The main issues are using Structured{Serialize,Deserailize} instead of
Structured{Serialize,Deserialize}WithTransfer and the temporary
execution context usage for StructuredDeserialize.
Allows Discord to load once again, as it uses a postMessage scheduler
to render components, including the main App component. The callback
checked the (previously) non-existent source attribute of the
MessageEvent and returned if it was not the main window.
Fixes the Twitch cookie consent banner saying "failed integrity check"
for unknown reasons, but presumably related to the source and origin
attributes.
Passing a value of a type different than number or length-percentage
to transform-origin returned a null pointer, and we didn't take care
of that path before.
This patch fixes a crash caused by an incorrect CSS declaration, such as
`transform-origin: "center"`.
Fixes#21609
Instead of implementing this inline, put it into a function. Use this
new function to correctly implement shortening paths for some places
where this logic was previously missing.
Before these changes, the pathname for the included test was incorrectly
being set to '/' as we were not considering the windows drive letter.
We now produce a `matrix3d()` value when appropriate.
Some sites (such as gsap.com) request the resolved style for `transform`
when there's no viewport paintable, but the element itself does already
have a stacking context. This fixes crashes in that case, because we now
do not access the stacking context at all.
We also do not wrap the result as a StyleValueList any more. The
returned StyleValue is only serialized and exposed to JS, so making it a
StyleValueList has no effect.
Also remove the hack for SVG documents, a well-formed SVG document has
the correct xmlns attribute set, which should be automatically picked up
by the builder now.
There were some unhandled paths due to the liberally typed XHR response
object. This patch flushes out those issues by using a tighter type set
in the Variant. (NonnullGCPtr<Object> instead of Value)
Print out the value of each property in the computed-style of the body
element. This is by no means a thorough test that we're serializing
every property's value correctly in every configuration, (and in fact,
some are definitely wrong,) but it does give us a nice baseline.
DOMMatrix fromMatrix was using create_from_dom_matrix_2d_init to make
a DOMMatrix for it's init struct this is wrong because only the 2D
params of the DOMMatrix are put into the new matrix. I have added
a non 2D version of that function that takes the full DOMMatrixInit
so now fromMatrix works correctly again. I also have added some
text tests to test if it works correctly.
I split the dommatrix.html text tests into multiple files because that
file was becoming to big so now every sub function is a seperate file.
It does not currently handle any of the actual scripting, but this
should at least allow us to create an instance of the element.
The test being added here isn't actually testing much, but before the
previous commit we used to crash parsing the page due to a TODO().
These allow accessing embeds, forms, images and objects with a given
name attribute, and any element with a given id attribute, as top level
properties on the global object.
It also allows accessing NavigableContainers by target name as top level
properties on the global object.
The current implementation feels very expensive. It's likely that
these values will need smarter caching in the future.
And implement WindowProperties, the "named properties object" for Window
according to the spec.
This involves moving an AO out of LegacyPlatformObject and into a common
place that the WindowProperties class can access.
This doesn't implement the AOs on Window that actually name lookup for
the unenumerable named properties on the window yet, just the
scaffolding.
Otherwise `attr(|name, "fallback")` becomes `attr(| name , "fallback")`
The test here is slightly aspirational. There are other rules for
serialization we don't follow (like stripping whitespace entirely from
many places) so these are marked with FIXMEs.
Some steps are still to be implemented, namely:
* Properly aborting the read algorithm
* Handling BinaryString type properly
* Setting error on any error
But as it stands, this is enough functionality for the basic case of
reading the contents of a blob using the FileReader API.
Previously, we used `on_load_finish` to determine when the text test
was completed. This method did not allow testing of async functions
because there was no way to indicate that the runner should wait for
the async call to end.
This change introduces a function in the `internals` object that is
intended to be called when the text test execution is completed. The
text test runner will now ignore `on_load_finish` which means a test
will timeout if this new function is never called.
`test(f)` function in `include.js` has been modified to automatically
terminate a test once `load` event is fired on `window`.
new `asyncTest(f)` function has been introduces. `f` receives function
that will terminate a test as a first argument.
Every test is expected to call either `test()` or `asyncTest()` to
complete. If not, it will remain hanging until a timeout occurs.
We skip serializing any of the internal state of the Regex<ECMA262>
object, because that state is all computable from the input pattern
and flags. If it turns out that this is really, really slow, we can add
some optimizations to serialize more of the regex parse result.
In order to access the string's contents, use the new
`StringStyleValue::string_value()` method.
I think I found all the existing places that relied on
`StringStyleValue::to_string()` returning an unquoted string, but it's
hard to know for sure until things break.
This one is a bit fun because it can be `add(<integer>)` or `auto-add`,
but children have to inherit the computed value not the specified one.
We also have to compute it before computing the font-size, because of
`font-size: math` which will be implemented later.
This change allows IDL interfaces to be compiled using new AK String
which have a attribute in the interface that may return null.
Without this change we would run into a compile error from code such as
the following example:
```
auto retval = impl->deprecated_attribute(HTML::AttributeNames::ref);
if (!retval.has_value()) {
return JS::js_null();
}
return JS::PrimitiveString::create(vm, retval.release_value());
```
As `deprecated_attribute` returns a `DeprecatedString` instead of an
`Optional<String>`. Fix that by using the non-deprecated attribute
implementation, and falling back to the empty string for where we cannot
return null.
Also add a test here to cover a regression I almost introduced here
which was not previously covered by our test suite.
Ideally, all of this should actually just be calling
Element::get_attribute_value, but I'm not entirely sure at this stage
what the behavioral change would be to test for here. Since this
implementation preserves the previous behavior, stick with it, and add a
FIXME for now.
None of the existing tests contain a URL which has a fragment in them,
but this does verify that the URL parser does not actually find any!
Also, this should let us verify the correctness of URLs which actually
do contain fragments.