* enable plznavigate code path
* AtomBrowserClient::GetGeolocationApiKey returns the right default
* use IsLoadingToDifferentDocument to identify top level navigation in mainFrame
* use candidate site instance when available
* spec: don't test httpReferrer option for file origin
* update libcc ref
* affinity: only group same site in this mode
* plznavigate: don't emit did-get-response-details event for blob scheme
* remove unused variable
* limit scope of variable 'ret'
* pass shared_ptr<SkBitmap> by reference
* silence warning: value reassign before read
* fix oops
* don't refer to 'response' after std::move()ing it
* make the linter happy
When `--enable-sandbox` is passed, electron will use chromium sandbox to spawn
all renderers, and every new BrowserWindow will automatically have "sandboxed"
passed as a web preference(since the renderer would not work properly
otherwise).
When "sandboxed" is passed as a web preference for `BrowserWindow`, the newly
created renderer won't run any node.js code/integration, only communicating with
the system via the IPC API of the content module. This is a requirement for
running the renderer under chrome OS-level sandbox.
Beyond that, certain behaviors of AtomBrowserClient are modified when dealing
with sandboxed renderers:
- `OverrideSiteInstanceNavigation` no longer create a new `SiteInstance` for
every navigation. Instead, it reuses the source `SiteInstance` when not
navigating to a different site.
- `CanCreateWindow` will return true and allow javascript access.
- Calls for console.* on browser process are printed with no need for
--enable-logging
- The output is without the logging prefix
- The cursor in the terminal is always after the last output
- The first output starts on a new line and not at the prompt
- console.* from renderer are not printed to cmd
- Added a missing '\n' in the default_app help output
Ship pdf as dll library, electron only loads pdf.dll when calling print
API. In this way, the developer who don't need print feature can safe
remove the pdf.dll in saving their binary size.