This patch was autogenerated by my decomponents.py
It covers almost every file with the extension js, jsm, html, py,
xhtml, or xul.
It removes blank lines after removed lines, when the removed lines are
preceded by either blank lines or the start of a new block. The "start
of a new block" is defined fairly hackily: either the line starts with
//, ends with */, ends with {, <![CDATA[, """ or '''. The first two
cover comments, the third one covers JS, the fourth covers JS embedded
in XUL, and the final two cover JS embedded in Python. This also
applies if the removed line was the first line of the file.
It covers the pattern matching cases like "var {classes: Cc,
interfaces: Ci, utils: Cu, results: Cr} = Components;". It'll remove
the entire thing if they are all either Ci, Cr, Cc or Cu, or it will
remove the appropriate ones and leave the residue behind. If there's
only one behind, then it will turn it into a normal, non-pattern
matching variable definition. (For instance, "const { classes: Cc,
Constructor: CC, interfaces: Ci, utils: Cu } = Components" becomes
"const CC = Components.Constructor".)
MozReview-Commit-ID: DeSHcClQ7cG
If the tab was resumed before, it could start playing any autoplay media without user's
permission after session restore.
MozReview-Commit-ID: C3DHIIsLtJA
If the tab was resumed before, it could start playing any autoplay media without user's
permission after session restore.
MozReview-Commit-ID: C3DHIIsLtJA
The browser.contentPrincpal will report a null prinicpal instead of the actual
content principal if the tab is not loaded. So the SessionStore will collect a
wrong principal for the 'iconLoadingPrincipal', and it will use this wrong
principal to load favicon when session restoring.
To fix this problem, this patch makes the TabState.jsm to collect
'iconLoadingPrincipal' from browser.mIconLoadingPrincipal which will be the
correct principal for loading favicon.
MozReview-Commit-ID: AYUbHFKaG8v
userTypedClear was used for two cases:
1) to keep track of whether we were in the middle of a loadURI call. This use is replaced by inLoadURI, which is
more sane when using e10s (though it's hard to be precise there because we're sending all web navigation calls to
the content process and this introduces a degree of asynchronousness that we just have to live with...).
2) to keep track of whether we were between a network start and a corresponding network stop, and whether the user
typed since the load properly started. This is now tracked on a small object on the browser binding, which has
appropriately named method so we're not just incrementing some magic number but actually understand what
we're saying, and so the information we get out (did the user type since this load started or not?) makes sense.
Note that we're keeping userTypedClear in session store information in order to remain backwards compatible.
It becomes a simple boolean-stored-as-int (1 or 0) that indicates whether we quit/crashed/stopped while a load
was pending, or not.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 5NbmVueocC7
userTypedClear was used for two cases:
1) to keep track of whether we were in the middle of a loadURI call. This use is replaced by inLoadURI, which is
more sane when using e10s (though it's hard to be precise there because we're sending all web navigation calls to
the content process and this introduces a degree of asynchronousness that we just have to live with...).
2) to keep track of whether we were between a network start and a corresponding network stop, and whether the user
typed since the load properly started. This is now tracked on a small object on the browser binding, which has
appropriately named method so we're not just incrementing some magic number but actually understand what
we're saying, and so the information we get out (did the user type since this load started or not?) makes sense.
Note that we're keeping userTypedClear in session store information in order to remain backwards compatible.
It becomes a simple boolean-stored-as-int (1 or 0) that indicates whether we quit/crashed/stopped while a load
was pending, or not.
MozReview-Commit-ID: 5NbmVueocC7
In a following patch, all DevTools moz.build files will use DevToolsModules to
install JS modules at a path that corresponds directly to their source tree
location. Here we rewrite all require and import calls to match the new
location that these files are installed to.