This file is indexed.

/usr/share/idl/thunderbird/nsIMessageManager.idl is in thunderbird-dev 1:52.8.0-1~deb8u1.

This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.

The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.

  1
  2
  3
  4
  5
  6
  7
  8
  9
 10
 11
 12
 13
 14
 15
 16
 17
 18
 19
 20
 21
 22
 23
 24
 25
 26
 27
 28
 29
 30
 31
 32
 33
 34
 35
 36
 37
 38
 39
 40
 41
 42
 43
 44
 45
 46
 47
 48
 49
 50
 51
 52
 53
 54
 55
 56
 57
 58
 59
 60
 61
 62
 63
 64
 65
 66
 67
 68
 69
 70
 71
 72
 73
 74
 75
 76
 77
 78
 79
 80
 81
 82
 83
 84
 85
 86
 87
 88
 89
 90
 91
 92
 93
 94
 95
 96
 97
 98
 99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
/* -*- Mode: IDL; tab-width: 2; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- */
/* This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
 * License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this
 * file, You can obtain one at http://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/. */

#include "nsISupports.idl"

interface mozIDOMWindowProxy;
interface nsIDocShell;
interface nsIContent;
interface nsIFrameLoader;
interface nsIPrincipal;

/**
 * Message managers provide a way for chrome-privileged JS code to
 * communicate with each other, even across process boundaries.
 *
 * Message managers are separated into "parent side" and "child side".
 * These don't always correspond to process boundaries, but can.  For
 * each child-side message manager, there is always exactly one
 * corresponding parent-side message manager that it sends messages
 * to.  However, for each parent-side message manager, there may be
 * either one or many child-side managers it can message.
 *
 * Message managers that always have exactly one "other side" are of
 * type nsIMessageSender.  Parent-side message managers that have many
 * "other sides" are of type nsIMessageBroadcaster.
 *
 * Child-side message managers can send synchronous messages to their
 * parent side, but not the other way around.
 *
 * There are two realms of message manager hierarchies.  One realm
 * approximately corresponds to DOM elements, the other corresponds to
 * process boundaries.
 *
 * Message managers corresponding to DOM elements
 * ==============================================
 *
 * In this realm of message managers, there are
 *  - "frame message managers" which correspond to frame elements
 *  - "window message managers" which correspond to top-level chrome
 *    windows
 *  - "group message managers" which correspond to named message
 *    managers with a specific window MM as the parent
 *  - the "global message manager", on the parent side.  See below.
 *
 * The DOM-realm message managers can communicate in the ways shown by
 * the following diagram.  The parent side and child side can
 * correspond to process boundaries, but don't always.
 *
 *  Parent side                         Child side
 * -------------                       ------------
 *  global MMg
 *   |
 *   +-->window MMw1
 *   |    |
 *   |    +-->frame MMp1_1<------------>frame MMc1_1
 *   |    |
 *   |    +-->frame MMp1_2<------------>frame MMc1_2
 *   |    |
 *   |    +-->group MMgr1
 *   |    |    |
 *   |    |    +-->frame MMp2_1<------->frame MMc2_1
 *   |    |    |
 *   |    |    +-->frame MMp2_2<------->frame MMc2_2
 *   |    |
 *   |    +-->group MMgr2
 *   |    |    ...
 *   |    |
 *   |    ...
 *   |
 *   +-->window MMw2
 *   ...
 *
 * For example: a message sent from MMc1_1, from the child side, is
 * sent only to MMp1_1 on the parent side.  However, note that all
 * message managers in the hierarchy above MMp1_1, in this diagram
 * MMw1 and MMg, will also notify their message listeners when the
 * message arrives.
 *
 * A message sent from MMc2_1 will be sent to MMp2_1 and also notify
 * all message managers in the hierarchy above that, including the
 * group message manager MMgr1.

 * For example: a message broadcast through the global MMg on the
 * parent side would be broadcast to MMw1, which would transitively
 * broadcast it to MMp1_1, MM1p_2.  The message would next be
 * broadcast to MMgr1, which would broadcast it to MMp2_1 and MMp2_2.
 * After that it would broadcast to MMgr2 and then to MMw2, and so
 * on down the hierarchy.
 *
 *   ***** PERFORMANCE AND SECURITY WARNING *****
 * Messages broadcast through the global MM and window or group MMs
 * can result in messages being dispatched across many OS processes,
 * and to many processes with different permissions.  Great care
 * should be taken when broadcasting.
 *
 * Interfaces
 * ----------
 *
 * The global MMg and window MMw's are message broadcasters implementing
 * nsIMessageBroadcaster while the frame MMp's are simple message senders
 * (nsIMessageSender). Their counterparts in the content processes are
 * message senders implementing nsIContentFrameMessageManager.
 *
 *                    nsIMessageListenerManager
 *                  /                           \
 * nsIMessageSender                               nsIMessageBroadcaster
 *       |
 * nsISyncMessageSender (content process/in-process only)
 *       |
 * nsIContentFrameMessageManager (content process/in-process only)
 *       |
 * nsIInProcessContentFrameMessageManager (in-process only)
 *
 *
 * Message managers in the chrome process can also be QI'ed to nsIFrameScriptLoader.
 *
 *
 * Message managers corresponding to process boundaries
 * ====================================================
 *
 * The second realm of message managers is the "process message
 * managers".  With one exception, these always correspond to process
 * boundaries.  The picture looks like
 *
 *  Parent process                      Child processes
 * ----------------                    -----------------
 *  global (GPPMM)
 *   |
 *   +-->parent in-process PIPMM<-->child in-process CIPPMM
 *   |
 *   +-->parent (PPMM1)<------------------>child (CPMM1)
 *   |
 *   +-->parent (PPMM2)<------------------>child (CPMM2)
 *   ...
 *
 * Note, PIPMM and CIPPMM both run in the parent process.
 *
 * For example: the parent-process PPMM1 sends messages to the
 * child-process CPMM1.
 *
 * For example: CPMM1 sends messages directly to PPMM1. The global GPPMM
 * will also notify their message listeners when the message arrives.
 *
 * For example: messages sent through the global GPPMM will be
 * dispatched to the listeners of the same-process, CIPPMM, CPMM1,
 * CPMM2, etc.
 *
 *   ***** PERFORMANCE AND SECURITY WARNING *****
 * Messages broadcast through the GPPMM can result in messages
 * being dispatched across many OS processes, and to many processes
 * with different permissions.  Great care should be taken when
 * broadcasting.
 *
 * Requests sent to parent-process message listeners should usually
 * have replies scoped to the requesting CPMM.  The following pattern
 * is common
 *
 *  const ParentProcessListener = {
 *    receiveMessage: function(aMessage) {
 *      let childMM = aMessage.target.QueryInterface(Ci.nsIMessageSender);
 *      switch (aMessage.name) {
 *      case "Foo:Request":
 *        // service request
 *        childMM.sendAsyncMessage("Foo:Response", { data });
 *      }
 *    }
 *  };
 */

[scriptable, function, uuid(2b44eb57-a9c6-4773-9a1e-fe0818739a4c)]
interface nsIMessageListener : nsISupports
{
  /**
   * This is for JS only.
   * receiveMessage is called with one parameter, which has the following
   * properties:
   *   {
   *     target:    %the target of the message. Either an element owning
   *                 the message manager, or message manager itself if no
   *                 element owns it%
   *     name:      %message name%,
   *     sync:      %true or false%.
   *     data:      %structured clone of the sent message data%,
   *     json:      %same as .data, deprecated%,
   *     objects:   %named table of jsvals/objects, or null%
   *     principal: %principal for the window app
   *   }
   *
   * Each listener is invoked with its own copy of the message
   * parameter.
   *
   * When the listener is called, 'this' value is the target of the message.
   *
   * If the message is synchronous, the possible return value is
   * returned as JSON (will be changed to use structured clones).
   * When there are multiple listeners to sync messages, each
   * listener's return value is sent back as an array.  |undefined|
   * return values show up as undefined values in the array.
   */
  void receiveMessage();
};

[scriptable, builtinclass, uuid(b949bfec-bb7d-47bc-b387-ac6a9b655072)]
interface nsIMessageListenerManager : nsISupports
{
  /**
   * Register |listener| to receive |messageName|.  All listener
   * callbacks for a particular message are invoked when that message
   * is received.
   *
   * The message manager holds a strong ref to |listener|.
   *
   * If the same listener registers twice for the same message, the
   * second registration is ignored.
   *
   * Pass true for listenWhenClosed if you want to receive messages
   * during the short period after a frame has been removed from the
   * DOM and before its frame script has finished unloading. This
   * parameter only has an effect for frame message managers in
   * the main process. Default is false.
   */
  void addMessageListener(in AString messageName,
                          in nsIMessageListener listener,
                          [optional] in boolean listenWhenClosed);

  /**
   * Undo an |addMessageListener| call -- that is, calling this causes us to no
   * longer invoke |listener| when |messageName| is received.
   *
   * removeMessageListener does not remove a message listener added via
   * addWeakMessageListener; use removeWeakMessageListener for that.
   */
  void removeMessageListener(in AString messageName,
                             in nsIMessageListener listener);

  /**
   * This is just like addMessageListener, except the message manager holds a
   * weak ref to |listener|.
   *
   * If you have two weak message listeners for the same message, they may be
   * called in any order.
   */
  void addWeakMessageListener(in AString messageName,
                              in nsIMessageListener listener);

  /**
   * This undoes an |addWeakMessageListener| call.
   */
  void removeWeakMessageListener(in AString messageName,
                                 in nsIMessageListener listener);

  [notxpcom] boolean markForCC();
};

/**
 * Message "senders" have a single "other side" to which messages are
 * sent.  For example, a child-process message manager will send
 * messages that are only delivered to its one parent-process message
 * manager.
 */
[scriptable, builtinclass, uuid(bb5d79e4-e73c-45e7-9651-4d718f4b994c)]
interface nsIMessageSender : nsIMessageListenerManager
{
  /**
   * Send |messageName| and |obj| to the "other side" of this message
   * manager.  This invokes listeners who registered for
   * |messageName|.
   *
   * See nsIMessageListener::receiveMessage() for the format of the
   * data delivered to listeners.
   * @throws NS_ERROR_NOT_INITIALIZED if the sender is not initialized.  For
   *         example, we will throw NS_ERROR_NOT_INITIALIZED if we try to send
   *         a message to a cross-process frame but the other process has not
   *         yet been set up.
   * @throws NS_ERROR_FAILURE when the message receiver cannot be found.  For
   *         example, we will throw NS_ERROR_FAILURE if we try to send a message
   *         to a cross-process frame whose process has crashed.
   */
  [implicit_jscontext, optional_argc]
  void sendAsyncMessage([optional] in AString messageName,
                        [optional] in jsval obj,
                        [optional] in jsval objects,
                        [optional] in nsIPrincipal principal,
                        [optional] in jsval transfers);

 /**
  * For remote browsers there is always a corresponding process message
  * manager. The intention of this attribute is to link leaf level frame
  * message managers on the parent side with the corresponding process
  * message managers (if there is one). For any other cases this property
  * is null.
  */
  readonly attribute nsIMessageSender processMessageManager;
};

/**
 * Message "broadcasters" don't have a single "other side" that they
 * send messages to, but rather a set of subordinate message managers.
 * For example, broadcasting a message through a window message
 * manager will broadcast the message to all frame message managers
 * within its window.
 */
[scriptable, builtinclass, uuid(4d7d62ad-4725-4f39-86cf-8fb22bf9c1d8)]
interface nsIMessageBroadcaster : nsIMessageListenerManager
{
  /**
   * Like |sendAsyncMessage()|, but also broadcasts this message to
   * all "child" message managers of this message manager.  See long
   * comment above for details.
   *
   * WARNING: broadcasting messages can be very expensive and leak
   * sensitive data.  Use with extreme caution.
   */
  [implicit_jscontext, optional_argc]
  void broadcastAsyncMessage([optional] in AString messageName,
                             [optional] in jsval obj,
                             [optional] in jsval objects);

  /**
   * Number of subordinate message managers.
   */
  readonly attribute unsigned long childCount;

  /**
   * Return a single subordinate message manager.
   */
  nsIMessageListenerManager getChildAt(in unsigned long aIndex);
};

[scriptable, builtinclass, uuid(0e602c9e-1977-422a-a8e4-fe0d4a4f78d0)]
interface nsISyncMessageSender : nsIMessageSender
{
  /**
   * Like |sendAsyncMessage()|, except blocks the sender until all
   * listeners of the message have been invoked.  Returns an array
   * containing return values from each listener invoked.
   */
  [implicit_jscontext, optional_argc]
  jsval sendSyncMessage([optional] in AString messageName,
                        [optional] in jsval obj,
                        [optional] in jsval objects,
                        [optional] in nsIPrincipal principal);

  /**
   * Like |sendSyncMessage()|, except re-entrant. New RPC messages may be
   * issued even if, earlier on the call stack, we are waiting for a reply
   * to an earlier sendRpcMessage() call.
   *
   * Both sendSyncMessage and sendRpcMessage will block until a reply is
   * received, but they may be temporarily interrupted to process an urgent
   * incoming message (such as a CPOW request).
   */
  [implicit_jscontext, optional_argc]
  jsval sendRpcMessage([optional] in AString messageName,
                       [optional] in jsval obj,
                       [optional] in jsval objects,
                       [optional] in nsIPrincipal principal);
};

[scriptable, builtinclass, uuid(13f3555f-769e-44ea-b607-5239230c3162)]
interface nsIMessageManagerGlobal : nsISyncMessageSender
{
  /**
   * Print a string to stdout.
   */
  void dump(in DOMString aStr);

  /**
   * If leak detection is enabled, print a note to the leak log that this
   * process will intentionally crash.
   */
  void privateNoteIntentionalCrash();

  /**
   * Ascii base64 data to binary data and vice versa
   */
  DOMString atob(in DOMString aAsciiString);
  DOMString btoa(in DOMString aBase64Data);
};

[scriptable, builtinclass, uuid(694e367c-aa25-4446-8499-2c527c4bd838)]
interface nsIContentFrameMessageManager : nsIMessageManagerGlobal
{
  /**
   * The current top level window in the frame or null.
   */
  readonly attribute mozIDOMWindowProxy content;

  /**
   * The top level docshell or null.
   */
  readonly attribute nsIDocShell docShell;
};

[uuid(b39a3324-b574-4f85-8cdb-274d04f807ef)]
interface nsIInProcessContentFrameMessageManager : nsIContentFrameMessageManager
{
  [notxpcom] nsIContent getOwnerContent();
  [notxpcom] void cacheFrameLoader(in nsIFrameLoader aFrameLoader);
};

[scriptable, builtinclass, uuid(6d12e467-2446-46db-9965-e4e93cb87ca5)]
interface nsIContentProcessMessageManager : nsIMessageManagerGlobal
{
  /**
   * Read out a copy of the object that was initialized in the parent
   * process via nsIProcessScriptLoader.initialProcessData.
   */
  [implicit_jscontext]
  readonly attribute jsval initialProcessData;
};

[scriptable, builtinclass, uuid(bf61446b-ba24-4b1d-88c7-4f94724b9ce1)]
interface nsIFrameScriptLoader : nsISupports
{
  /**
   * Load a script in the (remote) frame. aURL must be the absolute URL.
   * data: URLs are also supported. For example data:,dump("foo\n");
   * If aAllowDelayedLoad is true, script will be loaded when the
   * remote frame becomes available. Otherwise the script will be loaded
   * only if the frame is already available.
   */
  void loadFrameScript(in AString aURL, in boolean aAllowDelayedLoad,
                       [optional] in boolean aRunInGlobalScope);

  /**
   * Removes aURL from the list of scripts which support delayed load.
   */
  void removeDelayedFrameScript(in AString aURL);

  /**
   * Returns all delayed scripts that will be loaded once a (remote)
   * frame becomes available. The return value is a list of pairs
   * [<URL>, <WasLoadedInGlobalScope>].
   */
  [implicit_jscontext]
  jsval getDelayedFrameScripts();
};

[scriptable, builtinclass, uuid(7e1e1a20-b24f-11e4-ab27-0800200c9a66)]
interface nsIProcessScriptLoader : nsISupports
{
  /**
   * Load a script in the (possibly remote) process. aURL must be the absolute URL.
   * data: URLs are also supported. For example data:,dump("foo\n");
   * If aAllowDelayedLoad is true, script will be loaded when the
   * remote frame becomes available. Otherwise the script will be loaded
   * only if the frame is already available.
   */
  void loadProcessScript(in AString aURL, in boolean aAllowDelayedLoad);

  /**
   * Removes aURL from the list of scripts which support delayed load.
   */
  void removeDelayedProcessScript(in AString aURL);

  /**
   * Returns all delayed scripts that will be loaded once a (remote)
   * frame becomes available. The return value is a list of URLs.
   */
  [implicit_jscontext]
  jsval getDelayedProcessScripts();
};

[scriptable, builtinclass, uuid(5b390753-abb3-49b0-ae3b-b803dab58144)]
interface nsIGlobalProcessScriptLoader : nsIProcessScriptLoader
{
  /**
   * Allows the parent process to set the initial process data for
   * new, not-yet-created child processes. This attribute should only
   * be used by the global parent process message manager. When a new
   * process is created, it gets a copy of this data (via structured
   * cloning). It can access the data via the initialProcessData
   * attribute of its childprocessmessagemanager.
   *
   * This value will always be a JS object. Different users are
   * expected to set properties on this object. The property name
   * should be unique enough that other Gecko consumers won't
   * accidentally choose it.
   */
  [implicit_jscontext]
  readonly attribute jsval initialProcessData;
};

[scriptable, builtinclass, uuid(637e8538-4f8f-4a3d-8510-e74386233e19)]
interface nsIProcessChecker : nsISupports
{
  bool killChild();

  /**
   * Return true if the "remote" process has |aPermission|.  This is
   * intended to be used by JS implementations of cross-process DOM
   * APIs, like so
   *
   *   recvFooRequest: function(message) {
   *     if (!message.target.assertPermission("foo")) {
   *       return false;
   *     }
   *     // service foo request
   *
   * This interface only returns meaningful data when our content is
   * in a separate process.  If it shares the same OS process as us,
   * then applying this permission check doesn't add any security,
   * though it doesn't hurt anything either.
   *
   * Note: If the remote content process does *not* have |aPermission|,
   * it will be killed as a precaution.
   */
  boolean assertPermission(in DOMString aPermission);

  /**
   * Return true if the "remote" process has |aManifestURL|.  This is
   * intended to be used by JS implementations of cross-process DOM
   * APIs, like so
   *
   *   recvFooRequest: function(message) {
   *     if (!message.target.assertContainApp("foo")) {
   *       return false;
   *     }
   *     // service foo request
   *
   * This interface only returns meaningful data when our content is
   * in a separate process.  If it shares the same OS process as us,
   * then applying this manifest URL check doesn't add any security,
   * though it doesn't hurt anything either.
   *
   * Note: If the remote content process does *not* contain |aManifestURL|,
   * it will be killed as a precaution.
   */
  boolean assertContainApp(in DOMString aManifestURL);

  boolean assertAppHasPermission(in DOMString aPermission);

  /**
   * Return true if the "remote" process' principal has an appStatus equal to
   * |aStatus|.
   *
   * This interface only returns meaningful data when our content is
   * in a separate process.  If it shares the same OS process as us,
   * then applying this permission check doesn't add any security,
   * though it doesn't hurt anything either.
   *
   * Note: If the remote content process does *not* has the |aStatus|,
   * it will be killed as a precaution.
   */
  boolean assertAppHasStatus(in unsigned short aStatus);

};