This removes the --enable-callgrind-profiling flag, and replaces it with
a --profile-process=<process-name> flag. For example:
ladybird --profile-process=WebContent
ladybird --profile-process=RequestServer
This allows profiling any helper process with callgrind.
This removes the --debug-web-content flag, and replaces it with a
--debug-process=<process-name> flag. For example:
ladybird --debug-process=WebContent
ladybird --debug-process=RequestServer
This allows attaching gdb to any helper process.
Currently, if we want to add a new e.g. WebContent command line option,
we have to add it to all of Qt, AppKit, and headless-browser. (Or worse,
we only add it to one of these, and we have feature disparity).
To prevent this, this moves command line flags to WebView::Application.
The flags are assigned to ChromeOptions and WebContentOptions structs.
Each chrome can still add its platform-specific options; for example,
the Qt chrome has a flag to enable Qt networking.
There should be no behavior change here, other than that AppKit will now
support command line flags that were previously only supported by Qt.