This change fixes a bug in our implementation of the “step base”
algorithm at https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#concept-input-min-zero. We
were using the “value” IDL/DOM attribute in a particular step, where the
spec instead actually requires using the “value” content attribute.
A font-size with rem units need to resolve against the default font
metrics for the root element, otherwise every time we compute style,
the reference value for rem units grows.
This fixes an issue where text on some web pages would grow every time
there was a relayout. This was very noticeable on https://proton.me/Fixes#339
We already have a check to skip the layout of descendants if the
available size is intrinsic, but this is not sufficient in nested
intrinsic layout cases, where the available size might be definite even
though we are in intrinsic layout mode.
We already have a check to skip the layout of descendants if the
available size is intrinsic, but this is not sufficient in nested
intrinsic layout cases, where the available size might be definite even
though we are in intrinsic layout mode.
Instead of trying to manually determine which parts of a bitmap fall
within the box of the `<img>` element, just draw the whole bitmap and
let Skia clip the draw-area to the correct rectangle.
This fixes a bug where the entire bitmap was squashed into the rectangle
of the image box instead of being clipped.
With this change, image rendering is now correct enough to import some
of the WPT tests for object-fit and object-position. To get some good
coverage I have imported all tests for the `<img>` tag. I also wanted to
import a subset of the tests for the `<object>` tag, since those are
passing as well now. Unfortunately, they are flaky for unknown reasons.
This change implements HTMLInputElement type=email constraint validation
in conformance with the current spec requirements (which happens to also
produce behavior that’s interoperable with other existing engines).
Before this change, an element masked with 'mask-image: url(...)' would
show the mask, but 'mask: url(...)' would not. On e.g. dialogic.nl it
would show white boxes instead of the actual images in the top
navigation bar. We still do not support many of the other mask
properties, but with this change at least the masks show up in both
cases.
There is further work needed to complete the implementation of
URL::Pattern::Pattern, but this implements the remaining URLPattern
exec and test IDL interfaces, leaving all remaining work to LibURL.
This is a bit weird in the spec in it passing through a string here
instead of a URL record. However, the string being used in this
case should only ever be a valid URL string if it is not the empty
string.
Instead of relying on the implicit URL constuctor. Parsing should
never fail here as urlString before adding the suffix is already
parsed above, and the suffix should only be a valid query string.
This is the same type as what is spec'd. We cannot use a URL record
for this member as the spec in some scenarios will set and compare
the URL string to an invalid URL value, such as the empty string.
With implicit string constructors for the URL class removed
explicitly using URL::Parser::basic_parse makes the code look
quite silly in those places.
This change implements HTMLInputElement type=url constraint validation
in such a way as to match the behavior in other existing engines (which
is, however, very different from what the spec currently requires).
We already have logic to play or cancel animations in an element's
subtree when the display property changes to or from none. However,
this was not sufficient to cover the case when an element starts/stops
being nested in display none after insertion.
The DOMParsing spec is in the process of being merged into the HTML one,
gradually. The linked spec change moves XMLSerializer, but many of the
algorithms are still in the DOMParsing spec so I've left the links to
those alone.
I've done my best to update the GN build but since I'm not actually
using it, I might have done that wrong.
Corresponds to 2edb8cc7ee
These form the basis of Content Security Policy. A policy is a
collection of directives that are parsed from either the
Content-Security-Policy(-Report-Only) HTTP header, or the `<meta>`
element.
The directives are what restrict the operations can be performed in the
current global execution context. For example, "frame-ancestors: none"
tells us to prevent the page from being loaded in an embedded context,
such as `<iframe>`.
You can see it a bit like OpenBSD's pledge() functionality, but for the
web platform: https://man.openbsd.org/pledge.2
Previously, despite CTRL being held, the webpage elements such as
checboxes (if existing) could 'hijact' moving to the next and previous
tab with CTRL+TAB and CTRL+SHIFT+TAB.
All necessary invalidations are issued while invalidating animated
style. There is no need to drop display list simply because there are
some animations that might need an update.
Note that "becomes browsing-context connected" is defined as:
> When the insertion steps are invoked with it as the argument and it is
> now browsing-context connected.
This fixes an issue where WPT editing tests would clone the entire DOM
thousands of times and re-fetch all the linked CSS files once per clone.
We set the page's focused navigable upon mouse-down events from the UI.
However, we neglected to ever clear that focused navigable upon events
such as subsequent page navigations. This left the page with a stale
reference to a no-longer-active navigable. The effect was that any key
events from the UI would not be sent to the new page until either the
reference was collected by GC, or another mouse-down event occurred.
In the test added here, without this fix, the text sent to the input
element would not be received, and the change event would not fire.
In some cases, we might be hovering directly on an element
scrollable e.g. horizontally, but we are scrolling vertically.
In these cases, we need to delegate the scroll to the parent
instead of stalling the user's scroll.
Instead of marking all nodes in the subtree for style recalculation,
including subtrees of subsequent siblings, we can fall back to the
default invalidation path, which is optimized to skip siblings
unaffected by sibling selectors.
Makes scrolling on https://frame.work/pl/en/about go a lot smoother.