Form submissions to file:// URLs are now permitted only if the
submitting document is also a file:// URL and the form method is "get".
Form submissions to URLs with a http(s):// URL protocol are permitted.
Form submissions for all other URL protocols are rejected.
When computing the list of blocks to deallocate when freeing an inode,
we would stop collecting blocks after reaching the inode's block count.
Since we're getting rid of the inode, we need to also include the meta
blocks used by the on-disk block list itself.
Keeping the VM call frames in a Vector could cause them to move around
underneath us due to Vector resizing. Avoid this issue by allocating
CallFrame objects on the stack and having the VM simply keep a list
of pointers to each CallFrame, instead of the CallFrames themselves.
Fixes#3830.
Fixes#3951.
As the global object is constructed and initialized in a different way
than most other objects we were not setting its prototype! This made
things like "globalThis.toString()" fail unexpectedly.
If value.to_string() throws an exception and returns a null string we
must create an invalid StringOrSymbol, not one from the null string
(which ASSERT()s).
* Change the register structures to use the volatile keyword explicitly
on the register values. This avoids accidentally omitting it as any
access will be guaranteed volatile.
* Don't assume we can read/write 64 bit value to the main counter and
the comparator. Not all HPET implementations may support this. So,
just use 32 bit words to access the registers. This ultimately works
around a bug in Bochs 2.6.11 that loses 32 bits of a 64 bit write to
a timer's comparator register (it internally writes one half and
clears the Tn_VAL_SET_CNF bit, and then because it's cleared it
fails to write the second half).
* Properly calculate the tick duration in calculate_ticks_in_nanoseconds
* As per specification, changing the frequency of one periodic timer
requires a restart of all periodic timers as it requires the main
counter to be reset.
Some things, like (the non-generic version of) Array.prototype.pop(),
check is_empty() to determine whether an action, like removing elements,
can be performed. We need to know the array-like size for that, not the
size of the underlying storage, which can be different - and is not
something IndexedProperties should expose so I removed its size().
Fixes#3948.
- We have to check if the property name is a string before calling
as_string() on it
- We can't as_number() the same property name but have to use the parsed
index number
Fixes#3950.
We had competing inline definitions of the placement operators new.
Avoid this by having <AK/kmalloc.h> pull in <new> from the compiler
and always using their definitions instead.
I feel like there must be an elegant solution to this whole situation
with the operators, but I'm not sure what it is.
We can't assume that property names can be converted to strings anymore,
as we have symbols. Use name.to_value() instead.
This makes something like this possible:
new Proxy(Object, { get(t, p) { return t[p] } })[Symbol.hasInstance]
This was probably a result of search & replace, it's quite ridiculous in
some places. Let use the existing pattern of getting a reference to the
VM once at each function start consistently.
This allows issuing asynchronous requests for devices and waiting
on the completion of the request. The requests can cascade into
multiple sub-requests.
Since IRQs may complete at any time, if the current process is no
longer the same that started the process, we need to swich the
paging context before accessing user buffers.
Change the PATA driver to use this model.
Because allocating/freeing regions may require locks that need to
wait on other processors for completion, this needs to be delayed
until it's safer. Otherwise it is possible to deadlock because we're
holding the global heap lock.
Function calls that are deferred will be executed before a thread
enters a pre-emptable state (meaning it is not in a critical section
and it is not in an irq handler). If it is not already in such a
state, it will be called immediately.
This is meant to be used from e.g. IRQ handlers where we might want
to block a thread until an interrupt happens.
This fixes Array.prototype.{join,toString}() crashing with arrays
containing themselves, i.e. circular references.
The spec is suspiciously silent about this, and indeed engine262, a
"100% spec compliant" ECMA-262 implementation, can't handle these cases.
I had a look at some major engines instead and they all seem to keep
track or check for circular references and return an empty string for
already seen objects.
- SpiderMonkey: "AutoCycleDetector detector(cx, obj)"
- V8: "CycleProtectedArrayJoin<JSArray>(...)"
- JavaScriptCore: "StringRecursionChecker checker(globalObject, thisObject)"
- ChakraCore: "scriptContext->CheckObject(thisArg)"
To keep things simple & consistent this uses the same pattern as
JSONObject, MarkupGenerator and js: simply putting each seen object in a
HashTable<Object*>.
Fixes#3929.
`AK::URL` will now check if the URL requires a port to be set using
`AK::URL.protocol_requires_port(protocol)`.
If the URL does not specify a port, and no default port for the URL
protocol is found with `AK::URL.default_port_for_protocol(protocol)`,
the URL is considered to be invalid.
This renames Object::to_primitive() to Object::ordinary_to_primitive()
for two reasons:
- No confusion with Value::to_primitive()
- To match the spec's name
Also change existing uses of Object::to_primitive() to
Value::to_primitive() when the spec uses the latter (which will still
call Object::ordinary_to_primitive()). Object::to_string() has been
removed as it's not needed anymore (and nothing the spec uses).
This makes it possible to overwrite an object's toString and valueOf and
have them provide results for anything that uses to_primitive() - e.g.:
const o = { toString: undefined, valueOf: () => 42 };
Number(o) // 42, previously NaN
["foo", o].toString(); // "foo,42", previously "foo,[object Object]"
++o // 43, previously NaN
etc.
This should not just inherit Object.prototype.toString() (and override
Object::to_string()) but be its own function, i.e.
'RegExp.prototype.toString !== Object.prototype.toString'.
When value.to_string() throws an exception it returns a null string in
which case we must not construct a valid PropertyName.
Also ASSERT in PropertyName(String) and PropertyName(FlyString) to
prevent this from happening in the future.
Fixes#3941.
We must *never* call some method that expects a non-empty value on the
result of a function call without checking for exceptions first. It
won't work reliably.
Fixes#3939.
This regressed when turning the terminal history into a circular buffer
as only the non-const version of Terminal::line() was updated with
the new indexing logic.
This looks at three things:
- if the type has a typedef `AllowOwnPtr', respect that
- if not, disallow construction if both of `ref()' and `unref()' are
present.
Note that in the second case, if a type only defines `ref()' or only
defines `unref()', an OwnPtr can be created, as a RefPtr of that type
would be ill-formed.
Also marks a `Performance' to explicitly allow OwnPtrs.