/* -*- Mode: C++; tab-width: 8; indent-tabs-mode: nil; c-basic-offset: 2 -*- * vim: set ts=8 sts=2 et sw=2 tw=80: * 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/. */ #ifndef js_StructuredClone_h #define js_StructuredClone_h #include "mozilla/Attributes.h" #include "mozilla/BufferList.h" #include "mozilla/MemoryReporting.h" #include #include #include "jstypes.h" #include "js/AllocPolicy.h" #include "js/RootingAPI.h" #include "js/TypeDecls.h" #include "js/Value.h" #include "js/Vector.h" /* * API for safe passing of structured data, HTML 2018 Feb 21 section 2.7. * * * This is a serialization scheme for JS values, somewhat like JSON. It * preserves some aspects of JS objects (strings, numbers, own data properties * with string keys, array elements) but not others (methods, getters and * setters, prototype chains). Unlike JSON, structured data: * * - can contain cyclic references. * * - handles Maps, Sets, and some other object types. * * - supports *transferring* objects of certain types from one realm to * another, rather than cloning them. * * - is specified by a living standard, and continues to evolve. * * - is encoded in a nonstandard binary format, and is never exposed to Web * content in its serialized form. It's used internally by the browser to * send data from one thread/realm/domain to another, not across the * network. */ struct JSStructuredCloneReader; struct JSStructuredCloneWriter; /** * The structured-clone serialization format version number. * * When serialized data is stored as bytes, e.g. in your Firefox profile, later * versions of the engine may have to read it. When you upgrade Firefox, we * don't crawl through your whole profile converting all saved data from the * previous version of the serialization format to the latest version. So it is * normal to have data in old formats stored in your profile. * * The JS engine can *write* data only in the current format version. * * It can *read* any data written in the current version, and data written for * DifferentProcess scope in earlier versions. * * * ## When to bump this version number * * When making a change so drastic that the JS engine needs to know whether * it's reading old or new serialized data in order to handle both correctly, * increment this version number. Make sure the engine can still read all * old data written with previous versions. * * If StructuredClone.cpp doesn't contain code that distinguishes between * version 8 and version 9, there should not be a version 9. * * Do not increment for changes that only affect SameProcess encoding. * * Increment only for changes that would otherwise break old serialized data. * Do not increment for new data types. (Rationale: Modulo bugs, older versions * of the JS engine can already correctly throw errors when they encounter new, * unrecognized features. A version number bump does not actually help them.) */ #define JS_STRUCTURED_CLONE_VERSION 8 namespace JS { /** * Indicates the "scope of validity" of serialized data. * * Writing plain JS data produces an array of bytes that can be copied and * read in another process or whatever. The serialized data is Plain Old Data. * However, HTML also supports `Transferable` objects, which, when cloned, can * be moved from the source object into the clone, like when you take a * photograph of someone and it steals their soul. * See . * We support cloning and transferring objects of many types. * * For example, when we transfer an ArrayBuffer (within a process), we "detach" * the ArrayBuffer, embed the raw buffer pointer in the serialized data, and * later install it in a new ArrayBuffer in the destination realm. Ownership * of that buffer memory is transferred from the original ArrayBuffer to the * serialized data and then to the clone. * * This only makes sense within a single address space. When we transfer an * ArrayBuffer to another process, the contents of the buffer must be copied * into the serialized data. (The original ArrayBuffer is still detached, * though, for consistency; in some cases the caller shouldn't know or care if * the recipient is in the same process.) * * ArrayBuffers are actually a lucky case; some objects (like MessagePorts) * can't reasonably be stored by value in serialized data -- it's pointers or * nothing. * * So there is a tradeoff between scope of validity -- how far away the * serialized data may be sent and still make sense -- and efficiency or * features. The read and write algorithms therefore take an argument of this * type, allowing the user to control those trade-offs. */ enum class StructuredCloneScope : uint32_t { /** * The most restrictive scope, with greatest efficiency and features. * * When writing, this means: The caller promises that the serialized data * will **not** be shipped off to a different process or stored in a * database. However, it may be shipped to another thread. It's OK to * produce serialized data that contains pointers to data that is safe to * send across threads, such as array buffers. In Rust terms, the * serialized data will be treated as `Send` but not `Copy`. * * When reading, this means: Accept transferred objects and buffers * (pointers). The caller promises that the serialized data was written * using this API (otherwise, the serialized data may contain bogus * pointers, leading to undefined behavior). * * Starts from 1 because there used to be a SameProcessSameThread enum value * of 0 and these values are encoded into the structured serialization format * as part of the SCTAG_HEADER, and IndexedDB persists the representation to * disk. */ SameProcess = 1, /** * When writing, this means we're writing for an audience in a different * process. Produce serialized data that can be sent to other processes, * bitwise copied, or even stored as bytes in a database and read by later * versions of Firefox years from now. The HTML5 spec refers to this as * "ForStorage" as in StructuredSerializeForStorage, though we use * DifferentProcess for IPC as well as storage. * * Transferable objects are limited to ArrayBuffers, whose contents are * copied into the serialized data (rather than just writing a pointer). * * When reading, this means: Do not accept pointers. */ DifferentProcess, /** * Handle a backwards-compatibility case with IndexedDB (bug 1434308): when * reading, this means to treat legacy SameProcess data as if it were * DifferentProcess. * * Do not use this for writing; use DifferentProcess instead. */ DifferentProcessForIndexedDB, /** * Existing code wants to be able to create an uninitialized * JSStructuredCloneData without knowing the scope, then populate it with * data (at which point the scope *is* known.) */ Unassigned, /** * This scope is used when the deserialization context is unknown. When * writing, DifferentProcess or SameProcess scope is chosen based on the * nature of the object. */ UnknownDestination, }; enum TransferableOwnership { /** Transferable data has not been filled in yet */ SCTAG_TMO_UNFILLED = 0, /** Structured clone buffer does not yet own the data */ SCTAG_TMO_UNOWNED = 1, /** All values at least this large are owned by the clone buffer */ SCTAG_TMO_FIRST_OWNED = 2, /** Data is a pointer that can be freed */ SCTAG_TMO_ALLOC_DATA = 2, /** Data is a memory mapped pointer */ SCTAG_TMO_MAPPED_DATA = 3, /** * Data is embedding-specific. The engine can free it by calling the * freeTransfer op. The embedding can also use SCTAG_TMO_USER_MIN and * greater, up to 32 bits, to distinguish specific ownership variants. */ SCTAG_TMO_CUSTOM = 4, SCTAG_TMO_USER_MIN }; class CloneDataPolicy { bool allowIntraClusterClonableSharedObjects_; bool allowSharedMemoryObjects_; public: // The default is to deny all policy-controlled aspects. CloneDataPolicy() : allowIntraClusterClonableSharedObjects_(false), allowSharedMemoryObjects_(false) {} // SharedArrayBuffers and WASM modules can only be cloned intra-process // because the shared memory areas are allocated in process-private memory or // because there are security issues of sharing them cross agent clusters. // y default, we don't allow shared-memory and intra-cluster objects. Clients // should therefore enable these 2 clone features when needed. void allowIntraClusterClonableSharedObjects() { allowIntraClusterClonableSharedObjects_ = true; } bool areIntraClusterClonableSharedObjectsAllowed() const { return allowIntraClusterClonableSharedObjects_; } void allowSharedMemoryObjects() { allowSharedMemoryObjects_ = true; } bool areSharedMemoryObjectsAllowed() const { return allowSharedMemoryObjects_; } }; } /* namespace JS */ /** * Read structured data from the reader r. This hook is used to read a value * previously serialized by a call to the WriteStructuredCloneOp hook. * * tag and data are the pair of uint32_t values from the header. The callback * may use the JS_Read* APIs to read any other relevant parts of the object * from the reader r. closure is any value passed to the JS_ReadStructuredClone * function. Return the new object on success, nullptr on error/exception. */ typedef JSObject* (*ReadStructuredCloneOp)( JSContext* cx, JSStructuredCloneReader* r, const JS::CloneDataPolicy& cloneDataPolicy, uint32_t tag, uint32_t data, void* closure); /** * Structured data serialization hook. The engine can write primitive values, * Objects, Arrays, Dates, RegExps, TypedArrays, ArrayBuffers, Sets, Maps, * and SharedTypedArrays. Any other type of object requires application support. * This callback must first use the JS_WriteUint32Pair API to write an object * header, passing a value greater than JS_SCTAG_USER to the tag parameter. * Then it can use the JS_Write* APIs to write any other relevant parts of * the value v to the writer w. closure is any value passed to the * JS_WriteStructuredClone function. * * Return true on success, false on error/exception. */ typedef bool (*WriteStructuredCloneOp)(JSContext* cx, JSStructuredCloneWriter* w, JS::HandleObject obj, bool* sameProcessScopeRequired, void* closure); /** * This is called when JS_WriteStructuredClone is given an invalid transferable. * To follow HTML5, the application must throw a DATA_CLONE_ERR DOMException * with error set to one of the JS_SCERR_* values. */ typedef void (*StructuredCloneErrorOp)(JSContext* cx, uint32_t errorid, void* closure, const char* errorMessage); /** * This is called when JS_ReadStructuredClone receives a transferable object * not known to the engine. If this hook does not exist or returns false, the * JS engine calls the reportError op if set, otherwise it throws a * DATA_CLONE_ERR DOM Exception. This method is called before any other * callback and must return a non-null object in returnObject on success. */ typedef bool (*ReadTransferStructuredCloneOp)( JSContext* cx, JSStructuredCloneReader* r, uint32_t tag, void* content, uint64_t extraData, void* closure, JS::MutableHandleObject returnObject); /** * Called when JS_WriteStructuredClone receives a transferable object not * handled by the engine. If this hook does not exist or returns false, the JS * engine will call the reportError hook or fall back to throwing a * DATA_CLONE_ERR DOM Exception. This method is called before any other * callback. * * tag: indicates what type of transferable this is. Must be greater than * 0xFFFF0201 (value of the internal SCTAG_TRANSFER_MAP_PENDING_ENTRY) * * ownership: see TransferableOwnership, above. Used to communicate any needed * ownership info to the FreeTransferStructuredCloneOp. * * content, extraData: what the ReadTransferStructuredCloneOp will receive */ typedef bool (*TransferStructuredCloneOp)(JSContext* cx, JS::Handle obj, void* closure, // Output: uint32_t* tag, JS::TransferableOwnership* ownership, void** content, uint64_t* extraData); /** * Called when freeing an unknown transferable object. Note that it * should never trigger a garbage collection (and will assert in a * debug build if it does.) */ typedef void (*FreeTransferStructuredCloneOp)( uint32_t tag, JS::TransferableOwnership ownership, void* content, uint64_t extraData, void* closure); /** * Called when the transferring objects are checked. If this function returns * false, the serialization ends throwing a DataCloneError exception. */ typedef bool (*CanTransferStructuredCloneOp)(JSContext* cx, JS::Handle obj, bool* sameProcessScopeRequired, void* closure); /** * Called when a SharedArrayBuffer (including one owned by a Wasm memory object) * has been processed in context `cx` by structured cloning. If `receiving` is * true then the SAB has been received from a channel and a new SAB object has * been created; if false then an existing SAB has been serialized onto a * channel. * * If the callback returns false then the clone operation (read or write) will * signal a failure. */ typedef bool (*SharedArrayBufferClonedOp)(JSContext* cx, bool receiving, void* closure); struct JSStructuredCloneCallbacks { ReadStructuredCloneOp read; WriteStructuredCloneOp write; StructuredCloneErrorOp reportError; ReadTransferStructuredCloneOp readTransfer; TransferStructuredCloneOp writeTransfer; FreeTransferStructuredCloneOp freeTransfer; CanTransferStructuredCloneOp canTransfer; SharedArrayBufferClonedOp sabCloned; }; enum OwnTransferablePolicy { /** * The buffer owns any Transferables that it might contain, and should * properly release them upon destruction. */ OwnsTransferablesIfAny, /** * Do not free any Transferables within this buffer when deleting it. This * is used to mark as clone buffer as containing data from another process, * and so it can't legitimately contain pointers. If the buffer claims to * have transferables, it's a bug or an attack. This is also used for * abandon(), where a buffer still contains raw data but the ownership has * been given over to some other entity. */ IgnoreTransferablesIfAny, /** * A buffer that cannot contain Transferables at all. This usually means * the buffer is empty (not yet filled in, or having been cleared). */ NoTransferables }; namespace js { class SharedArrayRawBuffer; class SharedArrayRawBufferRefs { public: SharedArrayRawBufferRefs() = default; SharedArrayRawBufferRefs(SharedArrayRawBufferRefs&& other) = default; SharedArrayRawBufferRefs& operator=(SharedArrayRawBufferRefs&& other); ~SharedArrayRawBufferRefs(); MOZ_MUST_USE bool acquire(JSContext* cx, SharedArrayRawBuffer* rawbuf); MOZ_MUST_USE bool acquireAll(JSContext* cx, const SharedArrayRawBufferRefs& that); void takeOwnership(SharedArrayRawBufferRefs&&); void releaseAll(); private: js::Vector refs_; }; template struct BufferIterator; } // namespace js /** * JSStructuredCloneData represents structured clone data together with the * information needed to read/write/transfer/free the records within it, in the * form of a set of callbacks. */ class MOZ_NON_MEMMOVABLE JS_PUBLIC_API JSStructuredCloneData { public: using BufferList = mozilla::BufferList; using Iterator = BufferList::IterImpl; private: static const size_t kStandardCapacity = 4096; BufferList bufList_; // The (address space, thread) scope within which this clone is valid. Note // that this must be either set during construction, or start out as // Unassigned and transition once to something else. JS::StructuredCloneScope scope_; const JSStructuredCloneCallbacks* callbacks_ = nullptr; void* closure_ = nullptr; OwnTransferablePolicy ownTransferables_ = OwnTransferablePolicy::NoTransferables; js::SharedArrayRawBufferRefs refsHeld_; friend struct JSStructuredCloneWriter; friend class JS_PUBLIC_API JSAutoStructuredCloneBuffer; template friend struct js::BufferIterator; public: // The constructor must be infallible but SystemAllocPolicy is not, so both // the initial size and initial capacity of the BufferList must be zero. explicit JSStructuredCloneData(JS::StructuredCloneScope scope) : bufList_(0, 0, kStandardCapacity, js::SystemAllocPolicy()), scope_(scope), callbacks_(nullptr), closure_(nullptr), ownTransferables_(OwnTransferablePolicy::NoTransferables) {} // Steal the raw data from a BufferList. In this case, we don't know the // scope and none of the callback info is assigned yet. JSStructuredCloneData(BufferList&& buffers, JS::StructuredCloneScope scope) : bufList_(std::move(buffers)), scope_(scope), callbacks_(nullptr), closure_(nullptr), ownTransferables_(OwnTransferablePolicy::NoTransferables) {} MOZ_IMPLICIT JSStructuredCloneData(BufferList&& buffers) : JSStructuredCloneData(std::move(buffers), JS::StructuredCloneScope::Unassigned) {} JSStructuredCloneData(JSStructuredCloneData&& other) = default; JSStructuredCloneData& operator=(JSStructuredCloneData&& other) = default; ~JSStructuredCloneData() { discardTransferables(); } void setCallbacks(const JSStructuredCloneCallbacks* callbacks, void* closure, OwnTransferablePolicy policy) { callbacks_ = callbacks; closure_ = closure; ownTransferables_ = policy; } MOZ_MUST_USE bool Init(size_t initialCapacity = 0) { return bufList_.Init(0, initialCapacity); } JS::StructuredCloneScope scope() const { if (scope_ == JS::StructuredCloneScope::UnknownDestination) { return JS::StructuredCloneScope::DifferentProcess; } return scope_; } void sameProcessScopeRequired() { if (scope_ == JS::StructuredCloneScope::UnknownDestination) { scope_ = JS::StructuredCloneScope::SameProcess; } } void initScope(JS::StructuredCloneScope newScope) { MOZ_ASSERT(Size() == 0, "initScope() of nonempty JSStructuredCloneData"); if (scope() != JS::StructuredCloneScope::Unassigned) { MOZ_ASSERT(scope() == newScope, "Cannot change scope after it has been initialized"); } scope_ = newScope; } size_t Size() const { return bufList_.Size(); } const Iterator Start() const { return bufList_.Iter(); } MOZ_MUST_USE bool Advance(Iterator& iter, size_t distance) const { return iter.AdvanceAcrossSegments(bufList_, distance); } MOZ_MUST_USE bool ReadBytes(Iterator& iter, char* buffer, size_t size) const { return bufList_.ReadBytes(iter, buffer, size); } // Append new data to the end of the buffer. MOZ_MUST_USE bool AppendBytes(const char* data, size_t size) { MOZ_ASSERT(scope() != JS::StructuredCloneScope::Unassigned); return bufList_.WriteBytes(data, size); } // Update data stored within the existing buffer. There must be at least // 'size' bytes between the position of 'iter' and the end of the buffer. MOZ_MUST_USE bool UpdateBytes(Iterator& iter, const char* data, size_t size) const { MOZ_ASSERT(scope() != JS::StructuredCloneScope::Unassigned); while (size > 0) { size_t remaining = iter.RemainingInSegment(); size_t nbytes = std::min(remaining, size); memcpy(iter.Data(), data, nbytes); data += nbytes; size -= nbytes; iter.Advance(bufList_, nbytes); } return true; } char* AllocateBytes(size_t maxSize, size_t* size) { return bufList_.AllocateBytes(maxSize, size); } void Clear() { discardTransferables(); bufList_.Clear(); } // Return a new read-only JSStructuredCloneData that "borrows" the contents // of |this|. Its lifetime should not exceed the donor's. This is only // allowed for DifferentProcess clones, so finalization of the borrowing // clone will do nothing. JSStructuredCloneData Borrow(Iterator& iter, size_t size, bool* success) const { MOZ_ASSERT(scope() == JS::StructuredCloneScope::DifferentProcess); return JSStructuredCloneData( bufList_.Borrow(iter, size, success), scope()); } // Iterate over all contained data, one BufferList segment's worth at a // time, and invoke the given FunctionToApply with the data pointer and // size. The function should return a bool value, and this loop will exit // with false if the function ever returns false. template bool ForEachDataChunk(FunctionToApply&& function) const { Iterator iter = bufList_.Iter(); while (!iter.Done()) { if (!function(iter.Data(), iter.RemainingInSegment())) { return false; } iter.Advance(bufList_, iter.RemainingInSegment()); } return true; } // Append the entire contents of other's bufList_ to our own. MOZ_MUST_USE bool Append(const JSStructuredCloneData& other) { MOZ_ASSERT(scope() == other.scope()); return other.ForEachDataChunk( [&](const char* data, size_t size) { return AppendBytes(data, size); }); } size_t SizeOfExcludingThis(mozilla::MallocSizeOf mallocSizeOf) { return bufList_.SizeOfExcludingThis(mallocSizeOf); } void discardTransferables(); private: // This internal method exposes the real value of scope_. It's meant to be // used only when starting the writing. JS::StructuredCloneScope scopeForInternalWriting() const { return scope_; } }; /** * Implements StructuredDeserialize and StructuredDeserializeWithTransfer. * * Note: If `data` contains transferable objects, it can be read only once. */ JS_PUBLIC_API bool JS_ReadStructuredClone( JSContext* cx, const JSStructuredCloneData& data, uint32_t version, JS::StructuredCloneScope scope, JS::MutableHandleValue vp, const JS::CloneDataPolicy& cloneDataPolicy, const JSStructuredCloneCallbacks* optionalCallbacks, void* closure); /** * Implements StructuredSerialize, StructuredSerializeForStorage, and * StructuredSerializeWithTransfer. * * Note: If the scope is DifferentProcess then the cloneDataPolicy must deny * shared-memory objects, or an error will be signaled if a shared memory object * is seen. */ JS_PUBLIC_API bool JS_WriteStructuredClone( JSContext* cx, JS::HandleValue v, JSStructuredCloneData* data, JS::StructuredCloneScope scope, const JS::CloneDataPolicy& cloneDataPolicy, const JSStructuredCloneCallbacks* optionalCallbacks, void* closure, JS::HandleValue transferable); JS_PUBLIC_API bool JS_StructuredCloneHasTransferables( JSStructuredCloneData& data, bool* hasTransferable); JS_PUBLIC_API bool JS_StructuredClone( JSContext* cx, JS::HandleValue v, JS::MutableHandleValue vp, const JSStructuredCloneCallbacks* optionalCallbacks, void* closure); /** * The C-style API calls to read and write structured clones are fragile -- * they rely on the caller to properly handle ownership of the clone data, and * the handling of the input data as well as the interpretation of the contents * of the clone buffer are dependent on the callbacks passed in. If you * serialize and deserialize with different callbacks, the results are * questionable. * * JSAutoStructuredCloneBuffer wraps things up in an RAII class for data * management, and uses the same callbacks for both writing and reading * (serializing and deserializing). */ class JS_PUBLIC_API JSAutoStructuredCloneBuffer { JSStructuredCloneData data_; uint32_t version_; public: JSAutoStructuredCloneBuffer(JS::StructuredCloneScope scope, const JSStructuredCloneCallbacks* callbacks, void* closure) : data_(scope), version_(JS_STRUCTURED_CLONE_VERSION) { data_.setCallbacks(callbacks, closure, OwnTransferablePolicy::NoTransferables); } JSAutoStructuredCloneBuffer(JSAutoStructuredCloneBuffer&& other); JSAutoStructuredCloneBuffer& operator=(JSAutoStructuredCloneBuffer&& other); ~JSAutoStructuredCloneBuffer() { clear(); } JSStructuredCloneData& data() { return data_; } bool empty() const { return !data_.Size(); } void clear(); JS::StructuredCloneScope scope() const { return data_.scope(); } /** * Adopt some memory. It will be automatically freed by the destructor. * data must have been allocated by the JS engine (e.g., extracted via * JSAutoStructuredCloneBuffer::steal). */ void adopt(JSStructuredCloneData&& data, uint32_t version = JS_STRUCTURED_CLONE_VERSION, const JSStructuredCloneCallbacks* callbacks = nullptr, void* closure = nullptr); /** * Release the buffer and transfer ownership to the caller. */ void steal(JSStructuredCloneData* data, uint32_t* versionp = nullptr, const JSStructuredCloneCallbacks** callbacks = nullptr, void** closure = nullptr); /** * Abandon ownership of any transferable objects stored in the buffer, * without freeing the buffer itself. Useful when copying the data out into * an external container, though note that you will need to use adopt() to * properly release that data eventually. */ void abandon() { data_.ownTransferables_ = OwnTransferablePolicy::IgnoreTransferablesIfAny; } bool read(JSContext* cx, JS::MutableHandleValue vp, const JS::CloneDataPolicy& cloneDataPolicy = JS::CloneDataPolicy(), const JSStructuredCloneCallbacks* optionalCallbacks = nullptr, void* closure = nullptr); bool write(JSContext* cx, JS::HandleValue v, const JSStructuredCloneCallbacks* optionalCallbacks = nullptr, void* closure = nullptr); bool write(JSContext* cx, JS::HandleValue v, JS::HandleValue transferable, const JS::CloneDataPolicy& cloneDataPolicy, const JSStructuredCloneCallbacks* optionalCallbacks = nullptr, void* closure = nullptr); size_t sizeOfExcludingThis(mozilla::MallocSizeOf mallocSizeOf) { return data_.SizeOfExcludingThis(mallocSizeOf); } size_t sizeOfIncludingThis(mozilla::MallocSizeOf mallocSizeOf) { return mallocSizeOf(this) + sizeOfExcludingThis(mallocSizeOf); } private: // Copy and assignment are not supported. JSAutoStructuredCloneBuffer(const JSAutoStructuredCloneBuffer& other) = delete; JSAutoStructuredCloneBuffer& operator=( const JSAutoStructuredCloneBuffer& other) = delete; }; // The range of tag values the application may use for its own custom object // types. #define JS_SCTAG_USER_MIN ((uint32_t)0xFFFF8000) #define JS_SCTAG_USER_MAX ((uint32_t)0xFFFFFFFF) #define JS_SCERR_RECURSION 0 #define JS_SCERR_TRANSFERABLE 1 #define JS_SCERR_DUP_TRANSFERABLE 2 #define JS_SCERR_UNSUPPORTED_TYPE 3 #define JS_SCERR_SHMEM_TRANSFERABLE 4 #define JS_SCERR_TYPED_ARRAY_DETACHED 5 #define JS_SCERR_WASM_NO_TRANSFER 6 #define JS_SCERR_NOT_CLONABLE 7 #define JS_SCERR_NOT_CLONABLE_WITH_COOP_COEP 8 JS_PUBLIC_API bool JS_ReadUint32Pair(JSStructuredCloneReader* r, uint32_t* p1, uint32_t* p2); JS_PUBLIC_API bool JS_ReadBytes(JSStructuredCloneReader* r, void* p, size_t len); JS_PUBLIC_API bool JS_ReadTypedArray(JSStructuredCloneReader* r, JS::MutableHandleValue vp); JS_PUBLIC_API bool JS_WriteUint32Pair(JSStructuredCloneWriter* w, uint32_t tag, uint32_t data); JS_PUBLIC_API bool JS_WriteBytes(JSStructuredCloneWriter* w, const void* p, size_t len); JS_PUBLIC_API bool JS_WriteString(JSStructuredCloneWriter* w, JS::HandleString str); JS_PUBLIC_API bool JS_WriteTypedArray(JSStructuredCloneWriter* w, JS::HandleValue v); JS_PUBLIC_API bool JS_ObjectNotWritten(JSStructuredCloneWriter* w, JS::HandleObject obj); JS_PUBLIC_API JS::StructuredCloneScope JS_GetStructuredCloneScope( JSStructuredCloneWriter* w); #endif /* js_StructuredClone_h */