On macOS, the "close tab" button is on the left, so we should place the
audio state button on the right to avoid conflict. Rather than an OS
ifdef, we do this by detecting if the left side is occupied.
We were errantly always referring to the active tab when the audio play
state changed, and when clicking a tab's audio state button, by way of
BrowserWindow::view().
It turns out we also can't copy / rely on the tab index provided to the
signal in any asynchronous context. If the tabs are rearranged, so are
their indices. Instead, capture a pointer to the tab of interest - this
should be safe as we wouldn't be able to click a tab's audio button if
that tab no longer exists.
With this change, we can click the audio button from any tab in the Qt
chrome, and re-arrange tabs at will. The AppKit and Serenity chromes do
not have this issue.
Going via the `ViewportPaintable` missed some steps (in particular
computing clip rects), which meant nested SVGs within SVGs-as-images
were completely clipped.
Allocating a MemoryInstance or TableInstance from Store would result in
a reference to a stack allocated {Memory,Table}Type that would
immediately fall out of scope.
The MemoryInstance case was causing ASAN issues for a LibWeb based test
- I don't have a reproducer for TableInstance, but it looks like it
suffers from the exact same problem.
To the 'convert to int' AO. Nothing actually makes use of the [Clamp]
attribute yet in our implementation, but we may as well add support for
it now since it is trivial to do do.
This partially reverts d1e2d2a4, which made us explicitly specify the
library type for lagom libraries. This broke the fuzzer build, which
relies on the BUILD_SHARED_LIBS cmake variable to enable static builds.
We already display a speaker icon on tabs which are playing audio. This
allows the user to click that icon to mute the tab, at which point the
icon is replaced with a muted speaker icon.
We would previously hide the icon when audio stopped playing. We now do
this only if the tab isn't muted. If it is muted, the muted speaker icon
remains on the tab so that the page isn't stuck in a muted state.
We already display a speaker icon on tabs which are playing audio. This
allows the user to click that icon to mute the tab, at which point the
icon is replaced with a muted speaker icon.
We would previously hide the icon when audio stopped playing. We now do
this only if the tab isn't muted. If it is muted, the muted speaker icon
remains on the tab so that the page isn't stuck in a muted state.
This adds an IPC for chromes to mute a tab. When muted, we trigger an
internal volume change notification and indicate that the user agent has
overriden the media volume.
For example, if a page has multiple audio elements all actively playing
audio, we don't want to broadcast a play state change when only one of
them stop playing.
The T.800 spec says there should only be one 'colr' box, but the
extended jpx file format spec in T.801 annex M allows having multiple.
Method 2 is a basic ICC profile, while method 3 (jpx-only) allows full
ICC profiles. Support that.
For the test, I opened buggie.png in Photoshop, converted it to
grayscale, and saved it as a JPEG2000, with "JP2 Compatible" checked
and "Include Transparency" unchecked. I also unchecked "Include
Metadata", and "Lossless". I left "Fast Mode" checked and the quality
at the default 50.
It's not safe to capture a local NonnullGCPtr by reference in a closure
that will execute at some arbitrary time in the future when the local is
out of scope.
I saw a suspicious null dereference in
check_if_access_between_two_browsing_contexts_should_be_reported(),
but I have no idea how to reproduce it.
Still, it seems harmless to paper over it with a FIXME debug log.
While waiting for a task that populates a session history entry, we
can't limit the processing of the event loop to the
`NavigationAndTraversal` task source. This is because fetching uses the
`Networking` task source, which also needs to be processed.
Since making a fetch request might take some time, we want to process
everything on the event loop while waiting, to avoid blocking user
interactions.
It is still possible to use `spin_processing_tasks_with_source_until()`
on subsequent steps of `apply_the_history_step()`.
Also modifies test that was flaky.
The current location of the IPC invocation is often too soon. We reach
it before the audio file has completely finished downloading / loading,
thus there isn't an AudioTrack object yet.
Instead, wait until we are actually playing the audio to invoke the IPC.
This is particularly frequent on bandcamp.
This works just like masks, with a few more (spec imposed) limitations.
All the style properties on the contents of a <clipPath> are ignored,
and instead we just paint the "raw geometry" (as all black), then apply
that as an alpha mask to the target element.
If the element has both a `mask` and `clip-path` set, we compute the
masking area as the intersection of the mask rect and clip rect, then
apply the clip mask to the `mask` (producing a combined mask).
Fixes#19648Fixes#23006
This uses the same trick as done for masks in #23554. Each use of an
SVG `<clipPath>` becomes it's own layout subtree rooted at it's user.
This allows each use have it's own layout (which allows supporting
features such as `clipPathUnits`).