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>.
This commit introduces a WEB_SET_PROTOTYPE_FOR_INTERFACE macro that
caches the interface name in a local static FlyString. This means that
we only pay for FlyString-from-literal lookup once per browser lifetime
instead of every time the interface is instantiated.
With this change, we now have ~1200 CellAllocators across both LibJS and
LibWeb in a normal WebContent instance.
This gives us a minimum heap size of 4.7 MiB in the scenario where we
only have one cell allocated per type. Of course, in practice there will
be many more of each type, so the effective overhead is quite a bit
smaller than that in practice.
I left a few types unconverted to this mechanism because I got tired of
doing this. :^)