With Ladybird now being its own repository, there's little reason
to keep the Ladybird Android port in the SerenityOS repository.
(The Qt port is useful to be able to test changes to LibWeb in lagom
so it'll stay around. Similar for the AppKit port, since getting
Qt on macOS is a bit annoying. But if the AppKit port is too much
pain to keep working, we should toss that too.
Eventually, the lagom browser ports should move out from Ladybird/
to Meta/Lagom/Contrib, but for now it might make sense to leave them
where they are to keep cherry-picks from ladybird easier.)
No longer just for response headers! The same type is obviously useful
and ergonomic when making requests as well.
(cherry picked from commit 260c5c50ad19f19d0d4c30984e512f56c055ecff)
Updated various SerenityOS components to make it build.
Before we had HTTP::HeaderMap (which preserves multiple headers with the
same name), we collected multiple "Set-Cookie" headers and bundled them
together as a JSON array.
This was a huge hack, and now we can stop doing that, since LibWeb gets
access to the full set of headers now.
(cherry picked from commit 5ac093885922246529a467054888e598f8832450)
Instead of using a HashMap<ByteString, ByteString, CaseInsensitive...>
everywhere, we now encapsulate this in a class.
Even better, the new class also allows keeping track of multiple headers
with the same name! This will make it possible for HTTP responses to
actually retain all their headers on the perilous journey from
RequestServer to LibWeb.
(cherry picked from commit e636851481eabdf00953573a5eb459ee52feeacc)
Updated various SerenityOS components to make it build.
Fetch: Make sure we iterate over HeaderMap's headers()
This fixes a build failure when built with CMake option
'-DENABLE_ALL_THE_DEBUG_MACROS=ON'.
(cherry picked from commit c51d01bea712d75f9b2cd700be942935044e49b4)
This option skips attempting any chrome IPC which even with the
`--new-window` does not open a new browser process. This is annoying
when trying to compare browser options as opening a new window with
the currently running chrome ignores any options passed to the new
ladybird invocation.
This adds a `--experimental-cpu-transforms` option to Ladybird and
WebContent (which defaults to false/off).
When enabled the AffineCommandExecutorCPU will be used to handle
painting transformed stacking contexts (i.e. stacking contexts where
the transform is something other than a simple translation). The regular
command executor will still handle the non-transformed cases.
This is hidden under a flag as the `AffineCommandExecutorCPU` is very
incomplete now. It missing support for clipping, text, and other basic
commands. Once most common commands have been implemented this flag
will be removed.
LibWeb will need to use unbuffered requests to support server-sent
events. Connection for such events remain open and the remote end sends
data as HTTP bodies at its leisure. The browser needs to be able to
handle this data as it arrives, as the request essentially never
finishes.
To support this, this make Protocol::Request operate in one of two
modes: buffered or unbuffered. The existing mechanism for setting up a
buffered request was a bit awkward; you had to set specific callbacks,
but be sure not to set some others, and then set a flag. The new
mechanism is to set the mode and the callbacks that the mode needs in
one API.
This is to avoid including any LibProtocol header in Objective-C source
files, which will cause a conflict between the Protocol namespace and a
@Protocol interface.
See Ladybird/AppKit/Application/ApplicationBridge.cpp for why this
conflict unfortunately cannot be worked around.
Previously RS handled all the requests in an event loop, leading to
issues with connections being started in the middle of other connections
being started (and potentially blowing up the stack), ultimately causing
requests to be delayed because of other requests.
This commit reworks the way we handle these (specifically starting
connections) by first serialising the requests, and then performing them
in multiple threads concurrently; which yields a significant loading
performance and reliability increase.
Now that the chrome process is a singleton on all platforms, we can
safely add a cache to the CookieJar to greatly speed up access. The way
this works is we read all cookies upfront from the database. As cookies
are updated by the web, we store a list of "dirty" cookies that need to
be flushed to the database. We do that synchronization every 30 seconds
and at shutdown.
There's plenty of room for improvement here, some of which is marked
with FIXMEs in the CookieJar.
Before these changes, in a SQL database populated with 300 cookies,
browsing to https://twinings.co.uk/ WebContent spent:
19,806ms waiting for a get-cookie response
505ms waiting for a set-cookie response
With these changes, it spends:
24ms waiting for a get-cookie response
15ms waiting for a set-cookie response
We already have required this version for quite a while for Lagom,
Ladybird and Serenity. Now that we require it in all of our CMakeLists,
let's scrub for better ways of writing things.
This actually actives the underlying tab if needed. This wasn't an issue
previously, as new tabs were always created in already active windows.
But when new windows/tabs are requested from new Ladybird processes, we
need to actually activate those tabs.
For some reason, we occasionally receive a junk `info` pointer from the
CFSocketCallback we create for socket notifiers. Instead of capturing a
pointer to the local Core::Notifier for this `info` member, grab it from
the thread data instance based on the socket FD.
This was mostly seen when spamming new window requests to an existing
Ladybird process.
When we receive a LibCore event, we post an "application defined" Cocoa
event to the NSApp. However, we are currently only processing these from
`pump`, which is only invoked manually.
Instead, we should listen for the event that we've posted and process
the event queue at that time. This is much closer to how Qt's event loop
behaves as well with EventLoopImplementationQtEventTarget.
This shows the following actions:
* Reload Tab
* Duplicate Tab
* Move Tab
* Move to Start
* Move to End
* Close Tab
* Close Other Tabs
* Close Tabs to Left
* Close Tabs to Right
* Close Other Tabs
Rather than getting the tab name from the tab container. This resolves
an issue where ampersands were being introduced to the window title
when changing tabs.
This broke due to the way we now use posix_spawn under the hood. This
moves the handling of the callgrind option to the launcher helper where
we iterate over the candidate process paths, as we need to augment the
way we fork the process for callgrind based on those paths.
This also opens the door for running other processes under callgrind in
the future.
This really only affects headless-browser when it is linked with Qt. In
that case, it currently uses Qt networking by default and does not have
a flag to use RequestServer instead. Change the default to use RS so it
can undergo sanitized testing in CI.
The following command was used to clang-format these files:
clang-format-18 -i $(find . \
-not \( -path "./\.*" -prune \) \
-not \( -path "./Base/*" -prune \) \
-not \( -path "./Build/*" -prune \) \
-not \( -path "./Toolchain/*" -prune \) \
-not \( -path "./Ports/*" -prune \) \
-type f -name "*.cpp" -o -name "*.mm" -o -name "*.h")
There are a couple of weird cases where clang-format now thinks that a
pointer access in an initializer list, e.g. `m_member(ptr->foo)`, is a
lambda return statement, and it puts spaces around the `->`.