The recent commits 28ba610f32 and
70c4ed261f adjusted some include
directives to avoid excessive recompilation when changing some header
files. This has broken compilation with clang-cl on Windows without
getting noticed before the PRs were merged.
Some of this is rearranged for clarity, but it's mostly the exact same
code. Steps 3, 10, 11, and 15 are new, but don't have any effect until
we implement downward-growing cells.
Corresponds to:
93634aed57
The current live spec has been rearranged since this went in, so that
these steps are no longer located here. But that's a much larger change
that I don't want to implement right now. See here:
e09d10202d
While I was at it, I also made use of extract_error_information() to
populate the ErrorEvent.
I missed where this change happened in the spec. The second half of
abort_the_ongoing_navigation() becomes a separate method, which is
slightly rearranged. I've placed this in Navigation instead of
NavigateEvent because of how many steps poke at the Navigation's
internals.
The text here includes the amendments I made in
https://github.com/whatwg/html/pull/11967 to correct a variable name.
A bonus is that we now actually populate the ErrorEvent instead of
leaving it blank.
There are a couple of remaining RFC 9111 methods in LibWeb's Fetch, but
these are currently directly tied to the way we store GC-allocated HTTP
response objects. So de-coupling that is left as a future exercise.
This factors the conversion logic to be independent from WebGL code,
allowing us to write unit tests for it that can run in CI (since WebGL
can't run in CI).
The `Bitmap` type was referring to to its internal pixel format by a
name that represents the order of the color components as they are layed
out in memory. Contrary, the `Color` type was using a naming that where
the name represents the order of the components from most to least
significant byte when viewed as a unsigned 32bit integer. This is
confusing as you have to keep remembering which mental model to use
depending on which code you work with.
To unify the two, the naming of RGBA-like colors in the `Color` type has
been adjusted to match the one from the Bitmap type. This seems to be
generally in line with how web APIs think about these types:
* `ImageData.pixelFormat` can be `rgba-8unorm` backed by a
`Uint8ClamedArray`, but there is no pixel format backed by a 32bit
unsigned type.
* WebGL can use format `RGBA` with type `UNSIGNED_BYTE`, but there is no
such format with type `UNSIGNED_INT`.
Additionally, it appears that other browsers and browser-adjacent
libraries also think similarly about these types:
* Firefox:
https://github.com/mozilla-firefox/firefox/blob/main/gfx/2d/Types.h
* WebKit:
https://github.com/WebKit/WebKit/blob/main/Source/WebCore/platform/graphics/PixelFormat.h
* Skia:
https://chromium.googlesource.com/skia/+/refs/heads/main/include/core/SkColorType.h
This has the not so nice side effect that APIs that interact with these
types through 32bit unsigned integers now have the component order
inverted due to little-endian byte order. E.g. specifying a color as hex
constant needs to be done as `0xAABBGGRR` if it is to be treated as
RGBA8888.
We could alleviate this by providing endian-independent APIs to callers.
But I suspect long-term we might want to think differently about bitmap
data anyway, e.g. to better support HDR in the future. However, such
changes would be more involved than just unifying the naming as done
here. So I considered that out of scope for now.
The remaining failing tests in view-timeline-shorthand.html are due to
either:
a) incorrect tests, see web-platform-tests/wpt#56181 or;
b) a wider issue where we collapse coordinating value list longhand
properties to a single value when we shouldn't.
The remaining failing tests in scroll-timeline-shorthand.html are due to
either:
a) incorrect tests, see web-platform-tests/wpt#56181 or;
b) a wider issue where we collapse coordinating value list longhand
properties to a single value when we shouldn't.
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.)
An upcoming commit will migrate the contents of Headers.h/cpp to LibHTTP
for use outside of LibWeb. These CORS and MIME helpers depend on other
LibWeb facilities, however, so they cannot be moved.