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.
This constructor was easily confused with a copy constructor, and it was
possible to accidentally copy-construct Objects in at least one way that
we dicovered (via generic ThrowCompletionOr construction).
This patch adds a mandatory ConstructWithPrototypeTag parameter to the
constructor to disambiguate it.
This is a monster patch that turns all EventTargets into GC-allocated
PlatformObjects. Their C++ wrapper classes are removed, and the LibJS
garbage collector is now responsible for their lifetimes.
There's a fair amount of hacks and band-aids in this patch, and we'll
have a lot of cleanup to do after this.
No functional changes - we can still very easily get to the global
object via `Realm::global_object()`. This is in preparation of moving
the intrinsics to the realm and no longer having to pass a global
object when allocating any object.
In a few (now, and many more in subsequent commits) places we get a
realm using `GlobalObject::associated_realm()`, this is intended to be
temporary. For example, create() functions will later receive the same
treatment and are passed a realm instead of a global object.