The naming scheme for Xray typedefs is the concatenation of the tuple:
({SC,}, {Security,Permissive}, Xray, {XPCWN,DOM}). This is admittedly a bit
much, but I think it's still better than explicitly doing the "typdef Foo Xray"
everywhere. Moreover, once the new DOM bindings are done, the last component
in the tuple will go away.
The naming scheme for Xray typedefs is the concatenation of the tuple:
({SC,}, {Security,Permissive}, Xray, {XPCWN,DOM}). This is admittedly a bit
much, but I think it's still better than explicitly doing the "typdef Foo Xray"
everywhere. Moreover, once the new DOM bindings are done, the last component
in the tuple will go away.
There is no reason to have special methods for specific sets of CompileOptions
when the JS::Compile interface is so easy to use. Other API methods can be
moved internal or removed entirely with this change.
--HG--
extra : rebase_source : f48fb221ebe02c0137e521ea605953532808825d
This is a pretty dumb bug, but we never actually hit this codepath at the moment.
We currently end up in wrapper by either explicitly calling
ReparentWrappedNativeIfFound (in nsNodeUtils and in nsHTMLDocument), or by moving
existing wrappers during orphan fixup. The former always passes a wrapper-cached
object, and the latter guarantees that we always have a wrapper. So we'd never
hit the "no wrapper cache, no wrapper" case in the current code.
This is another one of those annoying situaitons in XPConnect right now where we
can't ask a question without potentially throwing if the answer is no. There's
also a bunch of unused cruft in here (like the Perm*Access stuff), so this stuff
was ripe for a spring cleaning. Unfortunately, I wasn't able to divide this patch
up nicely. Sorry for the big diff. :-(
In a nutshell, this patch changes things so that Policy::check() just becomes
a predicate that says whether the access is allowed or not. There's the remote
possibility that one of the underlying JSAPI calls in a ::check() implementation
might throw, so callers to ::check() should check JS_IsExceptionPending
afterwards (this doesn't catch OOM, but we can just continue along until the
next OOM-triggering operation and throw there).
Aside from exceptional cases, callers should call Policy::deny if they want to
report the failure. Policy::deny returns success value that should be returned
to the wrapper's consumer.
There's really no reason to use the wishy-washy static COW Deny() here.
Also, note that the xpcshell-test wasn't testing what it thought it
was - interfaces is accessible from content code.