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.
If multiple cross-document navigations are queued on
SessionHistoryTraversalQueue, running the next entry before the current
document load is finished may result in a deadlock. If the new document
has a navigable element of its own, it will append steps to SHTQ and
hang in nested spin_until.
This change uses promises to ensure that the current document loads
before the next entry is executed.
Fixes timeouts in the imported tests.
Co-authored-by: Sam Atkins <sam@ladybird.org>
This flag defaults to false for new Documents, such as the one created
here for use by template elements' contents. Without setting it to
true, nothing inside a template can have a declarative shadow dom.
As noted, this appears to be a spec issue. I am not convinced that this
is the correct fix, but it is simple and does solve the issue without
any apparent regressions.
This would happen for example when removing a slot element from the DOM,
in which case it would keep its old list of assigned slottables even
though it now has none. Fixes a couple of WPT tests.
We need to prevent these mutation observers from being garbage
collected, and since they are only part of SimilarOriginWindowAgent and
themselves as part of the intrusive list, nobody is visiting them.
Make the list of pending mutation observers a GC::RootVector so we keep
them alive until they have been processed in the microtask.
Restores 1400+ WPT subtest passes in `dom/nodes/Element-classlist.html`.
Fixes the `dom/nodes/getElementsByClassName-11.xml` WPT test, which can
be imported but unfortunately not run since it's not an .html file.
Co-authored-by: YTBuzzles <bentory15@proton.me>
We use a Vector for this, but its spec definition is an ordered set.
That means we need to ensure we don't add duplicates. This fixes issues
where we would send slotchange events multiple times to the same
HTMLSlotElement.
In the current spec, MutationObservers are explicitly added to the
pending mutation observers list, and they are removed when that list is
cleared in the "notify mutation observers" microtask.
This solves some issues with slotchange events.
As noted, we delay actually emptying the list of pending mutation
observers until after we're finished with the "clone", because we can't
actually copy or move the intrusive list. As far as I am aware, this
should not affect behaviour because only one microtask can run at once.
`font-weight` and `font-size` both can have keywords that are relative
to their inherited value, and so need recomputing when that changes.
Fixes all but one subtest in font-weight-computed.html, because that
remaining one uses container-query units. No font-size tests seem to be
affected: font-size-computed.html doesn't update the parent element's
`font-size` so this invalidation bug didn't apply.
We have a couple of ways to designate spec notes and (our) developer
notes in comments, but we never really settled on a single approach. As
a result, we have a bit of a mixed bag of note comments on our hands.
To the extent that I could find them, I changed developer notes to
`// NB: ...` and changed spec notes to `// NOTE: ...`. The rationale for
this is that in most web specs, notes are prefixed by `NOTE: ...` so
this makes it easier to copy paste verbatim. The choice for `NB: ...` is
pretty arbitrary, but it makes it stand out from the regular spec notes
and it was already in wide use in our codebase.
The implementation here is a ad-hoc, but there's no clear spec for
exactly how to handle "critical subresources" blocking rendering.
For now, this is overly conservative but fixes ugly FOUC on some
websites like https://hey.com/
Before this change, we've been maintaining various StyleComputer caches
at the document level.
This made sense for old-school documents without shadow trees, since
all the style information was document-wide anyway. However, documents
with many shadow trees ended up suffering since any time you mutated
a style sheet inside a shadow tree, *all* style caches for the entire
document would get invalidated.
This was particularly expensive on Reddit, which has tons of shadow
trees with their own style elements. Every time we'd create one of their
custom elements, we'd invalidate the document-level "rule cache" and
have to rebuild it, taking about ~60ms each time (ouch).
This commit introduces a new object called StyleScope.
Every Document and ShadowRoot has its own StyleScope. Rule caches etc
are moved from StyleComputer to StyleScope.
Rule cache invalidation now happens at StyleScope level. As an example,
rule cache rebuilds now take ~1ms on Reddit instead of ~60ms.
This is largely a mechanical change, moving things around, but there's
one key detail to be aware of: due to the :host selector, which works
across the shadow DOM boundary and reaches from inside a shadow tree out
into the light tree, there are various places where we have to check
both the shadow tree's StyleScope *and* the document-level StyleScope
in order to get all rules that may apply.
`play_or_cancel_animations_after_display_property_change` is called
whenever an element is inserted or removed, or it's display property
changes, but it is only required to run if we actually have animations
to play or cancel.
Reduces time spent in the aforementioned function from ~2% to ~0.03%
when loading https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_in_American_television
This moves the responsibility of setting up a SourceCode object to the
users of JS::Lexer.
This means Lexer and Parser are free to use string views into the
SourceCode internally while working.
It also means Lexer no longer has to think about anything other than
UTF-16 (or ASCII) inputs. So the unit test for parsing various invalid
UTF-8 sequences is deleted here.
When an element has `display: contents` and it gets marked for a layout
tree rebuild, we actually have to mark its parent for rebuild as well.
The structure of the parent (and siblings) may change depending on how
the `display: contents` element changes (e.g position, display, etc.)
Prevents observably calling Trusted Types, which can run arbitrary JS,
cause crashes due to use of MUST and allow arbitrary JS to modify
internal elements.
We were doing this manually within `Document::update_layout()` and
`CSSStyleProperties::get_direct_property()` but we should do it for all
callers of `Document::update_style()`
This function was supposed to throw errors even before the TrustedTypes
spec thanks to the CharacterData replaceData call but had a MUST.
This changes this to ensure this function can throw an error