CSC/ECE 517 Spring 2015/oss M1503 EDT: Difference between revisions
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=='''Introduction'''== | =='''Introduction'''== | ||
Servo is | [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Servo_%28layout_engine%29 Servo] is an experimental [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_browser web browser] [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Layout_engine layout engine] being developed by [https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/research/ Mozilla Research]. It is currently in an early stage, with the rendering and browsing of pages functional. It is currently being developed on 64bit OS X, 64bit Linux and Android, and is being ported to ARM processors. The aim of this prototype engine is to create a highly parallel environment, with fine-grained tasks to handle different functions like rendering, parsing, layout, etc. | ||
Servo is written in the [http://doc.rust-lang.org/book/README.html Rust] language, which is also being developed by Mozilla Research. The language is being refined through feedback from Servo development, and writing the Rust compiler itself. Rust is a systems programming language similar to C and C++ in syntax (but semantically very different). The emphasis is on speed, safety, concurrency and control of memory layout. | |||
=='''Running Servo'''== | =='''Running Servo'''== | ||
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===Running=== | ===Running=== | ||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
./mach run [url] | ./mach run [url] --devtools <port number> | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
=='''Remote Developer Tools'''== | =='''Remote Developer Tools<ref>https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Tools/Remote_Debugging</ref>'''== | ||
You can use remote developer tools, such as the one in Firefox to debug Web sites and Web apps running on different browsers. The other browser could either be on the same device or a different device. | You can use remote developer tools, such as the one in Firefox to debug Web sites and Web apps running on different browsers. The other browser could either be on the same device or a different device. | ||
Servo has a basic implementation of developer tools that supports executing JS remotely and investigating the DOM tree in the document inspector. As part of the project for extending the funcionalities to enable remote logging from web content, and add new capabilities to log HTTP requests and responses to allow for easier debugging of network-related problems in Servo, we performed some initial additions to the code to get the web console to print out log messages. | Servo has a basic implementation of developer tools that supports executing JS remotely and investigating the DOM tree in the document inspector. As part of the project for extending the funcionalities to enable remote logging from web content, and add new capabilities to log HTTP requests and responses to allow for easier debugging of network-related problems in Servo, we performed some initial additions to the code to get the web console to print out log messages. | ||
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</pre> | </pre> | ||
We also update the ConsoleMessage enum in components/devtools_traits/lib.rs to add fields filename, lineNumber, columnNumber | |||
components/devtools_traits/lib.rs | components/devtools_traits/lib.rs | ||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
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. | . | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
==Connecting from Firefox== | |||
Run Servo on a webpage with the --devtools 6000 argument, connect to it from a recent version of Firefox. Check <span class="plainlinks">[https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Tools/Remote_Debugging/Thunderbird here]</span> to see how to configure Firefox for this. You can now experiment with the document inspector and web console. | |||
=='''Conclusion'''== | |||
After these changes were made, the message now logs on the web console. A video demonstration is available <span class="plainlinks">[http://www.screencast.com/t/nwN23WnG9 here]. | |||
=='''References'''== | =='''References'''== | ||
<references/> | <references/> |
Latest revision as of 04:46, 24 March 2015
Extending Developer Tools for Servo
Servo<ref>https://github.com/servo/servo/</ref> is a prototype web browser engine written in the RUST language. Servo implements a very basic developer tools server that currently supports executing JavaScript (JS) remotely and investigating the Document Object Model (DOM) tree in the document inspector. We want to expand these capabilities by completing previous work that enables remote logging from web content, and add new capabilities to log HTTP requests and responses to allow for easier debugging of network-related problems in Servo.
Introduction
Servo is an experimental web browser layout engine being developed by Mozilla Research. It is currently in an early stage, with the rendering and browsing of pages functional. It is currently being developed on 64bit OS X, 64bit Linux and Android, and is being ported to ARM processors. The aim of this prototype engine is to create a highly parallel environment, with fine-grained tasks to handle different functions like rendering, parsing, layout, etc.
Servo is written in the Rust language, which is also being developed by Mozilla Research. The language is being refined through feedback from Servo development, and writing the Rust compiler itself. Rust is a systems programming language similar to C and C++ in syntax (but semantically very different). The emphasis is on speed, safety, concurrency and control of memory layout.
Running Servo
Installation
Debian-based Linuxes
sudo apt-get install curl freeglut3-dev \ libfreetype6-dev libgl1-mesa-dri libglib2.0-dev xorg-dev \ msttcorefonts gperf g++ cmake python-virtualenv \ libssl-dev libbz2-dev libosmesa6-dev
Fedora
sudo yum install curl freeglut-devel libtool gcc-c++ libXi-devel \ freetype-devel mesa-libGL-devel glib2-devel libX11-devel libXrandr-devel gperf \ fontconfig-devel cabextract ttmkfdir python python-virtualenv expat-devel \ rpm-build openssl-devel cmake bzip2-devel libXcursor-devel pushd /tmp wget http://corefonts.sourceforge.net/msttcorefonts-2.5-1.spec rpmbuild -bb msttcorefonts-2.5-1.spec sudo yum install $HOME/rpmbuild/RPMS/noarch/msttcorefonts-2.5-1.noarch.rpm popd
Building
Servo is built with Cargo, the Rust package manager. We also use Mozilla's Mach tools to orchestrate the build and other tasks. Normal Build
git clone https://github.com/servo/servo cd servo ./mach build ./mach run tests/html/about-mozilla.html
Running
./mach run [url] --devtools <port number>
Remote Developer Tools<ref>https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Tools/Remote_Debugging</ref>
You can use remote developer tools, such as the one in Firefox to debug Web sites and Web apps running on different browsers. The other browser could either be on the same device or a different device. Servo has a basic implementation of developer tools that supports executing JS remotely and investigating the DOM tree in the document inspector. As part of the project for extending the funcionalities to enable remote logging from web content, and add new capabilities to log HTTP requests and responses to allow for easier debugging of network-related problems in Servo, we performed some initial additions to the code to get the web console to print out log messages.
The following changes were made to the ConsoleMsg struct in components/devtools/libs.rs:
- rename logLevel to level and make it a String
- rename timestamp to timeStamp
- add an arguments vector of Strings
- remove the message field and add the value to the arguments vector
- add filename, lineNumber, and columnNumber fields
The following code snippets show the modified version:
components/devtools/lib.rs:
struct ConsoleMsg { level: String, timeStamp: u64, arguments: Vec<String>, filename: String, lineNumber: u32, columnNumber: u32, } fn handle_console_message(actors: Arc<Mutex<ActorRegistry>>, id: PipelineId, console_message: ConsoleMessage, actor_pipelines: &HashMap<PipelineId, String>) { let console_actor_name = find_console_actor(actors.clone(), id, actor_pipelines); let actors = actors.lock().unwrap(); let console_actor = actors.find::<ConsoleActor>(console_actor_name.as_slice()); match console_message { ConsoleMessage::LogMessage(message, filename, lineNumber, columnNumber) => { let msg = ConsoleAPICall { from: console_actor.name.clone(), __type__: "consoleAPICall".to_string(), message: ConsoleMsg { level: "log".to_string(), timeStamp: precise_time_ns(), arguments: vec!(message), filename: filename, lineNumber: lineNumber, columnNumber: columnNumber, }, }; for stream in console_actor.streams.borrow_mut().iter_mut() { stream.write_json_packet(&msg); } } } }
We also update the ConsoleMessage enum in components/devtools_traits/lib.rs to add fields filename, lineNumber, columnNumber components/devtools_traits/lib.rs
pub enum ConsoleMessage { // Log: message, filename, line number, column number LogMessage(String, String, u32, u32), //WarnMessage(String), }
components/script/dom/console.rs
impl<'a> ConsoleMethods for JSRef<'a, Console> { fn Log(self, message: DOMString) { println!("{}", message); //TODO: Sending fake values for filename, lineNumber and columnNumber in LogMessage; adjust later propagate_console_msg(&self, ConsoleMessage::LogMessage(message, String::from_str("test"), 1, 1)); } . . .
Connecting from Firefox
Run Servo on a webpage with the --devtools 6000 argument, connect to it from a recent version of Firefox. Check here to see how to configure Firefox for this. You can now experiment with the document inspector and web console.
Conclusion
After these changes were made, the message now logs on the web console. A video demonstration is available here.
References
<references/>