Shape was allocating property tables inside visit_children(), which
could cause garbage collection to happen. It's not very good to start
a new garbage collection while you are in the middle of one already.
To make sure that everything is set up correctly in objects before we
start adding properties to them, we split cell allocation into 3 steps:
1. Allocate a cell of appropriate size from the Heap
2. Call the C++ constructor on the cell
3. Call initialize() on the constructed object
The job of initialize() is to define all the initial properties.
Doing it in a second pass guarantees that the Object has a valid Shape
and can find its own GlobalObject.
We need to move towards supporting multiple global objects, which will
be a large refactoring. To keep it manageable, let's do it in steps,
starting with giving Object a way to find the GlobalObject it lives
inside by asking its Shape for it.
Includes all traps except the following: [[Call]], [[Construct]],
[[OwnPropertyKeys]].
An important implication of this commit is that any call to any virtual
Object method has the potential to throw an exception. These methods
were not checked in this commit -- a future commit will have to protect
these various method calls throughout the codebase.
When calling Object.defineProperty, there is now a difference between
omitting a descriptor attribute and specifying that it is false. For
example, "{}" and "{ configurable: false }" will have different
attribute values.
This commit introduces a way to get an object's own properties in the
correct order. The "correct order" for JS object properties is first all
array-like index properties (numeric keys) sorted by insertion order,
followed by all string properties sorted by insertion order.
Objects also now print correctly in the repl! Before this commit:
courage ~/js-tests $ js
> ({ foo: 1, bar: 2, baz: 3 })
{ bar: 2, foo: 1, baz: 3 }
After:
courage ~/js-tests $ js
> ({ foo: 1, bar: 2, baz: 3 })
{ foo: 1, bar: 2, baz: 3 }
It turns out "delete" is actually a unary op :)
This patch implements deletion of object properties, it doesn't yet
work for casually deleting properties from the global object.
When deleting a property from an object, we switch that object to
having a unique shape, no longer sharing shapes with others.
Once an object has a unique shape, it no longer needs to care about
shape transitions.
Object.defineProperty() can now change the attributes of a property
already on the object. Internally this becomes a shape transition with
the TransitionType::Configure. Such transitions don't expand the
property storage capacity, but rather simply keep attributes up to date
when generating a property table.
We now care (a little bit) about the "configurable" and "writable"
property attributes.
Property attributes are stored together with the property name in
the Shape object. Forward transitions are not attribute-savvy and will
cause poor Shape reuse in the case of multiple same-name properties
with different attributes.
Oh, and this patch also adds Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor() :^)
This patch adds JS::Shape, which implements a transition tree for our
Object class. Object property keys, prototypes and attributes are now
stored in a Shape, and each Object has a Shape.
When adding a property to an Object, we make a transition from the old
Shape to a new Shape. If we've made the same exact transition in the
past (with another Object), we reuse the same transition and both
objects may now share a Shape.
This will become the foundation of inline caching and other engine
optimizations in the future. :^)