Unit tests on macOS deadlock because the WebContent process is waiting
for the next opportunity to render before a screenshot is taken. For
some reason unknown to myself, this opportunity never arrives. In
order to not deadlock, screenshot requests are now also processed
separately from rendering.
Since "Character" tokens do not have an "end position", viewing source
drops the source contents following the final non-"Character" token.
By handling the EOF token and breaking out of the loop, we avoid this
issue.
This is an attempt to fix the hanging CI on macOS caused by some
screenshot requests being stuck unprocessed. With this change, we at
least make sure that the HTML event loop processing, which triggers
repainting, will happen as long as there are navigables that need to be
repainted.
This avoids an unecessary lossy conversion for the current time from
double to i32. And avoids an UBSAN failure on macOS that's dependent
on the current uptime.
From SkPaint.h:
"Sets the thickness of the pen used by the paint to outline the shape.
A stroke-width of zero is treated as "hairline" width. Hairlines are
always exactly one pixel wide in device space (their thickness does not
change as the canvas is scaled)."
While we expect stroke-width=0 to simply not be painted.
This ensures that removing the last view from a WebContentClient will
close its associated process, assuming the WebContent process is not
hung. A more drastic measure will be needed to trigger forcefully
killing the process when it doesn't respond to this request.
This large commit also refactors LibWebView's process handling to use
a top-level Application class that uses a new WebView::Process class to
encapsulate the IPC-centric nature of each helper process.
Doing so results in incorrect values being created, ultimately leading
to traps or errors.
(cherry picked from commit f6c3b333334f7bb5314a844804cb259cf277005e)
The ChunkIterator now limits a chunk to using only one font (before, it
was possible to have a chunk with >1 font, when `unicode-range` CSS
property is used).
This change allows us to reduce some complexity in the text shaping and
painting code and makes us compatible with the APIs in Skia and
HarfBuzz.
Typeface is a more widely used name for the data represented by
class previously named VectorFont.
Now:
- Typeface represents decoded font that is not ready for rendering
- ScaledFont represents the combination of typeface and size for
rendering
Implements the same optimization we already have for DrawGlyphRun by
saving unscaled glyph run and scale factor in a painting command, which
allows to avoid copying of glyphs vector to apply scaling during
recording.
By moving this up to ConnectionBase, we have less custom code for each
templated subclass, and it gets a little easier to edit the code since
you don't have to rebuild as much when making changes.
If Metal context and IOSurface are available, Skia painter will use
Ganesh GPU backend on macOS, which is noticeably faster than the default
CPU backend.
Painting pipeline:
1. (WebContent) Allocate IOSurface for backing store
2. (WebContent) Allocate MTLTexture that wraps IOSurface
3. (WebContent) Paint into MTLTexture using Skia
4. (Browser) Wrap IOSurface into Gfx::Painter and use
QPainter/CoreGraphics to blit backing store into viewport.
Things we should improve in the future:
1. Upload textures for images in advance instead of doing that before
every repaint.
2. Teach AppKit client to read directly from IOSurface instead of
copying.
This is a non-standard API that other browsers implement, which
highlights matching text in the current window.
This is just a thin wrapper around our find in page functionality, the
main motivation for adding this API is that it allows us to write tests
for our find in page implementation.
This is the same behavior as RequestServer, with the added benefit that
we know how to gracefully reconnect ImageDecoder to all WebContent
processes on restart.
This is mostly useful when some application-level logic needs to
iterate over all child processes. A more robust Process abstraction
would make this easier.
They are now blocked on pages which:
- Don't have an opaque origin (should be only user-initiated or about:)
- Aren't other file: pages
- Aren't other resource: pages
The `deepEquals` algorithm used for testing was naive, and incorrectly
evaluated equality of objects in some cases. The new algorithm considers
that the second object could have more keys than the first, and compares
the prototypes of the objects.
An input event is now fired when the step up or step down button of an
input element of type number is clicked.
This ensures that any associated <output> element is updated when these
buttons are clicked.
Input elements without a defined user-interaction behavior need to fire
an input event when the user changes the element's value in some way.
This change moves the code to do this into its own function and adds
some spec text to explain what is being done.
The changes to tests are due to LibTimeZone incorrectly interpreting
time stamps in the TZDB. The TZDB will list zone transitions in either
UTC or the zone's local time (which is then subject to DST offsets).
LibTimeZone did not handle the latter at all.
For example:
The following rule is in effect until November 18, 6PM UTC.
America/Chicago -5:50:36 - LMT 1883 Nov 18 18:00u
The following rule is in effect until March 1, 2AM in Chicago time. But
at that time, a DST transition occurs, so the local time is actually
3AM.
America/Chicago -6:00 Chicago C%sT 1936 Mar 1 2:00
This required updating some LibJS spec steps to their latest versions,
as the data expected by the old steps does not quite match the APIs that
are available with the ICU. The new spec steps are much more aligned.