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//
// DO NOT EDIT. THIS FILE IS GENERATED FROM $SRCDIR/dom/indexedDB/nsIIndexedDatabaseManager.idl
//
/// `interface nsIIndexedDatabaseManager : nsISupports`
///
// The actual type definition for the interface. This struct has methods
// declared on it which will call through its vtable. You never want to pass
// this type around by value, always pass it behind a reference.
#[repr(C)]
pub struct nsIIndexedDatabaseManager {
vtable: &'static nsIIndexedDatabaseManagerVTable,
/// This field is a phantomdata to ensure that the VTable type and any
/// struct containing it is not safe to send across threads by default, as
/// XPCOM is generally not threadsafe.
///
/// If this type is marked as [rust_sync], there will be explicit `Send` and
/// `Sync` implementations on this type, which will override the inherited
/// negative impls from `Rc`.
__nosync: ::std::marker::PhantomData<::std::rc::Rc<u8>>,
// Make the rust compiler aware that there might be interior mutability
// in what actually implements the interface. This works around UB
// introduced by https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/commit/01859da84bad95fd51d6a03b08b60c660e642a4f
// that a rust lint would make blatantly obvious, but doesn't exist.
// This prevents optimizations, but those optimizations weren't available
// before rustc switched to LLVM 16, and they now cause problems because
// of the UB.
// Until there's a lint available to find all our UB, it's simpler to
// avoid the UB in the first place, at the cost of preventing optimizations
// in places that don't cause UB. But again, those optimizations weren't
// available before.
__maybe_interior_mutability: ::std::cell::UnsafeCell<[u8; 0]>,
}
// Implementing XpCom for an interface exposes its IID, which allows for easy
// use of the `.query_interface<T>` helper method. This also defines that
// method for nsIIndexedDatabaseManager.
unsafe impl XpCom for nsIIndexedDatabaseManager {
const IID: nsIID = nsID(0x6c62d204, 0xcb7f, 0x4762,
[0x87, 0x03, 0xeb, 0xcc, 0xcd, 0xd8, 0x8b, 0xde]);
}
// We need to implement the RefCounted trait so we can be used with `RefPtr`.
// This trait teaches `RefPtr` how to manage our memory.
unsafe impl RefCounted for nsIIndexedDatabaseManager {
#[inline]
unsafe fn addref(&self) {
self.AddRef();
}
#[inline]
unsafe fn release(&self) {
self.Release();
}
}
// This trait is implemented on all types which can be coerced to from nsIIndexedDatabaseManager.
// It is used in the implementation of `fn coerce<T>`. We hide it from the
// documentation, because it clutters it up a lot.
#[doc(hidden)]
pub trait nsIIndexedDatabaseManagerCoerce {
/// Cheaply cast a value of this type from a `nsIIndexedDatabaseManager`.
fn coerce_from(v: &nsIIndexedDatabaseManager) -> &Self;
}
// The trivial implementation: We can obviously coerce ourselves to ourselves.
impl nsIIndexedDatabaseManagerCoerce for nsIIndexedDatabaseManager {
#[inline]
fn coerce_from(v: &nsIIndexedDatabaseManager) -> &Self {
v
}
}
impl nsIIndexedDatabaseManager {
/// Cast this `nsIIndexedDatabaseManager` to one of its base interfaces.
#[inline]
pub fn coerce<T: nsIIndexedDatabaseManagerCoerce>(&self) -> &T {
T::coerce_from(self)
}
}
// Every interface struct type implements `Deref` to its base interface. This
// causes methods on the base interfaces to be directly avaliable on the
// object. For example, you can call `.AddRef` or `.QueryInterface` directly
// on any interface which inherits from `nsISupports`.
impl ::std::ops::Deref for nsIIndexedDatabaseManager {
type Target = nsISupports;
#[inline]
fn deref(&self) -> &nsISupports {
unsafe {
::std::mem::transmute(self)
}
}
}
// Ensure we can use .coerce() to cast to our base types as well. Any type which
// our base interface can coerce from should be coercable from us as well.
impl<T: nsISupportsCoerce> nsIIndexedDatabaseManagerCoerce for T {
#[inline]
fn coerce_from(v: &nsIIndexedDatabaseManager) -> &Self {
T::coerce_from(v)
}
}
// This struct represents the interface's VTable. A pointer to a statically
// allocated version of this struct is at the beginning of every nsIIndexedDatabaseManager
// object. It contains one pointer field for each method in the interface. In
// the case where we can't generate a binding for a method, we include a void
// pointer.
#[doc(hidden)]
#[repr(C)]
pub struct nsIIndexedDatabaseManagerVTable {
/// We need to include the members from the base interface's vtable at the start
/// of the VTable definition.
pub __base: nsISupportsVTable,
/* [implicit_jscontext] Promise doMaintenance (); */
/// Unable to generate binding because `jscontext is unsupported`
pub DoMaintenance: *const ::libc::c_void,
}
// The implementations of the function wrappers which are exposed to rust code.
// Call these methods rather than manually calling through the VTable struct.
impl nsIIndexedDatabaseManager {
/// ```text
/// /**
/// * Loop over all storage repositories, descend into origin directories,
/// * collect all available IndexedDB databases and do maintenance for them.
/// * The maintenance checks database integrity first and then determines
/// * maintenance action which can be either "nothing" or "incremental vacuum"
/// * or "full vacuum". Incremental or full vacuum is then performed.
/// *
/// * If the dom.indexedDB.testing preference is not true the call will fail
/// * because the maintenance is normally initiated by the QuotaManager based
/// * on notifications from the nsIUserIdleService. This method is intented for
/// * testing purposes only.
/// */
/// ```
///
/// `[implicit_jscontext] Promise doMaintenance ();`
const _DoMaintenance: () = ();
}