it then went on to do this in another location, causing a
document to be created whenever we received an onStateChange event. This should
no longer occur.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D28125
Previously the `WebNavigationChild` would keep track of when triggering its
`nsIWebNavigation`, `goForward`, `goBack`, `gotoIndex`, and `loadURI` methods.
It's `nsIWebNavigation` instance is always an `nsIDocShell` and as part of
porting `OnStateChange` and `OnLocationChange` events from
`WebProgressChild`/`RemoteWebProgress` to `BrowserChild`/`BrowserParent`, this
informations needs to be available from the `BrowserChild`. As it stands, it is
currently an expando property on the `WebProgressChild`.
Instead of introducing yet another XPCOM interface for the WebProgressChild, we
now store this information directly on the `nsDocShell`. Furthermore, instead
of having the `WebNavigationChild` manage this part of the `nsDocShell`'s
state, we can have the `nsDocShell` manage this state itself so it is always
consistent.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D28124
This bug will use the browsing context to notify content tab to mute/unmute media, instead of using MessageManager. We would use the top level canonical browsing context to
set the media mute property for the top level window and propagate it to other top level windows in other processes.
If we don't do so, we're not able to mute/unmute media in the different process when we we enable Fission, because the current way we use can only notify one process and would cause the media on other process can't be muted/unmuted.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D32077
We now also only access the document when the state is
nsIWebProgress::STATE_STOP. The comments in the previous code indicated that
touching the document inside the event handler when the state is not STATE_STOP
would result in the content creating a new about:blank document to retrieve the
values from. However, it then went on to do this in another location, causing a
document to be created whenever we received an onStateChange event. This should
no longer occur.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D28125
Previously the `WebNavigationChild` would keep track of when triggering its
`nsIWebNavigation`, `goForward`, `goBack`, `gotoIndex`, and `loadURI` methods.
It's `nsIWebNavigation` instance is always an `nsIDocShell` and as part of
porting `OnStateChange` and `OnLocationChange` events from
`WebProgressChild`/`RemoteWebProgress` to `BrowserChild`/`BrowserParent`, this
informations needs to be available from the `BrowserChild`. As it stands, it is
currently an expando property on the `WebProgressChild`.
Instead of introducing yet another XPCOM interface for the WebProgressChild, we
now store this information directly on the `nsDocShell`. Furthermore, instead
of having the `WebNavigationChild` manage this part of the `nsDocShell`'s
state, we can have the `nsDocShell` manage this state itself so it is always
consistent.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D28124
We now also only access the document when the state is
nsIWebProgress::STATE_STOP. The comments in the previous code indicated that
touching the document inside the event handler when the state is not STATE_STOP
would result in the content creating a new about:blank document to retrieve the
values from. However, it then went on to do this in another location, causing a
document to be created whenever we received an onStateChange event. This should
no longer occur.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D28125
Previously the `WebNavigationChild` would keep track of when triggering its
`nsIWebNavigation`, `goForward`, `goBack`, `gotoIndex`, and `loadURI` methods.
It's `nsIWebNavigation` instance is always an `nsIDocShell` and as part of
porting `OnStateChange` and `OnLocationChange` events from
`WebProgressChild`/`RemoteWebProgress` to `BrowserChild`/`BrowserParent`, this
informations needs to be available from the `BrowserChild`. As it stands, it is
currently an expando property on the `WebProgressChild`.
Instead of introducing yet another XPCOM interface for the WebProgressChild, we
now store this information directly on the `nsDocShell`. Furthermore, instead
of having the `WebNavigationChild` manage this part of the `nsDocShell`'s
state, we can have the `nsDocShell` manage this state itself so it is always
consistent.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D28124