The purpose of using a custom base128 encoder is to
convert array buffers into strings, to allow a direct
string-to-array buffer conversion at load time:
string => array buffer
Whereas a JSON array would require an extra step:
JSON array as string => JS array => array buffer
Turns out that the current use of a custom base128 encoding
results in a significantly larger selfie storage usage when
converting array buffers into strings.
Speculation: possibly the browser convert the strings to
save into JSON strings internally. Since the custom base128
encoder is likely to cause the resulting string to contain
a lot of unprintable ASCII characters, these will need to
be escaped when converted to JSON -- escaped characters
occupy more space than non-escaped ones.
Using a sequence of base 64 numbers means only printable
will be present in the output string, hence no escaping
necessary. I have observed significant reduction in
storage usage for selfie purpose.
Related issue:
- https://github.com/uBlockOrigin/uBlock-issues/issues/528#issuecomment-484408622
Following STrie-related work in above issue, I noticed that a large
number of filters in EasyList were filters which only had to match
against the document origin. For instance, among just the top 10
most populous buckets, there were four such buckets with over
hundreds of entries each:
- bits: 72, token: "http", 146 entries
- bits: 72, token: "https", 139 entries
- bits: 88, token: "http", 122 entries
- bits: 88, token: "https", 118 entries
These filters in these buckets have to be matched against all
the network requests.
In order to leverage HNTrie for these filters[1], they are now handled
in a special way so as to ensure they all end up in a single HNTrie
(per bucket), which means that instead of scanning hundreds of entries
per URL, there is now a single scan per bucket per URL for these
apply-everywhere filters.
Now, any filter which fulfill ALL the following condition will be
processed in a special manner internally:
- Is of the form `|https://` or `|http://` or `*`; and
- Does have a `domain=` option; and
- Does not have a negated domain in its `domain=` option; and
- Does not have `csp=` option; and
- Does not have a `redirect=` option
If a filter does not fulfill ALL the conditions above, no change
in behavior.
A filter which matches ALL of the above will be processed in a special
manner:
- The `domain=` option will be decomposed so as to create as many
distinct filter as there is distinct value in the `domain=` option
- This also apply to the `badfilter` version of the filter, which
means it now become possible to `badfilter` only one of the
distinct filter without having to `badfilter` all of them.
- The logger will always report these special filters with only a
single hostname in the `domain=` option.
***
[1] HNTrie is currently WASM-ed on Firefox.
As a development tool for investigation purpose. To use, enter the
following at uBO's dev console:
µBlock.staticNetFilteringEngine.filterClassHistogram()
In the static network filtering engine, `google` token is too
generic and probably leads to too many false positives, beside
causing too large filter bucket.
Implement a plain string trie container class: STrieContainer.
Make use of STrieContainer where beneficial
Some filter buckets can grow quite large, and in such case
coalescing "trieable" filter classes into a single trie reduces
lookup performance and memory usage.
For instance, at time of commit, the filter bucket for the
`ad` keyword contains 919 entries[1].
Coalescing trieable filters of the same class into a single plain
string trie reduced the size of the bucket into 50 entries + two
tries which are scanned only once each whenever the bucket is
visited.
[1] Enter the following code at uBO's dev console:
µBlock.staticNetFilteringEngine.categories.get(0).get(µBlock.urlTokenizer.tokenHashFromString('ad'))
Refactor static network filtering engine code to make use of
ES6's syntactic sugar `class`.
Change first auto-update run from 7 to 5 minutes.
Related issue:
- https://github.com/uBlockOrigin/uBlock-issues/issues/416
The Chromium version of uBO has declared `unlimitedStorage` since the
extension was first published in 2014. Declaring this permission in
Firefox brings uBO inline with the Chromium version. I suspect some
reported errors could be caused by IndexedDB eviction due to the lack
of `unlimitedStorage` permission.
Additionally, a timeout has been added when uBO tries to access its
indexedDB storage. It's unclear whether this will help with the
mentioned related issue though, the root cause is still to be
identified.
Relocate workaround to the code responsible to compute filtering context, such
that the workaround will also be applied in other code paths, for example also
for webRequest.onHeadersReceived.
With the new PSL implementation, benchmarks do not show benefit
from caching the domain extracted from a hostname for later
reuse -- the caching seems to even add an overhead instead with
the new publicSuffixList implementation.
Default behavior is to fall back to an alternative backend
if the uBO-selected one is not available. However there will be
no fall back when the `cacheStorageAPI` is set to one specific
backend by the user.
The value of `suspendTabsUntilReady` was disregarded in Firefox and
uBO defaulted to always defer tab loading until it was ready.
This commit allows to disable the deferring of tab loading in
Firefox. The new valid values for `suspendTabsUntilReady` are:
- `unset`: leave it to the platform to pick the optimal
behavior (default)
- `no`: do no suspend tab loading at launch time
- `yes`: suspend tab loading at launch time
Related issue:
- https://github.com/uBlockOrigin/uBlock-issues/issues/409
By default `indexedDB` is used in Firefox for purpose of cache storage
backend.
This commit allows to force the use of `browser.storage.local` instead
as cache storage backend. For this to happen, set `cacheStorageAPI` to
`browser.storage.local` in advanced settings.
Additionally, should `indexedDB` not be available for whatever reason,
uBO will automatically fallback to `browser.storage.local`.
These filters are to be considered obsolete since they can't be
matched against network requests in the webRequest API.
They were probably meant to work when ABP was pre-webext, which
means they are quite probably obsolete and there is no longer
a point for uBO to conveniently translate them into CSP directives.
This removes the derivation of FilterOrigin flavors from
FilterOrigin itself and simplify code paths. FilterOrigin
flavors are small specialized classes, no need to
overcomplicate with derivation.
Specifically, this removes an indirect call to reach the
match() method.
As seen at:
https://whotracks.me/blog/adblockers_performance_study.html
The requests.json.gz file can be downloaded from:
https://cdn.cliqz.com/adblocking/requests_top500.json.gz
Copy the file into ./tmp/requests.json.gz
If the file is present when you build uBO using `make-[target].sh` from
the shell, the resulting package will contain `./assets/requests.json`,
which will be looked-up by the method below to launch a benchmark
session.
From uBO's dev console, launch the benchmark:
µBlock.staticNetFilteringEngine.benchmark();
The usual browser dev tools can be used to obtain useful profiling
data, i.e. start the profiler, call the benchmark method from the
console, then stop the profiler when it completes.
Keep in mind that the measurements at the blog post above where obtained
with ONLY EasyList. The CPU reportedly used was:
https://www.cpubenchmark.net/cpu.php?cpu=Intel+Core+i7-6600U+%40+2.60GHz&id=2608
Rename ./tmp/requests.json.gz to something else if you no longer want
./assets/requests.json in the build.