* feat: Allow detection of MITM HTTPS proxies like ZScaler
For security purposes, Figma heavily restrics the origins that are
allowed to load within our Electron app. Unfortunately some corporate
environments use MITM proxies like ZScaler, which intercepts our
connection to `https://www.figma.com` and serves a redirect to e.g.
`https://gateway.zscloud.net` before finally redirecting back to
`https://www.figma.com`.
In order to detect this situation and handle it gracefully, we need to
be able to know whether or not the certificate for our own origin
(`https://www.figma.com`) is chained to a known root. We do this by
exposesing `CertVerifyResult::is_issued_by_known_root`.
If the certification verification passed without the certificate being
tied to a known root, we can safely assume that we are dealing with a
MITM proxy that has its root CA installed locally on the machine. This
means that HTTPS can't be trusted so we might as well make life easier
for corporate users by loosening our origin restrictions without any
manual steps.
* Tweak docs wording
* fix: increace main thread stack size on windows x86
* chore: improve quit-on-crashed-event spec
* chore: add debug logs
* Revert "chore: add debug logs"
This reverts commit 0be81ae07c85095ac2c920436b97557c95c1c524.
* chore: use a reliable crash endpoint
Co-authored-by: Stephen Wang <wangwenqiang.wwq@bytedance.com>
Co-authored-by: Deepak Mohan <hop2deep@gmail.com>
* mac: add dialog.closeMessageBox API
* win: Implement dialog.closeMessageBox
* mac: Return cancelId with closeMessageBox
* gtk: Implement dialog.closeMessageBox
* win: Fix 32bit build
* win: Reduce the scope of lock
* fix: Build error after rebase
* feat: Use AbortSignal to close message box
* chore: silently handle duplicate ID
* win: Add more notes about the threads
* chore: apply reviews
* fix: base::NoDestructor should be warpped in function
* chore: fix style on windows