A new icon has been added to the popup panel, to open a popup
window with a terse list of DNR events for the current tab, in
reverse chronological order (most recent DNR event appears at
the top).
The new ability is available only when the extension is sideloaded,
as per `declarativeNetRequestFeedback` documentation. Ref:
https://developer.chrome.com/docs/extensions/reference/api/declarativeNetRequest#event-onRuleMatchedDebug
Purposefully minimal, so as to have something rather than nothing
when having to diagnose filtering issue with the DNR API. Example:
https://github.com/uBlockOrigin/uBOL-home/issues/156
The content of the popup window does not dynamically update, force
a refresh (F5) to get the most recent DNR events. This might be
improved in the future.
The DNR event buffer is not persisted, so the buffer is empty when
service worker is restarted. This might be improved in the future
by using session storage API.
There is no output filtering ability in this first draft. This
might be improved in the future.
DNR rules are reported. The filter from which a DNR rule
originates is not reported. Given that the rulesets are optimized
after conversion from original filter lists to reduce the DNR rule
count, this is unlikely to ever be possible.
Avoid using updateContentScripts() as it suffers from an unexpected
behavior, causing injected content scripts to lose proper order
at injection time. The order in which content scripts are injected
is key for uBOL content scripts. Potential out of order injection
was causing cosmetic filtering to be broken.
Use actual storage API to persist data across service worker
wake-ups and browser launches. uBOL was trying to avoid using
storage API, at the cost of somewhat hacky code (using DNR API
to persist settings).
Make use of session storage if available, to speed up
initialization of waking up the service worker (which at this
point is necessary to properly implement cosmetic filtering).
`uDom` is old and crusty and `dom` is meant as replacement. The
goal of `dom` is to be simpler and mainly just convenience
methods for handling the DOM with vanilla JS -- this is not a
framework.
Additionally, removed keyboard shortcuts pane which was useful
only on very old versions of Firefox.