Commit Graph

26 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jeff Gilbert
70a22b2878 Bug 1470325 - s/FooBinding/Foo_Binding/g - r=qdot
MozReview-Commit-ID: JtTcLL5OPF0
2018-06-26 17:05:01 -07:00
Valentin Gosu
5a8b6a068c Bug 1423495 - Part6: Use threadsafe refcounting for nsServerTiming r=baku,nwgh
* Also keeps the timing array as nsTArray<nsCOMPtr<nsIServerTiming>> instead of the scriptable nsIArray (which doesn't like being released on another thread)

MozReview-Commit-ID: 37uPZJ38saQ
2018-04-24 13:04:12 +02:00
Kershaw Chang
7dc1b44b2a Bug 1423495 - Part1: Implement PerformanceServerTiming, r=baku
This patch:
1. Introduces PerformanceServerTiming.webidl.
2. Adds serverTiming in PerformanceResourceTiming.webidl.
3. Gets serverTiming data from nsITimedChannel and keeps it in the PerformanceTimng class.

MozReview-Commit-ID: 9mkGkHbxopC
2018-01-10 04:01:00 +01:00
Phil Ringnalda
0ce22154e5 Backed out changeset 1e6febc9f5af (bug 1436778) for being too easy to hit, by just running navigation-timing/test_performance_attributes_exist_in_object.html 2018-04-13 19:03:36 -07:00
Tom Ritter
4e4cdf7ff7 Bug 1436778 Add an assertion to hopefully get a reproduction for a hard-to-repro timer jitter bug r=baku
MozReview-Commit-ID: D4zt1v1tjOs
2018-04-10 13:08:25 -05:00
Tom Ritter
e19e7123c5 Bug 1440195 Add a random context seed to the Performance APIs r=baku
We attach it to WorkerPrivate and DOMNavigationTiming so it will be re-used
when it should.

WorkerPrivate is used in the Performance APIs, Performance Storage Worker,
and Event.

DOMNavigationTiming is used only in the Performance APIs, but the crucial
part is that when the individual DOMNavigationTiming object is re-used,
so will the context seed. This in particular came up with the
nav2_test_document_open.html Web Platform Test which illustrated the fact
that even if you .open() a new document, the performance navigation data
is not supposed to change.

MozReview-Commit-ID: GIv6biEo2jY
2018-03-13 12:36:34 -05:00
Tom Ritter
728b7eb478 Bug 1443943 Port the performance APIs only to only clamping/jittering on non-System Principal r=baku
MozReview-Commit-ID: FKYLI5Yc1kX
2018-03-09 09:29:33 -06:00
Andrea Marchesini
e78cbcb82c Bug 1425458 - Resource timing entries Workers - part 3 - PerformanceStorageWorker, r=smaug 2018-01-24 17:17:32 +01:00
Andrea Marchesini
170e7db772 Bug 1425458 - Resource timing entries Workers - part 2 - PerformanceTimingData, r=smaug 2018-01-24 17:17:31 +01:00
Brindusan Cristian
1153f2c09e Backed out 12 changesets (bug 1425458) for mochitest failures on WorkerPrivate.cpp on a CLOSED TREE
Backed out changeset 11997de13778 (bug 1425458)
Backed out changeset 100b9d4f36bc (bug 1425458)
Backed out changeset a29e9dbb8c42 (bug 1425458)
Backed out changeset b96d58fd945c (bug 1425458)
Backed out changeset f140da44ba68 (bug 1425458)
Backed out changeset af56400233d9 (bug 1425458)
Backed out changeset 7034af4332e4 (bug 1425458)
Backed out changeset f70500179140 (bug 1425458)
Backed out changeset 793bbfc23257 (bug 1425458)
Backed out changeset 2efb375a8ffc (bug 1425458)
Backed out changeset 07e781e37451 (bug 1425458)
Backed out changeset e875f3702a5f (bug 1425458)
2018-01-24 20:47:48 +02:00
Andrea Marchesini
1c39f5bdcd Bug 1425458 - Resource timing entries Workers - part 9 - Fixing a compilation issue, r=me CLOSED TREE 2018-01-24 18:19:12 +01:00
Andrea Marchesini
7441e0cd2e Bug 1425458 - Resource timing entries Workers - part 3 - PerformanceStorageWorker, r=smaug 2018-01-24 17:17:32 +01:00
Andrea Marchesini
73da7daec1 Bug 1425458 - Resource timing entries Workers - part 2 - PerformanceTimingData, r=smaug 2018-01-24 17:17:31 +01:00
Tom Ritter
8dec05b890 Bug 1429764 Do not call ReduceTimerPrecision twice for DOM Navigation timers r=bkelly,timhuang
Bug 1429764 details a test failure that was asserting that the performance navigation
timers were strictly increasing (or equal). fetchStart should have a timestamp before
domainLookupStart.  But it didn't.

The problem is two-fold.  This corrects the test and the issue by addressing one part
of the problem, the second part of the problem needs to be written up in a new bug
and addressed there. (That bug is not yet filed at writing, but see dependencies of
1429764 in the future to find it.)

The second, and underlying, problem is that calling ReduceTimerPrecision with the
same value multiple times may continually reduce it. Meaning that the first you call
it with, say, .75, (and a precision of .20), it will be reduced to .6. The second time
you call it (with .6), instead of staying at .6 it will be reduced to .4. This is
because floats are fuzzy. Inside ReduceTimerPrecision we are multiplying a decimal by
a decimal, so while floor(.6 / .20)  should equal 3, sometimes it's actually 2.999...
which gets floors to 2, gets multiplied again by .2, and which results in .4

If that's the underlying problem, the first, and surface, problem is - why are we
calling ReduceTimerPrecision multiple times? We shouldn't be. That's what this
patch fixes.

TimeStampToDOMHighResOrFetchStart will return either TimeStampToDOMHighRes() or
FetchStartHighRes(). FetchStartHighRes() internally calls TimeStampToDOMHighRes
and then ReduceTimerPrecision - this is where (some of) the two reduction calls
happen - because TimeStampToDOMHighRes itself calls ReduceTimerPrecision also.

I remove the ReduceTimerPrecision from TimeStampToDOMHighRes. FetchStartHighRes
will now only call ReduceTimerPrecision once, at the end of the return.

But we have to fix places we call TimeStampToDOMHighResOrFetchStart, because the
callers of that function also call ReduceTimerPrecision. So if
TimeStampToDOMHighResOrFetchStart returned FetchStartHighRes, we'd be calling
ReduceTimerPrecision twice for those callers.

So inside first off, we remove the outer call to ReduceTimerPrecision. that
surrounds the 5 or so callsites of TimeStampToDOMHighResOrFetchStart. Then
inside of TimeStampToDOMHighResOrFetchStart we return either FetchStartHighRes
(which is has already called ReduceTimerPrecision) or we call
ReduceTimerPrecision with the value.

Now. TimeStampToDOMHighRes was used in more places than just FetchStartHighRes -
there were several other places where we were doing double rounding, and this
fixed those as well. AsyncOpenHighRes, WorkerStartHighRes, DomainLookupEndHighRes,
ConnectStartHighRes, SecureConnectionStartHighRes, ConnectEndHighRes, and
ResponseEndHighRes.

MozReview-Commit-ID: K5nHql135rb
2018-01-12 13:36:04 -06:00
Tom Ritter
070e736544 Bug 1424341 Round the Performance Timing APIs when privacy.reduceTimerPrecision is set r=bkelly,timhuang
MozReview-Commit-ID: LrAmrIfKk39
2018-01-10 15:51:23 -06:00
Dragana Damjanovic
11ba0b856f Bug 1417431 - secureConnectionStart should be 0 for pages with HTTP scheme. r=bkelly 2017-12-06 12:57:28 +01:00
Ben Kelly
e332c8dfe7 Bug 1415630 Make PerformanceResourceTiming.fetchStart match the time we dispatch the FetchEvent when SW interception occurs. r=baku 2017-11-09 09:00:43 -08:00
Ben Kelly
2cc09eac02 Bug 1204254 P14 Stop faking responseStart/End directly and make PerformanceTiming map SW specific timings instead. r=asuth 2017-10-17 13:38:56 -07:00
Ben Kelly
89d98f1d6c Bug 1191943 P1 Implement PerformanceResourceTiming.workerStart. r=asuth 2017-10-06 09:04:54 -07:00
Ben Kelly
7e55863da4 Bug 1405739 P1 Don't expose internal redirect start/end/count through performance timing API. r=valentin 2017-10-06 09:04:54 -07:00
Valentin Gosu
c352b6ca90 Bug 919391 - Incorrect Navigation Timing API: performance.timing.responseStart - performance.timing.requestStart < 0 r=baku
MozReview-Commit-ID: 6s5FljTQEAB
2017-08-23 16:50:18 +02:00
Patrick McManus
f75e6f88c2 Bug 772589 - Implement the secureConnectionStart property for the PerformanceTiming interface r=bkelly,dragana,francois,Honza
Implements PerformanceTiming, nsITimedChannel, and devtools 'tls setup'

Also captures telemetry on this as we do for all other attributes of timedChannel

Also propogates some null transaction timings onto first real
transaction of a connection

MozReview-Commit-ID: 47TQJYVHnKC
2017-07-10 15:01:35 -04:00
Tim Huang
70b377a07b Bug 1369303 - Part 2: Marking the performance timing API always reports 0 and the access of resource timing and user timing becomes NOP when 'privacy.resistFingerprinting' is true. r=arthuredelstein,baku
This patch is going to neutralize the threat of fingerprinting of performance API
by spoofing the value of performance timing into 0, making getEntries* functions
always returns an empty list and making mark() and measure() into NOP methods.

In addition, this patch changes nsContentUtils::ShouldResistFingerprinting() to
allow it can be called in both main thread and worker threads.

MozReview-Commit-ID: C8Jt7KEMe5e
2017-06-15 16:48:27 +08:00
Wei-Cheng Pan
ddfe21e355 Bug 1344893 - Part 2: Add time to first byte metric. r=smaug, data-review=bsmedberg
MozReview-Commit-ID: 6a30Xofr6p1
2017-04-19 02:00:00 -04:00
Andrea Marchesini
7dcf0fcf39 Bug 1278838 - Remove separate worker binding for Performance API, r=smaug 2016-06-09 19:04:42 +02:00
Andrea Marchesini
9f252de81d Bug 1278843 - Move PerformanceTiming code in separate files, r=smaug 2016-06-09 12:43:56 +02:00