Per css-ui-4, setting `appearance: none` is supposed to suppress the
creation of a native-looking widget for stuff like checkboxes, radio
buttons, etc.
This patch implements this behavior by simply falling back to creating
a layout node based on the CSS `display` property in such cases.
This fixes an issue on the hey.com imbox page where we were rendering
checkboxes on top of sender profile photos.
Some callers (namely WebDriver) will need access to the navigable opened
by these steps. But if the noopener parameter is set, the returned proxy
will always be null.
This splits some of the Window open steps into an internal method that
returns the chosen navigable.
This is strictly nicer than passing them around as i32 everywhere,
and by switching to i64 as the underlying type, ID allocation becomes as
simple as incrementing an integer.
On the view-source page, generate anchor tags for any 'href' or 'src'
attribute value we come across. This handles both when the attribute
contains an absolute URL and a URL relative to the page.
This requires sending the document's base URL over IPC to resolve
relative URLs.
These flags always propagate to the root, so once we encounter an
ancestor with the flag set, we can stop traversal since everything above
it will already be set as well.
For pseudo elements that represent a browser-generated shadow tree
element, such as ::placeholder, we were reparsing their style attribute
in StyleComputer for some reason.
Instead of doing this, just access the already-parsed version via
Element::inline_style().
We only supported named properties on Storage, and as a result
`localStorage[0]` would be disconnected from the Storage's backing map.
Fixes at least 20 subtests in WPT in /webstorage.
As efforts to begin porting to Windows is underway, doing so should be a
bit less daunting if we clean up syscall wrappers that aren't used.
Note: While this removes Serenity-only wrappers, it leaves the Serenity
implementations of used wrappers in place for now, to not needlessly
complicate merging between the two orgs.
After InlinePaintable is gone it's possible to make this function accept
a PaintableBox instead of more broad
Layout::NodeWithStyleAndBoxModelMetrics type.
We've added a few JS::Handle members to this class over time. Let's
avoid creating a new GC root for each of these, and explicitly add a
visitation method.
Some of this code is older than widespread use of GCPtr. These functions
returning raw pointers has been a point of confusion at times, so lets
just indicate that they are non-null.
Without this, a worker can be GC'd in a very simple script such as:
const worker = new Worker("script.js");
worker.onmessage = () => {};
Where script.js attempts to post a message back to the parent window.
When the Worker is GC'd, the IPC connection from the WebContent process
to the WebWorker process is closed. When this occurs, the WebWorker will
exit() from LibIPC, and any message from the worker to its parent does
not have a chance to run.
This just updates our copied spec steps - new steps are not implemented
here. This is mostly just to highlight new steps we are missing around
MessagePorts.
No behavior change, but this does resolve an outstanding FIXME around
spec step ordering.
1.25x speed-up on this microbenchmark:
let o = { get x() { return 1; } };
for (let i = 0; i < 10_000_000; ++i)
o.x;
I looked into this because I noticed getter invocation when profiling
long-running WPT tests. We already had the mechanism for non-getter
properties, and the change to support getters turned out to be trivial.
These are created when a style rule has properties listed after another
rule. For example:
```css
.test {
--a: 1;
--b: 1;
--c: 1;
.thing {
/* ... */
}
/* These are after a rule (.thing) so they're wrapped in a
CSSNestedDeclarations: */
--d: 1;
--e: 1;
--f: 1;
}
```
They're treated like a nested style rule with the exact same selectors
as their containing style rule.
For example, this:
```css
.foo {
color: red;
&:hover {
color: green;
}
}
```
now has the same effect as this:
```css
.foo {
color: red;
}
.foo:hover {
color: green;
}
```
CSSStyleRule now has "absolutized selectors", which are its selectors
with any `&`s resolved. We use these instead of the "real" selectors
when matching them, meaning the style computer doesn't have to know or
care about where the selector appears in the CSS document.
Through the CSSOM, rules can be moved around, and so anything cached
(for now just the qualified layer name) needs to be recalculated when
that happens. This method is virtual so that other rules will be able
to clear their cached data too.