I tried to use the `?android:attr/...` method listed in the nearby comments but
kept receiving a "ResourceNotFound" exception. I wonder if this is related to
the way we inherit and then override the themes.
This patch reintroduced changes behind a nightly flag removed by:
1161638: Remove the chrome at the bottom of the screen in the Tabs Tray
1164723: Inherit from Tablet UI on Mobile UI (aka compact tabs)
1193745: Implement the tablet tabs tray grid view on mobile
I've also done a bit of work to allow the chrome to sit at the correct Y location in landscape on mobile devices when the tabs panel is shown to account for bug 1193374 which adjusts the aspect ratio of the tabs panel thumnbnails and didn't need to be hidden behind a nightly flag. Tablets remain unaffected by this change.
This commit does a few things. First, it fixes a typo
(s/ForResponse/ForResult/). It's not clear how this /ever/ worked,
but it did.
Second, it adds an UpdateAccountFromJSON sibling to
CreateAccountFromJSON. It would have been reasonable to have the
create message do double-duty and update an existing account (we have
the latitude to change the meaning since this API is not yet public)
but I generally prefer each consumer to perform the conditional state
check and to act appropriately.
Third, it generalizes the existing Accounts:Exist message to provide
some details (including email and UID) of any existing Firefox
Account. The Accounts.exist() API /is/ public, so I introduce a new
(not yet public) API for this richer information.
There are enough Accounts: messages to separate them from BrowserApp,
and the list is only growing.
This has also the small advantage of removing some non-native event
listeners.
This patch stops referring to package/class objects to identify
Android components directly and instead launches through action intent
filters. The intent filters are scoped to the package, but not marked
as private or as requiring a permission. A malicious package could
inject itself into an account flow, but I don't think there's much
advantage: the only time a secret is passed between activities is when
the native sign up (CreateAccount) and sign in (SignIn) activities
link between themselves, and in this instance I didn't route through
the action intent filters. (This is entirely native -- there's no web
analog -- so I didn't use the indirection.)
When used to do our own animation when opening the browser from the
share overlay. That caused this bug: we didn't call `finish` until
`onAnimationEnd` but since `startActivity` was called, the application
was switched before `onAnimationEnd`, and thus `finish`, could be
called. When we returned to the share overlay, it was in an unexpected
state (`isAnimating` was true) and the user could no longer interact
with it, blocking access to the app the ShareOverlay was opened from.
We fix this by not doing our custom animations and just calling `finish`.
Note: in any case, overriding the animation when opening the browser
could be unintuitive to users because they might expect a consistent
app-switch animation throughout the system.
The call to setResolution has (I believe) not been needed since bug 732971. Prior
to that resolutions used to be applied on the root document in Fennec, and so
browser.js would have to reapply the desired resolution on every tabswitch.
After that bug, the resolution was saved on the content documents for each tab
and so browser.js no longer needed to reapply the resolution. Until recently
doing this was redundant but harmless.
With bug 1180267 though the browser.js code that tracks the resolution may have
the wrong resolution initially, because that is determined in C++ code. Only
after the Java-side code process the setFirstPaintViewport message and sends
that information to browser.js does everything have the correct resolution. In
the case where a tab loaded in the background is brought into the foreground, the
tab-selected code runs before the setFirstPaintViewport code, and therefore uses
an incorrect resolution. This then screws up the viewport clamping code and causes
the page to get scrolled.
The intent of this check is to avoid setting the same margins more than once.
However this is redundant because the code in nsLayoutUtils::SetDisplayPortMargins
already has an equivalent check. Further, this code is wrong because it stores
the old margins per-tab, and so once a new document is loaded the margins may be
the same as "before" but they apply to a different element. In order to be correct
the check would have to track the target element as well as the margin values,
but it's easier to just get rid of this and let nsLayoutUtils handle it.
1) Added some comments to firefox.js to explain the relationship between
extensions.blocklist.interval and security.onecrl.maximum_staleness_in_seconds
2) Modified default values in firefox.js and mobile.js to set maximum staleness
to 1.25x blocklist interval
3) modified the tests_ev_certs.js xpcshell test to cope with larger maximum
staleness values to address test failures
The default zoom value is only used on the Java side to clamp the min/max zoom
values in the case where zooming is disabled. We can do this much earlier in
the flow, when we are computing the metadata, and reduce the amount of
redundant information being passed around.
From browser.js's point of view there's no difference between restricted and guest profiles. Both use the
parental controls API. So there are only two "simple" solutions here:
* 1) Add a method to nsIParentalControlsService to determine whether the current profiles is a restricted or
a guest profile (Something like isGuest()). But then every platform using this interface would require
to at least implement a stub for this method.
* 2) Add a new restriction that controls installing the theme.
This patch implements option 2. While this restriction is not of much use besides deciding whether we need
to install a specialized theme (DISALLOW_DEFAULT_THEME), it still offers the most flexibility. In a
follow-up bug we could decide to make the restriction configurable by the device admin (requires localized
strings).
This patch creates a copy of the GeckoAppBase style in v21/themes.xml and removes
the custom icons for copy, cut and paste we use on v11+. Instead the system icons,
that match the look&feel of the ActionBar, will be used.
To do this, I ran:
convert <image> -alpha extract -alpha on <image>
The resultant images were slightly larger than their previous
counterparts so I then compressed them with ImageOptim.
DONTBUILD NPOTB
This adds a pass-thru |mach android| command. It's just here to make
it easier to add and remove Android SDK packages: since most folks
don't have the Android tools on their PATH, this saves them having to
root through the object directory to find the path to the tool.
Other 3-dot menu button locations to follow.
I tested that the colors are correct in the various states (e.g. private
browsing).
This patch additionally:
* Restructured the menu button (which allowed the removal of a setVisibility
call
* Removed the now unused tablet assets.
And replace the older assets.
These are the 36dp icons from Google's material design page:
https://www.google.com/design/icons/#ic_more_vert
Then we trim off the whitespace with image magick:
convert icon.png -trim out.png
And compress with ImageOptim.