These instances were detected by searching for files that include
IterationDecision.h, but don't match the regex:
\\bIterationDecision(?!\.h>)\\b
This is the only symbol defined by IterationDecision.h.
In theory, one might use LibCPP to detect things like this
automatically, but let's do this one step after another.
In 7c5e30daaa, the focus was "only" on
Userland/Libraries/, whereas this commit cleans up the remaining
headers in the repo, and any new badly-formatted include.
This change introduces an action to bookmarks that allows them to be
opened in a new browser window. This is done by accessing any
bookmark's context menu and pressing "Open in New Window".
This fixes a few things I noticed whilst working on the inspector
for Ladybird.
1.
The computed and resolved values were being passed swapped around
from the inspect_dom_node() IPC call. I.e. computed values were
passed as resolved values and vice versa. This was then fixed by
swapping them again in the InspectorWidget (two errors canceled out).
2.
Resolved values were called "specified values" seemingly only in the
inspect_dom_node() IPC calls. This was a little confusing so I've
renamed them to back to "resolved values" for consistency.
3.
The inspector took and stored the DOM JSON strings unnecessarily,
all the models immediately parse the JSON and don't need the strings
to hang around.
This currently doesn't work when running Serenity through QEMU, as it
doesn't pass the side button events over to Serenity due to some bug or
missing feature.
Currently, cookies are ephemeral and only survive for the lifetime of
Browser instance. This will make Browser instead store cookies in a SQL
database for persisted access.
Updating cookies through these hooks happens in one of two manners:
1. Through the Browser's storage inspector.
2. Through WebDriver's delete-cookies operation.
In (1), we should not restrict ourselves to being able to delete cookies
for the current page. For example, it's handy to open the inspector from
the welcome page and be able to delete cookies for any domain.
In (2), we already are only interacting with cookies that have been
matched against the document URL.
This is a first step towards handling PNG encoding failures instead of
just falling over and crashing the program.
This initial step will cause encode() to return an error if the final
ByteBuffer copy fails to allocate. There are more potential failures
that will be surfaced by subsequent commits.
Two FIXMEs were killed in the making of this patch. :^)
This will make it easier to support both string types at the same time
while we convert code, and tracking down remaining uses.
One big exception is Value::to_string() in LibJS, where the name is
dictated by the ToString AO.
We have a new, improved string type coming up in AK (OOM aware, no null
state), and while it's going to use UTF-8, the name UTF8String is a
mouthful - so let's free up the String name by renaming the existing
class.
Making the old one have an annoying name will hopefully also help with
quick adoption :^)
The lack of this action caused a bug in my original patch
(https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/pull/16004) that appeared when
accessing a site that redirected the client and it was the first site
the client loaded.
We now replace the current history entry if the page-load has been
caused because of a redirect. This makes it able to traverse the
history if one of the entries redirects you, which previously
caused an infinite history traversion loop.
WebDriver now only has an IPC connection to WebContent. WebDriver still
launches the browser, but now when the session ends, we simply send a
SIGTERM signal to the browser.
There are a couple changes here from the existing Get All Cookies
implementation.
1. Previously, WebDriver actually returned *all* cookies in the cookie
jar. The spec dictates that we only return cookies that match the
document's URL. Specifically, it calls out that we must run just the
first step of RFC 6265 section 5.4 to perform domain matching.
This change adds a special mode to our implementation of that section
to skip the remaining steps.
2. We now fill in the SameSite cookie attribute when serializing the
cookie to JSON (this was a trival FIXME that didn't get picked up
when SameSite was implemented).
Requests to maximize and minimize Browser windows will be coming from
the WebContent process rather than the WebDriver process. Add hooks to
propagate these requests back up to the Browser.