This namespace will be used for all interfaces defined in the URL
specification, like URL and URLSearchParams.
This has the unfortunate side-effect of requiring us to use the fully
qualified AK::URL name whenever we want to refer to the AK class, so
this commit also fixes all such references.
This is in preparation for implementing JS scrolling functions, which
specify both x and y scrolling deltas. The visible behavior has not
changed.
Also, moved the "mouse wheel delta * 20" calculation to the
`EventHandler` since the JS calls will want to work directly in pixels.
Any browsing context that doesn't have a parent browsing context is now
considered a top-level browsing context. This matches the HTML spec.
This means we no longer keep a pointer to the top-level context, since
we can simply walk the parent chain until we find the topmost ancestor.
We already have a base class for frame elements that we call
BrowsingContextContainer. This patch makes BrowsingContext::container()
actually return one of those.
This makes us match the spec names, and also solves a FIXME about having
a shared base for <frame> and <iframe>. (We already had the shared base,
but the pointer we had there wasn't tightly typed enough.)
At the moment, nested browsing contexts expect that there's always a
top-level browsing context at some higher level. That's okay, but let's
keep the top-level pointer in a WeakPtr to make it easier to catch
mistakes (as this turns UAF into a null dereference.)
If the text-for-rendering of the last selected node is empty, the select
all implementation would end up setting the index to -1. This value is
used directly for a substring length in the copy text implementation,
thus would cause a failed assertion.
Adds support for the :active pseudo-class for hyperlinks (<a> tags
only).
Also, since it was very similar to :focus and an element having a
focused state was already implemented, I went ahead and implemented
that pseudo-class too, although I cannot come up with a working
example to validate it.
The previous behavior was to always VERIFY that the UTF-8 bytes were
valid when iterating over the code points of an UTF8View. This change
makes it so we instead output the 0xFFFD 'REPLACEMENT CHARACTER'
code point when encountering invalid bytes, and keep iterating the
view after skipping one byte.
Leaving the decision to the consumer would break symmetry with the
UTF32View API, which would in turn require heavy refactoring and/or
code duplication in generic code such as the one found in
Gfx::Painter and the Shell.
To make it easier for the consumers to detect the original bytes, we
provide a new method on the iterator that returns a Span over the
data that has been decoded. This method is immediately used in the
TextNode::compute_text_for_rendering method, which previously did
this in a ad-hoc waay.
This also add tests for the new behavior in TestUtf8.cpp, as well
as reinforcements to the existing tests to check if the underlying
bytes match up with their expected values.
Our "frame" concept very closely matches what the web specs call a
"browsing context", so let's rename it to that. :^)
The "main frame" becomes the "top-level browsing context",
and "sub-frames" are now "nested browsing contexts".
This patch updates the Page::keydown_event event handler to implement
crude Unicode support. It implements new method in EditEventHandler to
more easily handle deleting a single character after the cursor.
Furthermore, it makes use of the previously implemented methods to
increment and decrement the cursor position, which take into account
that Unicode codepoint may be multiple bytes wide.
This means it is now possible to mostly edit Unicode in editable DOM
nodes without any crashes. :^)
This introduces methods to increment and decrement the cursor position.
This is non-trivial as the cursor position is specified in bytes rather
than codepoints. Thus, it sometimes needs to be incremented or
decremented by more than one, depending on the codepoint to "jump over".
Because the cursor blink cycle needs to be reset after moving the
cursor, methods calling the ones in DOM::Position are implemented in
Frame. Furthermore, this allows the cursor_position() getter to stay
const. :^)
Additionally, it adds a offset_is_at_end_of_node() method which checks
if the current offset points to the end of the node.
This patch makes two modifications to improve the behavior of cursors in
editable DOM nodes, such as HTML tags with the contenteditable
attribute.
When the cursor blink cycle is reset in an editable DOM node, a repaint
should be initiated. For this, set_needs_display() needs to be called on
the layout node. Previously, the cursor blink cycle would not reset
properly and moving the cursor with the arrow keys did not feel
intuitive.
Furthermore, this modifies one of the conditions necessary to actually
paint the cursor, which previously prevented it from being painted when
at the end of a text node, after all the text present.
Before this patch, pressing modifier keys such as Ctrl would insert
whitespace into editable DOM nodes. This patch crudely fixes that
behavior by checking if the codepoint associated with the event is
non-zero.
This patch downgrades some TODO() calls when the cursor in an editable
DOM node should move to the previous or next node. Previously, the
process would crash, whereas now, the cursor will just stay where it
was.
This seems more sensible for now, as there is no reason to crash just
because of this.
A Frame now knows about its nesting-level.
The FrameLoader checks whether the recursion level of the current
frame allows it to be displayed and if not doesn't even load the
requested resource.
The nesting-check is done on a per-URL-basis, so there can be many many
nested Frames as long as they have different URLs.
If there are however Frames with the same URL nested inside each other
we only allow this to happen 3 times.
This mitigates infinetely recursing <iframe>s in an HTML-document
crashing the browser with an OOM.
This commit unifies methods and method/param names between the above
classes, as well as adds [[nodiscard]] and ALWAYS_INLINE where
appropriate. It also renamed the various move_by methods to
translate_by, as that more closely matches the transformation
terminology.
HTMLCollection is an awkward legacy interface from the DOM spec.
It provides a live view of a DOM subtree, with some kind of filtering
that determines which elements are part of the collection.
We now return HTMLCollection objects from these APIs:
- getElementsByClassName()
- getElementsByName()
- getElementsByTagName()
This initial implementation does not do any kind of caching, since that
is quite a tricky problem, and there will be plenty of time for tricky
problems later on when the engine is more mature.
SPDX License Identifiers are a more compact / standardized
way of representing file license information.
See: https://spdx.dev/resources/use/#identifiers
This was done with the `ambr` search and replace tool.
ambr --no-parent-ignore --key-from-file --rep-from-file key.txt rep.txt *
To protect the main Browser process against nefarious cookies, parse the
cookies out-of-process and then send the parsed result over IPC to the
main process. This way, if the cookie parser blows up, only that tab
will be affected.
This flag warns on classes which have `virtual` functions but do not
have a `virtual` destructor.
This patch adds both the flag and missing destructors. The access level
of the destructors was determined by a two rules of thumb:
1. A destructor should have a similar or lower access level to that of a
constructor.
2. Having a `private` destructor implicitly deletes the default
constructor, which is probably undesirable for "interface" types
(classes with only virtual functions and no data).
In short, most of the added destructors are `protected`, unless the
compiler complained about access.
These provide the cursor coordinate within the viewport at which the
event occurred (as opposed to the page relative coordinates exposed via
offsetX, offsetY).
To implement the HttpOnly attribute, the CookieJar needs to know where a
request originated from. Namely, it needs to distinguish between HTTP /
non-HTTP (i.e. JavaScript) requests. When the HttpOnly attribute is set,
requests from JavaScript are to be blocked.
The mutation algorithms now more closely follow the spec and
fixes some assertion failures in tests such as Acid3 and Dromaeo.
The main thing that is missing right now is passing exceptions to the
bindings layer. This is because of issue #6075. I spent a while trying
to work it out and got so frustrated I just left it as a FIXME. Besides
that, the algorithms bail at the appropriate points.
This also makes the adopting steps in the document more spec compliant
as it's needed by the insertion algorithm. While I was at it, I added
the adoptNode IDL binding.
This adds a bunch of ancestor/descendant checks to TreeNode as well.
I moved the "remove_all_children" function to Node as it needs to use
the full remove algorithm instead of simply removing it from
the child list.
It's a little awkward that we do this in two places, but IPWV and OOPWV
currently implement resizing a little differently from each other so we
need to cover both paths.
When a mousewheel scroll event isn't handled by the web content
itself (e.g. an overflowed box or similar), the event needs to get
passed back up to the OutOfProcessWebView.