This is a non-standard API that other browsers implement, which
highlights matching text in the current window.
This is just a thin wrapper around our find in page functionality, the
main motivation for adding this API is that it allows us to write tests
for our find in page implementation.
This implements most of the CloseWatcher API from the html spec.
AbortSignal support is unimplemented.
Integration with dialogs and popovers is also unimplemented.
This change adds the `captureEvents()` and `releaseEvents()` methods to
the window object. These methods are obsolete, but are still included
in the HTML specification, which says they must do nothing.
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.
Normally, assigning to e.g document.body.onload will forward to
window.onload. However, in a detached DOM tree, there is no associated
window, so we have nowhere to forward to, making this a no-op.
The bulk of this change is making Document::window() return a nullable
pointer, as documents created by DOMParser or DOMImplementation do not
have an associated window object, and so must be able to return null
from here.
This reverts commit e52c30cbd5.
It's highly possible that this test was flaky on CI due to mixing units
of seconds and milliseconds in the transient activation calculation.
Revert the workaround for that commit in an attempt to avoid needless
ad-hoc behavior.
We have a 5 second timeout between a user-activated event occurring and
an activation-gated API being invoked in order for that API to succeed.
This is quite fine in normal circumstances, but the machines used in CI
often exceed that limit (we see upwards of 10 seconds passing between
generating the user-activated event and the API call running).
So instead of generating a user-activated event, add a hook to allow
tests to bypass the very next activation check.
We have two known PlatformObjects that need to implement some of the
behavior of LegacyPlatformObjects to date: Window, and HTMLFormElement.
To make this not require double (or virtual) inheritance of
PlatformObject, move the behavior of LegacyPlatformObject into
PlatformObject. The selection of LegacyPlatformObject behavior is done
with a new bitfield of feature flags instead of a dozen virtual
functions that return bool. This change simplifies every class involved
in the diff with the notable exception of Window, which now needs some
ugly const casts to implement named property access.
Ultimately, this API should probably be replaced with something that
updates a cache on relevant DOM mutations instead of regenerating
the list of property names again and again.
This is an internal object that must be explicitly enabled by the chrome
before it is added to the Window. The Inspector object will be used by a
special WebView that will replace all chrome-specific inspector windows.
The IDL defines methods that this WebView will need to inform the chrome
of various events, such as the user clicking a DOM node.
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. :^)
The main issues are using Structured{Serialize,Deserailize} instead of
Structured{Serialize,Deserialize}WithTransfer and the temporary
execution context usage for StructuredDeserialize.
Allows Discord to load once again, as it uses a postMessage scheduler
to render components, including the main App component. The callback
checked the (previously) non-existent source attribute of the
MessageEvent and returned if it was not the main window.
Fixes the Twitch cookie consent banner saying "failed integrity check"
for unknown reasons, but presumably related to the source and origin
attributes.
These allow accessing embeds, forms, images and objects with a given
name attribute, and any element with a given id attribute, as top level
properties on the global object.
It also allows accessing NavigableContainers by target name as top level
properties on the global object.
The current implementation feels very expensive. It's likely that
these values will need smarter caching in the future.
And implement WindowProperties, the "named properties object" for Window
according to the spec.
This involves moving an AO out of LegacyPlatformObject and into a common
place that the WindowProperties class can access.
This doesn't implement the AOs on Window that actually name lookup for
the unenumerable named properties on the window yet, just the
scaffolding.
Stop worrying about tiny OOMs. Work towards #20449.
While going through these, I also changed the function signature in many
places where returning ThrowCompletionOr<T> is no longer necessary.
We got some errors while loading https://twinings.co.uk/ about this
interface missing, and it looked fairly simple so I sketched it out.
Note that I did leave some FIXMEs where it's not clear exactly which
metrics we should be returning.
This object is available as `window.internals` (or just `internals`) and
is only accessible while running in "test mode".
This first version only has one API: gc(), which triggers a garbage
collection immediately.
In the future, we can add more APIs here to help us test parts of the
engine that are hard or impossible to reach via public web APIs.