Attributes have a max value length of 1024. So we theoretically need to
support values in the range -${"9".repeat(1023)} to ${"9".repeat(1024)}.
These obviously do not fit in an i64, so we were previously failing to
parse the attribute.
We will now cap the parsed value to the numeric limits of an i64, after
ensuring that the attribute value is indeed a number.
Previously, attempting to get the computed value for a
grid-template-rows or grid-template-columns property would cause a crash
if the element had no associated paintable.
At least on my Linux machine using zsh, this line was interpreted as
( cd "$build_dir" || echo ... ) && exit 1
instead of the intended
cd "$build_dir" || ( echo ... && exit 1 )
...meaning that it always exited regardless of whether it found the
build dir or not. So, let's make the intended precedence explicit.
Function is defined as `round(<rounding-strategy>?, A, B?)`
With this change resolved type is `typeof(resolve(A))`, instead of
`typeof(A)`.
For example `round(up, 20%, 1px)` with 200px percentage basis is now
correctly resolved in 40px instead of 40%.
Progress on https://www.notion.so/ landing page.
The `calculate_inner_width()` and `calculate_inner_height()` resolve
percentage paddings using the width returned by
`containing_block_width_for()`. However, this function does not account
for grids where the containing block is defined by the grid area to
which an item belongs.
This change fixes the issue by modifying `calculate_inner_width()` and
`calculate_inner_height()` to use the already resolved paddings from the
layout state. Corresponding changes ensure that paddings are resolved
and saved in the state before box-sizing is handled.
As a side effect, this change also improves abspos layout for BFC where
now paddings are resolved using padding box of containing block instead
of content box of containing block.
Fixes yet another case of GFC bug, where Node::containing_block() should
not be used for grid items, because their containing block is grid area
which is not represented in layout tree.
We currently implement the official cookie RFC, which was last updated
in 2011. Unfortunately, web reality conflicts with the RFC. For example,
all of the major browsers allow nameless cookies, which the RFC forbids.
There has since been draft versions of the RFC published to address such
issues. This patch implements the latest draft.
Major differences include:
* Allowing nameless or valueless (but not both) cookies
* Formal cookie length limits
* Formal same-site rules (not fully implemented here)
* More rules around cookie domains
Although the parameter is named "available size," it is always supposed
to represent the containing block size whenever it has a definite value.
Therefore, it is possible to simply use this value instead of performing
a containing block lookup.
This change actually improves correctness for grid items whose
containing block is defined by the grid area, as
`Node::containing_block()` does not account for this.
Change try_compute_width() to check whether min-width/max-width or width
is auto instead of always using `computed_values.width()`.
`grid/min-max-content.html` test is affected but it's progression.
Before this change, a formatting context was responsible for layout of
absolutely positioned boxes whose FC root box was their parent (either
directly or indirectly). This only worked correctly when the containing
block of the absolutely positioned child did not escape the FC root.
This is because the width and height of an absolutely positioned box are
resolved based on the size of its containing block, so we needed to
ensure that the containing block's layout was completed before laying
out an absolutely positioned box.
With this change, the layout of absolutely positioned boxes is delayed
until the FC responsible for the containing block's layout is complete.
This has affected the way we calculate the static position. It is no
longer possible to ask the FC for a box's static position, as this FC's
state might be gone by the time the layout for absolutely positioned
elements occurs. Instead, the "static position rectangle" (a concept
from the spec) is saved in the layout state, along with information on
how to align the box within this rectangle when its width and height are
resolved.
This change ensures that the value sanitization algorithm is run and
the text cursor is set to the correct position when the type attribute
of an input is changed.
If grid-template-rows or grid-template-columns queried for a box that is
not a grid container, the result should be computed value instead of
null.
Fixes crashing in inspector.
Previously, there was a bug in the specification that would cause an
assertion failure, due to the abort event being fired before all
dependent signals were aborted.
That's awkward, but getComputedStyle needs to return used track values
for gridTemplateColumns and gridTemplateRows properties. This change
implements it by saving style values with used values into layout state,
so it could be assigned to paintables during LayoutState::commit() and
later accessed by style_value_for_property().
I haven't seen it used in the wild, but WPT grid tests extensively use
it. For example this change helps to go from 0/10 to 8/10 on this test:
https://wpt.live/css/css-grid/layout-algorithm/grid-fit-content-percentage.html
Fixes implementation of the following line from the spec:
"However, limit the growth of any fit-content() tracks by their
fit-content() argument."
Now we correctly apply a limit to increased growth limit rather than to
the planned increase.
Change in "Tests/LibWeb/Layout/input/grid/fit-content-2.html" is a
progression and "Item as wide as the content." is actually as wide as a
content.
This change enables using the rebaseline-libweb-test script with Debug
and Sanitizer builds — and allows specifying which build to use when
using rebaseline-libweb-test to generate new test-expectations files.
The mechanism used is to check the BUILD_PRESET environment variable.
Otherwise, without this change, there’s no way to use the
rebaseline-libweb-test script with Debug and Sanitizer builds — except
by manually hacking the script locally to hardcode a directory name.
Instead of switching on the PropertyID and doing a boatload of
comparisons, we reorder the PropertyID enum so that all inherited
properties are in two contiguous ranges (one for shorthands,
one for longhands).
This replaces the switch statement with two simple range checks.
Note that the property order change is observable via
window.getComputedStyle(), but the order of those properties is
implementation defined anyway.
Removes a 1.5% item from the profile when loading https://hemnet.se/
Before this change, we were cascading custom properties for each layer,
and then replacing any previously cascaded properties for the element
with only the set from this latest layer.
The patch fixes the issue by making each pass of the custom property
cascade add to the same set, and then finally assigning that set of
properties to the element.
This change adds green and red pass/fail emoji indicators to an in-tree
test — to make it easier to manually scan through the test results and
quickly see which cases are passing, and which are failing.
Depending on usage, `@layer` has two forms, with two different CSSOM
types. One simply lists layer names and the other defines a layer with
its contained rules.
This change should move us forward toward emoji support, as we are no
longer limited by our own OpenType implementation, which was failing
to parse the TrueType Collection format used to store emoji fonts
(at least on macOS).
When deciding if the grid containers min size should be limited by a
max size. Check for a max height or width depending on the dimension,
instead of just always checking for a max width.
Even though the underlying time zone is already cached by LibUnicode, JS
performs additional expensive lookups with that time zone. There's no
need to do those lookups again until the system time zone has changed.
Some callers (LibJS) will want to control the size of the output buffer,
to decode up to a maximum length. They will also want to receive partial
results in the case of an error. This patch adds a method to provide
those capabilities, and makes the existing implementation use it.
Use offset from ScrollFrame which is an actual value a box is shifted by
while painting.
Also change `update_paint_and_hit_testing_properties_if_needed()` to
refresh scroll frames state, because `getBoundingClientRect()` now
depends on them.
Fixes wrong file tree sidebar location and excessive layout
invalidations caused by some miscalculation on JS-side when wrong
bounding client rect is provided on Github PR pages like
https://github.com/LadybirdBrowser/ladybird/pull/1232/files
Scroll offset of body does not affect position of fixed elements, so
nearest scrollable lookup should early return from ancestor scrollable
lookup loop once "position: fixed" box is encountered.
Fixes regression introduced in 866608532a
Otherwise, it looks a bit awkward where the cursor position does not
update while the selection is elsewhere.
Note that this requires passing along the raw selection positions from
`set the selection range` to the elements. Otherwise, consider what will
happen if we set the selection start and end to the same value. By going
through the API accessor, we hit the case where the start and end are
the same value, and return the document cursor position. This would mean
the cursor position would not be updated.
The test changes here more closely match what Firefox produces now. It
is not a 100% match; the `select event fired` test case isn't right. The
problem is the event fires for the input element, but we most recently
focused the textarea element. Thus, when we retrieve the selection from
the input element, we return the document's cursor position, which is
actually in the textarea element. The fix will ultimately be to fully
implement the following:
https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/form-control-infrastructure.html#concept-textarea/input-cursor
That is, each input / textarea element should separately track its own
text cursor position.
Append text chunks to either the start or end of the text fragment,
depending on the text direction. The direction is determined by what
script its code points are from.
Implements:
"If the product of the hypothetical fr size and a flexible track’s flex
factor is less than the track’s base size, restart this algorithm
treating all such tracks as inflexible."
Fixes https://github.com/LadybirdBrowser/ladybird/issues/1211
Sticky positioning is implemented by modifying the algorithm for
assigning and refreshing scroll frames. Now, elements with
"position: sticky" are assigned their own scroll frame, and their
position is refreshed independently from regular scroll boxes.
Refreshing the scroll offsets for sticky boxes does not require display
list invalidation.
A separate hash map is used for the scroll frames of sticky boxes. This
is necessary because a single paintable box can have two scroll frames
if it 1) has "position: sticky" and 2) contains scrollable overflow.
According to https://www.w3.org/TR/css-grid-2/#placement-shorthands
when setting the 'grid-row' and 'grid-column' shorthand property to a
single <custom-ident> value, both 'grid-row-start'/'grid-column-start'
and 'grid-row-end'/'grid-column-end' should be set to that
<custom_ident>.
And add tests! This implementation closely follows the current C++
implementation, replacing macros and gotos with a slightly more
complex state machine. It's very possible that an async version that
yields tokens on "emit" would be even simpler, but let's get this
one working first :).
In particular, there was an assertion failure due to the temporary
parser document's "about base URL" being empty when trying to "parse a
URL" during parsing.
We fix this by copying the context element's document's about base URL
to the temporary parsing document while parsing a fragment.
This fixes a crash when loading search results on https://amazon.com/
At the same time, simplify CMakeLists magic for libraries that want to
include Swift code in the library. The Lib-less name of the library is
now always the module name for the library with any Swift additions,
extensions, etc. All vfs overlays now live in a common location to make
finding them easier from CMake functions. A new pattern is needed for
the Lib-less modules to re-export their Cxx counterparts.
For both types of elements, `.selectionStart`, `.selectionEnd`,
`.selectionDirection`, `.setSelectionRange()`, `.select()` and the
`select` event are now implemented.
Before this change, :hover wouldn't match anything outside the shadow
boundary when hovering elements inside a shadow tree. This was most
noticeable when hovering the text inside an input element and hover
styles disappearing from the hosting input element itself.
It's expensive to determine the system time zone from disk each time it
is requested. This makes LibUnicode cache the result, and provides an
API to clear that cache. This will let us set up a monitor to watch for
system time zone changes in platform-dependent ways.
When asked to monitor a file (not a directory), we often need to instead
monitor the parent directory to receive FS events. For example, when a
symbolic link is deleted/created, we don't receive any events unless we
are watching the parent.
We *could* even skip creating a paintable for hidden nodes, but that
means that dynamic updates to the CSS visibility property would require
mutating the paint tree, so let's keep it simple for now.
We were incorrectly looking at the CSS computed values for width and
height to determine the natural size of <svg> root elements.
This meant that elements where the attribute and computed value were
different values would end up with incorrect natural size.
The IDL constructor has to take separate steps than a DataTransfer that
is internally constructed. Notably, an IDL-created object has its own
drag data store, and that store is placed in a read-write mode.
We don't actually generate any such events ourselves. But Google Lens
will create one with the DataTransfer attribute set to that of any drop
event we send it.
Previously, a crash would occur in the if `CSSPixelFraction` was given a
denominator value less than the resolution of `CSSPixels` (1/64).
We now divide both parts of the ratio by the denominator in this case.
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.
When determining the intrinsic cross size contribution of a flex item
with a preferred aspect ratio, we have to account for any min/max
constraints in the main axis.
Capture the incoming reason argument to
transform_stream_default_source_cancel_algorithm() on the
on_fulfilled_callback() of WebIDL::react_to_promise() on step 7.
Instead of CSSColorValue holding a Gfx::Color, make it an abstract class
with subclasses for each different color function, to match the Typed-OM
spec. This means moving the color calculations from the parsing code to
the `to_color()` method on the style value.
This lets us have calc() inside a color function, instead of having to
fully resolve the color at parse time. The canvas fillStyle tests have
been updated to reflect this.
The other test change is Screenshot/css-color-functions.html: previously
we produced slightly different colors for an alpha of 0.5 and one of
50%, and this incorrect behavior was baked into the test. So now it's
more correct. :^)
Always assuming unpremultiplied color data only worked for PNGs (which
are specced as unpremultiplied) and bitmaps with alpha set to 100%.
Properly propagate the Gfx::AlphaType of a bitmap to Skia.
The reference tests were updated to reflect this change, but visually
it's practically impossible to see the difference. A new test was added
to clearly expose this issue.
Fixes#1104
Instead, it could be applied directly as a clip path in Skia painter.
As a side bonus, we get rid of some DeprecatedPath and
AntiAliasingPainter usage.
This allows us to get identical metrics on macOS and Linux. Without
this, Skia will use CoreText on macOS and give us slightly different
text metrics. That causes layout tests to be slightly different on
different platforms, which is a huge headache. So let's not do that.
You can now launch Ladybird and headless-browser with --force-fontconfig
to load fonts through fontconfig. Tests run in this mode by default.
SVG and and CSS border rendering now sits on top of SkPath instead of
the old Gfx::DeprecatedPath.
Due to an imperceptible (255, 255, 255) vs (255, 254, 255) color diff
in one ref test, I changed that test to not depend on border rendering
for a positive result, since that was incidental.
We should only block the escape key from being sent to the web page if
the CloseWatcherManager actually closed something.
We use the escape key in the Inspector to cancel editing a DOM field.
This unconditional early return broke this feature.
The drag-and-drop processing model allows for users to drag around
either elements within the DOM or objects completely outside the DOM.
This drag event can either end without action (via cancellation or user
input), or in a drop event, where the dragged object is dropped onto
another element within the DOM.
The processing model is rather large. This implements enough of it to
allow the UI process to specifically handle dragging objects outside of
the DOM onto the DOM. For example, dragging an image from the OS file
manager onto a file-upload input element. This does not implement the
ability to drag DOM elements.
Just to sanity check that we can import the library, and that it at
least interprets the generated enumeration values properly, let's
do some simple testing of the swift integration.
The values of attribute selectors are now compared case insensitively
by default if the attribute's document is not a HTML document, or the
element is not in the HTML namespace.
This requires pulling in some of the STL, but the result is that our
iterator is now STL Approved ™️ and our containers can be
auto-conformed to Swift protocols.
For a long time, we've used two terms, inconsistently:
- "Identifier" is a spec term, but refers to a sequence of alphanumeric
characters, which may or may not be a keyword. (Keywords are a
subset of all identifiers.)
- "ValueID" is entirely non-spec, and is directly called a "keyword" in
the CSS specs.
So to avoid confusion as much as possible, let's align with the spec
terminology. I've attempted to change variable names as well, but
obviously we use Keywords in a lot of places in LibWeb and so I may
have missed some.
One exception is that I've not renamed "valid-identifiers" in
Properties.json... I'd like to combine that and the "valid-types" array
together eventually, so there's no benefit to doing an extra rename
now.
The `start` and `end` value set the text alignment based on the computed
value of `direction`. The default value of `text-align` is now `start`
instead of `left`.
If given, the spec expects the input URL to be manipulated on the fly
as it is being parsed, and may ignore any errors thrown by the URL
parser.
Previously, we were not exactly following the specs assumption here
which resulted in us needed to make awkward copies of the URL in these
situations.
For most cases this is not an issue. But it does cause problems for
situations where URL parsing would result in a failure (which is
ignored by the caller), and the URL is _partially_ updated
while parsing.
Such a situation can occur when setting the host of an href alongside a
port number which is not valid. It is expected that this situation will
result in the host being updates - but not the port number.
Adjust the URL parser API so that it mutates the URL given (if any), and
adjust the callers accordingly.
Fixes two tests on https://wpt.live/url/url-setters-a-area.window.html
This isn't an issue now because this is only invoked from a macro that
is expanded within this file. But in an upcoming commit, it will be
invoked from a helper function in the Test namespace. At that point, the
compiler complains about the comparitor not being found (and helpfully
indicates we should move this one to the AK namespace to allow ADL to
succeed).
Otherwise, the following code would not compile:
constexpr Array<int, 3> array { 4, 5, 6 };
Vector<int> vector { 4, 5, 6 };
if (array == vector.span()) { }
We do such comparisons in tests quite a bit. But it currently doesn't
become an issue because of the way EXPECT_EQ copies its input parameters
to non-const locals. In a future patch, that copying will be removed,
and the compiler would otherwise complain about not finding a suitable
comparison operator.
Because the type returned by to_string is a String, _not_ an
Optional<String>, the following code:
if (serialized_query.is_empty())
serialized_query = {};
Was achieving nothing at all! Make sure that the type is an
Optional<String> so that we're not just setting an empty string to an
empty string.
Quick sort is not a stable sort. This meant we had a subtle issue
implementing this portion of the spec comment:
> The relative order between name-value pairs with equal names must
> be preserved.
Switch to insertion sort which is a stable sort, and properly handles
keys which are the same.
Fixes 8 tests on https://wpt.live/url/urlsearchparams-sort.any.html
This fixes a crash using URLSearchParams when provided a percent encoded
string which does not percent decode to valid UTF-8.
Fixes a crash running https://wpt.live/url/urlencoded-parser.any.html
While introducing clip and scroll frame trees, I made a mistake by
assuming that the paintable tree includes boxes from nested navigables.
Therefore, this comment in the code was incorrect, and clip/scroll
frames were simply not assigned for iframes:
// NOTE: We only need to refresh the scroll state for traversables
// because they are responsible for tracking the state of all
// nested navigables.
As a result, anything with "overflow: scroll" is currently not
scrollable inside an iframe
This change fixes that by ensuring clip and scroll frames are assigned
and refreshed for each navigable. To achieve this, I had to modify the
display list building process to record a separate display list for each
navigable. This is necessary because scroll frame ids are local to a
navigable, making it impossible to call
`DisplayList::apply_scroll_offsets()` on a display list that contains
ids from multiple navigables.
In calculating the base size of a flex item, we have a piece of ad-hoc
code that deals with an item that does have an instrinsic aspect ratio,
but not a cross size to resolve that ratio against. In determining the
actual flex item size however, we also take into account the minimum
content width and height, which assumes the box' intrinsic width or
height when available. This would break having an image as a flex item,
which gets stretched to its maximum size within the flex container
instead of the flex item being shrunk to the instrinsic size of the
image.
Fix this by only stretching flex items that do not have an instrinsic
width nor height set.
Implements the corresponding encoders, selects the appropriate one when
encoding URL search params. If an encoder for the given encoding could
not be found, fallback to utf-8.
USVString is defined in the IDL spec as:
> The USVString type corresponds to scalar value strings. Depending on
> the context, these can be treated as sequences of either 16-bit
> unsigned integer code units or scalar values.
This means we need to account for surrogate code points by using the
replacement character.
This fixes the last test in https://wpt.live/url/url-constructor.any.html
When converting a `Gfx::Bitmap` to a Skia bitmap, we cannot assume the
color data is unpremultiplied. For example, everything canvas-related
uses premultiplied color data:
https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/canvas.html#premultiplied-alpha-and-the-2d-rendering-context
We were probably assuming unpremultiplied since that is what the PNG
decoder gives us. Since we now make `Gfx::Bitmap` identify what alpha
type is being used, we can instruct Skia a bit better :^)
Update our `EdgeFlagPathRasterizer` to use premultiplied alpha instead
of unpremultiplied so we can apply alpha correctly for path masks.
This fixes the dark borders sometimes visible when SVGs are blended
with a colored background.
This also exposed an issue with our `CanvasRenderingContext2D`, which is
supposed to hold a bitmap with premultiplied alpha internally but expose
a bitmap with unpremultiplied alpha in `CanvasImageData`. Expand our C2D
test to include the alpha channel as well.
Finally, this also exposed an off-by-one issue in
`EdgeFlagPathRasterizer` which caused the last scanlines for edges to
render incorrectly. We had some reference images which included these
corruptions (they were almost unnoticeable), so update them as well.
Right now, we deviate from the CSSOM spec regarding our
CSSStyleDeclaration classes, so this is not as close to the spec as I'd
like. But it works, which means we'll be able to test pseudo-element
styling a lot more easily. :^)
Parsing last as an IPV4 number was not returning true in "ends with a
number" as the parsing of that part was overflowing. This means that the
URL is not considered to be an IPv4 address, and is treated as a valid
domain.
Helpfully, the spec also points out in a note that this step is
equivalent to simply checking that the last part ends with 0x followed
by only hex digits - which doesn't suffer from any overflow problem!
Arguably this is an editorial issue in the spec where this should be
clarified a little bit. But for now, fixing this fixes 3 sub tests in
WPT for:
https://wpt.live/url/url-constructor.any.html
Our heuristic was a bit too simplistic and would not run through the
ToASCII unicode algorithm which performs some extra validation. This
would cause invalid URLs that should fail to be parsed be mistakenly
accepted.
This fixes 8 tests in: https://wpt.live/url/url-constructor.any.html
We can't simply use the base URL as it may need to be modified in some
form. For example - for the included test, the fragment was previously
being included in the resulting URL.
This fixes 1 test on https://wpt.live/url/url-constructor.any.html
Instead of carrying the display list for a mask in each command that
might potentially be affected by "background-clip: text", this change
introduces a new AddMask command that is applied once for all
background layers within one box.
The new AddMask command includes a rectangle for the mask destination
that is translated by the corresponding scroll offset.
Fixes https://github.com/LadybirdBrowser/ladybird/issues/857
The spec didn't match how other browsers behave, and we dutifully did
what the spec said. A spec bug has been filed, so let's fix this locally
for now with a FIXME.
add_clip_rect() accepts a rectangle in viewport-relative coordinates,
so it must be translated by the enclosing scroll offset to be displayed
correctly inside a scrollable box.
There were some extra steps in there which produced wrong results for
relative file URLs.
Fixes 7 test cases in: https://wpt.live/url/url-constructor.any.html
We also need to adjust the test results in TestURL. The behaviour tested
does not match how URL is specified to work as an absolute relative is
given.
The check for:
```
if (start_index >= end_index)
return {};
```
To prevent an out of bounds when trimming the start and end of the input
of whitespace was preventing valid URLs (only having whitespace in the
input) from being parsed.
Instead, prevent start_index from ever getting above end_index in the
first place, and don't treat empty inputs as an error.
Fixes one WPT test on:
https://wpt.live/url/url-constructor.any.html
I previously believed there was no way a detached document should have
layout information, but it turns out there is a way: getComputedStyle().
So we need to account for cases where we have a layout node, but no
navigable, since that is a state we can get into at this moment.
Fixes#354
Web specs do not return through javascript percent decoded URL path
components - but we were doing this in a number of places due to the
default behaviour of URL::serialize_path.
Since percent encoded URL paths may not contain valid UTF-8 - this was
resulting in us crashing in these places.
For example - on an HTMLAnchorElement when retrieving the pathname for
the URL of:
http://ladybird.org/foo%C2%91%91
To fix this make the URL class only return the percent encoded
serialized path, matching the URL spec. When the decoded path is
required instead explicitly call URL::percent_decode.
This fixes a crash running WPT URL tests for the anchor element on:
https://wpt.live/url/a-element.html
Previously, calling `setProperty` or `removeProperty` from JS on a
CSSStyleDeclaration returned from `getComputedStyle()` would return
null. We now return a NoModificationAllowedError instead, which aligns
our implementation with the specification.
Not every value in a StyleProperties will be non-null by the time we
perform `revert`, so let's make a specialized function for reverting a
property instead of using the path that requires the value to be
non-null.
The "text-overflow" property affects text that may get clipped if it is
larger than its container and does not do any line breaks.
The ellipsis character gets added to the end and the rest of the text
gets trunctated if the property is set to "ellipsis".
This patch implements this behavior in the InlineFormattingContext. :^)
The "text-overflow" property is also added to the
getComputedStyle-print-all test.
Adds additional padding to the end-side of the scrollable overflow
rectangle as necessary to enable a scroll position that satisfies
the requirements of `place-content: end` alignment.
Overflow clipping is currently implemented as:
1. Create clip frame for each box with hidden overflow
2. Calculate clip rect for each clip frame by intersecting padding boxes
of all boxes with hidden overflow in containing block chain
3. Assign enclosing clip frame (closest clip frame in containing block
chain) to each PaintableBox
4. Apply clip rect of enclosing clip frame in Paintable::before_paint()
It breaks when any CSS transform other than simple translation is lying
between box with hidden overflow and a clipped box, because clip
rectangle will be applied when transform has already changed.
The fix is implemented by relying on the following rule:
"For elements whose layout is governed by the CSS box model, any value
other than none for the transform also causes the element to establish
a containing block for all descendants."
It means everything nested into a stacking context with CSS transform
can't escape its clip, so it's safe to apply its clip for all children.
Now that the implementation is in FormAssociatedElement, the
implementation in HTMLInputElement is effectively just a passthrough,
with some minor differences to handle small behavioural quirks between
the two (such as the difference in nullability of types).
Moves paint_table_borders() call into PaintableBox::paint() to make
scroll offset and clip rectangle of enclosing scrollable be applied
in ::before_paint().
Pseudo-elements' style is only computed while building the layout tree.
This meant that previously, they would not have their style recomputed
in some cases. (Such as when :hover is applied to an ancestor.)
Now, when recomputing an element's style, we also return a full
invalidation if one or more pseudo-elements would exist either before or
after style recomputation.
This heuristic produces some false positives, but no false negatives.
Because pseudo-elements' style is computed during layout building, any
computation done here is then thrown away. So this approach minimises
the amount of wasted style computation. Plus it's simple, until we have
data on what approach would be faster.
This fixes the Acid2 nose becoming blue when the .nose div is hovered.
In the HTML parser spec, there are 2 instances of the following text:
add the attribute and its corresponding value to that element
The "add the attribute" text does not have a corresponding spec link to
actually specify what to do. We currently use `set_attribute`, which can
throw an exception if the attribute name contains an invalid character
(such as '<'). Instead, switch to `append_attribute`, which allows such
attribute names. This behavior matches Firefox.
Note we cannot yet make the unclosed-html-element.html test match the
expectations of the unclosed-body-element.html due to another bug that
would prevent checking if the expected element has the right attribute.
That will be fixed in an upcoming commit.
This code previously only allocated enough space in
m_col_elements_by_index for 1 slot per column, meaning that columns
with a span > 1 would write off the end of it.
These have a few rules that we didn't follow in most cases:
- CSS-wide keywords are not allowed. (inherit, initial, etc)
- `default` is not allowed.
- The above and any other disallowed identifiers must be tested
case-insensitively.
This introduces a `parse_custom_ident_value()` method, which takes a
list of disallowed identifier names, and handles the above rules.
The main incentive is much better performance. We could have gone a bit
further in optimizing the Skia painter to blit glyphs produced by LibGfx
more efficiently from the glyph atlas, but eventually, we also want Skia
to improve correctness.
This change does not completely replace LibGfx in text handling. It's
still used at all stages, including layout, up until display list
replaying.
These control the state of CSS counters.
Parsing code for `reversed(counter-name)` is implemented, but disabled
for now until we are able to resolve values for those.
We now follow the rules from the spec more closely, along with an
unspecified quirk for when the offsetParent is a non-positioned body
element. (Spec bug linked in a comment.)
This fixes a whole bunch of css-flexbox tests on WPT, which already had
correct layout, but the reported metrics from JS API were wrong.
We now ensure that `Node::is_character_data()` returns true for all
nodes of type character data.
Previously, calling `Node::length()` on `CDataSection` or
`ProcessingInstruction` nodes would return an incorrect value.
We were mistakenly executing the current node's script instead of the
document's pending parsing-blocking script.
This caused ~1000 WPT tests to time out, since we never ended up firing
a load event for XHTML pages that load multiple external scripts.
Before this change, "background-clip: text" was implemented by saving a
Vector<Gfx::Path> of all glyphs needed to paint a mask for the
background. The issue with this approach was that once glyphs were
extracted into vector paths, the glyph rasterization cache could no
longer be utilized.
With this change, all text required for mask painting is saved in a
nested display list and rasterized as a regular text.
Previously, when creating a HTML element with
`document.createElementNS()` we would convert the given local name to
lowercase before deciding which element type to return. We now no
longer perform this lower case conversion, so if an uppercase local
name is provided, an element of type `HTMLUnknownElement` will be
returned. This aligns our implementation with the specification.
This is an AudioNode representing the final audio destination and is
what the user will ultimately hear.
This node is used as one of the connecting nodes in athenacrisis.com
Add a placeholder for the interface without anything backing it for now.
With this change, instead of recording a display list item for each
instance of a repeated background, a new DrawRepeatedImmutableBitmap
type is used. This allows the painter to use optimized repeated image
painting and, when the GPU backend is used, avoid re-uploading the image
texture for each repetition.
Some screenshot tests are affected, but there are no visible
regressions.
https://null.com/games/chainstaff works a lof faster with this change.
The :host family of pseudo class selectors select the shadow host
element when matching against a rule from within the element's shadow
tree.
This is a bit convoluted due to the fact that the document-level
StyleComputer keeps track of *all* style rules, and not just the
document-level ones.
In the future, we should refactor style storage so that shadow roots
have their own style scope, and we can simplify a lot of this.
Checking that the string parsed for the `font` property is not enough,
the spec also wants to rule out CSS-wide keywords like `inherit`. The
simplest way to do so is to check if it's a ShorthandStyleValue, which
also rules out use of `var()`; this matches other browsers' behaviour.
The newly-added test would previously crash, and now doesn't. :^)
Before this change, removing a style element from inside a shadow tree
would cause it to be unregistered with the document-level list of sheets
instead of the shadow-root-level list.
This would eventually lead to a verification failure if someone tried to
update the text contents of that style element, since it was still in
the shadow-root-level list, but now with a null owner element.
Fixes a crash on https://www.swedbank.se/
Previously, if a document had any element with a name attribute that
was set to the empty string, then `document.getElementsByName("")` and
`element.getElementsByName("")` would return a collection including
those elements.
Previously, if a document had an element whose id was the empty string,
then `document.getElementById("")` and `element.getElementById("")`
would return that element.
This change removes wrappers inherited from Gfx::Typeface for WOFF and
WOFF2 fonts. The only purpose they served is owning of ttf ByteBuffer
produced by decoding a WOFF/WOFF2 font. Now new FontData class is
responsible for holding ByteBuffer when a font is constructed from
non-externally owned memory.
It currently doesn't support animated image.
Note that Gfx::Bitmap has no support for get_pixel when the format is
RGBA8888. This is why it has been removed from the tests.
Previously, `SVGSVGBox` would have a natural aspect ratio of 0 if it
had a viewbox with zero width. This led to a division by zero, causing
a crash.
Found by Domato.
Previously calling `PaintableBox::set_scroll_offset()` with a
PaintableBox whose content size was larger than its scrollble overflow
rect would cause a crash.
Found by Domato.
The underlying CPU-specific instructions for operating on UTF-16 strings
behave differently for null inputs. Add an explicit check for this state
for consistency.
The underlying CPU-specific instructions for operating on UTF-8 strings
behave differently for null inputs. Add an explicit check for this state
for consistency.
We had a const and non-const version of this function, with slightly
different behavior (oops!)
This patch consolidates the implementations and keeps only the correct
behavior in there.
Fixes an issue where comments were not collapsible on Hacker News.
Skia painter is visibly faster than LibGfx painter and has more complete
CSS transforms support. With this change:
- On Linux, it will try to use Vulkan-backend with fallback to
CPU-backend
- On macOS it will try to use Metal-backend with fallback to
CPU-backend
- headless-browser always runs with CPU-backend in layout mode
These test work with LibGfx painter but won't longer work after
switching to Skia, because it produces slightly different antialiasing,
rounding in color blending, etc.
This is the expected behavior per the HTML spec. Fixes an issue where
styling these elements wouldn't have the expected effect unless you also
set the display property.
Instead of allowing arbitrarily large values (which could eventually
overflow an i32), let's just cap them at the same limit as Firefox does.
Found by Domato.
This change will make it easier to disable screenshot comparison tests
on a specific platform or have per-platform expectations.
Additionally, it's nice to be able to tell if a ref-test uses a
screenshot as an expectation by looking at the test path.