Required by code that brand checks native constructors.
For example, Wistia brand checks XMLHttpRequest by doing:
```
XMLHttpRequest.prototype.constructor.toString()
```
It then checks if it matches either one of:
```
function XMLHttpRequest() { [native code] }
```
```
[object XMLHttpRequestConstructor]
```
If neither matches, it disables HLS playback and prints:
"The XMLHttpRequest constructor has been tampered with. Because this
affects CORS/Range XHR requests, HLS playback has been disabled.
To enable HLS playback and other important features, please remove code
that changes the definition of window.XMLHttpRequest."
We hit this path due to not giving generated constructors a name, as
we would provide `function () { [native code] }`.
Now when the bookmark button that has not yet bookmarked the current
URL is pressed, it will add the bookmark but also prompt the user
with the BookmarkEditor dialog in case they wish to make final
touches to their bookmark title or URL. If they cancel or escape
the dialog, the bookmark will be removed.
We were missing some unwind related control flow paths, and followed
some in improper ways, leading us to access a dead unwind frame in some
cases, as well as generating a technically wrong CFG.
This reorders the ways EnterUnwindContext works and alleviates those
errors.
This patch parses enough of GPOS tables to be able to support the
kerning information embedded in Inter.
Since that specific font only applies positioning offsets to the first
glyph in each pair, I was able to get away with not changing our API.
Once we start adding support for more sophisticated positioning, we'll
need to be able to communicate more than a simple "kerning offset" to
the clients of this code.
Previously HTMLProgressElement implemented is_html_input_element() not
is_html_progress_element(), so is_html_progress_element() defaulted to
always returning false. This broke is<HTML::HTMLProgressElement>().
Currently, the WebAssemblyObject implements a visitor to keep its static
objects alive. This custom attribute will be used to hook the generated
namespace object's visitor to one that we define in non-generated code.
Interfaces with a LegacyNamespace extended attribute should have their
constructors defined on the namespace identified by the LegacyNamespace
attribute value.
Currently we have `m_should_block_pop_ups` set to true by default
which means `choose_a_browsing_context` will early return if new
top-level browsing context is requested and write `Pop-up blocked!`
in console. It is good but when WebDriver is connected we want it
to be able to actually open a new window if one is requested.
With current process architecture where every top level browsing
context lives in a separate WebContent process we need to request
a browser to spawn new WebContent process if new top level BC is
requested.
Introducing class for abstract browsing context is going to make it
possible to have separate implementations for:
1) Local browsing context (Top level BC of current page and iframes)
2) Remote browsing context (BC of a page that lives in another
WebContent process)
Generate handle UUID for top-level context that is going to
run in created WebContent process and sent it over IPC.
Co-authored-by: Timothy Flynn <trflynn89@pm.me>
Generate handle UUID for top-level context that is going to
run in created WebContent process and sent it over IPC.
Co-authored-by: Timothy Flynn <trflynn89@pm.me>
Add field for a handle that is going to be used by WebDriver to
identify top-level browsing contexts.
It is supposed to be populated by WebContent client during creation.
Co-authored-by: Timothy Flynn <trflynn89@pm.me>
This adds a function to parse multiple PEMs out of a single input.
This allows us to load certificates from a cacert.pem file without
need for preprocessing.
Currently, on Serenity, we connect to WebDriver from the browser-side of
the WebContent connection for both Browser and headless-browser.
On Lagom, we connect from within the WebContent process itself, signaled
by a command line flag.
This patch changes Lagom browsers to connect to WebDriver the same way
that Serenity browsers do. This will ensure we can do other initializers
in the same order across all platforms and browsers.
If the input file didn't exist at all, the TRY(MappedFile::map())
gives us a (cryptic) error message, but if it existed but wasn't an
image file, we would crash. Now we print a message instead.
This allows assigning a color profile from a .icc file to the output.
No pixel data conversion is taking place: the output will just contain
this profile, so it better matches the image data already.