This is required to store Content Security Policies, as their
Directives are implemented as subclasses with overridden virtual
functions. Thus, they cannot be stored as generic Directive classes, as
it'll lose the ability to call overridden functions when they are
copied.
A couple of reasons:
- Origin's Host (when in the tuple state) can't be null
- There's an "empty host" concept in the spec which is NOT the same as a
null Host, and that was confusing me.
In #1537, determine_the_origin() changed to take
`Optional<URL::URL> const&` as first parameter, but it's passed
`Web::Fetch::Infrastructure::Response::url()`, which returns
`Optional<URL::URL const&>`. Ladybird does not have
SerenityOS/serenity#22870 (yet?), so this mismatch silently creates
a copy.
Change determine_the_origin() to take `Optional<URL::URL const&>`
instead. No behavior change, saves a copy, and is probably what
was originally intended.
Resulting in a massive rename across almost everywhere! Alongside the
namespace change, we now have the following names:
* JS::NonnullGCPtr -> GC::Ref
* JS::GCPtr -> GC::Ptr
* JS::HeapFunction -> GC::Function
* JS::CellImpl -> GC::Cell
* JS::Handle -> GC::Root
Now that the heap has no knowledge about a JavaScript realm and is
purely for managing the memory of the heap, it does not make sense
to name this function to say that it is a non-realm variant.
The main motivation behind this is to remove JS specifics of the Realm
from the implementation of the Heap.
As a side effect of this change, this is a bit nicer to read than the
previous approach, and in my opinion, also makes it a little more clear
that this method is specific to a JavaScript Realm.