Create LadybirdServiceBase to hold the standard "set resource dir" and
"init ipc sockets" service functionality that will be common between the
WebContent, RequestServer, and WebSocket services.
Refactor the handler class slightly to avoid the HandlerLeak lint by
making the class a static class inside the companion object and use a
WeakReference to the service instead of a strong one.
Previously, trying to access a non-readable file would cause a
connection reset in the browser; trying to access a non-executable
directory would show a completely empty directory listing.
The counter is incremented after each new generation and reset
whenever any cell on the board is toggled. Resizing the board
does not reset the tick count.
When updating /usr/Ports/AvailablePorts.md, the file or even the entire
/usr/Ports directory might not exist.
To cope with this, we should be able to create it ourselves. To ensure
we are able to do this, we should unveil both /usr and /usr/Ports.
Some steps are still to be implemented, namely:
* Properly aborting the read algorithm
* Handling BinaryString type properly
* Setting error on any error
But as it stands, this is enough functionality for the basic case of
reading the contents of a blob using the FileReader API.
The FileReader IDL has the following entry:
```
readonly attribute (DOMString or ArrayBuffer)? result;
```
This change supports the use ArrayBuffer as a JS built-in in this
definition.
ArrayBuffer no longer stores a plain ByteBuffer internally, but a
DataBlock instead, which encapsulated the ByteBuffer together with
information if it is shared or not.
This adds initial support for `open-quote`, `close-quote`,
`no-open-quote` and `no-close-quote`. We don't yet track the "nesting
level" so we always use the first pair of quotes from the `quotes`
property.
This version contains my patch that adds support for the proprietary
VideoCore mailbox message for reading the kernel command line, so
patches aren't needed anymore.
The `-maxdepth` option limits the number of levels `find` will descend
into the file system for each given starting point.
The `-mindepth` option causes commands not to be evaluated until the
specified depth is reached.