To implement the HttpOnly attribute, the CookieJar needs to know where a
request originated from. Namely, it needs to distinguish between HTTP /
non-HTTP (i.e. JavaScript) requests. When the HttpOnly attribute is set,
requests from JavaScript are to be blocked.
This moves the cookie parsing steps out of CookieJar into their own file
inside LibWeb. It makes sense for the cookie structures to be in LibWeb
for a couple reasons:
1. There are some steps in the spec that will need to partially happen
from LibWeb, such as the HttpOnly attribute.
2. Parsing the cookie string will be safer if it happens in the OOP tab
rather than the main Browser process. Then if the parser blows up due
to a malformed cookie, only that tab will be affected.
3. Cookies in general are a Web concept not specific to a browser.
Otherwise these will get their name/default message from the Error
prototype, and as a result would always just say "Error" in error
messages, not the specific type.
Something I missed in da177c6, now with tests. :^)
I hereby declare these to be full nouns that we don't split,
neither by space, nor by underscore:
- Breadcrumbbar
- Coolbar
- Menubar
- Progressbar
- Scrollbar
- Statusbar
- Taskbar
- Toolbar
This patch makes everything consistent by replacing every other variant
of these with the proper one. :^)
Sometimes we just want to set m_exception to some value we stored
previously, without really "throwing" it again - that's what
set_exception() does now. Since we have clear_exception(), it does take
a reference, i.e. you don't set_exception(nullptr). For consistency I
updated throw_exception() to do the same.
Previously we would always return the result of executing the finalizer,
however the spec dictates the finalizer result must only be returned for
a non-normal completion.
I added some more comments along the way, which should make it more
clear what's going on - the unwinding and exception flow isn't super
straightforward here.
This enables the user to view and navigate classes with a TreeView that
is updated by the LanguageServer as it parses the code.
It offers a new neat way to view the project's structure :^)
This now means that when trying to open a folder, one can click on
the folder and press open instead of having to actually step into
the desired folder. Of course, it also means it won't let you open
non-directories anymore.
Previously, when trying to debug variables with more complex
types (such as String), we would crash the debugger simply because
it didn't know how to handle types that were irrelevant anyways.
Now we just skip data we don't yet know how to handle.
For one, viewing a variable who's type contained a subprogram will
no longer crash HackStudio. Additionally, the variable view will
handle invalid enum values gracefully now, fixing another crash.
Finally, deeply nested (nest count > 1) structures will have their
memory addresses properly set, fixing the final crash I found.