This is a simple getter and setter of the OscillatorType enum, with
error checking to not allow 'custom', as that should only be changed
through 'setPeriodicWave()'.
This is still missing a bunch of spec steps to construct the
audio node based on the parameters of the OscillatorNode, but it is at
least enough to construct an object to be able to add a basic test which
can get built upon as more is implemented.
If a function has the following properties:
- uses only local variables and registers
- does not use `this`
- does not use `new.target`
- does not use `super`
- does not use direct eval() calls
then it is possible to entirely skip function environment allocation
because it will never be used
This change adds gathering of information whether a function needs to
access `this` from environment and updates `prepare_for_ordinary_call()`
to skip allocation when possible.
For now, this optimisation is too aggressively blocked; e.g. if `this`
is used in a function scope, then all functions in outer scopes have to
allocate an environment. It could be improved in the future, although
this implementation already allows skipping >80% of environment
allocations on Discord, GitHub and Twitter.
Which currently will always throw an exception as it is unimplemented
under the hood - but this gives all of the plumbing we need in order to
create a oscillator node as used in the reduced turnstyle testcase.
An AudioNode is the fundamental building block used in 'Audio
Contexts'. In our immediate case, the audio node we are working towards
implementing is an oscillating source node.
The ReadableStreamPipeTo AO requires reading all chunks from a stream.
There actually isn't an AO defined to do that, so the "read all bytes"
implementation was changed to provide each chunk in a vector in commit
12cfa08a09.
This change makes reading all bytes a bit more uncomfortable in normal
use cases, as we now have to manually join the vector we receive. This
can also cause churn with huge allocations.
So instead, let's just provide an ad-hoc callback to receive each chunk
as they arrive.
There were several instances where the spec marks an AO invocation as
infallible, but we were propagating WebIDL::ExceptionOr. These mostly
cannot throw due to knowledge about the values they are provided. By
unwinding these, we can remove a decent amount of exception handling.
There are a number of script-provided stream callbacks for various
stream operations, such as `start`, `pull`, `cancel`, etc. Out of all of
these, only the `start` callback can actually throw. And when it does,
the exception is realized immediately in the corresponding stream
constructor.
All other callbacks have spec text of the form:
Throwing an exception is treated the same as returning a rejected
promise.
And indeed this is internally handled by the streams spec. Thus all of
those callbacks can be specified as returning only a promise, rather
than a WebIDL::ExceptionOr<Promise>.
Previously, we would apply any adopted style sheet to the document if
its alternate flag was not set. This meant that all adopted style
sheets would be applied, since constructed style sheets never have this
flag set.
Changes compute_absolute_padding_rect_with_css_transform_applied() to
use cached absolute rect and CSS transform instead of doing expensive
containing block chain traversal.
Reduces refresh_clip_state() from 4% to 2% in Discord profiles.