BrowsingContextIDs are consistent across the processes, so we can use
them to target frames in both browser and content processes. This will
aid browser-side navigation.
As a nice side-effect, we can drop a round-trip to the content process
for every `requestWillBeSent` event since we *almost* always can
attribute all network events to the proper parent frames.
I say "almost", because we in fact **fail** to correctly attribute requests
from workers that are instantiated by subframes. This, however, is
not working in Chromium ATM, so I consider this to be a minor regression
that is worth the simplification.
Firefox will sometimes send multiple requests with the same http channel id. When a frame is loaded, the favicon is requested in the parent frame, but with the same channel id. This can cause the document request to report the wrong frame, causing the test 'should capture iframe navigation request' to fail. It fails consistently on my computer.
This patch adds the content policy type into the http channelId to better distinguish requests. Maybe there is something better we can do? It looks like we use channelId has request ids, so there might be more bugs with these favicon requests in playwright?
When innerWindow is restored from the history state, we do not receive
content-document-global-created notification, but would still like to know
that window is now using a different inner window to reset the state.
This introduces a new notification juggler-dom-window-reused.
At the same time, goBack()/goForward() sometimes do not initiate
navigation synchronously, so our check for pendingNaivgationId() does
not work. Instead, we rely on canGoBack, and assume that client will
not need the navigationId synchronously.
When httpChannel is intercepted by Service Worker:
- it gets an internal redirect to another channel with the same id;
- once serivce worker responds, the channel gets the data, but
does not get any onResponse notifications.
So, we update our ResponseBodyListener (the nsIRequestObserver implementation)
to the new request and force onResponse from there once data is available or
request finishes.