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+# Mochitest FAQ
+
+## SSL and https-enabled tests
+
+Mochitests must be run from http://mochi.test/ to succeed. However, some tests
+may require use of additional protocols, hosts, or ports to test cross-origin
+functionality.
+
+The Mochitest harness addresses this need by mirroring all content of the
+original server onto a variety of other servers through the magic of proxy
+autoconfig and SSL tunneling. The full list of schemes, hosts, and ports on
+which tests are served, is specified in `build/pgo/server-locations.txt`.
+
+The origins described there are not the same, as some of them specify
+particular SSL certificates for testing purposes, while some allow pages on
+that server to request elevated privileges; read the file for full details.
+
+It works as follows: The Mochitest harness includes preference values which
+cause the browser to use proxy autoconfig to match requested URLs with servers.
+The `network.proxy.autoconfig_url` preference is set to a data: URL that
+encodes the JavaScript function, `FindProxyForURL`, which determines the host
+of the given URL. In the case of SSL sites to be mirrored, the function maps
+them to an SSL tunnel, which transparently forwards the traffic to the actual
+server, as per the description of the CONNECT method given in RFC 2817. In this
+manner a single HTTP server at http://127.0.0.1:8888 can successfully emulate
+dozens of servers at distinct locations.
+
+## What if my tests aren't done when onload fires?
+
+Use `add_task()`, or call `SimpleTest.waitForExplicitFinish()` before onload
+fires (and `SimpleTest.finish()` when you're done).
+
+## How can I get the full log output for my test in automation for debugging?
+
+Add the following to your test:
+
+```
+SimpleTest.requestCompleteLog();
+```
+
+## What if I need to change a preference to run my test?
+
+The `SpecialPowers` object provides APIs to get and set preferences:
+
+```js
+await SpecialPowers.pushPrefEnv({ set: [["your-preference", "your-value" ]] });
+// ...
+await SpecialPowers.popPrefEnv(); // Implicit at the end of the test too.
+```
+
+You can also set prefs directly in the manifest:
+
+```ini
+[DEFAULT]
+prefs =
+ browser.chrome.guess_favicon=true
+```
+
+If you need to change a pref when running a test locally, you can use the
+`--setpref` flag:
+
+```
+./mach mochitest --setpref="javascript.options.jit.chrome=false" somePath/someTestFile.html
+```
+
+Equally, if you need to change a string pref:
+
+```
+./mach mochitest --setpref="webgl.osmesa=string with whitespace" somePath/someTestFile.html
+```
+
+## Can tests be run under a chrome URL?
+
+Yes, use [mochitest-chrome](../chrome-tests/index.rst).
+
+## How do I change the HTTP headers or status sent with a file used in a Mochitest?
+
+Create a text file next to the file whose headers you want to modify. The name
+of the text file should be the name of the file whose headers you're modifying
+followed by `^headers^`. For example, if you have a file `foo.jpg`, the
+text file should be named `foo.jpg^headers^`. (Don't try to actually use the
+headers file in any other way in the test, because the HTTP server's
+hidden-file functionality prevents any file ending in exactly one ^ from being
+served.)
+
+Edit the file to contain the headers and/or status you want to set, like so:
+
+```
+HTTP 404 Not Found
+Content-Type: text/html
+Random-Header-of-Doom: 17
+```
+
+The first line sets the HTTP status and a description (optional) associated
+with the file. This line is optional; you don't need it if you're fine with the
+normal response status and description.
+
+Any other lines in the file describe additional headers which you want to add
+or overwrite (most typically the Content-Type header, for the latter case) on
+the response. The format follows the conventions of HTTP, except that you don't
+need to have HTTP line endings and you can't use a header more than once (the
+last line for a particular header wins). The file may end with at most one
+blank line to match Unix text file conventions, but the trailing newline isn't
+strictly necessary.
+
+## How do I write tests that check header values, method types, etc. of HTTP requests?
+
+To write such a test, you simply need to write an SJS (server-side JavaScript)
+for it. See the [testing HTTP server](/networking/http_server_for_testing.rst)
+docs for less mochitest-specific documentation of what you can do in SJS
+scripts.
+
+An SJS is simply a JavaScript file with the extension .sjs which is loaded in a
+sandbox. Don't forget to reference it from your `mochitest.ini` file too!
+
+```ini
+[DEFAULT]
+support-files =
+ test_file.sjs
+```
+
+The global property `handleRequest` defined by the script is then executed with
+request and response objects, and the script populates the response based on the
+information in the request.
+
+Here's an example of a simple SJS:
+
+```js
+function handleRequest(request, response) {
+ // Allow cross-origin, so you can XHR to it!
+ response.setHeader("Access-Control-Allow-Origin", "*", false);
+ // Avoid confusing cache behaviors
+ response.setHeader("Cache-Control", "no-cache", false);
+ response.setHeader("Content-Type", "text/plain", false);
+ response.write("Hello world!");
+}
+```
+
+The file is run, for example, at either
+http://mochi.test:8888/tests/PATH/TO/YOUR/test_file.sjs,
+http://{server-location}/tests/PATH/TO/YOUR/test_file.sjs - see
+`build/pgo/server-locations.txt` for server locations!
+
+If you want to actually execute the file, you need to reference it somehow. For
+instance, you can XHR to it OR you could use a HTML element:
+
+```js
+var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
+xhr.open("GET", "http://test/tests/dom/manifest/test/test_file.sjs");
+xhr.onload = function(e){ console.log("loaded!", this.responseText)}
+xhr.send();
+```
+
+The exact properties of the request and response parameters are defined in the
+`nsIHttpRequestMetadata` and `nsIHttpResponse` interfaces in
+`nsIHttpServer.idl`. However, here are a few useful ones:
+
+
+ * `.scheme` (string). The scheme of the request.
+ * `.host` (string). The scheme of the request.
+ * `.port` (string). The port of the request.
+ * `.method` (string). The HTTP method.
+ * `.httpVersion` (string). The protocol version, typically "1.1".
+ * `.path` (string). Path of the request,
+ * `.headers` (object). Name and values representing the headers.
+ * `.queryString` (string). The query string of the requested URL.
+ * `.bodyInputStream` ??
+ * `.getHeader(name)`. Gets a request header by name.
+ * `.hasHeader(name)` (boolean). Gets a request header by name.
+
+**Note**: The browser is free to cache responses generated by your script. If
+you ever want an SJS to return different data for multiple requests to the same
+URL, you should add a `Cache-Control: no-cache` header to the response to
+prevent the test from accidentally failing, especially if it's manually run
+multiple times in the same Mochitest session.
+
+## How do I keep state across loads of different server-side scripts?
+
+Server-side scripts in Mochitest are run inside sandboxes, with a new sandbox
+created for each new load. Consequently, any variables set in a handler don't
+persist across loads. To support state storage, use the `getState(k)` and
+`setState(k, v)` methods defined on the global object. These methods expose a
+key-value storage mechanism for the server, with keys and values as strings.
+(Use JSON to store objects and other structured data.) The myriad servers in
+Mochitest are in reality a single server with some proxying and tunnelling
+magic, so a stored state is the same in all servers at all times.
+
+The `getState` and `setState` methods are scoped to the path being loaded. For
+example, the absolute URLs `/foo/bar/baz, /foo/bar/baz?quux, and
+/foo/bar/baz#fnord` all share the same state; the state for /foo/bar is entirely
+separate.
+
+You should use per-path state whenever possible to avoid inter-test dependencies
+and bugs.
+
+However, in rare cases it may be necessary for two scripts to collaborate in
+some manner, and it may not be possible to use a custom query string to request
+divergent behaviors from the script.
+
+For this use case only you should use the `getSharedState(k, v)` and
+`setSharedState(k, v)` methods defined on the global object. No restrictions
+are placed on access to this whole-server shared state, and any script may add
+new state that any other script may delete. To avoid conflicts, you should use
+a key within a faux namespace so as to avoid accidental conflicts. For example,
+if you needed shared state for an HTML5 video test, you might use a key like
+`dom.media.video:sharedState`.
+
+A further form of state storage is provided by the `getObjectState(k)` and
+`setObjectState(k, v)` methods, which will store any `nsISupports` object.
+These methods reside on the `nsIHttpServer` interface, but a limitation of
+the sandbox object used by the server to process SJS responses means that the
+former is present in the SJS request handler's global environment with the
+signature `getObjectState(k, callback)`, where callback is a function to be
+invoked by `getObjectState` with the object corresponding to the provided key
+as the sole argument.
+
+Note that this value mapping requires the value to be an XPCOM object; an
+arbitrary JavaScript object with no `QueryInterface` method is insufficient.
+If you wish to store a JavaScript object, you may find it useful
+to provide the object with a `QueryInterface` implementation and then make
+use of `wrappedJSObject` to reveal the actual JavaScript object through the
+wrapping performed by XPConnect.
+
+For further details on state-saving mechanisms provided by `httpd.js`, see
+`netwerk/test/httpserver/nsIHttpServer.idl` and the
+`nsIHttpServer.get(Shared|Object)?State` methods.
+
+## How do I write a SJS script that responds asynchronously?
+
+Sometimes you need to respond to a request asynchronously, for example after
+waiting for a short period of time. You can do this by using the
+`processAsync()` and `finish()` functions on the response object passed to the
+`handleRequest()` function.
+
+`processAsync()` must be called before returning from `handleRequest()`. Once
+called, you can at any point call methods on the request object to send
+more of the response. Once you are done, call the `finish()` function. For
+example you can use the `setState()` / `getState()` functions described above to
+store a request and later retrieve and finish it. However be aware that the
+browser often reorders requests and so your code must be resilient to that to
+avoid intermittent failures.
+
+```js
+let { setTimeout } = ChromeUtils.importESModule("resource://gre/modules/Timer.sys.mjs");
+
+function handleRequest(request, response) {
+ response.processAsync();
+ response.setHeader("Content-Type", "text/plain", false);
+ response.write("hello...");
+
+ setTimeout(function() {
+ response.write("world!");
+ response.finish();
+ }, 5 * 1000);
+}
+```
+
+For more details, see the `processAsync()` function documentation in
+`netwerk/test/httpserver/nsIHttpServer.idl`.
+
+## How do I get access to the files on the server as XPCOM objects from an SJS script?
+
+If you need access to a file, because it's easier to store image data in a file
+than directly in an SJS script, use the presupplied `SERVER_ROOT` object
+state available to SJS scripts running in Mochitest:
+
+```js
+function handleRequest(req, res) {
+ var file;
+ getObjectState("SERVER_ROOT", function(serverRoot) {
+ file = serverRoot.getFile("tests/content/media/test/320x240.ogv");
+ });
+ // file is now an XPCOM object referring to the given file
+ res.write("file: " + file);
+}
+```
+
+The path you specify is used as a path relative to the root directory served by
+`httpd.js`, and an `nsIFile` corresponding to the file at that location is
+returned.
+
+Beware of typos: the file you specify doesn't actually have to exist
+because file objects are mere encapsulations of string paths.
+
+## Diagnosing and fixing leakcheck failures
+
+Mochitests output a log of the windows and docshells that are created during the
+test during debug builds. At the end of the test, the test runner runs a
+leakcheck analysis to determine if any of them did not get cleaned up before the
+test was ended.
+
+Leaks can happen for a variety of reasons. One common one is that a JavaScript
+event listener is retaining a reference that keeps the window alive.
+
+```js
+// Add an observer.
+Services.obs.addObserver(myObserver, "event-name");
+
+// Make sure and clean it up, or it may leak!
+Services.obs.removeObserver(myObserver, "event-name");
+```
+
+Other sources of issues include accidentally leaving a window, or iframe
+attached to the DOM, or setting an iframe's src to a blank string (creating an
+about:blank page), rather than removing the iframe.
+
+Finding the leak can be difficult, but the first step is to reproduce it
+locally. Ensure you are on a debug build and the `MOZ_QUIET` environment flag
+is not enabled. The leakcheck test analyzes the test output. After reproducing
+the leak in the test, start commenting out code until the leak goes away. Then
+once the leak stop reproducing, find the exact location where it is happening.
+
+See [this post](https://crisal.io/words/2019/11/13/shutdown-leak-hunting.html)
+for more advanced debugging techniques involving CC and GC logs.