Commit graph

7 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Linus Groh
50428ea8d2 LibJS: Move intrinsics to the realm
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 :^)
2022-08-27 11:29:10 +01:00
Linus Groh
e992a9f469 LibJS+LibWeb: Replace GlobalObject with Realm in Heap::allocate<T>()
This is a continuation of the previous three commits.

Now that create() receives the allocating realm, we can simply forward
that to allocate(), which accounts for the majority of these changes.
Additionally, we can get rid of the realm_from_global_object() in one
place, with one more remaining in VM::throw_completion().
2022-08-23 13:58:30 +01:00
Linus Groh
b99cc7d050 LibJS+LibWeb: Replace GlobalObject with Realm in create() functions
This is a continuation of the previous two commits.

As allocating a JS cell already primarily involves a realm instead of a
global object, and we'll need to pass one to the allocate() function
itself eventually (it's bridged via the global object right now), the
create() functions need to receive a realm as well.
The plan is for this to be the highest-level function that actually
receives a realm and passes it around, AOs on an even higher level will
use the "current realm" concept via VM::current_realm() as that's what
the spec assumes; passing around realms (or global objects, for that
matter) on higher AO levels is pointless and unlike for allocating
individual objects, which may happen outside of regular JS execution, we
don't need control over the specific realm that is being used there.
2022-08-23 13:58:30 +01:00
Lenny Maiorani
d00b79568f Libraries: Use default constructors/destructors in LibJS
https://isocpp.github.io/CppCoreGuidelines/CppCoreGuidelines#cother-other-default-operation-rules

"The compiler is more likely to get the default semantics right and
you cannot implement these functions better than the compiler."
2022-03-16 16:19:40 +00:00
Ali Mohammad Pur
3bfcd7b52d LibJS: Implement Sets using Maps
This implements ordered sets using Maps with a sentinel value, and
includes some extra set tests.
Fixes #11004.

Co-Authored-By: davidot <davidot@serenityos.org>
2022-02-09 20:57:41 +00:00
Linus Groh
e5753443ae LibJS: Consistently make prototype the last argument in Object ctors
This is so that we can reliably allocate them in a template function,
e.g. in ordinary_create_from_constructor():

    global_object.heap().allocate<T>(
        global_object, forward<Args>(args)..., *prototype);

The majority of objects already take the prototype as the last argument,
so I updated the ones that didn't.
2021-06-20 12:12:39 +02:00
Idan Horowitz
2a3090d292 LibJS: Add the SetIterator built-in and Set.prototype.{values, entries}
While this implementation should be complete it is based on HashTable's
iterator, which currently follows bucket-order instead of the required
insertion order. This can be simply fixed by replacing the underlying
HashTable member in Set with an enhanced one that maintains a linked
list in insertion order.
2021-06-09 11:48:04 +01:00