On Fri, Sep 27, 2019 at 10:16 AM Emilio Cobos Álvarez <emi...@mozilla.com>
wrote:

> Hi Steve,
>
> On 9/27/19 4:03 PM, Steve Kobes wrote:
> > Hi Emilio,
> >
> > My recollection is that scroll anchoring was, in fact, a mess.  I do not
> > personally have any opinion about whether scroll anchoring should be
> > removed from Gecko.
> >
> > We (Chrome) decided to accept some compat issues for the sake of
> > launching the feature.  This was a judgment call and could reasonably
> > have gone the other way.
>
> Right, my concern is that taking compat fallout with Chrome's market
> share may be acceptable, because people will likely fix their websites
> if they misbehave.
>
> But web developers may not take the same time to fix their site if it's
> broken on Firefox for Android, for example, which in turn drives Firefox
> users away (and you know this is a vicious cycle, the less users you
> have, the less people will care about fixing their websites in your
> browser).
>
> That being said, more generally, I care about being interoperable /
> predictable here for web developers, and seems like that ship may have
> sailed if we need to fix some Gecko-specific issues by tweaking our
> heuristics, but Chromium / Blink doesn't change them in the same way
> (which is understandable, I guess, though I've filed spec issues for our
> reasoning behind these changes, which I think would apply to Chrome as
> well).
>

FWIW, I agree with this principle. I'm sorry you've had to do a lot of
compat work on this Emilio. Are you saying you've found many cases where
chromium's behavior doesn't match the spec / web-platform-tests and the
different is relevant to real-world website compat (forcing you to invest
in "bug-for-bug compatibility")? That would definitely make me very sad. Or
is the issue more about compat with sites which have UA-conditional
behavior (either explicit or implicit based on some other Gecko/blink
difference?).

IMHO In general, either an initially chromium-only feature is valuable
enough that we should continue to invest as necessary to achieve interop
with other engines when they implement (eg. adding web-platform-tests and
improving the spec for the inevitable cases that appear with a second
implementation), or we should decide the feature isn't worth the cost to
properly support on the web at large and remove it from chromium.

Steve is the expert and can probably elaborate on details, but IIRC the
real world web compat constraints of scroll anchoring ended up requiring a
number of tough tradeoffs. If you're learning about new web compat
constraints, then it's entirely possible that the cost/benefit equation is
now different and we should be re-evaluating whether it still makes sense
to keep scroll anchoring in chromium. Like David I like the feature - but
only to the extent that it works alright for most of the web as it exists
today, and developers can reliably reason about it (eg. by replacing any
heuristics designed under the constraints of web-compat with explicit APIs).

Can you give us a week or so to chat about this within the Chrome team and
get back to you?

Thanks, and sorry again for the frustration. When we ship a feature first
in chromium, it's always our intent that subsequent compatible
implementations should be MUCH easier to ship (it's one of the main reasons
we invest so much in web-platform-tests).

  -- Emilio
>
> > On Fri, 27 Sep 2019 at 09:09, Emilio Cobos Álvarez <emi...@mozilla.com
> > <mailto:emi...@mozilla.com>> wrote:
> >
> >     And, to be clear, we _can_ fix these compat issues, some way or
> another.
> >
> >     One thought is to limit the amount of scroll adjustments without user
> >     scrolling or stuff like that, which would prevent the "you get stuck
> on
> >     the page".
> >
> >     Making anchoring opt-in rather than opt-out is another option, but
> that
> >     defeats most of the purpose of the feature, I guess.
> >
> >     See also some of the Chromium docs on the compat issues they found[1]
> >     and how were they trying to fix them before adding the
> >     "layout-affecting-property changed" heuristic, which is what is on
> the
> >     spec right now and what they implement.
> >
> >     I just think that these are very hacky heuristics that are just
> >     going to
> >     bring a lot of compat pain and developer confusion.
> >
> >     It doesn't help that all these things can break or not depending on
> the
> >     speed at which the user scrolls, the amount of scroll events that the
> >     user dispatches, the timing of these events relative to other
> >     events, etc...
> >
> >        -- Emilio
> >
> >     [1]:
> >
> https://docs.google.com/document/d/1nQAO4MYCDMn0rTkn_-WI6gjumk3Qi2Bn-MGuB3NlVxE/edit
> >     <
> https://docs.google.com/document/d/1nQAO4MYCDMn0rTkn_-WI6gjumk3Qi2Bn-MGuB3NlVxE/edit
> >
> >
> >     On 9/27/19 2:23 PM, Emilio Cobos Álvarez wrote:
> >      > Hi,
> >      >
> >      > (cc'ing webkit-dev@ and blink-dev@ in case they have feedback or
> >      > opinions, as WebKit is the only engine which does not implement
> >     scroll
> >      > anchoring, though I don't know if they plan to, and Blink is the
> >     only
> >      > other engine that does implement it. Please reply to
> >     dev-platform@ though.)
> >      >
> >      > TLDR: Scroll anchoring is really a mess.
> >      >
> >      > I didn't do the initial implementation of the feature in Gecko,
> >     but I've
> >      > done a ton of work over the last few months to fix compat issues
> >     in our
> >      > implementation (see all the bugs blocking [1]).
> >      >
> >      > At this point, our implementation is mostly compatible with
> >     Blink, but
> >      > even with a bug-for-bug compatible implementation, we did get
> compat
> >      > issues because of different content being served for different
> >     browsers,
> >      > or because our anti-tracking protections changing the final
> >     content of
> >      > the page slightly ([2] is an example of bug which only reproduces
> >     with
> >      > ETP enabled only, but whose reduced test-case renders the site
> >     unusable
> >      > in Chrome as well).
> >      >
> >      > If you hit one of the broken cases as a user you think the
> >     browser is
> >      > completely broken, and the site is just unusable.
> >      >
> >      > I've fixed those by tweaking the heuristics Gecko uses. Those
> extra
> >      > heuristics have also caused other compat issues, like [3],
> reported
> >      > today, which will require other adjustments to the heuristics,
> etc...
> >      >
> >      > On top of that, the spec is not in a good state, with ton of open
> >     issues
> >      > without feedback from the editors [4].
> >      >
> >      > So right now I'm at a stage where I think that the feature is
> >     just not
> >      > worth it. It doesn't behave predictably enough for developers,
> >     and you
> >      > have no guarantee of it behaving consistently unless you test a
> >      > particular browser, with a particular content in a particular
> >     viewport
> >      > size... That's not great given the current dominant position of
> >      > Chromium-based browsers.
> >      >
> >      > On top, issues with scroll anchoring are pretty hard to diagnose
> >     unless
> >      > you're aware of the feature.
> >      >
> >      > All in all, it doesn't seem like the kind of feature that
> benefits a
> >      > diverse web (nor web developers for that matter), and I think we
> >     should
> >      > remove the feature from Gecko.
> >      >
> >      > Does anyone have strong opinions against removing scroll
> >     anchoring from
> >      > Gecko, based on the above?
> >      >
> >      > Thanks,
> >      >
> >      >   -- Emilio
> >      >
> >      > [1]: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1519644
> >     <https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1519644>
> >      > [2]: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1561450
> >     <https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1561450>
> >      > [3]: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1584499
> >     <https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1584499>
> >      > [4]:
> >     https://github.com/w3c/csswg-drafts/labels/css-scroll-anchoring-1
> >     <https://github.com/w3c/csswg-drafts/labels/css-scroll-anchoring-1>
> >      > _______________________________________________
> >      > dev-platform mailing list
> >      > dev-platform@lists.mozilla.org
> >     <mailto:dev-platform@lists.mozilla.org>
> >      > https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-platform
> >     <https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-platform>
> >
> >     --
> >     You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
> >     Groups "blink-dev" group.
> >     To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it,
> >     send an email to blink-dev+unsubscr...@chromium.org
> >     <mailto:blink-dev%2bunsubscr...@chromium.org>.
> >     To view this discussion on the web visit
> >
> https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/d/msgid/blink-dev/4fb3b637-50f5-1167-62a0-dffdeff06f48%40mozilla.com
> >     <
> https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/d/msgid/blink-dev/4fb3b637-50f5-1167-62a0-dffdeff06f48%40mozilla.com
> >.
> >
>
> --
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
> "blink-dev" group.
> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an
> email to blink-dev+unsubscr...@chromium.org.
> To view this discussion on the web visit
> https://groups.google.com/a/chromium.org/d/msgid/blink-dev/f2feb402-36ac-dbdb-dab7-9d91f7f5800d%40mozilla.com
> .
>
_______________________________________________
dev-platform mailing list
dev-platform@lists.mozilla.org
https://lists.mozilla.org/listinfo/dev-platform

Reply via email to