Related issue:
- https://github.com/uBlockOrigin/uBlock-issues/issues/1501
Exception filters for `document` option are complying with
uBO's own semantic for `document` option, i.e. an exception
filter for `document` option will only allow to bypass a
block filter for `document` (either explicit or implicit)
and nothing else.
Exception filters using `document` option are *not*
compatible with ABP's interpretation of these filters.
Whereas in ABP the purpose of a `document` exception filter
is to wholly disable content blocking, in uBO the same
filter will just cause strict-blocking to be disabled while
leaving content blocking intact.
Additionally, the logger was fixed to properly report pages
which are being strict-blocked.
As per internal feedback.
The `length` property exists if the `adsbygoogle` object
is instantiated before the `adsbygoogle.js` script has
been loaded, but is no longer present once the
`adsbygoogle.js` script has been loaded.
The procedural cosmetic filtering code has been split from
the content script code injected unconditionally and will
from now on be injected only when it is needed, i.e. when
there are procedural cosmetic filters to enforce.
The motivation for this is:
https://www.debugbear.com/blog/2020-chrome-extension-performance-report#what-can-extension-developers-do-to-keep-their-extensions-fast
Though uBO's content script injected unconditionally in all
pages/frames is relatively small, I still wanted to further
reduce the amount of content script code injected
unconditionally: The procedural cosmetic filtering code
represents roughly 14KB of code the browser won't have to
parse/execute unconditionally unless there exists procedural
cosmetic filters to enforce for a page or frame.
At the time the above article was published, the total
size of unconditional content scripts injected by uBO was
~101 KB, while after this commit, the total size will be
~57 KB (keeping in mind uBO does not minify and does not
remove comments from its JavaScript code).
Additionally, some refactoring on how user stylesheets are
injected so as to ensure that `:style`-based procedural
filters which are essentially declarative are injected
earlier along with plain, non-procedural cosmetic filters.
Related issue:
- https://github.com/uBlockOrigin/uBlock-issues/issues/210
Additionally, a small (experimental) widget has been added
to emphasize/de-emphasize rows which have 3rd-party
scripts/frames, so as to more easily identify which rows
are "affected" by 3rd-party scripts and/or frames.
Tooltip localization for the new widget is not available
yet as I want wait for the feature to be fully settled.
Related issue:
- https://github.com/uBlockOrigin/uBlock-issues/issues/1480
Forward compatiblity was broken due to `externalLists`
being converted into an Array from a string, i.e.
downgrading to uBO 1.32.4 was completely breaking uBO.
This commit restores `externalLists` as a string which
is what older versions of uBO expect.
A new property `importedLists` has been created to
hold the imported lists as an array, while
`externalLists` will be kept around for a while until
it is completely removed in some future.
The managed `userSettings` entry is an array of entries,
where each entry is a name/value pair encoded into an array
of strings.
The first item in the entry array is the name of a setting,
and the second item is the stringified value for the
setting.
This is a more convenient way for administrators to set
specific user settings. The settings set through
`userSettings` policy will always be set at uBO launch
time.
The new entry is an array of strings, each representing a
distinct line, and all entries are used to populate the
"My filters" pane.
This offers an more straightforward way for administrators
to specify a list of custom filters to use for all
installations.
Content scripts can't properly look up effective context
for sandboxed frames. This commit add ability to extract
effective context from already existing store of frames
used for each tab.
The entry `toOverwrite.filterLists` is an array of
string, where each string is a token identifying a
stock filter list, or a URL for an external filter
list.
This new entry is to make it easier for an
administrator to centrally configure uBO with a
custom set of filter lists.
Related issue:
- https://github.com/uBlockOrigin/uBlock-issues/issues/1433
The new "extraTrustedSiteDirectives" policy is an array
of strings, each of which is parsed as a trusted-site
directive to append to a user's own set of trusted-site
directives at launch time.
The added trusted-site directives will be considered as
part of the default set of directives by uBO.
Related issue:
- https://github.com/uBlockOrigin/uBlock-issues/issues/1241
uBO will not discard secondary requests fired before a root
frame is committed, by ensuring that if newly uncommitted
root frames are of the same origin as previous one(s), the
uncommited journal slot pointer is not updated.
Related commit:
- 6ac09a2856
Patternless `queryprune` ar enow preserved as being
pattern-less while still attempting to extract a token
from the `queryprune` value. This allows to report the
filter in the logger same as its original form.
The following regex are not rejected as invalid when
using built-in regex objects:
/abc]/
/a7,18}/
/a{7,18/
However, as per documentation, they are not supposed to
be valid, as `{` and `}` are special characters and as
such should be escaped:
/abc\]/
/a7,18\}/
/a\{7,18/
With this commit, the regexes will additionally be
validated using the regex analyzer library in the editor
to ensure strict regex syntax compliance so as to avoid
what are likely mistakes in regex crafting by authors.
This commit fixes mouse double-click-and-drag operations,
which was broken due to the implementation of a custom
word selection in the filter list editor/viewer.
Regex-based static network filters are those most likely to
cause performance degradation, and as such the best guard
against undue performance degradation caused by regex-based
filters is the ability to extract valid and good tokens
from regex patterns.
This commit introduces a complete regex parser so that the
static network filtering engine can now safely extract
tokens regardless of the complexity of the regex pattern.
The regex parser is a library imported from:
https://github.com/foo123/RegexAnalyzer
The syntax highlighter adds an underline to regex-based
filters as a visual aid to filter authors so as to avoid
mistakenly creating regex-based filters. This commit
further colors the underline as a warning when a regex-based
filter is found to be untokenizable.
Filter list authors are invited to spot these untokenizable
regex-based filters in their lists to verify that no
mistake were made for those filters, causing them to be
untokenizabke. For example, what appears to be a mistake:
/^https?:\/\/.*\/sw.js?.[a-zA-Z0-9%]{50,}/
Though the mistake is minor, the regex-based filter above
is untokenizable as a result, and become tokenizable when
the `.` is properly escaped:
/^https?:\/\/.*\/sw\.js?.[a-zA-Z0-9%]{50,}/
Filter list authors can use this search expression in the
asset viewer to find instances of regex-based filters:
/^(@@)?\/[^\n]+\/(\$|$)/