This is the final component that required LibProtocol as a dependency
of LibWeb. With this, we can now remove the dependency, and LibWeb no
longer requires IPC to work :^)
Much like the ImageDecoder change, this moves the underlying connection
of the Web::WebSockets class from LibWeb to LibWebView, removing the
need for LibProtocol in LibWeb for this specific use-case.
After this change, LibWeb now expects Web::ImageDecoding::Decoder to be
pre-initialized with a concrete implementation before using the webpage.
The previous implementation, based on the ImageDecoder service, has been
provided directly through an adapter in LibWebClient, and is now used as
the default value by WebContent.
We now distribute the line-height evenly between the space above and
below inline-level boxes. This noticeably improves our baseline
alignment in many cases.
Note that the "vertical-align: <length>" case is quite awkward, as the
extra height added by the offset baseline must count towards the line
box height.
There's a lot of room for improvement here, but this makes the buckets
container on Acid3 show up in the right place, with the right size.
This reverts most of commit ede5c9548e.
The one change not reverted is ClockWidget.h, so that the taskbar clock
can continue to notice time zone changes.
In most applications, we invoke tzset once at startup for now. Most of
these are short lived and don't need to know about time zone changes.
The exception is the ClockWidget in the taskbar. Here, we invoke tzset
each time we update the system time. This way, any time zone changes can
take effect immediately.
This is partially a revert of commits:
10a8b6d411561b67a1ad
Rather than adding the prot_exec pledge requried to use dlopen(), we can
link directly against LibUnicodeData in applications that we know need
that library.
This might make the dlopen() dance a bit unnecessary. The same purpose
might now be fulfilled with weak symbols. That can be revisted next, but
for now, this at least removes the potential security risk of apps like
the Browser having prot_exec privileges.
Loading libunicodedata.so will require dlopen(), which in turn requires
mmap(). The 'prot_exec' pledge is needed for this.
Further, the .so itself must be unveiled for reading. The "real" path is
unveiled (libunicodedata.so.serenity) as the symlink (libunicodedata.so)
itself cannot be unveiled.
This is an encapsulation of the common work done by all of our
single-client IPC servers on startup:
1. Create a Core::LocalSocket, taking over an accepted fd.
2. Create an application-specific ClientConnection object,
wrapping the socket.
It's not a huge change in terms of lines saved, but I do feel that it
improves expressiveness. :^)
With this change, System::foo() becomes Core::System::foo().
Since LibCore builds on other systems than SerenityOS, we now have to
make sure that wrappers work with just a standard C library underneath.
The current ProtocolServer was really only used for requests, and with
the recent introduction of the WebSocket service, long-lasting
connections with another server are not part of it. To better reflect
this, this commit renames it to RequestServer.
This commit also changes the existing 'protocol' portal to 'request',
the existing 'protocol' user and group to 'request', and most mentions
of the 'download' aspect of the request to 'request' when relevant, to
make everything consistent across the system.
Note that LibProtocol still exists as-is, but the more generic Client
class and the more specific Download class have both been renamed to a
more accurate RequestClient and Request to match the new names.
This commit only change names, not behaviors.
The WebSocket bindings match the original specification from the
WHATWG living standard, but do not match the later update of the
standard that involves FETCH. The FETCH update will be handled later
since the changes would also affect XMLHttpRequest.
SPDX License Identifiers are a more compact / standardized
way of representing file license information.
See: https://spdx.dev/resources/use/#identifiers
This was done with the `ambr` search and replace tool.
ambr --no-parent-ignore --key-from-file --rep-from-file key.txt rep.txt *
(...and ASSERT_NOT_REACHED => VERIFY_NOT_REACHED)
Since all of these checks are done in release builds as well,
let's rename them to VERIFY to prevent confusion, as everyone is
used to assertions being compiled out in release.
We can introduce a new ASSERT macro that is specifically for debug
checks, but I'm doing this wholesale conversion first since we've
accumulated thousands of these already, and it's not immediately
obvious which ones are suitable for ASSERT.
Now that WindowServer broadcasts the system theme using an anonymous
file, we need clients to pledge "recvfd" so they can receive it.
Some programs keep the "shared_buffer" pledge since it's still used for
a handful of things.