This is implemented by these related changes:
* The Skia alpha type 'Opaque' is selected for surfaces that were
created with the intention of not having an alpha channel.
Previously we were simply creating one with alpha.
* Clearing now happens through Skia's `clear()` which always uses the
source color's value for the result, instead of setting all values
to 0.
* CanvasRenderingContext2D selects a different clearing color based on
the `alpha` context attribute's value.
Previously, the `|=` would not compare strings containing `-`
characters correctly because it would only compare the element
attribute up to the first `-` character.
Bitmap::get_pixel() was only handling two out of the four possible pixel
formats, asserting when called with the other two. The asserting code
path was triggered when loading JPEG XL images, causing crashes on pages
like https://jpegxl.info/resources/jpeg-xl-test-page or
https://html5test.co/.
Previously if we encountered any attributes with a namespace other than
`xml` or `xmlns`, we treated it as a parse error. Now, allow it as long
as it's been declared in the current context.
We also handle errors more gracefully - instead of exploding if setting
the namespace fails, treat it as an error and carry on.
This is a improved version of a73cd88f0c
The old commit was reverted in 552dd18696
The new version only paints an element into a new layer if background
blend modes other than normal are used. The rasterization performance
of most websites should therefore not suffer.
Co-Authored-By: Alexander Kalenik <kalenik.aliaksandr@gmail.com>
This reverts commit a73cd88f0c.
Emitting SaveLayer for each paintable made rasterization a lot slower
on every website because now Skia has to allocate enormous amounts of
temporary surfaces. Let's revert it for now and figure how to implement
it with less aggressive SaveLayer usage.
Now we use `before_paint()` and `after_paint()` calls for SVG root box
to make sure that both clip and scroll are applied.
Fixes painting of SVG arrows on www.ubereats.com
Quite simply, ignore any declarations for properties we don't want,
while computing a pseudo-element's style.
I've imported a WPT test for this, which fails without this patch.
positioned element is a descendant of inline-block
Sets inline block offsets in InlineFormattingContext.cpp, but this is
not enough. When static position rect is calculated during layout,
not all ancestors of abspos box may have their offsets calculated yet
(more info here: https://github.com/LadybirdBrowser/ladybird/pull/2583#issuecomment-2507140272).
So now static position rect is calculated relative to static containing
block during layout and calculation relative to actual containing block
is done later in
FormattingContext::layout_absolutely_positioned_element.
Fixes wpt/css/CSS2/abspos/static-inside-inline-block.html
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 is the second attempt at this bugfix. The prior one was e055927ead
and broke image rendering whenever the page was scrolled. It has
subsequently been reverted in 16b14273d1. Hopefully this time it is not
horribly broken.
e055927ead introduced a regression that caused images to not be rendered
when the page was scrolled. This was subsequently reverted in
16b14273d1. To ensure this mistake cannot happen again, this commit
introduces a regression test for that error case.
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.
We previously only invalidated the cached color-stop data when the
painted area's size changed. However, multiple elements can use the
same gradient and be the same size, but have different parameters that
affect the gradient stop positions, for example if a stop has an em
position. This can also change for the same element over time.
The new cache instead uses these parameters as the cache key. So we
recompute the cache if lengths would resolve differently, or the area's
size is different.
The included test fails without this change.
This fixes an issue where `vertical-align: middle` would incorrectly
shift the text away from the natural alphabetic baseline.
Fixing this makes many WPT table tests work correctly, so I'm also
importing one of them here. :^)
When restructuring inline nodes because of a block element insertion
during the layout tree build, we might end up with a `display: contents`
element in the ancestor stack that is not part of the actual layout
tree, since it's never actually used as a parent for any node. Because
we were only rewinding the ancestor stack with actual new layout nodes,
it became corrupted and layout nodes were added to the wrong parent.
This new logic leaves the ancestor stack intact, only replacing layout
nodes whenever a new one is created.
Fixes the sidebar on https://reddit.com.
Fixes#3590.
When drawing a table, some of the CSS properties must be moved from the
table grid box to an anonamyous table wrapper box. One of these
properties is `position`. `z-index` however is not. This leads to the
following behavior if a table has both `position` and `z-index`:
* The wrapper box has the `position`, but a `z-index` of `auto`.
* The grid box has the `z-index`, but `position: static`.
This effectively means that the `z-index property is ignored since it
has no effect on non-positioned elements. This behavior contradicts what
other browsers do and causes layout issues on websites.
To align Ladybird behavior with other browser this commit also moves the
`z-index` property to the wrapper box.
We've long claimed to support this, but then silently ignored string
values, until 4cb2063577 which would
not-so-silently crash instead. (Oops)
So, actually pass the string value along and use it in the list marker.
As part of this, rename our `list-style-type` enum to
`counter-style-name-keyword`. This is an awkward name, attempting to be
spec-based. (The spec says `<counter-style>`, which is either a
`<counter-style-name>` or a function, and the `<counter-style-name>` is
a `<custom-ident>` that also has a few predefined values. So this is the
best I could come up with.)
Unfortunately only one WPT test for this passes - the others fail
because we produce a different layout when text is in `::before` than
when it's in `::marker`, and similar issues.
At computed-value time, this is converted to whatever the parent's
computed value is. So it behaves a little like `inherit`, except that
an inherited start/end value uses the parent's start/end, which might
be different from the child's.