This is part of an old normative change that happened soon after
Andreas made `super` closer to spec in 1270df2.
See https://github.com/tc39/ecma262/pull/2267/
This was introduced into bytecode by virtue of copy and paste :^)
Bytecode results:
Summary:
Diff Tests:
+2 ✅ -2 ❌
Saving vector of local variables names in ECMAScriptFunctionObject
will allow to get a name by index in case message of ReferenceError
needs to contain a variable name.
The JS::VM now owns the one Bytecode::Interpreter. We no longer have
multiple bytecode interpreters, and there is no concept of a "current"
bytecode interpreter.
If you ask for VM::bytecode_interpreter_if_exists(), it will return null
if we're not running the program in "bytecode enabled" mode.
If you ask for VM::bytecode_interpreter(), it will return a bytecode
interpreter in all modes. This is used for situations where even the AST
interpreter switches to bytecode mode (generators, etc.)
Some of these are allocated upon initialization of the intrinsics, and
some lazily, but in neither case the getters actually return a nullptr.
This saves us a whole bunch of pointer dereferences (as NonnullGCPtr has
an `operator T&()`), and also has the interesting side effect of forcing
us to explicitly use the FunctionObject& overload of call(), as passing
a NonnullGCPtr is ambigous - it could implicitly be turned into a Value
_or_ a FunctionObject& (so we have to dereference manually).
This includes an Error::create overload to create an Error from a UTF-8
StringView. If creating a String from that view fails, the factory will
return an OOM InternalError instead. VM::throw_completion can also make
use of this overload via its perfect forwarding.
In this patch only top level and not the more complicated for loop using
statements are supported. Also, as noted in the latest meeting of tc39
async parts of the spec are not stage 3 thus not included.
DeprecatedFlyString relies heavily on DeprecatedString's StringImpl, so
let's rename it to A) match the name of DeprecatedString, B) write a new
FlyString class that is tied to String.
This makes construction of Utf16String fallible in OOM conditions. The
immediate impact is that PrimitiveString must then be fallible as well,
as it may either transcode UTF-8 to UTF-16, or create a UTF-16 string
from ropes.
There are a couple of places where it is very non-trivial to propagate
the error further. A FIXME has been added to those locations.
This will make it easier to support both string types at the same time
while we convert code, and tracking down remaining uses.
One big exception is Value::to_string() in LibJS, where the name is
dictated by the ToString AO.
We have a new, improved string type coming up in AK (OOM aware, no null
state), and while it's going to use UTF-8, the name UTF8String is a
mouthful - so let's free up the String name by renaming the existing
class.
Making the old one have an annoying name will hopefully also help with
quick adoption :^)
We were mistakenly trying to append UTF-16 code units to a StringBuilder
via the append(char) API. This patch fixes that by accumulating the
result in a Vector<u16> instead.
This'll be a bit worse for performance, since we're now doing additional
UTF-16 string conversions, but we're going for correctness at this stage
and can worry about performance later.
This is only visible with something like `Object.getOwnPropertyNames` on
the global object. All other declaration instantiations put the
functions on an environment making the order invisible.
Note that spec order is not quite tree order as in non-strict mode
functions which get hoisted out of blocks appear before top level
functions.
Co-authored-by: Hendiadyoin1 <leon.a@serenityos.org>
Intrinsics, i.e. mostly constructor and prototype objects, but also
things like empty and new object shape now live on a new heap-allocated
JS::Intrinsics object, thus completing the long journey of taking all
the magic away from the global object.
This represents the Realm's [[Intrinsics]] slot in the spec and matches
its existing [[GlobalObject]] / [[GlobalEnv]] slots in terms of
architecture.
In the majority of cases it should now be possibly to fully allocate a
regular object without the global object existing, and in fact that's
what we do now - the realm is allocated before the global object, and
the intrinsics between both :^)
This is needed so that the allocated NativeFunction receives the correct
realm, usually forwarded from the Object's initialize() function, rather
than using the current realm.