Implements idea described in
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1vEW86DaeVs4uQzNFI5R-_xS9TcS1Cs_EUsHRSgCHGu8
Invalidation sets are used to reduce the number of elements marked for
style recalculation by collecting metadata from style rules about the
dependencies between properties that could affect an element’s style.
Currently, this optimization is only applied to style invalidation
triggered by class list mutations on an element.
Same again, although rotation is more complicated: `rotate`
is "equivalent to" multiple different transform function depending on
its arguments. So we can parse as one of those instead of the full
`rotate3d()`, but then need to handle this when serializing.
The only ways this varies from the `scale()` function is with parsing
and serialization. Parsing stays separate, and serialization is done by
telling `TransformationStyleValue` which property it is, and overriding
its normal `to_string()` code for properties other than `transform`.
https://webaudio.github.io/web-audio-api/#AnalyserNode
Most of the interface is naively implemented. Container types
probably need adjusted (Vector<double> is used for all the processing).
A Fourier Transform is needed, but that's waiting on either a 3rd
party library or a complex number type.
There are lots of simple miscellaneous filters that need to be applied.
It could be reasonable to implement from scratch, supposing that
it can be parallelized. It might be hard to find one library with
everything. Not my call though.
Some additional scaffolding around blocks and render quanta is
probably needed before this is developed much further, which
probably comes in at the level of the AudioNode.
Co-authored-by: Tim Ledbetter <tim.ledbetter@ladybird.org>
This makes it more convenient to use the 'relvant agent' concept,
instead of the awkward dynamic casts we needed to do for every call
site.
mutation_observers is also changed to hold a GC::Root instead of raw
GC::Ptr. Somehow this was not causing problems before, but trips up CI
after these changes.
Instead of storing all storage objects in static memory, we now
follow the the spec by lazily creating a unique Storage object
on each document object.
Each Storage object now holds a 'proxy' to the underlying backing
storage. For now, this proxy is simply a reference to the backing
object. In the future, it will need to be some type of interface
object that stores on a SQLite database or similar.
Session storage is now correctly stored / tracked as part of the
TraversableNavigable object.
Local storage is still stored in a static map, but eventually this
should be factored into something that is stored at the user agent
level.
Before this change, StyleComputer would essentially take a DOM element,
find all the CSS rules that apply to it, and resolve the computed value
for each CSS property for that element.
This worked great, but it meant we had to do all the work of selector
matching and cascading every time.
To enable new optimizations, this change introduces a break in the
middle of this process where we've produced a "CascadedProperties".
This object contains the result of the cascade, before we've begun
turning cascaded values into computed values.
The cascaded properties are now stored with each element, which will
later allow us to do partial updates without re-running the full
StyleComputer machine. This will be particularly valuable for
re-implementing CSS inheritance, which is extremely heavy today.
Note that CSS animations and CSS transitions operate entirely on the
computed values, even though the cascade order would have you believe
they happen earlier. I'm not confident we have the right architecture
for this, but that's a separate issue.
This reverts commit 76daba3069.
We're going to need separate types for the JS-exposed style values, so
it doesn't make sense for us to match their names with our internal
types.
We are currently constructing the attribute names as FlyStrings every
time we invoke one of the ARIA attributes getters/setters. If there are
not any other instances of these strings in-memory, then we're thrashing
the FlyString cache.
Instead, let's follow suit of all other Web attributes - use an x-macro
to generate the attribute names.
To facilitate the implementation of "delete" and all associated
algorithms, split off this piece of `Document` into a separate
directory.
This sets up the infrastructure for arbitrary commands to be supported.
This is to resolve naming conflicts between the ServiceWorker JS exposed
object and the internal representation of a ServiceWorker which is going
to be stored cross process.