A lot of code gen happening here. These generators are kind of
awkward to work with, and the fact that the CLDR data download
extracts over 8,000 files makes it hard to fit into the explicit
patterns GN expects of us.
We depend on GNU-specific du switch `--apparent-size`. Busybox has this
implemented, but as `-b` instead.
Another part of the build system uses `cp --preserve=timestamps`. This
can be replaced by `rsync -t`, and rsync is already used through the
file.
Thanks to those changes, Serenity can be built on a Busybox system,
without GNU coreutils.
This includes a few new options to the .clang-format configuration file
to A) adhere to option changes within clang-format 16 (namely the option
AlignTrailingComments), and B) enforce existing style guide rules with
new clang-format rules.
The main missing features are rootMargin, proper nested browsing
context support and content clip/clip-path support.
This makes images appear on some sites, such as YouTube and
howstuffworks.com.
Using the cross-page links, we can generate a directed graph showing the
topology of which pages refer to other pages. This is not just for fun:
the links show how often a page is linked (since links are not
deduplicated on purpose), which pairs of pages only have links in one
direction (where a link in the other direction may be useful), which
groups of closely-interlinked pages exist, and which pages have few or
no links to other pages.
The EXTRA_MARKDOWN_CHECK_ARGS argument to the check-markdown script can
be used to inject the -g flag for generating the graph on all manpages.
Apart from the class used audio fuzzers have identical behavior: Create
a memory stream from the fuzzer input and pass this to the loader, then
try to load audio until an error occurs. Since the loader plugins need
to have the same static create() function anyways for LibAudio itself,
we can unify the fuzzer implementations and reduce code duplication.
This utility will learn tricks such as extracting images from PDFs and
dumping tables from PDFs so that we can create code from specs.
It also allows testing LibPDF things in lagom, and allows testing
reading large amounts of PDFs using a shell script.
This was missed in 02b74e5a70
We need to disable consteval in AK::String as well as AK::StringView,
and we need to disable it when building both the tools build and the
fuzzer build.
This removes a lot of duplicated stream creation code from the plugins,
and also simplifies the way that the appropriate plugin is found. This
mirrors the ImageDecoderPlugin design and necessitates new sniffing
methods on the loaders.
Once LibC is installed to the sysroot and its conflicts with libc++
are resolved, including LibC headers in such a way will cause errors
with a modern LLVM-based toolchain.
This is needed to avoid including LibC headers in Lagom builds.
Unfortunately, we cannot rely on the build machine to provide a
fully POSIX-compatible ELF header for Lagom builds, so we have to
use our own.
The JS::VM now owns the one Bytecode::Interpreter. We no longer have
multiple bytecode interpreters, and there is no concept of a "current"
bytecode interpreter.
If you ask for VM::bytecode_interpreter_if_exists(), it will return null
if we're not running the program in "bytecode enabled" mode.
If you ask for VM::bytecode_interpreter(), it will return a bytecode
interpreter in all modes. This is used for situations where even the AST
interpreter switches to bytecode mode (generators, etc.)
This was meant to be a temporary unit testuntil we could run test-js
in bytecode mode. This has been possible for a long time now, so let's
remove the unnecessary extra program.
GCC's build fails in `libisl`'s configure step if `CC` is set to
Homebrew Clang with the message "Link Time Optimisation is not
supported". This is likely due to the fact that it tries to use ranlib
from Xcode, which is not compatible with the newer LLVM version's
bitcode format.
The toolchain build runs after `pick_host_compiler` is called, which
selects Homebrew Clang if the installed Xcode version is too old. We
need to unset `CC` and `CXX` for the toolchain build to sidestep the
issue.
This reduced the runtime of `lint-ports` from 72s down to 0.5s on
my computer (a reduction of ~99.2%)! While it may not be as
accurate as running `package.sh showproperty` it makes using
`precommit` while editing ports much nicer!
Don't try to implement this AO in bytecode. Instead, the bytecode
Interpreter class now has a run() API with the same inputs as the AST
interpreter. It sets up the necessary environments etc, including
invoking the GlobalDeclarationInstantiation AO.
This creates (and installs upon WebContent startup) a platform plugin to
play audio data.
On Serenity, we use AudioServer to play audio over IPC. Unfortunately,
AudioServer is currently coupled with Serenity's audio devices, and thus
cannot be used in Ladybird on Lagom. Instead, we use a Qt audio device
to play the audio, which requires the Qt multimedia package.
While we use Qt to play the audio, note that we can still use LibAudio
to decode the audio data and retrieve samples - we simply send Qt the
raw PCM signals.
This does a few things:
- The decoder uses a 32- or 64-bit integer as a reservoir of the data
being decoded, rather than one single byte as it was previously.
- `read_bool()` only refills the reservoir (value) when the size drops
below one byte. Previously, it would read out a bit-sized range from
the data to completely refill the 8-bit value, doing much more work
than necessary for each individual read.
- VP9-specific code for reading the marker bit was moved to its own
function in Context.h.
- A debug flag `VPX_DEBUG` was added to optionally enable checking of
the final bits in a VPX ranged arithmetic decode and ensure that it
contains all zeroes. These zeroes are a bitstream requirement for
VP9, and are also present for all our lossy WebP test inputs
currently. This can be useful to test whether all the data present in
the range has been consumed.
A lot of the size of this diff comes from the removal of error handling
from all the range decoder reads in LibVideo/VP9 and LibGfx/WebP (VP8),
since it is now checked only at the end of the range.
In a benchmark decoding `Tests/LibGfx/test-inputs/4.webp`, decode times
are improved by about 22.8%, reducing average runtime from 35.5ms±1.1ms
down to 27.4±1.1ms.
This should cause no behavioral changes.
On macOS, CMake incorrectly tries to add and/or remove rpaths from files
that it has already processed when it performs installation. Setting the
rpaths during the build process ensures that they are only set once, and
as a bonus, makes installation slightly more performant.
Fixes#10055.
This broke in c2e24a2fa1 where the boot
drive was removed from `SERENITY_MACHINE`. We now add the boot drive to
the common Qemu arguments, so it gets included in the aarch64 run
configuration as well.
The PNP IDs data file was recently updated with an accidental duplicate
entry (HONOR Device Co., Ltd.). Rather than breaking everyone's build,
let's just ignore duplicates.
Generated iterator prototypes already have the IteratorPrototype as
their prototype, but we were incorrectly hijacking them and rerouting
to ObjectPrototype.
Regressed in cfe663435e.
If a local include does not point to a file in the repository, it should
be a system include instead. This is now checked on every commit.
While this does introduce significant overhead in terms of percentage,
I think that an additional 10ms on huge commits (or less on smaller
commits) are acceptable:
hyperfine -w1 './Meta/check-style.py AK/*.h AK/*.cpp' # Before
Benchmark 1: ./Meta/check-style.py AK/*.h AK/*.cpp
Time (mean ± σ): 20.3 ms ± 0.4 ms [User: 17.1 ms, System: 3.
5 ms]
Range (min … max): 19.5 ms … 21.6 ms 128 runs
hyperfine -w1 './Meta/check-style.py AK/*.h AK/*.cpp' # After
Benchmark 1: ./Meta/check-style.py AK/*.h AK/*.cpp
Time (mean ± σ): 32.3 ms ± 0.4 ms [User: 27.9 ms, System: 4.
4 ms]
Range (min … max): 31.4 ms … 34.9 ms 91 runs
Previously this was compiled to require an object despite the IDL file
specifying 'optional'.
This commit makes IDLGenerator respect this modifier, and fixes the only
affected instance.
This partially implements CSS-Animations-1 (though there are references
to CSS-Animations-2).
Current limitations:
- Multi-selector keyframes are not supported.
- Most animation properties are ignored.
- Timing functions are not applied.
- Non-absolute values are not interpolated unless the target is also of
the same non-absolute type (e.g. 10% -> 25%, but not 10% -> 20px).
- The JavaScript interface is left as an exercise for the next poor soul
looking at this code.
With those said, this commit implements:
- Interpolation for most common types
- Proper keyframe resolution (including the synthetic from-keyframe
containing the initial state)
- Properly driven animations, and proper style invalidation
Co-Authored-By: Andreas Kling <kling@serenityos.org>
This will make it a lot easier to understand what went wrong, especially
when the failure occurs on CI but not at home.
And of course, use LibDiff to generate the diff! :^)
It does not make sense to test known-working code that is deprecated and
in the process of being removed. Also, this test becomes too cumbersome
to write without using read_all or line iteration in some form, and
migrating the test is just silly.
That's what this class really is; in fact that's what the first line of
the comment says it is.
This commit does not rename the main files, since those will contain
other time-related classes in a little bit.
There have been multiple reports of Xcode 14.0 (based on upstream LLVM
14) segfaulting when compiling `LibCore/Process.cpp`. Let's require
Xcode 14.3, which is a known good version based on LLVM 15.
Note that Xcode 14.3 requires macOS Ventura, so users of Monterey or
older are expected to get Homebrew Clang instead.
Homebrew Clang 13 also suffers from the same crash. Although I have not
tested on Linux, the backtrace points to the middle-end, so x86_64 is
also likely to be affected. LLVM 14 was released 14 months ago, so it's
not an unreasonable requirement.
It's not safe to allocate from the GC heap while in the constructor of a
GC heap cell. (Because if this ends up triggering a collection, we may
end up trying to call through an uninitialized vtable).
This was already done safely in the initialize() virtual in much of
LibJS and LibWeb. This patch moves the logic for prototypes, mixins,
and CSSStyleDeclaration as well.
Fixes a long-standing GC crash that was pretty easy to reproduce by
refreshing https://vercel.com/
This completion only works if you have lagom already built in some
capacity, since it scans the build directory tree for binaries, removing
known false positives. However, that is both more accurate than asking
ninja for the targets and filtering those, and it also makes it
independent of the build system used.
This is very convenient for anyone like me who regularly runs the Clang
toolchain. The toolchain is not completed for Lagom and the
toolchain-independent help command.
This in turn enables `./Meta/serenity.sh test aarch64` and the CI
scripts to work with the AArch64 port.
As the RPi doesn't have a debugcon-like device, we create two serial
devices. The system console, UART0 is redirected to `debug.log`, while
UART1 is made available to the userspace and is used as the stdout for
the test runner script.
We are not yet able to run the full test suite, as the kernel panics due
to some unimplemented features.
Note that Qemu `master` or our patched Qemu build is required for
`SystemServer` to recognize the `system_mode=self-test` parameter.
Newer versions of QEMU prevent the user from running a GL-rendered
display while a SPICE display is active due to incompatibilities.
Since there is no way to disable QEMUs (apparently implicit) SPICE
display, make sure that we only enable SPICE support if the user
requested running with SPICE specifically. In this case, QEMU picks the
default SPICE client instead of rendering a display using whatever our
default on that platform would be.
We already install C++ source files to allow debugging applications
in HackStudio.
Installing GML files can make editing application widgets a bit faster
and easier, as you no longer need to copy files to the system. :^)
This little program allows us to take the NetworkSettings app away
from being an elevated GUI app.
It receives a JsonObject on STDIN and writes it to the global
Network configuration file.
If the write was successfull it will apply the changes.
We now load SVG icons (via the Qt resource system) and render them into
a QIcon (with normal and disabled variants) using system colors.
We also re-render them if the system color theme changes.
This instantly makes Ladybird look less foreign on my Linux box.
I drew the icons myself, and they could definitely be more optimized,
but this was my first time using Inkscape. :^)
GCC 13 was released on 2023-04-26. This commit fixes Lagom build errors
when using an updated host toolchain:
- Adds a workaround for a bug in constraint handling, which made LibJS
fail to compile: https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=109683
- Silences the new `-Wdangling-reference` diagnostic globally. It
produces multiple false positives with no clear way to silence them
without `#pragmas`.
- Silences `-Wself-move` in `RefPtr` tests as GCC 13 adds this
previously Clang-exclusive warning.
This ensures that all visit_edges implementations include a call to
Base::visit_edges. In particular, this gives three nice benefits:
- The call can't be forgotten (the main benefit, of course).
- All of the calls look the same. In other words, always use "Base"
instead of the actual concrete class.
- Ensure the object has a call to JS_CELL or JS_OBJECT in the
definition. Otherwise, Base will not be defined and the call will
not compile.
Some hardware/software configurations crash KVM as soon as we try to
start Serenity. The exact cause is currently unknown, so just fully
revert it for now.
This reverts commit 897c4e5145.
The new baked image is a Prekernel and a Kernel baked together now, so
essentially we no longer need to pass the Prekernel as -kernel and the
actual kernel image as -initrd to QEMU, leaving the option to pass an
actual initrd or initramfs module later on with multiboot.
That pattern seems to show up a lot in code written by people that
aren't intimately familiar with the lifetime model of Error and Strings.
This commit makes the compiler detect it and present a more helpful
diagnostic than "garbage string at runtime".
This class can be used to run a task in another thread, and allows the
caller to wait for the task to complete to retrieve any error that may
have occurred.
Currently, it doesn't support functions returning a value on success,
but with some template magic that should be possible. :^)
For the most part no behavior change, except that we now pass
-Wno-implicit-const-int-float-conversion and -Wno-literal-suffix
only to clang and gcc each in both lagom and serenity builds,
while we previously passed them to both in lagom builds (and
passed them to one each in serenity builds). The former is
a clang flag, the latter a gcc flag, but since we also use
-Wno-unknown-warning-option it doesn't really matter.