This patch merges nsAtom into nsIAtom. For the moment, both names can be used
interchangeably due to a typedef. The patch also devirtualizes nsIAtom, by
making it not inherit from nsISupports, removing NS_DECL_NSIATOM, and dropping
the use of NS_IMETHOD_. It also removes nsIAtom's IIDs.
These changes trigger knock-on changes throughout the codebase, changing the
types of lots of things as follows.
- nsCOMPtr<nsIAtom> --> RefPtr<nsIAtom>
- nsCOMArray<nsIAtom> --> nsTArray<RefPtr<nsIAtom>>
- Count() --> Length()
- ObjectAt() --> ElementAt()
- AppendObject() --> AppendElement()
- RemoveObjectAt() --> RemoveElementAt()
- ns*Hashtable<nsISupportsHashKey, ...> -->
ns*Hashtable<nsRefPtrHashKey<nsIAtom>, ...>
- nsInterfaceHashtable<T, nsIAtom> --> nsRefPtrHashtable<T, nsIAtom>
- This requires adding a Get() method to nsRefPtrHashtable that it lacks but
nsInterfaceHashtable has.
- nsCOMPtr<nsIMutableArray> --> nsTArray<RefPtr<nsIAtom>>
- nsArrayBase::Create() --> nsTArray()
- GetLength() --> Length()
- do_QueryElementAt() --> operator[]
The patch also has some changes to Rust code that manipulates nsIAtom.
MozReview-Commit-ID: DykOl8aEnUJ
We make nsContentUtils::EnqueueLifecycleCallback static so that it can be
called without a window object. To achive this, we also make
CustomElementReaction not taking a CustomElementRegistry in the constructor,
as it can call Upgrade statically.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 7xUvK0q7Eri
The NS_LITERAL_STRING macro creates a temporary nsLiteralString to encapsulate the char16_t string literal and its length, but AssignLiteral() can determine the char16_t string literal's length at compile-time without nsLiteralString.
MozReview-Commit-ID: L9UE3gXHG4Q
The NS_LITERAL_STRING macro creates a temporary nsLiteralString to encapsulate the char16_t string literal and its length, but AssignLiteral() can determine the char16_t string literal's length at compile-time without nsLiteralString.
MozReview-Commit-ID: H9I6vNDMdIr
In order to let necko postpone the load of favicon, we have to set request context ID to the http channel that is created to load favicon.
This patch starts with passing a request context ID to nsContentUtils::LoadImage and makes other necessary changes to set the request context ID to the channel.
It a stateless wrapper around static methods in nsHTMLTags and nsHTMLElement,
and hence an unnecessary layer of indirection that just adds complexity and
slowness. This patch removes it, cutting almost 300 lines of code.
This requires making nsElementTable.h an exported header, to expose the
nsHTMLElement methods.
This also introduces JS::GetObjectRealmOrNull, which returns an object's realm,
or null if the object is a cross-compartment wrapper. In the new order,
wrappers can't have realms, since they must be shared across all realms in a
compartment. We're introducing this new function early (even though it's
*currently* possible to assign a realm to wrappers) in order to see in
advance if the possibility of returning null will cause problems.
(It looks like it won't.)
The extension policy services uses atoms internally for permission names, so
using them directly rather than strings is considerably cheaper.
MozReview-Commit-ID: Io8EuOXHKVy
We call attributeChangedCallback in two cases:
1. When any of the attributes in the observed attribute list has changed,
appended, removed, or replaced.
2. When upgrading an element, for each attribute in element's attribute list
that is in the observed attribute list.
MozReview-Commit-ID: LKUY5ibp9RI
* * *
Bug 1334051 - Part 3: Optimize attributeChanged callbacks. r=smaug
The failure mode in the attached crashtest is an inconsistency in the flattened
tree. Specifically, we null out mVideoControls in an nsVideoFrame, but defer
the UnbindFromTree call on that NAC element, which measn that its mParent still
points to the nsVideoFrame's mContent. Because all this stuff runs off of script
runners, and the anonymous content destroyer is not guaranteed to run before
other potential script runners, we end up running arbitrary script while the
tree mismatch exists. This script calls back into ProcessPendingRestyles, which
causes trouble.
We could build a separate deferral mechanism, but it's not clear that we actually
need to defer the unbind anymore. The deferred unbind was added in bug 489008,
which predated a lot of simplifications in layout/dom interaction.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 1JYAhiXKVJC
Per mixed-content-blocked spec, [1], <img srcset> and <picture> should
be blocked. However we still fetch <img srcset> and <picture> in image
preload, because they are fetched with contentPolicyType
TYPE_INTERNAL_IMAGE_PRELOAD and won't be rejected by nsMixedContentBlocker.cpp.
So I updated the image preloading code, and use the type TYPE_IMAGESET
if the image request is for <picture> or <img srcset>, otherwise for
normal image load we still use TYPE_INTERNAL_IMAGE_PRELOAD.
[1]: https://w3c.github.io/webappsec-mixed-content/#should-block-fetch
4. Return allowed if one or more of the following conditions are met:
request’s type is "image", and initiator is not "imageset".
5. Return blocked.
I noticed that touching MediaDecoder rebuilds a lot of seemingly unrelated
code. This is because HTMLMediaElement includes MediaDecoder.h, and
HTMLMediaElement is included in a number of places. Having HTMLMediaElement.h
predeclare rather than include fixes it.
MozReview-Commit-ID: I0vrPgqvvge
I noticed that touching MediaDecoder rebuilds a lot of seemingly unrelated
code. This is because HTMLMediaElement includes MediaDecoder.h, and
HTMLMediaElement is included in a number of places. Having HTMLMediaElement.h
predeclare rather than include fixes it.
MozReview-Commit-ID: I0vrPgqvvge
I noticed that touching MediaDecoder rebuilds a lot of seemingly unrelated
code. This is because HTMLMediaElement includes MediaDecoder.h, and
HTMLMediaElement is included in a number of places. Having HTMLMediaElement.h
predeclare rather than include fixes it.
MozReview-Commit-ID: I0vrPgqvvge
Our current machinery for enabling stylo requires a docshell - if there isn't
one, we default to the Gecko style system.
When getComputedStyle operates on an element without a presshell, it uses the
caller's presshell instead. If the element has previously been styled with
one style system (but no longer has a presshell), and the caller uses a
different style backend, using the caller's style system can cause crashes when
we pull bits of cached data off the DOM (like cached style attributes).
So we want to throw when window.getComputedStyle(element) is called for a
(window, element) pair with different style backends (which is what the next
patch in this bug does).
However, that causes a few failures where stylo-backed documents try to do
getComputedStyle on an XHR document (which, without a docshell, will use the
gecko style system).
So this patch does some work to propagate the creator's style backend into
various docshell-less documents. This should allow both chrome (which uses gecko)
and content (which uses stylo) to use getComputedStyle on the response document
for XHRs they create.
Note that the second patch in this bug will make
chromeWin.getComputedStyle(contentObj) throw. If we discover code that does
that, we can just make it invoke the content's getComputedStyle method over Xrays.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 5OsmHJKq5Ui
nsContentUtils::GetHTMLEditor() currently returns nsIEditor* since editor of doc shell may be any type of editors such as TextEditor or editor object which is implemented by JS. However, nsIEditor is now a builtin class. So, it can return HTMLEditor.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 3YoFOplZa7W
This patch makes the media statistics report values with a fixed frames per second
and a dynamic dropped ratio when resistance fingerprinting is enabled. The dropped
rate is decided by the video resolution that it will report a fixed dropped rate
when the video resolution is greater than 480p. And It will report a zero dropped
rate if the video is below or equal to 480p. In addition, it adds three new prefs
that allow us to change the value of frames per second, the dropped ratio and the
threshold of target video resolution. The three prefs are
'privacy.resistFingerprinting.video_frames_per_sec', 'privacy.resistFingerprinting.video_dropped_ratio'
and 'privacy.resistFingerprinting.target_video_res'. The default values of them
are 30, 5 and 480, which means 30 frames per second, 5 percent dropped ratio and
480p.
This also adds a new helper function 'nsContentUtils::ShouldResistFingerprinting(nsIDocument* aDoc)'
for checking whether fingerprinting resistance is enabled for a given docuemnt.
If it is a chrome document, this function will indicate that fingerprinting
resistance is not enabled regardless of the pref 'privacy.resistFingerprinting'.
If it is a content document, the result will depend on the pref.
MozReview-Commit-ID: FbSuRq6Zdnn
This removes about 2/3 of the occurrences of nsXPIDLString in the tree. The
places where nsXPIDLStrings are null-checked are replaced with |rv| checks.
The patch also removes a couple of unused declarations from
nsIStringBundle.idl.
Note that nsStringBundle::GetStringFromNameHelper() was merged into
GetStringFromName(), because they both would have had the same signature.