This forwards all drag-and-drop events from the UI to the WebContent
process. If the page accepts the events, the UI does not handle them.
Otherwise, we will open the dropped files as file:// URLs.
The identifier "Protocol" is claimed by Objective-C and Swift for use
by the language's built-in protocol conformance feature, which is
similar to Rust traits or Java interfaces.
Rename LibProtocol -> LibRequests, and its namespace from Protocol to
Requests to accomodate this.
Currently, if we want to add a new e.g. WebContent command line option,
we have to add it to all of Qt, AppKit, and headless-browser. (Or worse,
we only add it to one of these, and we have feature disparity).
To prevent this, this moves command line flags to WebView::Application.
The flags are assigned to ChromeOptions and WebContentOptions structs.
Each chrome can still add its platform-specific options; for example,
the Qt chrome has a flag to enable Qt networking.
There should be no behavior change here, other than that AppKit will now
support command line flags that were previously only supported by Qt.
This change adds a `--use-lagom-networking` flag to the WebWorker
process. Qt networking is used if this flag isn't passed. The flag is
passed the UI launches the WebWorker process unless the Qt chrome is
being run with the `--enable-qt-networking` flag.
This call is used to inform the chrome that it should display a tooltip
now and avoid any hovering timers. This is used by <video> tags to
display the volume percentage when it is changed.
Now instead of sending the position in which the user entered the
tooltip area, send just the text, and let the chrome figure out how to
display it.
In the case of Qt, wait for 600 milliseconds of no mouse movement, then
display it under the mouse cursor.
In the upcoming changes, Skia painter will be switched to Metal backend,
so we can no longer assume `pitch = width * 4` while reading Gfx::Bitmap
that wraps IOSurface populated by writing into MTLTexture that has
padded scanlines.
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.
The main intention of this change is to have a consistent look and
behavior across all scrollbars, including elements with
`overflow: scroll` and `overflow: auto`, iframes, and a page.
Before:
- Page's scrollbar is painted by Browser (Qt/AppKit) using the
corresponding UI framework style,
- Both WebContent and Browser know the scroll position offset.
- WebContent uses did_request_scroll_to() IPC call to send updates.
- Browser uses set_viewport_rect() to send updates.
After:
- Page's scrollbar is painted on WebContent side using the same style as
currently used for elements with `overflow: scroll` and
`overflow: auto`. A nice side effects: scrollbars are now painted for
iframes, and page's scrollbar respects scrollbar-width CSS property.
- Only WebContent knows scroll position offset.
- did_request_scroll_to() is no longer used.
- set_viewport_rect() is changed to set_viewport_size().
This was no longer doing anything. We'll eventually want a way to pass
system default fonts to each WebContent process, but we don't need to
squeeze everything through this API that was really meant for Serenity's
very idiosyncratic font system.
Previously the 'device independent pixels' (which consider scaling)
were used, and then scaling would be applied again when calculating the
screen width for CSS.
The code to convert a Gfx::IntPoint to a QPoint adjusted for the device
pixel ratio is a bit of a mouthful, and will be needed outside of Tab,
so move it to a helper that can be reused.
The Qt chrome currently handles all input events before selectively
forwarding those events to WebContent. This means that WebContent does
not see events like ctrl+c.
Here, we make use of LibWebView's input handling and wait for LibWebView
to inform the chrome that it should handle the event itself.
Some Wayland compositors have support of fractional-scale-v1 protocol.
The protocol allows compositor to announce a preferred fractional scale
on a per-wl_surface basis. Qt forwards these Wayland events to an
application using a usual DevicePixelRatioChange event. However, in
contrast to the other platforms, this DevicePixelRatioChange event is
issued directly on widgets and not screens. Additionally, the exact
fractional scale is stored in QWindow object and not the current screen.
Note that in theory it is possible to obtain per-screen fractional
scaling on Wayland by interpolating data provided by wl_output and
xdg_output events but qtwayland does not do that.
If fractional-scale-v1 is not available, qtwayland will still fire
per-Widget DevicePixelRatioChange events, but, obviously, with the
per-screen possibly larger ceiled scaling.
This whole thing makes handling DPI changes on Wayland really simple.
All we need to do is to intercept DevicePixelRatioChange events firing
on QWindow objects and call the old device_pixel_ratio_changed handler
with the window's devicePixelRatio(). The only caveat here is not forget
to always set QWidget's parent before calling devicePixelRatio() on it.
Previously, on systems where pressing Enter would generate "\r\n", only
the '\r' character was being sent to the event handler. This change
ensures consistent behavior across platforms regardless of their native
line ending characters.
The IPC layer between chromes and LibWeb now understands that multiple
top level traversables can live in each WebContent process.
This largely mechanical change adds a billion page_id/page_index
arguments to make sure that pages that end up opening new WebViews
through mechanisms like window.open() still work properly with those
extra windows.
Instead of spawning these processes from the WebContent process, we now
create them in the Browser chrome.
Part 1/N of "all processes are owned by the chrome".
With this change, chrome no longer has to ask the WebContent process
to paint the next frame into a specified bitmap. Instead, it allocates
bitmaps and sends them to WebContent, which then lets chrome know when
the painting is done.
This work is a preparation to move the execution of painting commands
into a separate thread. Now, it is much easier to start working on the
next frame while the current one is still rendering. This is because
WebContent does not have to inform chrome that the current frame is
ready before it can request the next frame.
Additionally, as a side bonus, we can now eliminate the
did_invalidate_content_rect and did_change_selection IPC calls. These
were used solely for the purpose of informing chrome that it needed to
request a repaint.
This commit un-deprecates DeprecatedString, and repurposes it as a byte
string.
As the null state has already been removed, there are no other
particularly hairy blockers in repurposing this type as a byte string
(what it _really_ is).
This commit is auto-generated:
$ xs=$(ack -l \bDeprecatedString\b\|deprecated_string AK Userland \
Meta Ports Ladybird Tests Kernel)
$ perl -pie 's/\bDeprecatedString\b/ByteString/g;
s/deprecated_string/byte_string/g' $xs
$ clang-format --style=file -i \
$(git diff --name-only | grep \.cpp\|\.h)
$ gn format $(git ls-files '*.gn' '*.gni')
There's no need for 2 overloads for String and DeprecatedString, we can
just use a StringView. This also avoids some cases of needlessly
allocating a DeprecatedString from a StringView when calling this
method.
It is currently a bit messy to pass these options along from main() to
where WebContent is actually launched. If a new flag were to be added,
there are a couple dozen files that need to be updated to pass that flag
along. With this change, the flag can just be added to the struct, set
in main(), and handled in launch_web_content_process().