This is a partial revert of commit 7af5eef. After 97d15e9, the 'proc'
promise is not needed for operations using getsid().
This also fixes launching several applications in which 7af5eef added
the 'proc' promise only in the second call to pledge().
This commit does three things atomically:
- switch over Core::Account+SystemServer+LoginServer to sid based socket
names.
- change socket names with %uid to %sid.
- add/update necessary pledges and unveils.
Userland: Switch over servers to sid based sockets
Userland: Properly pledge and unveil for sid based sockets
This Intrinsics object hangs off of a new HostDefined struct that takes
the place of EnvironmentSettingsObject as the true [[HostDefined]] slot
on JS::Realm objects created by LibWeb.
This gets the intrinsics off of the GlobalObject, Window, similar to the
previous refactor of LibJS to move the intrinsics into the Realm's
[[Intrinics]] internal slot.
A side effect of this change is that we cannot fully initialize a Window
object until the [[HostDefined]] slot has been installed into the realm,
which happens with the creation of the WindowEnvironmentSettingsObject.
As such, any Window usage that has not been funned through a WindowESO
will not have any cached Web prototyped or constructors, and will not
have Window APIs available to javascript code. Currently this seems
limited to usage of Window in the CSS parser, but a subsequent commit
will clean those up to take Realm as well. However, this commit compiles
so let's cut it off here :^).
These are exactly what's wanted by headless-browser too, so this saves
us some duplication. LibWeb already links LibCore so it should not
cause any issues for Ladybird.
...and the other Console methods.
This lets you apply styling to a log message or any other text that
passes through the Console `Formatter` operation.
We store the CSS on the ConsoleClient instead of passing it along with
the rest of the message, since I couldn't figure out a nice way of
doing that, as Formatter has to return JS::Values. This way isn't nice,
and has a risk of forgetting to clear the style and having it apply to
subsequent messages, but it works.
This is only supported in the Browser for now. REPL support would
require parsing the CSS and figuring out the relevant ANSI codes. We
also don't filter this styling at all, so you can `position: absolute`
and `transform: translate(...)` all you want, which is less than
ideal.
Instead of asking Gfx::FontDatabase for the "default font" and the
"default fixed-width font", we now proxy those requests out via
the Platform::FontPlugin. This will allow Ladybird to use other default
fonts as fallback.
This replaces the previous Web::ImageDecoding::Decoder interface.
While we're doing this, also move the SerenityOS implementation of this
interface from LibWebView to WebContent. That means we no longer have to
link with LibImageDecoderClient in applications that use a web view.
Instead of hard-coding the names of system fonts to use for the CSS
generic fonts (like "sans-serif", "monospace", etc.) we now call out
to a Platform::FontPlugin and ask for the generic names.
Instead of using Core::EventLoop and Core::Timer directly, LibWeb now
goes through a Web::Platform abstraction layer instead.
This will allow us to plug in Qt's event loop (and QTimer) over in
Ladybird, to avoid having to deal with multiple event loops.
wrap() is now basically a no-op so we should stop using it everywhere
and eventually remove it. This patch removes uses of wrap() in
non-generated code.
This is a monster patch that turns all EventTargets into GC-allocated
PlatformObjects. Their C++ wrapper classes are removed, and the LibJS
garbage collector is now responsible for their lifetimes.
There's a fair amount of hacks and band-aids in this patch, and we'll
have a lot of cleanup to do after this.
Currently, LibUnicodeData contains the generated UCD and CLDR data. Move
the UCD data to the main LibUnicode library, and rename LibUnicodeData
to LibLocaleData. This is another prepatory change to migrate to
LibLocale.
The basic idea is that a global object cannot just come out of nowhere,
it must be associated to a realm - so get it from there, if needed.
This is to enforce the changes from all the previous commits by not
handing out global objects unless you actually have an initialized
realm (either stored somewhere, or the VM's current realm).
- Prefer VM::current_realm() over GlobalObject::associated_realm()
- Prefer VM::heap() over GlobalObject::heap()
- Prefer Cell::vm() over Cell::global_object()
- Prefer Wrapper::vm() over Wrapper::global_object()
- Inline Realm::global_object() calls used to access intrinsics as they
will later perform a direct lookup without going through the global
object
This is needed so that the allocated NativeFunction receives the correct
realm, usually forwarded from the Object's initialize() function, rather
than using the current realm.
Global object initialization is tightly coupled to realm creation, so
simply pass it to the function instead of relying on the non-standard
'associated realm' concept, which I'd like to remove later.
This works essentially the same way as regular Object::initialize() now.
Additionally this allows us to forward the realm to GlobalObject's
add_constructor() / initialize_constructor() helpers, so they set the
correct realm on the allocated constructor function object.
Similar to create() in LibJS, wrap() et al. are on a low enough level to
warrant passing a Realm directly instead of relying on the current realm
from the VM, as a wrapper may need to be allocated while no JS is being
executed.
This is a continuation of the previous six commits.
The global object is only needed to return it if the execution context
stack is empty, but that doesn't seem like a useful thing to allow in
the first place - if you're not currently executing JS, and the
execution context stack is empty, there is no this value to retrieve.
This is a continuation of the previous five commits.
A first big step into the direction of no longer having to pass a realm
(or currently, a global object) trough layers upon layers of AOs!
Unlike the create() APIs we can safely assume that this is only ever
called when a running execution context and therefore current realm
exists. If not, you can always manually allocate the Error and put it in
a Completion :^)
In the spec, throw exceptions implicitly use the current realm's
intrinsics as well: https://tc39.es/ecma262/#sec-throw-an-exception
This is a continuation of the previous three commits.
Now that create() receives the allocating realm, we can simply forward
that to allocate(), which accounts for the majority of these changes.
Additionally, we can get rid of the realm_from_global_object() in one
place, with one more remaining in VM::throw_completion().
Each of these strings would previously rely on StringView's char const*
constructor overload, which would call __builtin_strlen on the string.
Since we now have operator ""sv, we can replace these with much simpler
versions. This opens the door to being able to remove
StringView(char const*).
No functional changes.
This makes the page automatically update to reflect the system theme
when in "Color Scheme > Follow System Theme" mode without having to
manually cause a style update.
I already fixed the crash from this in #14470, but didn't fully fix
the issue. Currently the browser just avoids sending the
inspect_dom_node() IPC call for non-visible nodes.
The main problem with this is it means the browser keeps displaying
the overlay for the previously selected node. This commit fixes
the crash in the WebContent side, so the IPC call can still be made
and the selection correctly updated.
To achieve this goal:
- The Browser unveils "/tmp/portal/filesystemaccess"
- Pass the page through LoadRequest => ResourceLoader
- ResourceLoader requests a file to the FileSystemAccessServer via IPC
- OutOfProcessWebView handles it and sends a file descriptor back to
the Page.
This is the final component that required LibProtocol as a dependency
of LibWeb. With this, we can now remove the dependency, and LibWeb no
longer requires IPC to work :^)
Much like the ImageDecoder change, this moves the underlying connection
of the Web::WebSockets class from LibWeb to LibWebView, removing the
need for LibProtocol in LibWeb for this specific use-case.
After this change, LibWeb now expects Web::ImageDecoding::Decoder to be
pre-initialized with a concrete implementation before using the webpage.
The previous implementation, based on the ImageDecoder service, has been
provided directly through an adapter in LibWebClient, and is now used as
the default value by WebContent.