We now replace the current history entry if the page-load has been
caused because of a redirect. This makes it able to traverse the
history if one of the entries redirects you, which previously
caused an infinite history traversion loop.
Depends on https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/pull/16004
Similar to https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/commit/9782660. Unlike
Serenity's browser, this doesn't affect reloading the page, as Ladybird
refers to the History object for reloading (which is updated already on
page load). However, this URL is used for e.g. crash reporting, so let's
update it here as well.
WebContent now needs to interact with these dialogs asynchronously. This
updates WebContentView to hold a pointer to whatever dialog is open, and
implements the methods to interact with that dialog.
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.
The WebDriver will pass the --webdriver-fd-passing-socket command line
option when it launches Ladybird. Forward this flag onto the WebContent
process, where it will create the WebDriverConnection for IPC.
Rather than needing to set another environment variable for WebDriver's
passing socket, let's forward these FDs by command line. This also moves
the creation of the WebContent connection to a helper function so that
the WebDriver connection can re-use it.
Previously, reloading went back to the first page loaded by
WebView::load() or WebView::load_html(), as they are the only methods
that modify m_url, which is what the reload loaded. Now we handle
reloads in Tab.cpp by simply loading the last entry in the m_history.
The hackish initial loading of about:blank was previously added to the
history, so you could go back to it (which wasn't very ergonomic). Now
we set the m_is_history_navigation flag before loading it so it doesn't
get added to the history.
Steps to reproduce:
1. Open the Cookie Clicker game in a tab.
2. Open another website in another tab and make that the current tab.
3. Observe how the window's title mentions Cookie Clicker.
Previously we were always pushing to history on the on_load_start
callback. Now we only do that if we are NOT navigating through the
history navigation (loading pages by going back/forward). This is what
the SerenityOS browser does:^)
We now emit a new signal for backward mouse button's mouseup and forward
mouse button's mouseup which is handled by going back and forward in the
history respectively:))
There's no point in busy-waiting for the condition to come true.
By passing the `WaitForMoreEvents` flag to `processEvents()`, we allow
Qt to block until it has something for us to react to.
This was extremely noticeable when waiting for large resources to
finish loading.
The slowdown is sometimes 5x, possibly more.
This is trivially confirmed by adding a large JS file to a page and
comparing the load time with a simple wget.
- 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.
Qt can wrap any number of cookies into a single Set-Cookie header in the
network responses it gives us. We now use the QNetworkReply::header()
API to get a "cooked" list of the cookies, and then rewrap them in a
format suitable for LibWeb.
Sites that send multiple Set-Cookie headers in one response now work
a lot better. :^)
These didn't work, for two reasons:
1. Qt swallows all Tab key presses by default. We have to override
the event() function in order to receive them.
2. Qt transforms Shift+Tab into a fake "Backtab" key. We have to
undo this transformation and send Shift+Tab to WebContent.
When spawning a WebContent process, we have to close the file
descriptors belonging to the "other side" in both processes, or they
will not get naturally "cleaned up" when one of the processes exits.
Fixes#93
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.