Commit graph

13 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Timothy Flynn
9375660b64 LibHTTP+LibWeb+RequestServer: Move Fetch's HTTP header infra to LibHTTP
The end goal here is for LibHTTP to be the home of our RFC 9111 (HTTP
caching) implementation. We currently have one implementation in LibWeb
for our in-memory cache and another in RequestServer for our disk cache.

The implementations both largely revolve around interacting with HTTP
headers. But in LibWeb, we are using Fetch's header infra, and in RS we
are using are home-grown header infra from LibHTTP.

So to give these a common denominator, this patch replaces the LibHTTP
implementation with Fetch's infra. Our existing LibHTTP implementation
was not particularly compliant with any spec, so this at least gives us
a standards-based common implementation.

This migration also required moving a handful of other Fetch AOs over
to LibHTTP. (It turns out these AOs were all from the Fetch/Infra/HTTP
folder, so perhaps it makes sense for LibHTTP to be the implementation
of that entire set of facilities.)
2025-11-27 14:57:29 +01:00
Timothy Flynn
0fd80a8f99 LibTextCodec+LibWeb: Move isomorphic coders to LibTextCodec
This will be used outside of LibWeb.
2025-11-27 14:57:29 +01:00
Timothy Flynn
00070455fd LibWeb: Parse the correct header list for CSP-Report-Only
Fixes a regression from a copy-paste mistake in commit:
ed27eea091

The regressed CSP tests aren't able to be imported, unfortunately. They
do not work with the file-based test-web infra.
2025-11-26 21:22:35 -05:00
Timothy Flynn
f675cfe90f LibWeb: Store HTTP methods and headers as ByteString
The spec declares these as a byte sequence, which we then implemented as
a ByteBuffer. This has become pretty awkward to deal with, as evidenced
by the plethora of `MUST(ByteBuffer::copy(...))` and `.bytes()` calls
everywhere inside Fetch. We would then treat the bytes as a string
anyways by wrapping them in StringView everywhere.

We now store these as a ByteString. This is more comfortable to deal
with, and we no longer need to continually copy underlying storage (as
ByteString is ref-counted).

This work is largely preparatory for an upcoming HTTP header refactor.
2025-11-26 09:15:06 -05:00
Timothy Flynn
ed27eea091 LibWeb: Do not copy the result of HeaderList::extract_header_list_values
There's no need to copy the Vector out of this result every time we call
it. We can move it out or access it directly.
2025-11-26 09:15:06 -05:00
Timothy Flynn
d70224ad2e LibWeb: Organize Fetch Headers.h/Headers.cpp a bit
Generally just define things in the order they are declared (will make a
change to use ByteString in this file a bit easier to follow). Also make
a couple of free functions be class methods on Header / HeaderList.
2025-11-26 09:15:06 -05:00
Shannon Booth
e0d7278820 LibURL+LibWeb: Make URL::Origin default constructor private
Instead, porting over all users to use the newly created
Origin::create_opaque factory function. This also requires porting
over some users of Origin to avoid default construction.
2025-06-17 20:54:03 +02:00
Luke Wilde
e364443e60 LibWeb: Support Content-Security-Policy http-equiv state on meta element 2025-05-23 16:39:13 +02:00
Timothy Flynn
1c075d6039 LibWeb: Remove Web::Infra ASCII case conversion methods
We have more optimized versions of these methods in AK.
2025-05-04 15:59:17 +02:00
Shannon Booth
8a3c66d8a6 LibWeb: Make a bunch of CSP classes not realm associated
These are not associated with a javascript realm, so to avoid
confusion about which realm these need to be created in, make
all of these objects a GC::Cell, and deal with the fallout.
2025-04-28 12:41:28 +02:00
Timothy Flynn
ee6b2db009 AK+LibURL+LibWeb: Use simdutf to validate ASCII strings
simdutf provides a vectorized ASCII validator, so let's use that instead
of looping over strings manually.
2025-04-06 11:05:58 -04:00
Luke Wilde
86170f4bfd LibWeb/CSP: Introduce the ability to create and report a violation
A violation provides several details about an enforcement failing, such
as the URL of the document, the directive that returned "Blocked", etc.
2025-03-19 00:55:14 +01:00
Luke Wilde
e34a6c86b9 LibWeb: Introduce Content Security Policy policies and directives
These form the basis of Content Security Policy. A policy is a
collection of directives that are parsed from either the
Content-Security-Policy(-Report-Only) HTTP header, or the `<meta>`
element.

The directives are what restrict the operations can be performed in the
current global execution context. For example, "frame-ancestors: none"
tells us to prevent the page from being loaded in an embedded context,
such as `<iframe>`.

You can see it a bit like OpenBSD's pledge() functionality, but for the
web platform: https://man.openbsd.org/pledge.2
2025-03-04 14:27:19 +01:00