These operations should still apply even if they are off screen, because
they affect painting of things outside of their bounding rectangles.
This commit makes us always apply these, regardless of if they are in
the visible region. However, if they are outside that region, we
replace them with simple clip-rect commands, which have the same
effect (not painting anything) but are cheaper than computing a full
mask bitmap.
The insertion steps for iframes were following an old version of the
spec, where it was checking if the iframe was "in a document tree",
which doesn't cross shadow root boundaries. The spec has since been
updated to check the shadow including root instead.
This is now needed for Cloudflare Turnstile iframe widgets to appear,
as they are now inserted into a shadow root.
Previously, the inclusive descendant, which is the node that
for_each_shadow_including_inclusive_descendant was called on, would not
have it's shadow root traversed if it had one.
This is because the shadow root traversal was in the `for` loop, which
begins with the node's first child. The fix here is to move the shadow
root traversal outside of the loop, and check if the current node is an
element instead.
This was preventing https://ubereats.com/ from fully loading, because
they are attempting to overwrite setItem. They seem to be trying to add
error logging to setItem if it throws, as all they do is add a
try/catch block that emits an error log to their monitoring service if
it throws.
However, because Storage is a legacy platform object with a named
property setter (setItem), it will call setItem with the stringified
version of the function. This is actually expected as per the spec,
Firefox (Gecko) and Epiphany (WebKit) does this too, but Chromium does
not as it actually overwrites the function with the new function and
does not store the stringified function.
The problem is that we had the LegacyOverrideBuiltIns flag accidentally
set, so it would return the stored string instead of the built-in
function (hence the name), then it would try and call it and throw a
"not a function" error. This prevented their JS from going any further.
This fix allows their UI to fully load and be fully interactive, though
it is quite slow at the moment!
compute_inset() was incorrectly retrieving the containing block size
because containing_block() is unaware of grid areas that form a
containing block for grid items but do not exist in the layout tree.
With this change, we explicitly pass the containing block into
compute_inset(), allowing it to correctly provide the containing block
sizes for grid items.
If available space is definite it should always match the size of the
containing block. Therefore, there is no need to do containing block
node lookup.
The example shows how to write a test that depends on custom HTTP
headers in the response. This will be useful for testing browser JS
that depends on how Ladybird processes response headers, eg CORS
headers like Access-Control-Allow-Origin and others.
This allows us to simulate HTTP responses from Browser JS tests.
Instead of using hacks like data URLs to "load" external data,
we can now generate an actual HTTP response that contains
arbitrary headers, body, and has a defined response delay.
Gap values are now represented by Variant<LengthPercentage, NormalGap>.
NormalGap is just an empty struct to represent the `normal` keyword.
This fixes a long-standing issue where we were incorrectly storing gaps
as CSS::Size, which led to us allowing a bunch of invalid gap values.
This also adds support for `xyz` as it defaults to `xyz-d65`. We now
pass the following WPT tests:
- css/css-color/xyz-001.html
- css/css-color/xyz-002.html
- css/css-color/xyz-004.html
- css/css-color/xyz-d65-001.html
- css/css-color/xyz-d65-002.html
- css/css-color/xyz-d65-004.html
If a & simple selector is on a style rule with no parent style rule,
then it behaves like :scope - but notably, :scope provides 1
specificity in the class category, but & is supposed to provide 0.
To solve this, we stop replacing it directly, and just handle the & like
any other simple selector. We know that if the selector engine ever
sees one, it's equivalent to :scope, because the nested ones will have
been replaced with :is() before that point.
This gets us one more subtest pass. :^)
When we first parse a nested CSSStyleRule's selectors, we treat them as
relative selectors and then patch them up with an `&` as needed.
However, we weren't doing this when assigning the `cssText` attribute.
So, let's do that!
This gives us a couple of subtest passes. :^)
This change fixes accessible-name computation for:
- an element that has empty text content but that also has a title
attribute (“tooltip”) with a non-empty value
- an img element whose alt attribute is the empty string but that also
has a “title” attribute with a non-empty value
Otherwise, without this change, the accessible name unexpectedly isn’t
computed correctly for those cases.
A few are skipped for now:
- A few ref tests fail
- Crash tests are not supported by our runner and time out
- top-level-is-scope.html crashes and needs further investigation
If a rule gets its caches cleared because it's moved in the OM, then its
child rules' caches are likely invalid and need clearing too.
Assuming that caches only point "upwards", this will correctly clear
them all. For the time being that will be true.
We can't invalidate after the removal has taken effect, since that means
invalidation won't be able to find potentially affected siblings and
ancestors by traversing from the invalidation target.
This causes 36 new subtests to pass locally. :^)
Unfortunately at least one of these is flaky when it's able to load the
font file, apparently because we don't wait for the font and its
stylesheet to actually load before the tests run.
Eventually we want to stop skipping these, so it's helpful to know why
they were skipped in the first place. :^)
I've grouped them together by reason, so the order has changed a little.
For some of these the reason isn't clear.
Range API uses UTF-16 code units to represent offsets, so replace_data()
needs to use it instead of bytes count while calculating new offsets.
Fixes incorrectly thrown exception when non-latin string is passed into
replace_data().
This is enough for a basic shadow realm to work :^)
There is more that we still need to implement here such as module
loading and fixing up the global object, but this is enough to get some
basic usage working.
This object represents the global object for a shadow realm. The IDL
generator will need to be adjusted to the '[Global]' extended attribute
and no '[Exposed]' field (the change in the test is not correct, as I
understand it), but this should be enough to get us started on
shadow realms.
We were neglecting to check the namespace when looking for a specific
type of element on the stack of open elements in many cases.
This caused us to confuse HTML and SVG elements.
Element::tag_name() returns an uppercased string for HTML elements,
which is usually not what's expected by the parser algorithms that look
at tag names.
Letter spacing is applied during text shaping and `shape_text` is used
in places other `InlineLevelIterator` so way may have more work to do,
however this is a good start :^).
If the attribute value is the empty string `(lang="")`, the language
is set to unknown. `lang` attribute higher up in the document tree
will no longer be applied to the content of that element.
We guarded one step against a null navigable, but the very next step
also needs to be protected. Let's just abort early instead. This was
caught by the following imported WPT test:
html/dom/elements/the-innertext-and-outertext-properties/innertext-setter.html
This test adds a <frame> element and immediately removes it, but the
task to process the src attribute is already queued. Note that <iframe>
would have the same issue, but this test does not include them.
NavigableContainer is our home grown concept which already contains the
AOs needed for frame and iframe elements. This patch simply aligns our
HTMLFrameElement implementation with this class.
A couple of notes:
1. The <script> in the <head> element is intentional. The <frameset>
element effectively takes the place of the <body> element, and we
cannot add a <script> to a <frameset> element.
2. We don't render <frameset> or <frame> at all. Rendering is defined
in the following spec:
https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/rendering.html#frames-and-framesets
3. If you load the test page in your browser, you won't see anything,
regardless of (2). Our test infra adds a <pre> element to the "body"
element (which is the <frameset> element here). Such children will
never be rendered. In the future, we could come up with something
better for our test infra to do, but this isn't important anyways
for this test - we can still grab the <pre> element's innerText.
This fixes structured serialization of DataView. It was expected
to be uniform with TypedArray, which returns u32 for byte_offset().
This was covered by a number of WPT infrastructure tests, which this
commit also imports.
Previously, callers were passing the size in bytes, but the method
expected bits. This caused a crash in LibCrypto when verifying the key
size later on.
Also make the naming of local variables and parameters a little more
clear between the different AES algorithms :^)
It's actually possible for there to be no adjusted current node, when
the stack of open elements is empty. This was covered by one of the WPT
parsing tests.