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276 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
276 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
/* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 4; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 4 -*- */
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/* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
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* License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
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* file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */
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/* Defines the abstract interface for a principal. */
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#include "nsISerializable.idl"
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%{C++
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struct JSContext;
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struct JSPrincipals;
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#include "nsCOMPtr.h"
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#include "nsTArray.h"
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%}
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interface nsIURI;
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interface nsIContentSecurityPolicy;
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[ptr] native JSContext(JSContext);
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[ptr] native JSPrincipals(JSPrincipals);
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[ptr] native PrincipalArray(nsTArray<nsCOMPtr<nsIPrincipal> >);
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[scriptable, builtinclass, uuid(dbda8bb0-3023-4aec-ad98-8e9931a29d70)]
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interface nsIPrincipal : nsISerializable
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{
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/**
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* Returns whether the other principal is equivalent to this principal.
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* Principals are considered equal if they are the same principal, or
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* they have the same origin.
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*/
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boolean equals(in nsIPrincipal other);
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/**
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* Like equals, but doesn't take document.domain changes into account.
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*/
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boolean equalsIgnoringDomain(in nsIPrincipal other);
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%{C++
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inline bool Equals(nsIPrincipal* aOther) {
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bool equal = false;
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return NS_SUCCEEDED(Equals(aOther, &equal)) && equal;
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}
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inline bool EqualsIgnoringDomain(nsIPrincipal* aOther) {
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bool equal = false;
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return NS_SUCCEEDED(EqualsIgnoringDomain(aOther, &equal)) && equal;
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}
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%}
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/**
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* Returns a hash value for the principal.
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*/
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[noscript] readonly attribute unsigned long hashValue;
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/**
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* The domain security policy of the principal.
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*/
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// XXXcaa should this be here? The script security manager is the only
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// thing that should care about this. Wouldn't storing this data in one
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// of the hashtables in nsScriptSecurityManager be better?
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// XXXbz why is this writable? Who should have write access to this? What
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// happens if this principal is in our hashtable and we pass it out of the
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// security manager and someone writes to this field? Especially if they
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// write garbage? If we need to give someone other than the security
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// manager a way to set this (which I question, since it can increase the
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// permissions of a page) it should be a |void clearSecurityPolicy()|
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// method.
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[noscript] attribute voidPtr securityPolicy;
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/**
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* The codebase URI to which this principal pertains. This is
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* generally the document URI.
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*/
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readonly attribute nsIURI URI;
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/**
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* The domain URI to which this principal pertains.
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* This is congruent with HTMLDocument.domain, and may be null.
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* Setting this has no effect on the URI.
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*/
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[noscript] attribute nsIURI domain;
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/**
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* The origin of this principal's codebase URI.
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* An origin is defined as: scheme + host + port.
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*/
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// XXXcaa this should probably be turned into an nsIURI.
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// The system principal's origin should be some caps namespace
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// with a chrome URI. All of chrome should probably be the same.
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readonly attribute string origin;
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/**
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* Returns whether the other principal is equal to or weaker than this
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* principal. Principals are equal if they are the same object or they
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* have the same origin.
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*
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* Thus a principal always subsumes itself.
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*
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* The system principal subsumes itself and all other principals.
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*
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* A null principal (corresponding to an unknown, hence assumed minimally
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* privileged, security context) is not equal to any other principal
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* (including other null principals), and therefore does not subsume
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* anything but itself.
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*/
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boolean subsumes(in nsIPrincipal other);
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/**
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* Same as the previous method, subsumes(), but for codebase principals
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* ignores changes to document.domain.
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*/
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boolean subsumesIgnoringDomain(in nsIPrincipal other);
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%{C++
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inline bool Subsumes(nsIPrincipal* aOther) {
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bool subsumes = false;
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return NS_SUCCEEDED(Subsumes(aOther, &subsumes)) && subsumes;
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}
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inline bool SubsumesIgnoringDomain(nsIPrincipal* aOther) {
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bool subsumes = false;
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return NS_SUCCEEDED(SubsumesIgnoringDomain(aOther, &subsumes)) && subsumes;
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}
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%}
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/**
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* Checks whether this principal is allowed to load the network resource
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* located at the given URI under the same-origin policy. This means that
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* codebase principals are only allowed to load resources from the same
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* domain, the system principal is allowed to load anything, and null
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* principals are not allowed to load anything. This is changed slightly
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* by the optional flag allowIfInheritsPrincipal (which defaults to false)
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* which allows the load of a data: URI (which inherits the principal of
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* its loader) or a URI with the same principal as its loader (eg. a
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* Blob URI).
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* In these cases, with allowIfInheritsPrincipal set to true, the URI can
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* be loaded by a null principal.
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*
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* If the load is allowed this function does nothing. If the load is not
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* allowed the function throws NS_ERROR_DOM_BAD_URI.
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*
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* NOTE: Other policies might override this, such as the Access-Control
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* specification.
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* NOTE: The 'domain' attribute has no effect on the behaviour of this
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* function.
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*
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*
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* @param uri The URI about to be loaded.
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* @param report If true, will report a warning to the console service
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* if the load is not allowed.
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* @param allowIfInheritsPrincipal If true, the load is allowed if the
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* loadee inherits the principal of the
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* loader.
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* @throws NS_ERROR_DOM_BAD_URI if the load is not allowed.
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*/
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void checkMayLoad(in nsIURI uri, in boolean report,
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in boolean allowIfInheritsPrincipal);
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/**
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* A Content Security Policy associated with this principal.
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*/
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[noscript] attribute nsIContentSecurityPolicy csp;
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/**
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* Returns the extended origin of the principal.
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* The extended origin is a string that has more information than the origin
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* and can be used to isolate data or permissions between different
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* principals while taking into account parameters like the app id or the
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* fact that the principal is embedded in a mozbrowser.
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* Some principals will return the origin for extendedOrigin.
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* Some principals will assert if you try to access the extendedOrigin.
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*
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* The extendedOrigin is intended to be an opaque identifier. It is
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* currently "human-readable" but no callers should assume it will stay
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* as is and it might be crypto-hashed at some point.
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*/
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readonly attribute AUTF8String extendedOrigin;
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/**
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* The base domain of the codebase URI to which this principal pertains
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* (generally the document URI), handling null principals and
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* non-hierarchical schemes correctly.
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*/
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readonly attribute ACString baseDomain;
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const short APP_STATUS_NOT_INSTALLED = 0;
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const short APP_STATUS_INSTALLED = 1;
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const short APP_STATUS_PRIVILEGED = 2;
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const short APP_STATUS_CERTIFIED = 3;
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/**
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* Gets the principal's app status, which indicates whether the principal
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* corresponds to "app code", and if it does, how privileged that code is.
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* This method returns one of the APP_STATUS constants above.
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*
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* Note that a principal may have
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*
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* appId != nsIScriptSecurityManager::NO_APP_ID &&
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* appId != nsIScriptSecurityManager::UNKNOWN_APP_ID
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*
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* and still have appStatus == APP_STATUS_NOT_INSTALLED. That's because
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* appId identifies the app that contains this principal, but a window
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* might be contained in an app and not be running code that the app has
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* vouched for. For example, the window might be inside an <iframe
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* mozbrowser>, or the window's origin might not match the app's origin.
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*
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* If you're doing a check to determine "does this principal correspond to
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* app code?", you must check appStatus; checking appId != NO_APP_ID is not
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* sufficient.
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*/
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[infallible] readonly attribute unsigned short appStatus;
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/**
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* Gets the id of the app this principal is inside. If this principal is
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* not inside an app, returns nsIScriptSecurityManager::NO_APP_ID.
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*
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* Note that this principal does not necessarily have the permissions of
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* the app identified by appId. For example, this principal might
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* correspond to an iframe whose origin differs from that of the app frame
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* containing it. In this case, the iframe will have the appId of its
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* containing app frame, but the iframe must not run with the app's
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* permissions.
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*
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* Similarly, this principal might correspond to an <iframe mozbrowser>
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* inside an app frame; in this case, the content inside the iframe should
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* not have any of the app's permissions, even if the iframe is at the same
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* origin as the app.
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*
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* If you're doing a security check based on appId, you must check
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* appStatus as well.
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*/
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[infallible] readonly attribute unsigned long appId;
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/**
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* Returns true iff the principal is inside a browser element. (<iframe
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* mozbrowser mozapp> does not count as a browser element.)
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*/
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[infallible] readonly attribute boolean isInBrowserElement;
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/**
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* Returns true if this principal has an unknown appId. This shouldn't
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* generally be used. We only expose it due to not providing the correct
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* appId everywhere where we construct principals.
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*/
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[infallible] readonly attribute boolean unknownAppId;
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/**
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* Returns true iff this principal is a null principal (corresponding to an
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* unknown, hence assumed minimally privileged, security context).
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*/
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[infallible] readonly attribute boolean isNullPrincipal;
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};
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/**
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* If nsSystemPrincipal is too risky to use, but we want a principal to access
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* more than one origin, nsExpandedPrincipals letting us define an array of
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* principals it subsumes. So script with an nsExpandedPrincipals will gain
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* same origin access when at least one of its principals it contains gained
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* sameorigin acccess. An nsExpandedPrincipal will be subsumed by the system
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* principal, and by another nsExpandedPrincipal that has all its principals.
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* It is added for jetpack content-scripts to let them interact with the
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* content and a well defined set of other domains, without the risk of
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* leaking out a system principal to the content. See: Bug 734891
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*/
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[uuid(f3e177Df-6a5e-489f-80a7-2dd1481471d8)]
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interface nsIExpandedPrincipal : nsISupports
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{
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/**
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* An array of principals that the expanded principal subsumes.
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* Note: this list is not reference counted, it is shared, so
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* should not be changed and should only be used ephemerally.
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*/
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[noscript] readonly attribute PrincipalArray whiteList;
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};
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