The completion callback currently only accepts a JavaScriptModuleScript.
The same callback will need to be used for ClassicScript scripts as well
so allow the callback to accept any Script type. The single existing
outside caller already stores the result as a Script.
This ports MouseEvent, UIEvent, WheelEvent, and Event to new String.
They all had a dependency to T::create() in
WebDriverConnection::fire_an_event() and therefore had to be ported in
the same commit.
Because of interdependencies between DOM::Event and UIEvents::MouseEvent
to template function fire_an_event() in WebDriverConnection.cpp, the
commit: 'LibWeb: Make factory methods of UIEvents::MouseEvent fallible'
have been squashed into this commit.
Note that as of this commit, there aren't any such throwers, and the
call site in Heap::allocate will drop exceptions on the floor. This
commit only serves to change the declaration of the overrides, make sure
they return an empty value, and to propagate OOM errors frm their base
initialize invocations.
This needs to happen before prototype/constructor intitialization can be
made lazy. Otherwise, GC could run during the C++ constructor and try to
collect the object currently being created.
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 :^)
This patch adds support for script elements with the type attribute set
to "module". As a first cut the changes are mainly focused around inline
scripts.
Co-authored-by: davidot <davidot@serenityos.org>
Previously we would simply check the an input string against a list of
mime type essences, ignoring that the input might not be a valid mime
type or contain parameters.
This patch moves the helpers into the MimeSniff namespace and properly
parses an input string before comparing the essence.
This allows the garbage collector to keep HTML::Script objects alive and
fixes a bug where a HTMLScriptElement could get GC'd while its code was
executing.
Unlike ensure_web_prototype<T>(), the cached version doesn't require the
prototype type to be fully formed, so we can use it without including
the FooPrototype.h header. It's also a bit less verbose. :^)
This is a monster patch that turns all EventTargets into GC-allocated
PlatformObjects. Their C++ wrapper classes are removed, and the LibJS
garbage collector is now responsible for their lifetimes.
There's a fair amount of hacks and band-aids in this patch, and we'll
have a lot of cleanup to do after this.
Each of these strings would previously rely on StringView's char const*
constructor overload, which would call __builtin_strlen on the string.
Since we now have operator ""sv, we can replace these with much simpler
versions. This opens the door to being able to remove
StringView(char const*).
No functional changes.
We shouldn't delay the load event for scripts that we're completely
refusing to run anyway. Also, for scripts that have inline text content,
we don't need to delay them either, as they will become ready before
returning from "prepare script".
This makes the "load" event finally fire on lots of websites, including
Wikipedia. :^)
We previously had a bug where markup with unclosed script tags caused
the document load event to be delayed indefinitely. Fix this by only
marking script elements as delaying the load event once we encounter
the script end tag.
The environment settings object is effectively the context a piece of
script is running under, for example, it contains the origin,
responsible document, realm, global object and event loop for the
current context. This effectively replaces ScriptExecutionContext, but
it cannot be removed in this commit as EventTarget still depends on it.
https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/webappapis.html#environment-settings-object
Step 1 of the spec is to capture the <script> element's node document
into a local variable.
When I originally implemented this, I thought this was not necessary.
However, I realised that the script that runs can adopt the current
script element into a different document, meaning step 5.4 and 6 then
operate on the incorrect document.
Covered by this WPT: 7b0ebaccc6/html/semantics/scripting-1/the-script-element/moving-between-documents-during-evaluation.html