This patch mitigates violation of private browsing disk access. The DataStruct API and implementation is modified to obey private browsing design when used by objects such as nsTransferable (during clipboard data caching for example.)
Without this patch, a user is misled by use of private browsing when copying (or in some case just selecting) large blocks of text. A condition (presently hard coded at one million bytes kLargeDatasetSize) produces a cache file on disk regardless of whether private browsing is in use. This violates Mozilla's design (documented online at https://support.mozilla.org/kb/private-browsing-browse-web-without-saving-info/ and https://wiki.mozilla.org/PrivateBrowsing) This patch simply corrects the violation, discovered and resolved by the Tor Browser community.
We are white-listing the existing set of tests that use setTimeout
like this. Hopefully these tests will be investigated and fixed
in the future, so that we can narrow down the white-list.
This check is only turned on for mochitest-plain for now.
There are, sadly, many combinations of linkage in use throughout the tree.
The main differentiator, though, is between program/libraries related to
Gecko or not. Kind of. Some need mozglue, some don't. Some need dependent
linkage, some standalone.
Anyways, these new templates remove the need to manually define the
right dependencies against xpcomglue, nspr, mozalloc and mozglue
in most cases.
Places that build programs and were resetting MOZ_GLUE_PROGRAM_LDFLAGS
or that build libraries and were resetting MOZ_GLUE_LDFLAGS can now
just not use those Gecko-specific templates.
This also includes a test that mozMatchesSelector is still exposed and works.
--HG--
rename : js/xpconnect/tests/chrome/test_mozMatchesSelector.xul => js/xpconnect/tests/chrome/test_matches.xul
rename : js/xpconnect/tests/mochitest/file_mozMatchesSelector.html => js/xpconnect/tests/mochitest/file_matches.html
The -*- file variable lines -*- establish per-file settings that Emacs will
pick up. This patch makes the following changes to those lines (and touches
nothing else):
- Never set the buffer's mode.
Years ago, Emacs did not have a good JavaScript mode, so it made sense
to use Java or C++ mode in .js files. However, Emacs has had js-mode for
years now; it's perfectly serviceable, and is available and enabled by
default in all major Emacs packagings.
Selecting a mode in the -*- file variable line -*- is almost always the
wrong thing to do anyway. It overrides Emacs's default choice, which is
(now) reasonable; and even worse, it overrides settings the user might
have made in their '.emacs' file for that file extension. It's only
useful when there's something specific about that particular file that
makes a particular mode appropriate.
- Correctly propagate settings that establish the correct indentation
level for this file: c-basic-offset and js2-basic-offset should be
js-indent-level. Whatever value they're given should be preserved;
different parts of our tree use different indentation styles.
- We don't use tabs in Mozilla JS code. Always set indent-tabs-mode: nil.
Remove tab-width: settings, at least in files that don't contain tab
characters.
- Remove js2-mode settings that belong in the user's .emacs file, like
js2-skip-preprocessor-directives.