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| author | Stephen Blott | 2015-01-04 14:54:04 +0000 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Stephen Blott | 2015-01-04 14:54:04 +0000 |
| commit | 7e4fdac07ffb59c438a17c2c88051064aaab16b5 (patch) | |
| tree | 36f1e187818bee9448796e2f8a4df4ee9cc312c4 | |
| parent | a5adf7c06128cc963a09acc9960bab1117b55d1a (diff) | |
| download | vimium-7e4fdac07ffb59c438a17c2c88051064aaab16b5.tar.bz2 | |
Revise handler stack implementation.
The old implementation:
- Wasn't actually checking whether handlers had been removed before
calling them.
- Could end up calling the same handler twice (if a handler was removed
further down the stack, and the stack elements moved due the resulting
splice.
Solution:
- Mark elements as removed and check. Set their ids to null.
- Don't splice stack.
Also, optimisation:
- Removing the element at the top of the stack is still O(1).
- In Modes, reverse handlers before removing (so, more likely to hit the
optimisation above).
For the record, the stable stack length at the moment seems to be about
10-12 elements.
| -rw-r--r-- | content_scripts/mode.coffee | 4 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | lib/handler_stack.coffee | 32 |
2 files changed, 22 insertions, 14 deletions
diff --git a/content_scripts/mode.coffee b/content_scripts/mode.coffee index 10b7bb2a..76b65a12 100644 --- a/content_scripts/mode.coffee +++ b/content_scripts/mode.coffee @@ -76,7 +76,9 @@ class Mode exit: -> console.log @count, "exit:", @name - handlerStack.remove handlerId for handlerId in @handlers + # We reverse @handlers, here. That way, handlers are popped in the opposite order to that in which they + # were pushed. + handlerStack.remove handlerId for handlerId in @handlers.reverse() Mode.modes = Mode.modes.filter (mode) => mode != @ Mode.updateBadge() diff --git a/lib/handler_stack.coffee b/lib/handler_stack.coffee index f05413d3..c8e9a035 100644 --- a/lib/handler_stack.coffee +++ b/lib/handler_stack.coffee @@ -14,24 +14,24 @@ class HandlerStack # processing should take place. @stopBubblingAndFalse = new Object() - genId: -> @counter = ++@counter - # Adds a handler to the stack. Returns a unique ID for that handler that can be used to remove it later. push: (handler) -> - handler.id = @genId() @stack.push handler - handler.id + handler.id = ++@counter - # Called whenever we receive a key event. Each individual handler has the option to stop the event's - # propagation by returning a falsy value. + # Called whenever we receive a key or other event. Each individual handler has the option to stop the + # event's propagation by returning a falsy value, or stop bubbling by returning @stopBubblingAndFalse or + # @stopBubblingAndTrue. bubbleEvent: (type, event) -> + # extra is passed to each handler. This allows handlers to pass information down the stack. + extra = {} for i in [(@stack.length - 1)..0] by -1 handler = @stack[i] # We need to check for existence of handler because the last function call may have caused the release # of more than one handler. - if handler && handler[type] + if handler and handler.id and handler[type] @currentId = handler.id - passThrough = handler[type].call(@, event) + passThrough = handler[type].call @, event, extra if not passThrough DomUtils.suppressEvent(event) if @isChromeEvent event return false @@ -40,11 +40,17 @@ class HandlerStack true remove: (id = @currentId) -> - for i in [(@stack.length - 1)..0] by -1 - handler = @stack[i] - if handler.id == id - @stack.splice(i, 1) - break + if 0 < @stack.length and @stack[@stack.length-1].id == id + # A common case is to remove the handler at the top of the stack. And we can this very efficiently. + # Tests suggest that this case arises more than half of the time. + @stack.pop().id = null + else + # Otherwise, we'll build a new stack. This is better than splicing the existing stack since at can't + # interfere with any concurrent bubbleEvent. + @stack = @stack.filter (handler) -> + # Mark this handler as removed (for any active bubbleEvent call). + handler.id = null if handler.id == id + handler?.id? # The handler stack handles chrome events (which may need to be suppressed) and internal (fake) events. # This checks whether that the event at hand is a chrome event. |
