Xcode clang doesn't understand the -std=c++23 spelling yet, and this
is what CMake's `set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 23)` translates to too.
Unbreaks building with Xcode clang on macOS.
This allows main UI processes created while there is a currently
running one to request a new tab or a new window with the initial urls
provided on the command line. This matches (almost) the behavior of
Chromium and Firefox.
Add a new IPC protocol between two UI processes. The main UI process
will create an IPC server socket, while secondary UI processes will
connect to that socket and send over the URLs and action it wants the
main process to take.
It previously resided in LibWebView to hide the details of launching a
singleton process. That functionality now lives in LibCore. By moving
this to Ladybird, we will be able to register the process with the task
manager.
This just moves the code to launch a single process such as SQLServer to
LibCore. This will allow re-using this feature for other processes, and
will allow moving the launching of SQLServer to Ladybird.
This will be needed to collect statistics from processes that do not
have anything to do with LibWebView. The ProcessInfo structure must be
virtual to allow callers to add application-specific information.
On macOS, it's not trivial to get a Mach task port for your children.
This implementation registers the chrome process as a well-known
service with launchd based on its pid, and lets each child process
send over a reference to its mach_task_self() back to the chrome.
We'll need this Mach task port right to get process statistics.
On Serenity, it's not trivial to extract the peer pid from a socket that
is created by SystemServer and then passed to a forked service process.
This patch adds an API to let the WebContent process notify the UI
directly, which makes the WebContent process show up in the Serenity
port's TaskManagerWidget. It seems that we will need to do something of
this sort in order to properly gather metrics on macOS as well, due to
the way that self mach ports work.
We were able to keep LibCoreMinimal a bit smaller as an object library,
but that is causing ODR violations in the fuzzer build (realistically,
should be an issue in all builds, but only the fuzzer actively complains
for some reason).
To make it a shared library, we have to add a couple more symbols to it,
and make LibCore publicly depend on it.
We were off-by-one when returning the result of parsing a quoted string
in Web::Fetch::Infrastructure::collect_an_http_quoted_string. Instead of
backtracking the lexer and consuming the backtracked string, do a simple
substring operation.
We have been dancing around circular dependencies between LibCore and
generated sources. For example, LibURL currently cannot depend on
LibUnicode because the LibUnicode generators depend on LibCore, and
LibCore depends on LibURL. LibTimeZone is in a similar situation.
To alleviate this, we can define the minimal sources that the code
generators need as an object library. This will allow the generators to
depend on this library, rather than the full LibCore.
JPEG2000 is the last image format used in PDF filters that we
don't have a loader for. Let's change that.
This adds all the scaffolding, but no actual implementation yet.
This is a fetching AO and is only used by LibWeb in the context of fetch
tasks. Move it to LibWeb with other fetch methods.
The main reason for this is that it requires the use of other LibWeb AOs
such as the forgiving Base64 decoder and MIME sniffing. These AOs aren't
available within LibURL.