Prior to funcref, a partial chunk of an invalid module was never needed,
but funcref allows a partially instantiated module to modify imported
tables with references to its own functions, which means we need to keep
the second module alive while that function reference is present within
the imported table.
This was tested by the spectests, but very rarely caught as our GC does
not behave particularly predictably, making it so the offending module
remains in memory just long enough to let the tests pass.
This commit makes it so all function references keep their respective
modules alive.
Remove `for_each_section_of_type` in favor of making the module's
sections defined as distinct fields. This means it is no longer possible
to have two of the same section (which is invalid in WebAssembly, for
anything other than custom sections).
The user is not required to keep the object alive, this commit makes it
so the lifetime of these functions is extended to match the Wasm module
it is imported into.
Fixes the crash in #907.
As it's not uncommon for users to drop the module instance on the floor
after having grabbed the few exports they need to hold on to.
Fixes a few UAFs that show up as "invalid" accesses to
memory/tables/etc.
This change moves WebAssembly related data that was previously globally
accessible into the `WebAssemblyCache` object and creates one of these
per global object. This ensures that WebAssembly data cannot be
accessed across realms.
This commit un-deprecates DeprecatedString, and repurposes it as a byte
string.
As the null state has already been removed, there are no other
particularly hairy blockers in repurposing this type as a byte string
(what it _really_ is).
This commit is auto-generated:
$ xs=$(ack -l \bDeprecatedString\b\|deprecated_string AK Userland \
Meta Ports Ladybird Tests Kernel)
$ perl -pie 's/\bDeprecatedString\b/ByteString/g;
s/deprecated_string/byte_string/g' $xs
$ clang-format --style=file -i \
$(git diff --name-only | grep \.cpp\|\.h)
$ gn format $(git ls-files '*.gn' '*.gni')
Instead of allocating these in a mixture of ways, we now always put
them on the malloc heap, and keep an intrusive linked list of them
that we can iterate for GC marking purposes.
These wrappers will make it much easier to do various operations on the
different ArrayBuffer-related classes in LibWeb compared to the current
solution, which is to just accept a Handle<Object> everywhere (and use
"any" in the *.idl files).
Co-Authored-By: Matthew Olsson <mattco@serenityos.org>
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.
Rather than splitting the Iterator type and its AOs into two files,
let's combine them into one file to match every other JS runtime object
that we have.
This is an editorial change in the ECMA-262 spec. See:
https://github.com/tc39/ecma262/commit/ff60140
In doing so, as the new name implies, callsites are updated to pass in
an IteratorRecord themselves, rather than an iterable value.