On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 11:26 AM, Andrew Sutherland
wrote:
> On 03/04/2014 03:13 AM, Henri Sivonen wrote:
>>
>> It saddens me that we are using non-compliant ad hoc parsers when we
>> already have two spec-compliant (at least at some point in time) ones.
>
> Interesting! I assume you are referring
On 03/05/2014 01:52 AM, nsm.nik...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tuesday, March 4, 2014 1:26:15 AM UTC-8, somb...@gmail.com wrote:
While we have a defense-in-depth strategy (CSP and iframe sandbox should
be protecting us from the worst possible scenarios) and we're hopeful
that Service Workers will eventu
On Tuesday, March 4, 2014 1:26:15 AM UTC-8, somb...@gmail.com wrote:
> While we have a defense-in-depth strategy (CSP and iframe sandbox should
>
> be protecting us from the worst possible scenarios) and we're hopeful
>
> that Service Workers will eventually let us provide
>
> nsIContentPolic
The actual translation needs to happen at once, but that's ok if I can work
in the chunks incrementally, and only when everything is ready I send it
off to the translation service. What I need to find then is a good (and
fast) partitioning algorithm that will give me a list of several blocks to
tr
On Wed, Mar 5, 2014 at 8:47 AM, Felipe G wrote:
> If I go with the clone route (to work on the snapshot'ed version of the
> data), how can I later associate the cloned nodes to the original nodes
> from the document? One way that I thought is to set a a userdata on the
> DOM nodes and then use t
Thanks for the feedback so far!
If I go with the clone route (to work on the snapshot'ed version of the
data), how can I later associate the cloned nodes to the original nodes
from the document? One way that I thought is to set a a userdata on the
DOM nodes and then use the clone handler callback
Chrome imports a JS
On 03/04/2014 03:13 AM, Henri Sivonen wrote:
It saddens me that we are using non-compliant ad hoc parsers when we
already have two spec-compliant (at least at some point in time) ones.
Interesting! I assume you are referring to:
https://github.com/davidflanagan/html5/blob/master/html5parser.j
On Mon, Mar 3, 2014 at 10:19 PM, Boris Zbarsky wrote:
> How feasible is just doing .innerHTML to do that, then doing some sort of
> async parse (e.g. XHR or DOMParser) to get a DOM snapshot?
Seems more efficient to write the walk in C++, since the innerHTML
getter already includes the walk in C++
3, 2014 3:57:04 PM
Subject: Re: How to efficiently walk the DOM tree and its strings
On 03/03/2014 03:19 PM, Boris Zbarsky wrote:
> That said, there might be JS implementations of an HTML5 parser out there.
The Gaia e-mail app has a streaming HTML parser in its worker-friendly
sanitizer a
On 3/3/14 9:07 PM, Boris Zbarsky wrote:
document.documentElement.cloneNode(true): ~18ms
document.cloneNode(true): ~8ms
Oh, and the difference between these two is that in the former clones of
elements try to do image loads, which takes about 70% of the
cloning time, but in the latter w
On 3/3/14 5:38 PM, Robert O'Callahan wrote:
Wouldn't a deep clone of the root element be more efficient?
Possibly, yes. Of course if you plan to do processing on a worker you
then have to serialize parts or all of the clone
Anyway, I just did some measurements. On a year+ old laptop, o
On 03/03/2014 03:19 PM, Boris Zbarsky wrote:
That said, there might be JS implementations of an HTML5 parser out there.
The Gaia e-mail app has a streaming HTML parser in its worker-friendly
sanitizer at
https://github.com/mozilla-b2g/bleach.js/blob/worker-thread-friendly/lib/bleach.js.
It's
On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 9:19 AM, Boris Zbarsky wrote:
> How feasible is just doing .innerHTML to do that, then doing some sort of
> async parse (e.g. XHR or DOMParser) to get a DOM snapshot? That said, this
> would mean that you end up with a snapshot that's actual DOM stuff, on the
> main thread
Hi Axel,
yeah, we are planning to cover that case about the changing order of inline
elements. See the bottom half of this comment for details:
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=971043#c3
For alt text, input label placeholders, and other text content from
attributes, I'm planning on bu
Hi,
translating DOM is a bit funky. Generally, you can probably translate
block elements one by one, but you need to persist inline elements.
You should mark up the inline elements in the string that you send to
the translation engine, such that you can support inline markup changing
the ord
On 2014-03-03, 3:19 PM, Boris Zbarsky wrote:
Better yet if we can send this copy with a non-copy move to a Worker
thread.
You could send the string to a worker (if you do this in C++ you won't
even need to copy it, afaict), but then on the worker you have to parse
the HTML... That said, there
On 2014-03-03, 3:30 PM, Felipe G wrote:
During the translation phase, Chrome imports a JS
During the translation phase, Chrome imports a JS
On 3/3/14 2:28 PM, Felipe G wrote:
A possible solution to that is to only pause the page that is being translated
(with,
say, EnterModalState) until we can finish working on it, while letting
other pages and the UI work normally.
The other pages can still modify the DOM of the page in question
On Mar 3, 2014, at 2:28 PM, Felipe G wrote:
> Hi everyone, I'm working on a feature to offer webpage translation in
> Firefox. Translation involves, quite unsurprisingly, a lot of DOM and
> strings manipulation. Since DOM access only happens in the main thread, it
> brings the question of how to
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