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.
Previously, a method with multiple sequence arguments would cause a
compile error, as the same variable name was redeclared when iterating
the sequence for each argument. This change disambiguates these
variable names.
This change fixes the IDLGenerators.cpp implementation of the “If
reflectedTarget's explicitly set attr-element is a descendant of any of
element's shadow-including ancestors” step from the “If a reflected IDL
attribute has the type T?, where T is either Element or an interface
that inherits from Element” case in the HTML spec at
http://whatwg.org/html/#reflecting-content-attributes-in-idl-attributes
This change updates the BindingsGenerator/IDLGenerators.cpp code to
handle reflected non-HTML::AttributeNames content-attribute names, and
to handle such names as-is — including names with dashes.
This change updates the bindings generator for the case defined at
https://html.spec.whatwg.org/#reflecting-content-attributes-in-idl-attributes:element;
that is, the case “If a reflected IDL attribute has the type T?, where T
is either Element or an interface that inherits from Element”.
The change “normalizes” the generator behavior for that case — such that
the generated code expects a getter with a name of the form used in
other cases; e.g., popover_target_element().
Otherwise, without this change, the generator expects a name of the form
get_popover_target_element() for that case.
1. Stop using GC::Root in member variables, since that usually creates
a realm leak.
2. Stop putting OrderedHashMap<FlyString, GC::Ptr> on the stack while
setting these up, since that won't protect the objects from GC.
Some WPT tests expect that if you go out of your way to
Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor on an interface object and extract
the setter out of it, that they throw when called with no arguments.
In conformance with the requirements of the spec PR at
https://github.com/whatwg/html/pull/9546, this change adds support for
the “switch” attribute for type=checkbox “input” elements — which is
shipping in Safari (since Safari 17.4). This change also implements
support for exposing it to AT users with role=switch.
There are essentially 3 URL parsing AOs defined by the spec:
1. Parse a URL
2. Encoding parse a URL
3. Encoding parse a URL and serialize the result
Further, these are replicated between the Document and the ESO.
This patch defines these methods in accordance with the spec and updates
existing users to invoke the correct method. In places where the correct
method is ambiguous, we use the encoding parser to preserve existing ad-
hoc behavior.
The WebIDL for the `Headers` constructor specifies that the `init`
parameter is optional and must be of type `HeadersInit`. While the
parameter can be omitted (or explicitly set to `undefined`),
`null` is not a valid value.
This change fixes at least 2 "Create headers with null should throw"
WPT subtests which I have imported in this patch.
When experimenting with different inheritance structures, I ended up
seeing compilation failures whenever a parent class defined a `call`
method. This seems more in line with the rest of the code.
In line with the ShadowRealm proposal changes in the WebIDL spec:
webidl#1437 and supporting changes in HTML spec.
This is required for ShadowRealms as they have no relevant settings
object on the shadow realm, so fixes a crash in the QueueingStrategy
test in this commit.
I believe this is an error in the UI Events spec, and it should be
updated to match the HTML spec (which uses WindowProxy everywhere).
This fixes a bunch of issues already covered by existing WPT tests.
Spec bug: https://github.com/w3c/uievents/issues/388
Note that WebKit has been using WindowProxy instead of Window in
UI Events IDL since 2018:
816158b4aa
We were previously throwing an exception if the generated code was
throwing an exception before it hit the implementation of the interface.
Instead, we are meant to catch any exception, and wrap that in a
rejected promise.
For example, this was impacting the fixed test in this commit as an
exception was being thrown when invoking WebIDL::convert_to_int<T>
as the given number was out of range, and the [EnforceRange]
extended attribute decorates that attribute.
This same type of case is seen for a few tests in WPT.