This adapts our implementation to the editorial change in the temporal
proposal: 737baf2d
The changes to CalendarMethodsRecordLookup had already been implemented,
but we had followed the typo in the spec for CalendarMethodsRecordCall.
The issue in CalendarMethodsRecordCall hasn't surfaced yet, as the AOs
using Calendar Methods Record are currently not passing through a String
to represent a Calendar builtin.
No change to test-262.
This begins the process of aligning our implementation with the spec
with regard to using CalendarMethodsRecord. The main intent here is to
make it much easier to make normative changes to AOs which have been
updated to CalendarMethodsRecord.
While this does resolve various FIXMEs, many others above need to be
added in order to be able to pass through a CalendarMethodsRecord. The
use here aligns with what I can gather from the spec of what the
arguments to CreateCalendarMethodsRecord should be, but various AOs have
been updated so much with other changes it's not completely obvious.
Other AOs do not even exist in the latest version of the spec, but we
still rely on them.
As part of these updates, this commit coincidentally also fixes two
PlainDate roundingmode issues seen in test262 - a test of which is also
added in test-js. This issue boiled down to what appears to be an
observable optimization in the spec, where it can avoid calling
dateUntil in certain situations (roundingGranularityIsNoop).
However, the main goal here is to make it much easier to fix many more
issues in the future :^)
since/calendar-dateuntil-called-with-singular-largestunit.js ❌ -> ✅
until/calendar-dateuntil-called-with-singular-largestunit.js ❌ -> ✅
This is part of a large refactor made as part of the temporal spec.
Most AOs using the calendar now pass through this record. There will
need to be a long process of going through updating AOs to use this
record.
This is a bit tangled in that updating these functions involves a slew
of other spec changes.
However those spec updates fix a bunch of rounding issues, fixing 32
test cases.
Diff Tests:
+32 ✅ -32 ❌
This has the guts of the old temporal AO BalanceDuration with some
differences such as an extra precision of one unit. This appears to be
important for different rounding modes to act as a tiebreaker.
It also does not have any logic regarding a zoned date time 'relative
to' - the spec seems to have this factored in a way where callers are
expected to perform this logic if neccessary.
This commit effectively just does a bulk update of this function to the
spec. Since there have been so many spec changes, no specific change was
made in mind, and many FIXMEs have been left for where we are still out
of date.
These changes also appear to include a normative change to the temporal
spec which was previously resulting in timeouts for some tests, and is
now resulting in a timeout.
Furthermore, this also resolves some crashes by protecting against
division by zero, instead throwing a RangeError. This can only happen
when a custom calender is provided which returns funky values. See:
https://github.com/tc39/proposal-temporal/commit/ed85e9
Diff Tests:
+8 ✅ -4 💀 -4 💥️
The spec has moved along quite a bit since this was originally
implemented. Catch up on at least some of these changes, and leave
FIXMEs for what is missing.
No change to test262.
In a bunch of cases, this actually ends up simplifying the code as
to_number will handle something such as:
```
Optional<I> opt;
if constexpr (IsSigned<I>)
opt = view.to_int<I>();
else
opt = view.to_uint<I>();
```
For us.
The main goal here however is to have a single generic number conversion
API between all of the String classes.
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')
This patch adds two macros to declare per-type allocators:
- JS_DECLARE_ALLOCATOR(TypeName)
- JS_DEFINE_ALLOCATOR(TypeName)
When used, they add a type-specific CellAllocator that the Heap will
delegate allocation requests to.
The result of this is that GC objects of the same type always end up
within the same HeapBlock, drastically reducing the ability to perform
type confusion attacks.
It also improves HeapBlock utilization, since each block now has cells
sized exactly to the type used within that block. (Previously we only
had a handful of block sizes available, and most GC allocations ended
up with a large amount of slack in their tails.)
There is a small performance hit from this, but I'm sure we can make
up for it elsewhere.
Note that the old size-based allocators still exist, and we fall back
to them for any type that doesn't have its own CellAllocator.
These functions all have a very common case that can be dealt with a
very simple inline check, often avoiding the need to call an out-of-line
function. This patch moves the common case to inline functions in a new
ValueInlines.h header (necessary due to header dependency issues..)
8% speed-up on the entire Kraken benchmark :^)
This is an editorial change in the ECMA-262 spec. See:
73926a5
The idea here is to reduce duplication of these AOs between ECMA-262,
ECMA-402, and Temporal. This patch contains only the ECMA-262 changes.
Stop worrying about tiny OOMs. Work towards #20449.
While going through these, I also changed the function signature in many
places where returning ThrowCompletionOr<T> is no longer necessary.
Rather than splitting the Iterator type and its AOs into two files,
let's combine them into one file to match every other JS runtime object
that we have.
The valid range for temporal values (`nsMinInstant`/`nsMaxInstant`)
means performing nanosecond-valued integers could lead to an overflow.
NB: Only the `roundingMode: "day"` case was affected, as all others were
already performing the division on floating-point `fractional_second`
values. I'm adding `.0` suffixes everywhere to make this fact clearer.
This adds a few local tests as well, as those are tested with sanitizers
enabled by default, unlike test262.
This is a clear sign that they want to use a UnixDateTime instead.
This also adds support for placing durations and date times into SQL
databases via their millisecond offset to UTC.
That's what this class really is; in fact that's what the first line of
the comment says it is.
This commit does not rename the main files, since those will contain
other time-related classes in a little bit.
Some of these are allocated upon initialization of the intrinsics, and
some lazily, but in neither case the getters actually return a nullptr.
This saves us a whole bunch of pointer dereferences (as NonnullGCPtr has
an `operator T&()`), and also has the interesting side effect of forcing
us to explicitly use the FunctionObject& overload of call(), as passing
a NonnullGCPtr is ambigous - it could implicitly be turned into a Value
_or_ a FunctionObject& (so we have to dereference manually).
This is a normative change in the ECMA-402 spec. See:
50eb413
Note that this canonicalization already occurred. As the above commit
alludes to, we parse the rearguard format of the TZDB, so GMT is already
an alias to Etc/GMT. But it doesn't hurt to be explicit here.
Comes with the usual benefit of saving some space on the stack, as well
as making a situation where both or neither Optionals hold a value
impossible.
The various unwrapping additions are required as we can no longer
construct a ThrowCompletionOr<T> from an Optional<T> - rightfully so.
First, this adds an overload of PrimitiveString::create for StringView.
This overload will throw an OOM completion if creating a String fails.
This is not only a bit more convenient, but it also ensures at compile
time that all PrimitiveString::create(string_view) invocations will be
handled as String and OOM-aware.
Next, this wraps all invocations to PrimitiveString::create(string_view)
with MUST_OR_THROW_OOM.
A small PrimitiveString::create(DeprecatedFlyString) overload also had
to be added to disambiguate between the StringView and DeprecatedString
overloads.