As suggested by Joshua, this commit adds the 2-clause BSD license as a
comment block to the top of every source file.
For the first pass, I've just added myself for simplicity. I encourage
everyone to add themselves as copyright holders of any file they've
added or modified in some significant way. If I've added myself in
error somewhere, feel free to replace it with the appropriate copyright
holder instead.
Going forward, all new source files should include a license header.
This patch adds a new "accept" promise that allows you to call accept()
on an already listening socket. This lets programs set up a socket for
for listening and then dropping "inet" and/or "unix" so that only
incoming (and existing) connections are allowed from that point on.
No new outgoing connections or listening server sockets can be created.
In addition to accept() it also allows getsockopt() with SOL_SOCKET
and SO_PEERCRED, which is used to find the PID/UID/GID of the socket
peer. This is used by our IPC library when creating shared buffers that
should only be accessible to a specific peer process.
This allows us to drop "unix" in WindowServer and LookupServer. :^)
It also makes the debugging/introspection RPC sockets in CEventLoop
based programs work again.
This is the first complex app to use pledge(), and it was extremely
easy to get it working.
The main trickiness comes from the RPC sockets that get set up inside
the GApplication constructor. Since it wants to unlink any old RPC
socket with the same filename and change the file mode of the new
socket, it needs both "cpath" and "fattr".
Once the GApplication has been constructed, it seems we can safely
drop those promises. Pretty cool!
I though it would be nice to also show the style that the browser uses
to display an element.
In order to do that, in place of the styles table I've put a tab widget,
with tabs for both element and computed element styles.
When selecting an element in the browser's DOM inspector, we now also
show the resolved CSS properties (and their values) for that element.
Since the inspector was growing a bit more complex, I moved it out of
the "show inspector" action callback and into its own class.
In the future, we will probably want to migrate the inspector down to
LibHTML to make it accessible to other clients of the library, but for
now we can keep working on it inside Browser. :^)
Lock each directory before entering it so when using -j, the same
dependency isn't built more than once at a time.
This doesn't get full -j parallelism though, since one make child
will be sitting idle waiting for flock to receive its lock and
continue making (which should then do nothing since it will have
been built already). Unfortunately there's not much that can be
done to fix that since it can't proceed until its dependency is
built by another make process.
Instead of directly manipulating LDFLAGS, set LIB_DEPS in each
subdirectory Makefile listing the libraries needed for
building/linking such as "LIB_DEPS = Core GUI Draw IPC Core".
This adds each library as an -L and -l argument in LDFLAGS, but
also adds the library.a file as a link dependency on the current
$(PROGRAM). This causes the given library to be (re)built before
linking the current $(PROGRAM), but will also re-link any binaries
depending on that library when it is modified, when running make
from the root directory.
Also turn generator tools like IPCCompiler into dependencies on the
files they generate, so they are built on-demand when a particular
directory needs them.
This all allows the root Makefile to just list directories and not
care about the order, as all of the dependency tracking will figure
it out.
Allow everything to be built from the top level directory with just
'make', cleaned with 'make clean', and installed with 'make
install'. Also support these in any particular subdirectory.
Specifying 'make VERBOSE=1' will print each ld/g++/etc. command as
it runs.
Kernel and early host tools (IPCCompiler, etc.) are built as
object.host.o so that they don't conflict with other things built
with the cross-compiler.
This opens the source of the current document in TextEditor.
For file:// URLs, we open the local file, but for all other protocols,
a temporary file is generated, containing the document source.
Longer-term we should build some kind of viewer into the Browser app
instead. That would avoid silly problems like how this forgets to
delete the temporary files, for instance :^)
This patch implements basic support for <a href="#foo"> fragment links.
To figure out where we actually want to scroll to, we have to do
something different based on the layout node's box type. So if it's a
regular LayoutBox we can just use the LayoutBox::position().
However, if it's an inline layout node, we use the position of the
first line box fragment in the containing block contributed by this
layout node or one of its descendants.
HtmlView will now invoke the on_link_hover hook when the cursor enters
or leaves a DOM node that has an enclosing link element.
This patch also updates the meaning of Node::enclosing_link_element()
to find the nearest HTMLAnchorElementAncestor *with an href attribute*.
The layout root is now kept alive via Document::m_layout_root.
This will allow us to do more layout-related things inside the inner
layer of LibHTML without reaching out to the HtmlView.
I'd like to keep HtmlView at a slightly higher level, to prevent it
from getting too complex.
This patch also fixes accidental disconnection of the layout tree from
the DOM after doing a layout tree rebuild. ~LayoutNode() now only
unsets the DOM node's layout_node() if it's itself.
For now this is simply a counter+hook exposed by ResourceLoader and
shown in the Browser status bar.
This is not very nuanced, and it would be nice to expose more info so
we could eventually do something like a progress bar.