If the "security.sandbox.content.level" preference is set to a value less than
1, all consumers will automatically treat it as if it were level 1. On Linux and
Nightly builds, setting the sandbox level to 0 is still allowed, for now.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 9QNTCkdbTfm
If the "security.sandbox.content.level" preference is set to a value less than
1, all consumers will automatically treat it as if it were level 1. On Linux and
Nightly builds, setting the sandbox level to 0 is still allowed, for now.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 9QNTCkdbTfm
Full Firefox on Linux can now be run with a --headless flag.
This includes seven parts:
1) Running all marionette tests in headless mode.
2) Prevents crashes where Firefox calls into GTK.
3) Adds a headless screen helper which supports changing the headless
screen size with the environment variables MOZ_HEADLESS_WIDTH and
MOZ_HEADLESS_HEIGHT.
4) Supports simulating moving a headless window.
5) Adds a stubbed out nsSound implementation.
6) Supports simulating size mode changes of headless windows.
7) Adds the --headless flag for Firefox.
This permission was needed for the memory bloat logging, which is used for
leaktest, including logging intentionally crashing processes. Now we restrict
ourselves to only allowing writes to the location needed for this logging,
rather than all of /private/var.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 5AbJEZlDHNV
Currently the profiler mostly uses an array of strings to represent which
features are available and in use. This patch changes the profiler core to use
a uint32_t bitfield, which is a much simpler and faster representation.
(nsProfiler and the profiler add-on still use the array of strings, alas.) The
new ProfilerFeature type defines the values in the bitfield.
One side-effect of this change is that profiler_feature_active() now can be
used to query all features. Previously it was just a subset.
Another side-effect is that profiler_get_available_features() no longer incorrectly
indicates support for Java and stack-walking when they aren't supported. (The
handling of task tracer support is unchanged, because the old code handled it
correctly.)
The content process stores the incoming initial gfxVars updates, which are
lazily used when the gfxVars are first initialized.
MozReview-Commit-ID: ExUVdr5xGLb
Remove sync protocol AllocateTabId. Instead we generate tabId in
each process with nsContentUtils::GenerateTabId, and register
RemoteFrameInfo in parent process. If the tab id was generated from
a content process, it's sent parent through either PBrowserConstructor
or PContent::CreateChildProcess.
MozReview-Commit-ID: D3W2fK9eCNH
LocaleService serves two main functions. It is a central place for all code in the
engine to learn about locales, but it also does the language negotiation and selection.
The former is relevant in all processes, but the latter should only be performed
by the "main" process. In case of current Desktop Firefox, the parent process
is the one performing all the language negotiation, and content processes should
operate in the "client" mode.
In Fennec, there's a Java app on top of Gecko which should work as a "server"
and then all processes, including parent process of Gecko is merely a "client" for that.
This refactor finalizes this duality making it easily configurable to define in
which mode a given LocaleService operates.
The server-client model allows all clients to stay in sync with the server,
but operate transparently for all callers just returning the right values.
In order to initialize LocaleService in the client mode in child process with the
right locales I'm adding the list of app locales to the XPCOMInitData,
and then fire LocaleService::SetAppLocales in the child process initialization.
In order to keep the list up to date, I'm adding intl:app-locales-changed to
the list of observed topics, and when triggered, I send the updated list
to the child process, which updates LocaleService::SetAppLocales with the new
list.
MozReview-Commit-ID: K9X6berF3IO