While waiting for a task that populates a session history entry, we
can't limit the processing of the event loop to the
`NavigationAndTraversal` task source. This is because fetching uses the
`Networking` task source, which also needs to be processed.
Since making a fetch request might take some time, we want to process
everything on the event loop while waiting, to avoid blocking user
interactions.
It is still possible to use `spin_processing_tasks_with_source_until()`
on subsequent steps of `apply_the_history_step()`.
Also modifies test that was flaky.
In our implementation of the "apply the history step" algorithm, we
have to spin-wait for the completion of tasks queued on the event loop.
Before this change, we allowed tasks from any source to be executed
while we were waiting. It should not be possible because it allows to
interrupt history step application by anything, including another
history step application.
Fixes https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/issues/23598
This URL library ends up being a relatively fundamental base library of
the system, as LibCore depends on LibURL.
This change has two main benefits:
* Moving AK back more towards being an agnostic library that can
be used between the kernel and userspace. URL has never really fit
that description - and is not used in the kernel.
* URL _should_ depend on LibUnicode, as it needs punnycode support.
However, it's not really possible to do this inside of AK as it can't
depend on any external library. This change brings us a little closer
to being able to do that, but unfortunately we aren't there quite
yet, as the code generators depend on LibCore.
When WebDriver asks to destroy a window, we can hit this case with no
active browsing context. This seems odd, but perhaps is a spec issue as
well. Just log to dbgln for now.
The IPC layer between chromes and LibWeb now understands that multiple
top level traversables can live in each WebContent process.
This largely mechanical change adds a billion page_id/page_index
arguments to make sure that pages that end up opening new WebViews
through mechanisms like window.open() still work properly with those
extra windows.
With this change, we now have ~1200 CellAllocators across both LibJS and
LibWeb in a normal WebContent instance.
This gives us a minimum heap size of 4.7 MiB in the scenario where we
only have one cell allocated per type. Of course, in practice there will
be many more of each type, so the effective overhead is quite a bit
smaller than that in practice.
I left a few types unconverted to this mechanism because I got tired of
doing this. :^)
Window.h is a rather heavy file, so let's try not to include it in
header files when we can!
Element.h now also includes LibWeb/Bindings/Intrinsics.h, but that's
just out of my laziness. Most if not all objects call
`Bindings::ensure_web_prototype<>()` anyway, so I don't think we would
gain much by sticking the header to source files instead.
And remove assorted spec FIXMEs along the way. Also align
populate_session_history_entry_document to the spec, with a bonus spec
bug to be filed.
This involves creating a new NonFetchSchemeNavigationParams spec, and
having the associated AOs take a Variant rather than Optional to
accomodate the fact that this extra struct could be returned by the
algorithm. We don't actually *do* anything with these params, but the
scaffolding is there now, with less TODOs.
If a navigable has been destroyed during a navigation process, we
should early return from it. The introduced checks are not in
the spec because, as explained in
https://github.com/whatwg/html/issues/9690 the spec is not written
with such a level of detail.
Replaces direct "apply the history step" calls with new functions from
the spec:
- "update for navigable creation/destruction"
- "apply the push/replace history step"
- "apply the reload history step"