This includes:
- Moving it from Bindings/ to HTML/
- Renaming it from LocationObject to Location
- Removing the manual definitions of the constructor and prototype
- Removing special handling of the Location interface from the bindings
generator
- Converting the JS_DEFINE_NATIVE_FUNCTIONs to regular functions
returning DeprecatedString instead of PrimitiveString
- Adding missing (no-op) setters for the various attributes, which are
expected to exist by the bindings generator
Introduce `TableWrapper` type so table wrappers could be
distinguished from block containers and override width
calculation for table wrappers (CSS 2.2 spec, section 17.5.2)
inside BFCs in the way that their width should be equal to
width of table box they wrap.
Currently, for each exposed interface, we generate one massive function
to create every Web constructor and prototype. In an effort to lazily
create these instead, this first step is to extract the creation of each
of these into its own method.
First, this generates a forwarding header for all IDL types. This is to
allow callers to remain unchanged without forcing them to include the
(very heavy) generated IDL headers. This header is included by LibWeb's
forwarding header.
Next, this defines a base template method on Web::Bindings::Intrinsics
to create a prototype/constructor pair. Specializations of this template
are now generated in a new .cpp file, IntrinsicDefinitions.cpp. The base
Intrinsics class is updated to use this new method, and will continue to
cache the result.
Last, some WebAssembly classes are updated to use this new mechanism.
They were using some ad hoc cache keys that are now in line with the
generated specializations.
That one massive function is still used to invoke these specializations,
so they are not lazy as of this commit.
With this patch, the accessibility tree can be build from the root
node of a document. This can then be serialzed and sent to (soon
to come) consumers.
This commit adds a simple style value (which is an abstract image)
to represent conic-gradient()s.
This commit also starts to factor out some reusable parts of the
linear-gradient() style value for other gradient types.
Refactor various classes in the GridTrackSize file for the incoming
named_tracks feature.
Previously the ExplicitTrackSizing had mixed responsiblities with the
newly-named GridRepeat class. This made it so it was not possible to
have multiple repeats within a single 'GridTrackSizeList' definition.
The MetaGridTrackSize class had both the responsibilities of being a
container for minmax values as well as for simple GridSizes. By uniting
the different possible values (repeat, minmax, default) into the
ExplicitGridTrack class are able to be more expressive as to the
different grid size modalities.
The GridTrackSizeList will be useful as compared to a
Vector<ExplicitGridTrack> since this way can keep track of the declared
line names. These same line names are able to be declared within the
values of a repeat function, hence the presence of a GridTrackSizeList
inside the GridRepeat class.
This implements the following operations from section 4 of the Fetch
spec (https://fetch.spec.whatwg.org/#fetching):
- Fetch
- Main fetch
- Fetch response handover
- Scheme fetch
- HTTP fetch
- HTTP-redirect fetch
- HTTP-network-or-cache fetch (without caching)
It does *not* implement:
- HTTP-network fetch
- CORS-preflight fetch
Instead, we let ResourceLoader handle the actual networking for now,
which isn't ideal, but certainly enough to get enough functionality up
and running for most websites to not complain.
Add classes ExplicitTrackSizing and MetaGridTrackSize which will allow
for managing properties like auto-fill and minmax.
In the following CSS example there are 3 classes that will be used:
grid-template-column: repeat(auto-fill, minmax(50px, 1fr) 75px);
ExplicitTrackSizing - will contain the entire value. e.g.
repeat(auto-fill, minmax(50px, 1fr) 75px)
With a flag if it's a repeat, as well as references to the
MetaGridTrackSizes which is the next step down.
MetaGridTrackSize:
Contain the individual grid track sizes. Here there are two:
minmax(50px, 1fr) as well as 75px.
This way can keep track if it's a minmax function or not, and the
references to both GridTrackSizes in the case it is, or in just the one
if it is not.
GridTrackSize:
Is the most basic element, in this case there are three in total; two of
which are held by the first MetaGridTrackSize, and the third is held by
the second MetaGridTrackSize.
Examples: 50px, 1fr and 75px.
Get rid of the bespoke NavigatorObject class and use the modern IDL
strategies for creating platform objects to re-implement Navigator and
its associcated mixin interfaces. While we're here, implement it in a
way that brings WorkerNavigator up to spec :^)
This Intrinsics object hangs off of a new HostDefined struct that takes
the place of EnvironmentSettingsObject as the true [[HostDefined]] slot
on JS::Realm objects created by LibWeb.
This gets the intrinsics off of the GlobalObject, Window, similar to the
previous refactor of LibJS to move the intrinsics into the Realm's
[[Intrinics]] internal slot.
A side effect of this change is that we cannot fully initialize a Window
object until the [[HostDefined]] slot has been installed into the realm,
which happens with the creation of the WindowEnvironmentSettingsObject.
As such, any Window usage that has not been funned through a WindowESO
will not have any cached Web prototyped or constructors, and will not
have Window APIs available to javascript code. Currently this seems
limited to usage of Window in the CSS parser, but a subsequent commit
will clean those up to take Realm as well. However, this commit compiles
so let's cut it off here :^).
Until now, we've been using CSS::LengthPercentage, sometimes wrapped in
Optional, to represent CSS sizes.
This meant we could not support modern values like `min-content`,
`max-content`, `fit-content(<length>)`. We were also conflating `none`
and `auto` which made the `min-*` and `max-*` properties confusing.
The new CSS::Size class covers all possible size values as individual
substates. It'll be quite a bit of work to make all layout code aware of
the additional features, this patch merely makes the new type available.
Let's stop putting generic types and AOs from the Web IDL spec into
the Bindings namespace and directory in LibWeb, and instead follow our
usual naming rules of 'directory = namespace = spec name'. The IDL
namespace is already used by LibIDL, so Web::WebIDL seems like a good
choice.
This remained undetected for a long time as HeaderCheck is disabled by
default. This commit makes the following file compile again:
// file: compile_me.cpp
#include <LibWeb/HTML/CrossOrigin/CrossOriginOpenerPolicy.h>
// That's it, this was enough to cause a compilation error.
Likewise for most other files touched by this commit.
This style value holds a list of CSS filter function calls e.g.
blur(10px) invert() grayscale()
It will be used to implement backdrop-filter, but the same style value
can be used for the image filter property.
(The name is a little awkward but it's referenced to as
filter-value-list in the spec too).
This remained undetected for a long time as HeaderCheck is disabled by
default. This commit makes the following file compile again:
// file: compile_me.cpp
#include <LibWeb/CSS/GridTrackSize.h>
// That's it, this was enough to cause a compilation error.
Instead of using Core::EventLoop and Core::Timer directly, LibWeb now
goes through a Web::Platform abstraction layer instead.
This will allow us to plug in Qt's event loop (and QTimer) over in
Ladybird, to avoid having to deal with multiple event loops.