Rather than render the icons to a 16x16 bitmap, keep them as vector
graphics and render them on request. This keeps the icons crisp on high
DPI displays.
We don't need the extra gradle files in our sources, the Qt CMake
integration will generate suitable ones for us.
Make sure that assets is always a folder, so that we can get the proper
layout for the ladybird-assets.tar.gz and CMake doesn't create a gzip
file with the name "assets".
Fix up the AndroidPlatform file and make sure it's linked into all the
applications that need it. Also make sure to copy all the application
shared libraries into the ladybird APK so that when we make them into
proper Services, the libs are already there.
Doing this removes the qt6-svg dependency and allows our rasterizer to
be used for these little icons (and happens to be a fair bit smaller
than the old SVGs).
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.
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 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! :^)
Instead of starting a new headless-browser for every layout & text test,
headless-browser now gets a mode where it runs all the tests in a single
process.
This is massively faster on my machine, taking a full LibWeb test run
from 14 seconds to less than 1 second. Hopefully it will be a similarly
awesome improvement on CI where it has been soaking up more and more
time lately. :^)
This allows us to create "text tests" in addition to "layout tests".
Text tests work the same as layout tests, but dump the document content
as text and exit upon receiving the window "load" event.
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. :^)
This patch adds EventLoopImplementationQt which is a full replacement
for the Core::EventLoopImplementationUnix that uses Qt's event loop
as a backend instead.
This means that Core::Timer, Core::Notifier, and Core::Event delivery
are all driven by Qt primitives in the Ladybird UI and WC processes.
We had a mismatch in the GUI Identifier property, causing warnings in
Xcode. It was also missing the Product Identifier Xcode property on
ladybird itself, causing another warning.
Copy all our helper processes to the ladybird.app bundle directory so
that they can be found by ``open ladybird.app`` and the Xcode debugger.
For the future, we should look in ../Resources for resources on macOS.
Copying resources to that directory requires more CMake-fu.
headless-browser currently uses its own PageClient to load web pages
in-process. Due to this, it also needs to set up a whole bunch of other
objects needed to run LibWeb, e.g. image decoders, request servers, etc.
This changes headless-browser to instead implement a WebView to launch
WebContent out-of-process. This implementation is almost entirely empty,
but can be filled in as-needed. For example, we may want to print
JavaScript console messages.
We should be able to run this locally, as long as ENABLE_LAGOM_LADYBIRD
is true, or if building ladybird from the ladybird source directory.
This removes a special case from the Lagom CI yml file.
This has been broken since the switch to the multiprocess architecture
(and even before then was very limited).
This restores the previous functionally and also implements the ability
to inspect individual elements (by selecting them in the tree view).
The inspector also now correctly updates when navigating between pages.
This adds a SQLServer binary for Ladybird to make use of Serenity's SQL
implementation. This has to use the same IPC socket handling that was
used to make WebContent and WebDriver work out-of-process.
Unlike Serenity, Ladybird creates a new SQLServer instance for each
Ladybird instance. In the future, we should try to make sure there is
only one SQLServer instance at a time, and allow multiple Ladybird
instances to communicate with it.
This adds a WebDriver binary for Ladybird to make use of Serenity's
WebDriver implementation. This has to use the same IPC socket handling
that was used to make WebContent work out-of-process. Besides that, we
are able to reuse almost everything from Serenity.
- Add Qt::Core, Qt::Gui, LibGfx, LibIPC, and LibJS to the ladybird
target, remove LibGL, LibSoftGPU, and LibWebSocket
- Add LibJS to the WebContent target, remove LibWebView
- Order them properly :^)
Regressed in https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/pull/15746.
Fixes#108.
There are no custom changes for Ladybird in the current copies of those
files, so we just need to ensure to keep Ladybird up to date for any
changes made upstream.
There are no custom changes for Ladybird in the current copies of those
files, so we just need to ensure to keep Ladybird up to date for any
changes made upstream.
This fixes a build issue introduced by https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/pull/15736.
Always call platform_init after there's a QApplication, because in the
installed configuration that's how we find the resources.
Try QCoreApplication::applicationDirPath() after looking in ./WebContent
for the WebContent process. In an installed configuration, ladybird and
WebContent will both be in $PREFIX/bin.
Add install rules for WebContent and its linked libraries, for if they
ever differ from ladybird's.
This causes CMake to output a WebContent build, without this it would
not build WebContent and Ladybird would be unusable since it couldn't
find the WebContent executable.
While this adds a fair bit of widget code, we're also increasing code
sharing by using the same bits in WebContentClient for interacting with
the JS console.
That said, we should look for more ways to share code here.
This patch brings over the WebContent process over from SerenityOS
to Ladybird, along with a new WebContentView widget that renders
web content in a separate process.
There's a lot of jank and FIXME material here, notably I had to re-add
manually pumped Core::EventLoop instances on both sides, in order to get
the IPC protocol running. This introduces a lot of latency and we should
work towards replacing those loops with improved abstractions.
The WebContent process is built separately here (not part of Lagom) and
we provide our own main.cpp for it. Like everything, this can be better
architected, it's just a starting point. :^)
We use a ModelTranslator to expose a DOMTreeModel from LibWebView :^)
It allows you to select the currently inspected node, which causes
the engine to render a little box model overlay above the web content.
This will allow us to share code with LibWebView from SerenityOS.
(This would otherwise not work, since its "WebView" namespace collides
with our "WebView" class.)
Also, we should eventually move towards a more sophisticated
multi-process WebView like OOPWV.
This setup should allow the package maintainers who are looking to
distribute ladybird on their distributions to use CMake to install
ladybird using cmake install rules rather than having to write their own
In the future, ladybird should probably use a QOpenGLWidget or similar
platform plugin to use the native GL implementation instead of the one
in serenity.
This patch removes the dual-event-loop setup, leaving only the Qt event
loop. We teach LibWeb how to drive Qt by installing an EventLoopPlugin.
This removes the 50ms latency on all UI interactions (and network
requests, etc.)
Build an Android APK file that, when configured properly in Qt Creator,
can be used to deploy the browser to an Android device.
The current build requires NDK 24, targets no less than Android API 30,
and Qt Creator 6.4.0.
- Silences the -Wuser-defined-literals warning which is triggered by our
use of the `sv` suffix for StringView
- Removes an unused captured `this` pointer [-Wunused-lambda-capture]
- Changes a JSONArray.h include to JSONObject.h to get the definition
for `JSONValue::serialize`. This is needed because template functions
are not exported for dylibs on macOS. This is a hack; the JSON headers
should be refactored so that each one includes the definition of
the template functions it sees. -- Maybe we should build with
-fvisibility-inlines-hidden on Linux to catch issues like this?
This patch takes the browser history code from the Serenity browser and
wires it up to the QT interface. This is tied in with a few extra
toolbar buttons associated with each tab.
This patch removes the browser WebView from the window and places it
inside a Tab object, all wrapped up in a QT tab control. So far you can
create tabs, but can't close them.