mediawiki-extensions-Multim.../resources/mmv/provider/mmv.provider.Image.js
Sam Smith 34e4968b2c Remove instrumentation
The MediaViewer and MultimediaViewer* instruments were disabled circa
October 2021 in Ie7dd8739efc.

This patch removes those instruments and any supporting code and data.
Notably, this patch does not remove the mw.mmv.logging.ViewLogger
instrument, which is responsible for logging image views.

Bug: T310890
Change-Id: I97d41be93849b2ae9d1adba6660546ea716657fd
2022-07-05 17:41:24 +00:00

141 lines
4.7 KiB
JavaScript

/*
* This file is part of the MediaWiki extension MultimediaViewer.
*
* MultimediaViewer is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation, either version 2 of the License, or
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* MultimediaViewer is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with MultimediaViewer. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
*/
( function () {
/**
* Loads an image.
*
* @class mw.mmv.provider.Image
* @constructor
* @param {string} imageQueryParameter When defined, is a query parameter to add to every image request
*/
function Image( imageQueryParameter ) {
this.imageQueryParameter = imageQueryParameter;
/**
* AJAX call cache.
*
* @property {Object.<string, jQuery.Promise>} cache
* @protected
*/
this.cache = {};
}
/**
* Loads an image and returns it. When the browser supports it, the image is loaded as an AJAX
* request.
*
* @param {string} url
* @return {jQuery.Promise.<HTMLImageElement>} A promise which resolves to the image object.
* When loaded via AJAX, it has progress events, which return an array with the content loaded
* so far and with the progress as a floating-point number between 0 and 100.
*/
Image.prototype.get = function ( url ) {
var provider = this,
cacheKey = url,
extraParam = {},
uri;
if ( this.imageQueryParameter ) {
try {
uri = new mw.Uri( url );
extraParam[ this.imageQueryParameter ] = null;
url = uri.extend( extraParam ).toString();
} catch ( error ) {
return $.Deferred().reject( error.message );
}
}
if ( !this.cache[ cacheKey ] ) {
this.cache[ cacheKey ] = this.rawGet( url, this.imagePreloadingSupported() );
this.cache[ cacheKey ].fail( function ( error ) {
mw.log( provider.constructor.name + ' provider failed to load: ', error );
} );
}
return this.cache[ cacheKey ];
};
/**
* Internal version of get(): no caching, no performance metrics.
*
* @param {string} url
* @param {boolean} [cors] if true, use CORS for preloading
* @return {jQuery.Promise.<HTMLImageElement>} a promise which resolves to the image object
*/
Image.prototype.rawGet = function ( url, cors ) {
var img = new window.Image(),
deferred = $.Deferred();
// This attribute is necessary in Firefox, which needs it for the image request after
// the XHR to hit the cache by being a proper CORS request. In IE11, however,
// the presence of that attribute would cause the second image request to miss the cache,
// because IE11 adds a no-cache request header to image CORS requests. As a result,
// we call needsCrossOrigin to check if the current browser needs to set the attribute
// or not in order to avoid loading the image twice.
if ( cors && this.needsCrossOrigin() ) {
img.crossOrigin = 'anonymous';
}
img.onload = function () {
deferred.resolve( img );
};
img.onerror = function () {
deferred.reject( 'could not load image from ' + url );
};
img.src = url;
return deferred;
};
/**
* Checks whether the current browser supports AJAX preloading of images.
* This means that:
* - the browser supports CORS requests (large wiki farms usually host images on a
* separate domain) and
* - either AJAX and normal image loading uses the same cache (when an image is used by a CORS
* request, and then normally by setting img.src, it is only loaded once)
* - or (as is the case with Firefox) they are cached separately, but that can be changed by
* setting the crossOrigin attribute
*
* @return {boolean}
*/
Image.prototype.imagePreloadingSupported = function () {
// This checks if the browser supports CORS requests in XHRs
return window.XMLHttpRequest !== undefined && 'withCredentials' in new XMLHttpRequest();
};
/**
* Checks whether the current browser needs to set crossOrigin on images to avoid
* doing a double load
*
* @return {boolean} Browser needs to set crossOrigin
*/
Image.prototype.needsCrossOrigin = function () {
// Support: IE11
// This check is essentially "is this browser anything but IE > 10?".
// I couldn't find something more topical because IE11 does support the crossOrigin
// attribute, just in a counter-productive way compared to all the other browsers
// who also support it.
return window.MSInputMethodContext === undefined;
};
mw.mmv.provider.Image = Image;
}() );