Instead of creating a `ROUTER` for each fetch, create a fetch thread
which handles all incoming and outcoming fetch requests. Now messages
involving fetches carry a "request id" which indicates which fetch is
being addressed by the message. This greatly reduces the number of file
descriptors used by fetch.
In addition, the interface for kicking off fetches is simplified when
using the `Listener` with `Document`s and the `GlobalScope`.
This does not fix all leaked file descriptors / mach ports, but greatly
eliminates the number used. Now tests can be run without limiting
procesess on modern macOS systems.
Followup work:
1. There are more instances where fetch is done using the old method.
Some of these require more changes in order to be converted to the
`FetchThread` approach.
2. Eliminate usage of IPC channels when doing redirects.
3. Also eliminate the IPC channel used for cancel handling.
4. This change opens up the possiblity of controlling the priority of
fetch requests.
Fixes#29834.
Signed-off-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>
This change replaces OpenSSL with rustls and also the manually curated
CA certs file with webpki-roots (effectively the same thing, but as a
crate).
Generally speaking the design of the network stack is the same. Changes:
- Code around certificate overrides needed to be refactored to work with
rustls so the various thread-safe list of certificates is refactored
into `CertificateErrorOverrideManager`
- hyper-rustls takes care of setting ALPN protocols for HTTP requests,
so for WebSockets this is moved to the WebSocket code.
- The safe set of cypher suites is chosen, which seem to correspond to
the "Modern" configuration from [1]. This can be adjusted later.
- Instead of passing a string of PEM CA certificates around, an enum is
used that includes parsed Certificates (or the default which reads
them from webpki-roots).
- Code for starting up an SSL server for testing is cleaned up a little,
due to the fact that the certificates need to be overriden explicitly
now. This is due to the fact that the `webpki` crate is more stringent
with self-signed certificates than SSL (CA certificates cannot used as
end-entity certificates). [2]
1. https://wiki.mozilla.org/Security/Server_Side_TLS
2. https://github.com/briansmith/webpki/issues/114Fixes#7888.
Fixes#13749.
Fixes#26835.
Fixes#29291.
The purpose of this commit is to ensure that the Response object has
access to Timing updates as previously the Response object simply
stored a ResourceFetchTiming struct so updates on ResourceFetchTiming
that were not explicitly done on the Response would not be passed down.
The references to ServoArc are added because Response uses
servo_arc::Arc rather than std::sync::Arc as is used elsewhere. So,
we've switched those other places to servo_arc::Arc instead of switching
Response to std::sync::Arc.
refactoring with ResourceFetchMetadata
implemented deprecated window.timing functionality
created ResourceTimingListener trait
fixed w3c links in navigation timing
updated include.ini to run resource timing tests on ci