tor-browser

The Tor Browser
git clone https://git.dasho.dev/tor-browser.git
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README.md (2777B)


WebConsole

The WebConsole (webconsole) shows you all the console API calls made by scripts and alerts you when javascript errors are thrown by a script. It can also display network logs, and you can evaluate expressions using the console input, a.k.a. JsTerm. You can read more about it to learn all the features and how to use the tool.

Run WebConsole

If you want to build the WebConsole inside of the DevTools toolbox (Firefox Devtools Panels), follow the simple Firefox build documentation. Start your compiled firefox and open the Firefox developer tool, you can then see the WebConsole tab.

Code Structure

Top level files are used to launch the WebConsole inside of the DevTools toolbox. The main files used to run the WebConsole are:

UI

The WebConsole UI is built using React components (in components/).

The React application is rendered from webconsole-wrapper.js. It contains 4 top components:

We prefer stateless component (defined by function) instead of stateful component (defined by class) unless the component has to maintain its internal state.

State

Besides the UI, the WebConsole manages the app state via [Redux]. The following locations define the app state:

The redux state is a plain javascript object with the following properties:

{
  // State of the filter input and toggle buttons
  filters,
  // State of the input history
  history,
  // Console messages data and state (hidden, expanded, groups, …)
  messages,
  // State of notifications displayed on the output (e.g. self-XSS warning message)
  notifications,
  // Preferences (persist message, message limit, …)
  prefs,
  // Interface state (filter bar visible, sidebar visible, …)
  ui,
}

Tests

See test/README.md