A C++ library offering the core functionality of Adblock Plus.
This repo uses pre-commit to maintain agreed conventions in the repo. It should
be installed (tldr; pip install pre-commit
then pre-commit install
)
before making any new commits to the repo.
You need Python 2.7 and ensure that
python
binary is in yourPATH
.
libadblockplus has dependencies that aren't part of this repository. They are retrieved and updated during the build process, but you can also manually update them by running the following:
./ensure_dependencies.py
Additionally one should provide V8 headers in order to build libadblockplus library and V8 prebuilt libraries in order to link a binary (executable, shared object/DLL), even libadblockplus tests. The last time is was tested against V8 6.7. For more details see below.
General:
-
You need a C++14 compatible compiler to build libadblockplus. Below there is the list of tested tools.
-
7z We use 7z for prebuilt V8. In order to install it on a debian-based system one can use
p7zip-full
package, orp7zip-plugins
on rpm-based.
Win32:
- At least v141 Visual C++ toolset (available in Microsoft Visual Studio 2017).
Linux:
- clang 5.0
We use libc++ instead of the libstdc++ that gcc uses, since by default v8 build
with libc++. Make sure you have the right development package installed for
libc++:
libc++-dev
andlibc++abi-dev
on Debian/Ubuntu,libcxx-devel
andlibcxxabi-devel
on RedHat/Fedora.
Mac:
- Apple LLVM 9.0.0 for OS X/macOS (Xcode should be installed and its developer tools should be "selected").
Android:
- The host system should be Linux or OS X (for Windows 10 see below)
- android-ndk-r16b, here are the links for downloading OS X, Linux 64.
- g++ multilib
If you have a compilation issue with another compiler please create an issue.
You need V8 prior to building. Two options:
- Use the default prebuild V8 by invoking the make target
get-prebuilt-v8
. This will download and extract the prebuilt V8 for your setup. The default environment will be set by the Makefile at build time. If you are cross compiling use the same options as below to invoke make.
Pass WGET_QUIET=true
to download the files silently.
If you switch the version of V8 using the same source tree, you should
manually remove the third_party/prebuilt-v8
directory and redownload
again with the right options.
Or
- Prepare V8 and set environment variables LIBV8_LIB_DIR and LIBV8_INCLUDE_DIR.
LIBV8_INCLUDE_DIR should point to the include directory of V8, e.g.
.../v8/include
and there should belibv8_monolith.a
in the directory LIBV8_LIB_DIR.
To build:
Using Make:
make
The default target architecture is the architecture of a host. In order to build for a different architecture pass ABP_TARGET_ARCH
to make
, e.g. run:
make ABP_TARGET_ARCH=ia32
supported values are ia32
and x64
.
To build and run the tests:
make test
Likewise, use the following with ABP_TARGET_ARCH
:
make test ABP_TARGET_ARCH=ia32
To run specific tests, you can specify a filter:
make test FILTER=*.Matches
-
Prepare V8. Let's say V8 is prepared in
build/v8
. There should be V8 headers inbuild/v8/include
and binaries inbuild/v8/win-%PLATFORM%.%CONFIGURATION%
, e.g ensure that there isv8_monolith.lib
available asbuild/v8/win-x64.release/v8_monolith.lib
. -
Set GYP variable
v8_dir
pointing to the prepared V8,<path to build/v8>
. E.g.set "GYP_DEFINES=v8_dir=e:/v8-6.7"
and executecreatesolution.bat
to generate project files, this will createbuild\ia32\libadblockplus.sln
(solution for the 32 bit build) andbuild\x64\libadblockplus.sln
(solution for the 64 bit build). -
Open
build\ia32\libadblockplus.sln
orbuild\x64\libadblockplus.sln
in Visual Studio and build the solution there. Alternatively you can use themsbuild
command line tool, e.g. runmsbuild /m build\ia32\libadblockplus.sln
from the Visual Studio Developer Command Prompt to create a 32 bit debug build. Due to linking errors with precompiled V8 binary we have disabled iterator checking by setting_ITERATOR_DEBUG_LEVEL=0
in libadblockplus.gypi.
Tested on Microsoft Visual Studio 2017 Community Edition.
For more details see CI configuration for appveyor.
Configure V8 as for Unix and set ANDROID_NDK_ROOT environment variable to your Android NDK directory.
To build for x86 or x64 arch run:
make TARGET_OS=android ABP_TARGET_ARCH=ia32
or
make TARGET_OS=android ABP_TARGET_ARCH=x64
To build for arm or arm64 arch run:
make TARGET_OS=android ABP_TARGET_ARCH=arm
or
make TARGET_OS=android ABP_TARGET_ARCH=arm64
Build for Android can be performed in Windows 10 with WSL2 or with docker. Here we give instructions for WSL 2, feel free to add docker instructions.
- Please, check how to install WSL 2.
- After installing,
- open PowerShell (or cmd)
- navigate to libadblockplus root
- run (once) the provision script:
wsl sudo ./build-scripts/provision.sh
.- run it only once in order to prepare environment, no need to run it every time
- run build script
wsl ./build-scripts/build-android.sh
You might also run it from inside the WSL2, then do not prefix your commands withwsl
.
You can use libadblockplus to build an ad blocker. Or, strictly speaking, a web content filter. Just like Adblock Plus, it can detect resources that should be blocked based on their URL and context information, and generate CSS selectors to hide DOM elements.
The basic usage is explained below, see comments in the header files for more information. See the filter documentation to learn more about Adblock Plus filters.
All the types and functions in libadblockplus are in the AdblockPlus
namespace. For brevity's sake, we'll assume the following using
declaration:
using namespace AdblockPlus;
Most of the functionality of libadblockplus is available via the
FilterEngine
class. Since libadblockplus uses the Adblock Plus core code under the hood, you
first need to create a
JsEngine
instance and pass some information about your
application to it.
AppInfo appInfo;
appInfo.name = "awesomewebfilter";
appInfo.version = "0.1";
appInfo.locale = "en-US";
auto platform = AdblockPlus::DefaultPlatformBuilder().CreatePlatform();
platform->SetUpJsEngine(appInfo);
JsEngine& jsEngine = platform->GetJsEngine();
JsEngine
needs to store files, make web requests and write log messages. Default implementations
are created using
DefaultPlatformBuilder
.
Depending on your application and platform, you might want to supply your own
implementations. For this, supply Platform::CreationParameters
for Platform
constructor.
With the JsEngine
instance created, you can create a FilterEngine
instance:
auto filterEngine = FilterEngine::Create(jsEngine);
Please also pay attention to asynchronous version of factory method FilterEngine::CreateAsync and to optional creationParameters.
When initialised, FilterEngine
will automatically select a suitable ad
blocking subscription based on AppInfo::locale
and download the filters for
it.
libadblockplus takes care of storing and updating subscriptions.
You can add more:
SubscriptionPtr subscription =
filterEngine.GetSubscription("https://example.org/filters.txt");
subscription->AddToList();
Retrieving an existing subscription works the same way, use
Subscription::IsListed
to check if the subscription has been added or not.
SubscriptionPtr subscription =
filterEngine.GetSubscription("https://example.org/filters.txt");
if (subscription->IsListed())
....
Removing a subscription is not rocket science either:
subscription->RemoveFromList();
You can also get a list of all subscriptions that were added:
std::vector<SubscriptionPtr> subscriptions =
filterEngine.GetListedSubscriptions();
Working with custom filters is very similar to working with subscriptions:
FilterPtr filter = filterEngine.GetFilter("||example.com/ad.png");
filter->AddToList();
filter->RemoveFromList();
Note that applications should only do this to manage a user's custom filters. In general, filter lists should be hosted somewhere and added as a subscription.
As mentioned above, one of the two main tasks of libadblockplus is to check if a URL matches any of the active blocking filters.
To demonstrate this, we'll add a custom filter:
FilterPtr filter = filterEngine.GetFilter("||example.com/ad.png");
filter->AddToList();
Now we'll call matches on an URL that should be blocked:
FilterPtr match =
filterEngine.Matches("http://example.com/ad.png", "DOCUMENT", "");
Since we've added a matching filter, match
will point to the same filter
object as filter
.
Note that we've ignored the third parameter of
FilterEngine::Matches
here to keep things simple. Real applications should pass the frame structure
in here - this is necessary because many filters and exception rules are domain
specific.
Some filters should be applied only for sites providing special key. It is
provided in X-Adblock-Key
header. Usually it is used to whitelist specific
sites. You can read more about this in
filters documentation.
To find match filter taking into account site key, please use 4th parameter
for FilterEngine::Matches
It should contain decoded and verified public key extracted from X-Adblock-Key
header.
FilterPtr match =
filterEngine.Matches("http://example.com/ad.png", "DOCUMENT", "",
"DECODED PUBLIC KEY");
You can take a look for the sitekey-related tests for reference.
Aside from blocking requests, ad blockers typically also hide elements. This is done via a second type of filter that is completely ignored when matching URLs: element hiding rules.
You can retrieve a CSS style sheet for elements that should be hidden
using
FilterEngine::GetElementHidingStyleSheet
.
What libadblockplus clients typically do with this is to inject the CSS style sheet into each page.
At any moment you can call FilterEngine::SetAllowedConnectionType
to change the settings indicating what connection types are allowed in your application. However to have it working you should also pass a callback function into factory method of FilterEngine. This callback is being called before each request and the value of argument is earlier passed string into FilterEngine::SetAllowedConnectionType
, what allows to query the system and check whether the current connection is in accordance with earlier stored value in settings.
For example, you can pass "not_metered" into FilterEngine::SetAllowedConnectionType
and on each request you can check whether the current connection is "not_metered" and return true or false from you implementation of callback AdblockPlus::FilterEngine::IsConnectionAllowedAsyncCallback
.
The shell subdirectory contains an example application using libadblockplus.
It's a simple shell that loads subscriptions into memory and checks whether a specified resource would be blocked or not.
To see the available commands, type help
.
The shell is automatically built by make
, you can run it as follows:
build/out/abpshell
Just run the project abpshell.
Just in case one can find args files to build V8 in v8-args
directory.
You can lint the code using ESLint.
npm run eslint
In order to set up ESLint and
configuration eslint-config-eyeo you need Node.js 7 or higher and once it is installed please run npm install
in the repository directory.
In order to learn about the usage of deprecated V8 API please set libv8_show_warnings
to "true"
on *nix, e.g.
make libv8_show_warnings="true"
or on Windows add it to GYP_DEFINES
.