Commit graph

7 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Linus Groh
09bd5f8772 LibJS: Rewrite most of Object for spec compliance :^)
This is a huge patch, I know. In hindsight this perhaps could've been
done slightly more incremental, but I started and then fixed everything
until it worked, and here we are. I tried splitting of some completely
unrelated changes into separate commits, however. Anyway.

This is a rewrite of most of Object, and by extension large parts of
Array, Proxy, Reflect, String, TypedArray, and some other things.

What we already had worked fine for about 90% of things, but getting the
last 10% right proved to be increasingly difficult with the current code
that sort of grew organically and is only very loosely based on the
spec - this became especially obvious when we started fixing a large
number of test262 failures.

Key changes include:

- 1:1 matching function names and parameters of all object-related
  functions, to avoid ambiguity. Previously we had things like put(),
  which the spec doesn't have - as a result it wasn't always clear which
  need to be used.
- Better separation between object abstract operations and internal
  methods - the former are always the same, the latter can be overridden
  (and are therefore virtual). The internal methods (i.e. [[Foo]] in the
  spec) are now prefixed with 'internal_' for clarity - again, it was
  previously not always clear which AO a certain method represents,
  get() could've been both Get and [[Get]] (I don't know which one it
  was closer to right now).
  Note that some of the old names have been kept until all code relying
  on them is updated, but they are now simple wrappers around the
  closest matching standard abstract operation.
- Simplifications of the storage layer: functions that write values to
  storage are now prefixed with 'storage_' to make their purpose clear,
  and as they are not part of the spec they should not contain any steps
  specified by it. Much functionality is now covered by the layers above
  it and was removed (e.g. handling of accessors, attribute checks).
- PropertyAttributes has been greatly simplified, and is being replaced
  by PropertyDescriptor - a concept similar to the current
  implementation, but more aligned with the actual spec. See the commit
  message of the previous commit where it was introduced for details.
- As a bonus, and since I had to look at the spec a whole lot anyway, I
  introduced more inline comments with the exact steps from the spec -
  this makes it super easy to verify correctness.
- East-const all the things.

As a result of all of this, things are much more correct but a bit
slower now. Retaining speed wasn't a consideration at all, I have done
no profiling of the new code - there might be low hanging fruits, which
we can then harvest separately.

Special thanks to Idan for helping me with this by tracking down bugs,
updating everything outside of LibJS to work with these changes (LibWeb,
Spreadsheet, HackStudio), as well as providing countless patches to fix
regressions I introduced - there still are very few (we got it down to
5), but we also get many new passing test262 tests in return. :^)

Co-authored-by: Idan Horowitz <idan.horowitz@gmail.com>
2021-07-04 22:07:36 +01:00
Andreas Kling
ee3a73ddbb AK: Rename downcast<T> => verify_cast<T>
This makes it much clearer what this cast actually does: it will
VERIFY that the thing we're casting is a T (using is<T>()).
2021-06-24 19:57:01 +02:00
Idan Horowitz
dcb55db99b LibJS: Replace boolean without_side_effects parameters with an enum 2021-06-17 16:52:15 +02:00
Brian Gianforcaro
1682f0b760 Everything: Move to SPDX license identifiers in all files.
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 *
2021-04-22 11:22:27 +02:00
Linus Groh
da177c6517 LibJS: Make Errors fully spec compliant
The previous handling of the name and message properties specifically
was breaking websites that created their own error types and relied on
the error prototype working correctly - not assuming an JS::Error this
object, that is.

The way it works now, and it is supposed to work, is:

- Error.prototype.name and Error.prototype.message just have initial
  string values and are no longer getters/setters
- When constructing an error with a message, we create a regular
  property on the newly created object, so a lookup of the message
  property will either get it from the object directly or go though the
  prototype chain
- Internal m_name/m_message properties are no longer needed and removed

This makes printing errors slightly more complicated, as we can no
longer rely on the (safe) internal properties, and cannot trust a
property lookup either - get_without_side_effects() is used to solve
this, it's not perfect but something we can revisit later.

I did some refactoring along the way, there was some really old stuff in
there - accessing vm.call_frame().arguments[0] is not something we (have
to) do anymore :^)

Fixes #6245.
2021-04-12 09:38:57 +02:00
Andreas Kling
cad4cc9a2a LibWeb: Invalidate element style after setting Element.style.foo
This makes us recompute style for the element so the change actually
takes effect. :^)
2021-03-16 19:00:42 +01:00
Andreas Kling
4559faf8d8 LibWeb: Support named CSS properties on CSSStyleDeclaration wrapper
Use the new CustomGet/CustomPut wrapper mechansim to intercept gets and
puts on CSSStyleDeclaration objects. This allows content to get and set
individual CSS properties from JavaScript. :^)
2021-03-15 21:20:33 +01:00