We had previous implemented some plumbing for file input elements in
commit 636602a54e.
This implements the return path for chromes to inform WebContent of the
file(s) the user selected. This patch includes a dummy implementation
for headless-browser to enable testing.
Attribute values may contain HTML, and may contain invalid HTML at that.
If the latter occurs, let's not generate invalid Inspector HTML when we
embed the attribute values as data attributes. Instead, cache the values
in the InspectorClient, and embed just a lookup index into the HTML.
This also nicely reduces the size of the generated HTML. The Inspector
on https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity reduces from 2.3MB to 1.9MB
(about 318KB, or 13.8%).
In this change, updating layout and painting are moved to the EventLoop
processing steps. This modification allows the addition of resize
observation dispatching that needs to happen in event loop processing
steps and must occur in the following order relative to layout and
painting:
1. Update layout.
2. Gather and broadcast resize observations.
3. Paint.
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.
This refactoring makes WebContent less aware of LibWeb internals.
The code that initializes paint recording commands now resides in
`Navigable::paint()`. Additionally, we no longer need to reuse
PaintContext across iframes, allowing us to avoid saving and restoring
its state before recursing into an iframe.
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".
When the WebContent process has painted to its shared bitmaps, it sends
a synchronous IPC to the browser process to let the chrome paint. It is
synchronous to ensure the WC process doesn't paint onto the backing
bitmap again while it is being displayed.
However, this can cause a crash at exit if the browser process quits
while the WC process is waiting for a response to this IPC.
This patch makes the painting logic asynchronous by letting the browser
process broadcast when it has finished handling the paint IPC. The WC
process will not paint anything again until it receives that message. If
it had tried to repaint while waiting for that message, that paint will
be deferred until it arrives.
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')
Let's not assume there is one global OpenGL context because it might
change once we will start creating >1 page inside single WebContent
process or contexts for WebGL.
No functional impact intended. This is just a more complicated way of
writing what we have now.
The goal of this commit is so that we are able to store the 'name' of a
pseudo element for use in serializing 'unknown -webkit-
pseudo-elements', see:
https://www.w3.org/TR/selectors-4/#compat
This is quite awkward, as in pretty much all cases just the selector
type enum is enough, but we will need to cache the name for serializing
these unknown selectors. I can't figure out any reason why we would need
this name anywhere else in the engine, so pretty much everywhere is
still just passing around this raw enum. But this change will allow us
to easily store the name inside of this new struct for when it is needed
for serialization, once those webkit unknown elements are supported by
our engine.
It was a bit short-sighted to combine the tag and attribute names into
one string when the Inspector requests a context menu. We will want both
values for some context menu actions. Send both names, as well as the
attribute value, when requesting the context menu.
The Inspector will have context menu support to manipulate the DOM, e.g.
adding or removing nodes/attributes. This context menu will require some
detailed knowledge about what element in the Inspector has been clicked.
To support this, we intercept the `contextmenu` event and collect the
required information to be sent to the Inspector client over IPC.
This is a first step towards removing the various Page& and Page*
we have littering the engine with "trust me bro" safety guarantees.
Co-Authored-By: Andreas Kling <kling@serenityos.org>
This is a first step towards simplifying the ownership model of
Web::Page. Soon Web::Page will store its WebClient as a
NonnullGCPtr to help solve lifetime issues of the client being
destroyed before the page.
The Inspector will have an <input> element to execute user-provided JS.
This adds an IDL method and IPC to forward that JS from the Inspector
WebView to the Inspector client.
In order for same-origin NavigableContainers (iframe, frame, embed, ...)
and window.open() WindowProxies to have the proper JS access to their
embedder/opener, we need to host multiple top level traversables in the
same WebContent process. As a first step, make WebContent::PageHost hold
a HashMap of PageClient objects, each holding their own Web::Page that
represents a TraversableNavigable's API surface with the UI process.