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* Issue #1656 - Part 7: Nuke vim config lines in JSMoonchild2020-09-24
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* Fix a bunch of dumb typos and omissions.athenian2002019-10-21
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* MoonchildProductions#1251 - Part 1: Restore initial Solaris support, fixed up.athenian2002019-10-21
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | Compared with what Pale Moon had for Solaris originally, this is mostly the same zero point I started patching from, but I've made the following changes here after reviewing all this initial code I never looked at closely before. 1. In package-manifest.in for both Basilisk and Pale Moon, I've made the SPARC code for libfreebl not interefere with the x86 code, use the proper build flags, and also updated it to allow a SPARC64 build which is more likely to be used than the 32-bit SPARC code we had there. 2. See Mozilla bug #832272 and the old rules.mk patch from around Firefox 30 in oracle/solaris-userland. I believe they screwed up NSINSTALL on Solaris when they were trying to streamline the NSS buildsystem, because they started having unexplained issues with it around that time after Firefox 22 that they never properly resolved until Mozilla began building NSS with gyp files. I'm actually not even sure how relevant the thing they broke actually is to Solaris at this point, bug 665509 is so old it predates Firefox itself and goes back to the Mozilla suite days. I believe $(INSTALL) -t was wrong, and they meant $(NSINSTALL) -t because that makes more sense and is closer to what was there originally. It's what they have for WINNT, and it's possible a fix more like that could serve for Solaris as well. Alternatively, we could get rid of all these half-broken Makefiles and start building NSS with gyp files like Mozilla did. 3. I've completely cut out support for the Sun compiler and taken into account the reality that everyone builds Firefox (and therefore its forks) with GCC now on Solaris. This alone helped clean up a lot of the uglier parts of the code. 4. I've updated all remaining SOLARIS build flags to the newer XP_SOLARIS, because the SOLARIS flag is no longer set when building Solaris. 5. I've confirmed the workaround in gtxFontconfigFonts.cpp is no longer necessary. The Solaris people got impatient about implementing a half-baked patch for a fontconfig feature that wasn't ready yet back in 2009, and somehow convinced Mozilla to patch their software to work around it when really they should have just fixed or removed their broken fontconfig patch. The feature they wanted has since been implemented properly, and no version of Solaris still uses the broken patch that required this fix. If anyone had ever properly audited this code, it would have been removed a long time ago.
* Fix build errors with newer glibc versionsMatt A. Tobin2019-10-16
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* Remove AIX 1st party code OS checks, part 1wolfbeast2019-03-31
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* Issue #187: Remove solaris conditional code.wolfbeast2019-03-30
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* Issue #578: Applications cannot start without /proc (chroot).wolfbeast2018-07-02
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | UXP uses the current stack frame address and the stack size as a sort of heuristic for various things in the JavaScript engine. The js::GetNativeStackBaseImpl() function is used to get the base stack address (i.e. the address from which the stack grows, so this can be either the first or last memory address of the stack memory space depending on the CPU architecture). On Linux, this function is implemented using the pthreads APIs. For non-main threads, the queried thread info is stored in memory. The main thread does not have this information on hand, so it gets the stack memory range via the /proc/self/maps file (see glibc's pthread_get_attr_np.c). Fortunately (per discussions with the firefox devs in #jsapi) the base address only needs to be approximate. In reality, environment variables, args, and other things are stored in stack space between the end/beginning of the mapped stack memory and the 'top' of the stack space used by stack frames. When using glibc, we can get the top of this usable stack from __libc_stack_end, which is a void* set by glibc during program initialization, avoiding the need to access /proc. Non-main threads still get their stack-base through the usual pthreads APIs. Other libc implementations like musl will fall back to the standard UNIX-like implementation which calls pthread's pthread_attr_getstack() also from the main thread, which may imply /proc access and not work in restricted environments.
* Add m-esr52 at 52.6.0Matt A. Tobin2018-02-02