The assertions in nsINode and nsWrapperCache are to eagerly catch
failures to override those methods.
The classinfo change for XULTreeBuilder is needed because one of those
is returned via an nsIXULTemplateBuilder attribute on XULElement.
Alternately, I could mark it notflattened in Bindings.conf, but Enn
said he prefers this anyway.
The change to the QI impl in BindingUtils is needed because when
XPConnect converts an IID from C++ to JS it makes is an nsJSID, not an
nsJSIID. We've run into this before, sadly.
I removed "id" from nsIDOMXULElement because it's already on Element.
I suppose I could have left it there, but this seems cleaner.
The nsJSIID::HasInstance changes are needed to support XBL-implemented
interfaces. Sadly, this does mean that if the underlying object QIs
to something but we didn't put those props on the WebIDL we'll end up
testing true for instanceof but not exposing the props. I don't see
an obviously better way. We should work on killing off uses of
"instanceof someinterface".
The browser.js change is needed to avoid throwing exceptions during
browser-chrome tests that are now getting reported because our
swapFrameLoaders is no longer an XPConnect method.
The assertions in nsINode and nsWrapperCache are to eagerly catch
failures to override those methods.
The classinfo change for XULTreeBuilder is needed because one of those
is returned via an nsIXULTemplateBuilder attribute on XULElement.
Alternately, I could mark it notflattened in Bindings.conf, but Enn
said he prefers this anyway.
The change to the QI impl in BindingUtils is needed because when
XPConnect converts an IID from C++ to JS it makes is an nsJSID, not an
nsJSIID. We've run into this before, sadly.
I removed "id" from nsIDOMXULElement because it's already on Element.
I suppose I could have left it there, but this seems cleaner.
The nsJSIID::HasInstance changes are needed to support XBL-implemented
interfaces. Sadly, this does mean that if the underlying object QIs
to something but we didn't put those props on the WebIDL we'll end up
testing true for instanceof but not exposing the props. I don't see
an obviously better way. We should work on killing off uses of
"instanceof someinterface".
The browser.js change is needed to avoid throwing exceptions during
browser-chrome tests that are now getting reported because our
swapFrameLoaders is no longer an XPConnect method.
This adds support for many kinds of Paris bindings objects as weak map keys.
This patch supports nsISupports objects as well as non-cycle-collected
non-nsISupports objects. What is needed for support is to preserve any wrapper,
if the object is wrapper cached. In other cases, we don't need to do anything.
Switch from using the interface objects from the Xrays compartment to wrapping
interface objects and interface prototype objects in Xrays. Make dom binding
Xrays deal with both instance objects and interface and interface prototype
objects.
Unforgeable attributes are defined directly on the object, not on the
prototype. So we keep them in a separate spec array and define them
during object creation as needed.
This means that we have to pass that separate spec array to the Xray
helpers, unfortunately, which somewhat complicates those.
There are several changes here:
1) When wrapping a callback interface object for JS, just extract the
underlying JSObject from inside it and hand that object out.
2) Flag callback interface descriptors as "not concrete" (only matters
for cases when they have constants on the interface object) and not
wrappercached (will catch bugs if someone tries to treat them as a
Gecko object).
3) Fix a preexisting bug in sequence wrapping where we'd try to
JS_DefineElement twice if we were wrapping a null value for a
sequence of nullable interface objects.
For new DOM proxies, we could probably use the Xray expando machinery for the
regular expando object as well, and free up one of the reserved slots. That's
more than I want to bite off for the moment, though.
I also decided not to block on bug 760095 and just kick the problem of globals
with new binding down the road a little bit.