This is a complete rewrite of RemoteLazyInputStream to run off of its own
toplevel protocol, rather than being managed by other protocols like
PBackground or PContent. This should improve performance thanks to no longer
needing to operate on a main or worker thread, and due to no longer needing the
migration step for the stream actor.
This also acts as a step towards no longer requiring a manager actor to
serialize input streams, as the type is now actor-agnostic, and should support
being sent over IPC between any pair of processes.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D141040
This interface should no longer be required due to the changes in part 1
limiting the complexity of IPCStream instances and limiting the number of file
descriptors which a single stream can attach to a message.
Removing this interface is necessary to serialize nsIInputStream instances over
arbitrary toplevel protocols and non-protocol IPC in the future.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D141039
This gives us various positive benefits, such as using a shared memory ring
buffer for faster communication, not having data streaming being bound to the
thread which transferred the nsIInputStream (which is often the main thread),
and the ability for some backpressure to be applied to data streaming.
After this change, the "delayed start" parameter for IPCStream serialization is
less relevant, as backpressure will serve a similar purpose. It will still be
used to determine whether or not to use RemoteLazyInputStream when serializing
from the parent process.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D141038
This is a complete rewrite of RemoteLazyInputStream to run off of its own
toplevel protocol, rather than being managed by other protocols like
PBackground or PContent. This should improve performance thanks to no longer
needing to operate on a main or worker thread, and due to no longer needing the
migration step for the stream actor.
This also acts as a step towards no longer requiring a manager actor to
serialize input streams, as the type is now actor-agnostic, and should support
being sent over IPC between any pair of processes.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D141040
This interface should no longer be required due to the changes in part 1
limiting the complexity of IPCStream instances and limiting the number of file
descriptors which a single stream can attach to a message.
Removing this interface is necessary to serialize nsIInputStream instances over
arbitrary toplevel protocols and non-protocol IPC in the future.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D141039
This gives us various positive benefits, such as using a shared memory ring
buffer for faster communication, not having data streaming being bound to the
thread which transferred the nsIInputStream (which is often the main thread),
and the ability for some backpressure to be applied to data streaming.
After this change, the "delayed start" parameter for IPCStream serialization is
less relevant, as backpressure will serve a similar purpose. It will still be
used to determine whether or not to use RemoteLazyInputStream when serializing
from the parent process.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D141038
This doesn't change much; VsyncParent was already only using mVsyncSource
to obtain the VsyncDispatcher. (And to get the vsync rate, which it can
now get directly from the dispatcher.)
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D144370
This doesn't change much; VsyncParent was already only using mVsyncSource
to obtain the VsyncDispatcher. (And to get the vsync rate, which it can
now get directly from the dispatcher.)
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D144370
This is a complete rewrite of RemoteLazyInputStream to run off of its own
toplevel protocol, rather than being managed by other protocols like
PBackground or PContent. This should improve performance thanks to no longer
needing to operate on a main or worker thread, and due to no longer needing the
migration step for the stream actor.
This also acts as a step towards no longer requiring a manager actor to
serialize input streams, as the type is now actor-agnostic, and should support
being sent over IPC between any pair of processes.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D141040
This interface should no longer be required due to the changes in part 1
limiting the complexity of IPCStream instances and limiting the number of file
descriptors which a single stream can attach to a message.
Removing this interface is necessary to serialize nsIInputStream instances over
arbitrary toplevel protocols and non-protocol IPC in the future.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D141039
This gives us various positive benefits, such as using a shared memory ring
buffer for faster communication, not having data streaming being bound to the
thread which transferred the nsIInputStream (which is often the main thread),
and the ability for some backpressure to be applied to data streaming.
After this change, the "delayed start" parameter for IPCStream serialization is
less relevant, as backpressure will serve a similar purpose. It will still be
used to determine whether or not to use RemoteLazyInputStream when serializing
from the parent process.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D141038
This is a complete rewrite of RemoteLazyInputStream to run off of its own
toplevel protocol, rather than being managed by other protocols like
PBackground or PContent. This should improve performance thanks to no longer
needing to operate on a main or worker thread, and due to no longer needing the
migration step for the stream actor.
This also acts as a step towards no longer requiring a manager actor to
serialize input streams, as the type is now actor-agnostic, and should support
being sent over IPC between any pair of processes.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D141040
This interface should no longer be required due to the changes in part 1
limiting the complexity of IPCStream instances and limiting the number of file
descriptors which a single stream can attach to a message.
Removing this interface is necessary to serialize nsIInputStream instances over
arbitrary toplevel protocols and non-protocol IPC in the future.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D141039
This gives us various positive benefits, such as using a shared memory ring
buffer for faster communication, not having data streaming being bound to the
thread which transferred the nsIInputStream (which is often the main thread),
and the ability for some backpressure to be applied to data streaming.
After this change, the "delayed start" parameter for IPCStream serialization is
less relevant, as backpressure will serve a similar purpose. It will still be
used to determine whether or not to use RemoteLazyInputStream when serializing
from the parent process.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D141038
This patch avoids requiring the main thread to create PBackground instances by
instead using a background starter TaskQueue, and sending messages from a
PBackgroundStarter actor hosted on that thread to the target background thread
directly. On the background thread, the relevant metadata is already registered
and present in the BackgroundStarterParent actor allowing the main thread in
both processes to be bypassed completely.
Various tasks remain bound to the main thread, such as PBackground cleanup and
async steps involved in PBackground creation.
This patch also unifies the in-process and cross-process PBackground codepaths,
allowing in-process PBackground creation to bypass the main thread as well, and
removing the need for a main thread event target from
GetOrCreateForCurrentThread().
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D129705
This patch introduces ipcclientcerts, a PKCS#11 module that the socket process
can load to get access to client certificates and keys managed by the parent
process. This enables client certificate authentication to work with the socket
process (particularly for keys stored outside of NSS, as with osclientcerts or
third-party PKCS#11 modules).
Depends on D130820
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D122392
This patch introduces ipcclientcerts, a PKCS#11 module that the socket process
can load to get access to client certificates and keys managed by the parent
process. This enables client certificate authentication to work with the socket
process (particularly for keys stored outside of NSS, as with osclientcerts or
third-party PKCS#11 modules).
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D122392
VsyncChild is main thread only, and we would like to reuse PVsync on the
worker threads via PBackgroundChild which already implements it. This
patch does the necessary refactoring to have multiple implementations of
PVsyncChild.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D130264
This patch introduces ipcclientcerts, a PKCS#11 module that the socket process
can load to get access to client certificates and keys managed by the parent
process. This enables client certificate authentication to work with the socket
process (particularly for keys stored outside of NSS, as with osclientcerts or
third-party PKCS#11 modules).
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D122392
VsyncChild is main thread only, and we would like to reuse PVsync on the
worker threads via PBackgroundChild which already implements it. This
patch does the necessary refactoring to have multiple implementations of
PVsyncChild.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D130264
This patch introduces ipcclientcerts, a PKCS#11 module that the socket process
can load to get access to client certificates and keys managed by the parent
process. This enables client certificate authentication to work with the socket
process (particularly for keys stored outside of NSS, as with osclientcerts or
third-party PKCS#11 modules).
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D122392
This patch introduces ipcclientcerts, a PKCS#11 module that the socket process
can load to get access to client certificates and keys managed by the parent
process. This enables client certificate authentication to work with the socket
process (particularly for keys stored outside of NSS, as with osclientcerts or
third-party PKCS#11 modules).
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D122392
This patch introduces ipcclientcerts, a PKCS#11 module that the socket process
can load to get access to client certificates and keys managed by the parent
process. This enables client certificate authentication to work with the socket
process (particularly for keys stored outside of NSS, as with osclientcerts or
third-party PKCS#11 modules).
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D122392
To collect session storage data for session store, we make it possible
to query the background session storage managar for data.
Depends on D111432
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D111433