| # Supported Projects |
| |
| The `//net` stack is used on a variety of platforms and in a variety of open |
| source projects. These different platforms and projects have differing |
| degrees of support from `//net` OWNERS as well as differing requirements for |
| designs and technical requirements. |
| |
| Note that this is a rough high-level overview of the major projects; as more |
| of `//net` is broken into consumable services/components as part of the Mojo |
| servicificaiton efforts, it's likely that there will be a larger number of |
| 'variants' of these projects with different constraints and features. |
| |
| ## Google Chrome Browser |
| |
| The Google Chrome browser, which lives in `//chrome`, is the most important |
| `//net` consumer and shapes many of the core design decisions. In general, |
| features that are not intended with or not compatible with the needs of |
| the Google Chrome browser will have a very high bar for acceptance in `//net`. |
| |
| The feature matrix |
| |
| * **Supported Platforms**: Windows, macOS, Linux, Chromium OS, iOS, Android |
| * **Release Frequency**: ~6 weeks between releases |
| * **Automatic Updates**: Yes |
| * **Command-line Flags**: |
| * __Yes__: Windows, macOS, Linux, Chromium OS (Dev image), Android (rooted) |
| * __No__: Chromium OS (Release image), iOS, Android (Release) |
| * **Field Trials (Finch)**: Yes |
| * **Enterprise Policy**: Yes |
| * **User Metrics (UMA)**: Yes |
| * **Component Updater**: Yes |
| |
| ## Chromium Browser |
| |
| The Chromium browser refers to the practice of certain Linux distributions to |
| bundle the open-source components of Chrome Browser in `//chrome`, branded |
| as Chromium. This version is not distributed by Google, but by individual |
| Linux distributions (primarily). Other distributions based on building Chromium |
| for other platforms exist, although do not see as wide of usage. |
| |
| * **Supported Platforms**: Windows, macOS, Linux, Chromium OS, iOS, Android |
| * **Release Frequency**: Varies by distributor; some Linux distributions |
| treat versions of Chromium as "Long Term Stable" and support a single |
| version for a longer time than the Chromium projects do, others track |
| the Google Chrome release frequency. |
| * **Automatic Updates**: Varies by distributor |
| * **Command-line Flags**: |
| * __Yes__: Windows, macOS, Linux, Chromium OS (dev image), Android (rooted) |
| * __No__: Chromium OS (Release image), iOS, Android (Release) |
| * **Field Trials (Finch)**: No |
| * **Enterprise Policy**: Yes |
| * **User Metrics (UMA)**: Varies by distributor |
| * **Component Updater**: Varies by distributor |
| |
| ## Android WebView |
| |
| Distinct from the Chromium browser, the Android WebView is itself based on |
| the Chromium browser. On official Android devices running Android N or later, |
| WebView is automatically updated when Google Chrome is updated on the |
| device. For earlier devices, Android WebView is updated by the System WebView |
| component. |
| |
| Android WebView may also be used on non-official Android devices, such as |
| those based on the Android Open Source Project but do not go through the |
| Android [Compatability Test Suite](https://source.android.com/compatibility/cts/). |
| Such releases have limited to no interaction with the Chromium projects, and |
| so their capabilities cannot be conclusively documented. |
| |
| For official Android devices, WebView has the following capabilities. |
| |
| * **Supported Platforms**: Android |
| * **Release Frequency**: ~6 weeks between releases |
| * **Automatic Updates**: Varies. Updates are made available on the Android |
| App Store, but users must explicitly choose to update. As such, the |
| rate of update varies much more than for the Chromium browser. |
| * **Command-line Flags**: No |
| * **Field Trials (Finch)**: No |
| * **Enterprise Policy**: No |
| * **User Metrics (UMA)**: No |
| * **Component Updater**: No |
| |
| ## `//content` Embedders |
| |
| In addition to Chromium, there are a number of other of embedders of |
| `//content`, such as projects like [Chromium Embedded Framework](https://bitbucket.org/chromiumembedded/cef) |
| or [Electron](http://electron.atom.io/). While `//net` does not directly |
| support these consumers, it does support the `//content` embedding API that |
| these projects use. Note that this excludes the |
| [content_shell](../../content/shell) test framework. |
| |
| * **Supported Platforms**: Windows, macOS, Linux, Chromium OS, iOS, Android |
| * **Release Frequency**: Varies by consumer; Officially ~6 weeks |
| * **Command-line Flags**: Varies by consumer |
| * **Field Trials (Finch)**: No |
| * **Enterprise Policy**: No |
| * **User Metrics (UMA)**: No |
| * **Component Updater**: No |
| |
| ## Cronet |
| |
| [Cronet](../../components/cronet/README.md) is a version of the `//net` |
| network stack for use in mobile applications on iOS and Android. While |
| primarily targetting first-party Google applications, Cronet's status as an |
| open-source project, similar to the Chromium browser, means that it may |
| find itself embedded in a variety of other projects. |
| |
| Unlike some of the other `//net` consumers, Cronet does not necessarily |
| implement "The Web Platform" (as the holistic set of user agent-focused |
| features), and instead is more akin to an HTTP(s) client networking library. |
| |
| * **Supported Platforms**: iOS, Android |
| * **Release Frequency**: Varies. While "releases" are made following the |
| same frequency as Google Chrome, because it is treated similar to |
| a "third-party" library, different products and projects will ship |
| different versions of Cronet for differing periods of time. |
| * **Command-line Flags**: No |
| * **Field Trials (Finch)**: No |
| * **Enterprise Policy**: No |
| * **User Metrics (UMA)**: |
| * __Yes__: First-party (Google) projects, although they will be |
| reported in project-specific buckets (e.g. no overarching set of |
| metrics for all Cronet consumers). |
| * __No__: In general |
| * **Component Updater**: No |