This removes paint threads, rust-layers dependency, and changes
optional webrender types to be required.
The use_webrender option has been removed, however I've left
the "-w" command line option in place so that wpt
runner can continue to pass that. Once it's removed from there
we can also remove the -w option.
Once this stage is complete, it should be fine to change the
display list building code to generate webrender display
lists directly and avoid the conversion step.
In most scenarios, where the user of Servo will not override the default
user agent, the user agent can be a `&'static str`. But since we allow
for customization, we currently use a `String` to represent the user
agent. This commit migrates the user agent to be represented as a
`Cow<'static, str>`, which (at the cost of ergonomics) prevents
unnecessary allocations whenever cloning the user agent string in the
scenario the user doesn't override the user agent.
Implement private browsing for mozbrowser
<!-- Please describe your changes on the following line: -->
Support the `mozprivatebrowsing` attribute on mozbrowser iframes. This separates the non-private and private sessions in terms of cookies, HSTS lists, cached HTTP credentials, HTTP connection pools, and web storage. The private session is shared between all private mozbrowsers, and lasts until shutdown.
---
<!-- Thank you for contributing to Servo! Please replace each `[ ]` by `[X]` when the step is complete, and replace `__` with appropriate data: -->
- [X] `./mach build -d` does not report any errors
- [X] `./mach test-tidy` does not report any errors
- [X] There are tests for these changes
<!-- Pull requests that do not address these steps are welcome, but they will require additional verification as part of the review process. -->
<!-- Reviewable:start -->
---
This change is [<img src="https://reviewable.io/review_button.svg" height="35" align="absmiddle" alt="Reviewable"/>](https://reviewable.io/reviews/servo/servo/11544)
<!-- Reviewable:end -->
This implements system level DPI awareness for Windows. It has three
parts:
1. Add a application manifest which is copied alongside servo.exe during
build that declares our DPI awareness level. This is needed otherwise
DPI queries will return 96dpi and our application will be upscaled on
high DPI displays.
2. Rename hidpi_factor to avoid confusion with Glutin's hidpi_factor
which does something else.
3. Correctly convert windows sizes on window creation for
Windows. Unlike OS X, Windows uses device pixels for window creation.
Changes include:
- Introduce an IpcSend trait to abstract over a collection of IpcSenders
- Implement ResourceThreads collection to abstract the resource-related
sub threads across the component
- Rename original ResourceThread and ControlMsg into an unifed CoreResource__
to accommodate above changes and avoid confusions
Add timeline markers for HTTP requests, JS evaluation, and HTML parsing.
Thank you for contributing to Servo! Please replace each `[ ]` by `[X]` when the step is complete, and replace `__` with appropriate data:
- [ ] `./mach build -d` does not report any errors (didn't try to compile past a rustc upgrade on airplane wifi)
- [X] `./mach test-tidy --faster` does not report any errors
- [X] These changes fix#11218 (github issue number if applicable).
Either:
- [ ] There are tests for these changes OR
- [X] These changes do not require tests because we don't have testing infrastructure for profiling.
Pull requests that do not address these steps are welcome, but they will require additional verification as part of the review process.
<!-- Reviewable:start -->
---
This change is [<img src="https://reviewable.io/review_button.svg" height="35" align="absmiddle" alt="Reviewable"/>](https://reviewable.io/reviews/servo/servo/11239)
<!-- Reviewable:end -->
Interval + CSV time-profiling
This PR fixes#10886. The -p option can be followed by either an interval number or a CSV filename.
* In the interval profiling, the profiler output would be spitted out to the terminal periodically.
Example usage: **./mach run -p 1 http://www.google.com** will print the time-profiling output to the terminal every second.
* In the CSV file profiling, a CSV file will be generate upon termination of servo.
Example usage: **./mach run -x -o out.png -p out.csv http://www.google.com** will generate out.csv upon termination of Servo.
<!-- Reviewable:start -->
---
This change is [<img src="https://reviewable.io/review_button.svg" height="35" align="absmiddle" alt="Reviewable"/>](https://reviewable.io/reviews/servo/servo/10995)
<!-- Reviewable:end -->
The features for each crate will be computed based on the union of features
specified in the dependency graph. Specifying the same ones again just adds
more ways for them to get out of sync.
This commit adds the `--profiler-trace-path` flag. When combined with `-p` to
enable profiling, it dumps a profile as a self-contained HTML file to the given
path. The profile visualizes the traced operations as a gant-chart style
timeline.
Without this `./mach run -b -- -M` would start fine but navigating to a site would fail with:
`thread 'ScriptThread PipelineId { namespace_id: PipelineNamespaceId(0), index: PipelineIndex(0) }' panicked at 'assertion failed: mozbrowser_enabled()', /Users/ulf/Documents/Code/servo/components/script/dom/htmliframeelement.rs:163`
The main issue was resources_dir_path. Every time it was called it would start from the executable's path and walk up the hierarchy to find a directory named "resources". The sandbox was granted permission to read from the found resources dir, but after the sandbox had been activated resources_dir_path would again start from the executable's path and try to find the resources dir. It would then fail with "Operation not permitted" when trying to canonicalize the path because it didn't have permissions to read metadata under ./target.
To fix this the resources dir path is now cached between resources_dir_path calls.
This changes headless operation to strictly be a runtime option, rather
than a compile-time one. Note that the old headless version still relied
on a display server to support WebGL, while it now requires one all the
time.
Fixes#8573
WebRender is an experimental GPU accelerated rendering backend for Servo.
The WebRender backend can be specified by running Servo with the -w option (otherwise the default rendering backend will be used).
WebRender has many bugs, and missing features - but it is usable to browse most websites - please report any WebRender specific rendering bugs you encounter!