We add two @-moz-document functions: `plain-text-document()`, matching the
obvious, and `unobservable-document()`, which matches a top-level document with
no opener. This is the equivalent check we do for automatic darkening of
`about:blank` here:
https://searchfox.org/mozilla-central/rev/014fe72eaba26dcf6082fb9bbaf208f97a38594e/layout/base/PresShell.cpp#5282
The former we don't need to use, but it's nice to let user stylesheets target
plaintext documents properly (rather than relying on extensions or what not).
Note that these are not content-observable.
Add two tests: One showing that we produce different rendering when on dark
mode, and one showing that we produce the same one from an iframe, regardless
of dark mode.
Depends on D101517
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D101518
The changes should be trivial.
The third_party changes are up for review in
https://github.com/servo/rust-cssparser/pull/277 (and of course I'll
land with a bump to 0.28 rather than the override after that gets r+'d).
The basic idea is that with this we have the actual start offset of the
rule, so we wouldn't include html comments or other invalid stuff we
discard during sanitization in bug 1680084. But that's a separate
change.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D98677
So that skip_children(), which just pops the stack and is used by the
dynamic media query evaluation code, works as it should.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D92717
Also, for changes in CSS declarations, like changing
cssRules[i].style.color or something, we end up avoiding a lot of the
work we were doing.
This page still trips us in the sense that they add a stylesheet, then
call getBoundingClientRect(), then insert more rules in the stylesheet,
which causes us to rebuild a lot of the cascade data.
We could try to detect appends to the last stylesheet on the list or
something I guess, and avoid rebuilding the cascade data in some cases.
Depends on D85615
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D85616
This does not (yet) upgrade ./rust-toolchain
The warnings:
* dead_code "field is never read"
* redundant_semicolons "unnecessary trailing semicolon"
* non_fmt_panic "panic message is not a string literal, this is no longer accepted in Rust 2021"
* unstable_name_collisions "a method with this name may be added to the standard library in the future"
* legacy_derive_helpers "derive helper attribute is used before it is introduced" https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/issues/79202
We still panic in a debug build, so that developers can notice when they
need to add a new static atom after modifying UA sheets.
We also add telemetry to note when this happens, add an app note to a
crash report, in case any crash later on occurs, and re-up the existing,
expired shared memory sheet telemetry probes so we can look at them
again.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D73188
- Add enum AllowImportRules to CSS parsing.
- `replaceSync()` will skip over @import rules and continue parsing.
- `replace()` will skip over @import rules and continue parsing.
- `insertRule()` will throw a syntax error on @import rules.
- Modify WPT test cases to reflect these changes.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D61882
The existing code wasn't sound, as CSSOM objects also needed to go away before
the shared memory goes away (as they keep references to them).
This is sound assuming no presence of reference cycles introduced by CSSOM.
We may want to live with this and rely on chrome code not writing cycles like
this with UA stylesheet DOM objects.
We could explicitly drop all potentially-static objects... That seems pretty
error prone though.
Or we could also just leak the shared memory buffer, is there any reason why we
may not want to do that?
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D51870
It's much nicer.
One nice thing about this is that the new code is subject to the existing
threadedness checking, which identified that several of these should be atomic
because they're accessed off the main thread.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D40792
There are a few canvas2d-related dependencies that haven't updated, but they
only use euclid internally so that's not blocking landing the rest of the
changes.
Given the size of this patch, I think it's useful to get this landed as-is.
This doesn't change the way C++ code uses static prefs. But it does slightly
change how Rust code uses static prefs, specifically the name generated by
bindgen is slightly different.
The commit also improves some comments.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D35764
Remove unused code (4/4)
<!-- Please describe your changes on the following line: -->
Fourth and final PR in a series of PRs to remove unused/dead code from servo, powered by an (upcoming) tool of mine. Please take a look and tell me if you want to keep something.
* First PR: #23477
* Second PR: #23498
* Third PR: #23499
Shortstat of the combined PR series:
```
47 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 805 deletions(-)
```
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This doesn't clean up as much as a whole, but it's a step in the right
direction. In particular, it allows us to start using simple bindings for:
* Filters
* Shapes and images, almost. Need to:
* Get rid of the complex -moz- gradient parsing (let
layout.css.simple-moz-gradient.enabled get to release).
* Counters, almost. Need to:
* Share the Attr representation with Gecko, by not using Option<>.
* Just another variant should be enough (ContentItem::{Attr,Prefixedattr},
maybe).
Which in turn allows us to remove a whole lot of bindings in followups to this.
The setup changes a bit. This also removes the double pointer I complained about
while reviewing the shared UA sheet patches. The old setup is:
```
SpecifiedUrl
* CssUrl
* Arc<CssUrlData>
* String
* UrlExtraData
* UrlValueSource
* Arc<CssUrlData>
* load id
* resolved uri
* CORS mode.
* ...
```
The new one removes the double reference to the url data via URLValue, and looks
like:
```
SpecifiedUrl
* CssUrl
* Arc<CssUrlData>
* String
* UrlExtraData
* CorsMode
* LoadData
* load id
* resolved URI
```
The LoadData is the only mutable bit that C++ can change, and is not used from
Rust. Ideally, in the future, we could just use rust-url to resolve the URL
after parsing or something, and make it all immutable. Maybe.
I've verified that this approach still works with the UA sheet patches (via the
LoadDataSource::Lazy).
The reordering of mWillChange is to avoid nsStyleDisplay from going over the
size limit. We want to split it up anyway in bug 1552587, but mBinding gains a
tag member, which means that we were having a bit of extra padding.
One thing I want to explore is to see if we can abuse rustc's non-zero
optimizations to predict the layout from C++, but that's something to explore at
some other point in time and with a lot of care and help from Michael (who sits
next to me and works on rustc ;)).
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D31742
Each user agent style sheet has a unique URLExtraData object containing
its URL, but since they are refcounted objects, we can't share them
easily across processes. Rather than adding support for copying them
into a shared memory buffer like we will do with the Rust objects, here
we just set up a static array of URLExtraData objects per UA style
sheet. The array will be filled in in a later patch.
Rust UrlExtraData objects, once they are transformed into their
sharable form and copied into the shared memory buffer, will reference
them by an index.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D17182
This should unblock the fuzzers for now, though it's not the ideal solution.
It's the only reasonably easy solution to unblock them though, I think.
We should probably always keep track of the document a stylesheet was associated
with. We'll need that for constructible stylesheets anyway.
That requires some though on how to get the cycle-collection and such right,
though, and I wouldn't be able to write or land that ASAP.
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D23584