We now invoke DOM timer callbacks via HTML tasks. This brings callback
sequencing closer to the spec, although there are still many
imperfections in this area.
The ideal solution here is to implement a more spec-compliant event
loop, but while we get all the pieces in place for that, this at least
makes the HTML event loop a bit more responsive since it never has to
wait for a 16ms timer to fire.
This doesn't follow the exact spec steps but instead simply makes a
nested Core::EventLoop and spins it while a periodic timer tests the
goal condition.
Since we can't simply give HTML::EventLoop control of the whole program,
we have to integrate with Core::EventLoop.
We do this by having a single-shot 0ms Core::Timer that we start when
a task is added to the queue, and restart after processing the queue and
there are still tasks in the queue.
This patch attaches a HTML::EventLoop to the main thread JS::VM used
for JavaScript bindings in the web engine.
The goal here is to model the various task scheduling mechanisms of the
HTML specification.