While introducing clip and scroll frame trees, I made a mistake by assuming that the paintable tree includes boxes from nested navigables. Therefore, this comment in the code was incorrect, and clip/scroll frames were simply not assigned for iframes: // NOTE: We only need to refresh the scroll state for traversables // because they are responsible for tracking the state of all // nested navigables. As a result, anything with "overflow: scroll" is currently not scrollable inside an iframe This change fixes that by ensuring clip and scroll frames are assigned and refreshed for each navigable. To achieve this, I had to modify the display list building process to record a separate display list for each navigable. This is necessary because scroll frame ids are local to a navigable, making it impossible to call `DisplayList::apply_scroll_offsets()` on a display list that contains ids from multiple navigables. |
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.devcontainer | ||
.github | ||
AK | ||
Base/res | ||
Documentation | ||
Ladybird | ||
Meta | ||
Tests | ||
Toolchain | ||
Userland | ||
.clang-format | ||
.clang-tidy | ||
.clangd | ||
.editorconfig | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gn | ||
.mailmap | ||
.pre-commit-config.yaml | ||
.prettierignore | ||
.prettierrc | ||
.swift-format | ||
.ycm_extra_conf.py | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
CMakePresets.json | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
flake.lock | ||
flake.nix | ||
ISSUES.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
SECURITY.md | ||
vcpkg-configuration.json | ||
vcpkg.json |
Ladybird
Ladybird is a truly independent web browser, using a novel engine based on web standards.
Important
Ladybird is in a pre-alpha state, and only suitable for use by developers
Features
We aim to build a complete, usable browser for the modern web.
Ladybird uses a multi-process architecture with a main UI process, several WebContent renderer processes, an ImageDecoder process, and a RequestServer process.
Image decoding and network connections are done out of process to be more robust against malicious content. Each tab has its own renderer process, which is sandboxed from the rest of the system.
At the moment, many core library support components are inherited from SerenityOS:
- LibWeb: Web rendering engine
- LibJS: JavaScript engine
- LibWasm: WebAssembly implementation
- LibCrypto/LibTLS: Cryptography primitives and Transport Layer Security
- LibHTTP: HTTP/1.1 client
- LibGfx: 2D Graphics Library, Image Decoding and Rendering
- LibArchive: Archive file format support
- LibUnicode: Unicode and locale support
- LibAudio, LibMedia: Audio and video playback
- LibCore: Event loop, OS abstraction layer
- LibIPC: Inter-process communication
How do I build and run this?
See build instructions for information on how to build Ladybird.
Ladybird runs on Linux, macOS, Windows (with WSL2), and many other *Nixes.
How do I read the documentation?
Code-related documentation can be found in the documentation folder.
Get in touch and participate!
Join our Discord server to participate in development discussion.
Before opening an issue, please see the issue policy and the detailed issue-reporting guidelines.
A general guide for contributing can be found in CONTRIBUTING.md
.
License
Ladybird is licensed under a 2-clause BSD license.