Ran into a crash here while testing LibProtocol changes. The method we
invoke here (did_progress) already accepts an Optional, and handles when
that Optional is empty. So there's no need to assume `total_size` is
non-empty.
Supporting unbuffered fetches is actually part of the fetch spec in its
HTTP-network-fetch algorithm. We had previously implemented this method
in a very ad-hoc manner as a simple wrapper around ResourceLoader. This
is still the case, but we now implement a good amount of these steps
according to spec, using ResourceLoader's unbuffered API. The response
data is forwarded through to the fetch response using streams.
This will eventually let us remove the use of ResourceLoader's buffered
API, as all responses should just be streamed this way. The streams spec
then supplies ways to wait for completion, thus allowing fully buffered
responses. However, we have more work to do to make the other parts of
our fetch implementation (namely, Body::fully_read) use streams before
we can do this.
This adds an alternate API to ResourceLoader to load HTTP/HTTPS/Gemini
requests unbuffered. Most of the changes here are moving parts of the
existing ResourceLoader::load method to helper methods so they can be
re-used by the new ResourceLoader::load_unbuffered.
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.
All painting commands except SetClipRect are shifted by scroll offset
before command list execution. This change removes scroll offset
translation for sample/blit corner commands in
`PaintableWithLines::paint` so it is only applied once in
`CommandList::apply_scroll_offsets()`.
Currently, these only work when there are no CSS transforms (as the
stacking context painting is not set up to handle that case yet). This
is still enough to get most chat/comment markers working on GitHub
though :^)
The WebAssembly spec never relies on host system information, like
size_t. For consistency's sake, we should stick to the usage of u32's
instead of size_t's. This didn't cause issues before because
LEB128-encoded u64's are a superset of LEB128-encoded u32's.
...and use a different color name until a (relatively harmless) bug
writing fully-opaque frames to an animation that also has transparent
frames is fixed. (I've had a local fix for that for a while, but
I'm waiting for #24397 to land.)
Download files to a temporary location, then only move the downloaded
file to the real location once the download is complete. This prevents
CMake from being confused about partially-downloaded files, e.g. if
someone presses ctrl+c in the middle of a download.
Note the GN build already behaves this way.
- Less allocations
- Optimization pass that skips unnecessary sample/blit corner commands
could be more effecient by ignoring corner radius clipping for empty
painting commands
Both page target bitmap and mask bitmap are always BGRA8888, so we can
use `get_pixel<StorageFormat::BGRA8888>` and
`set_pixel<StorageFormat::BGRA8888>` to avoid branching by not
checking a bitmap format.
The if statement in the dispatch implies we are in the idle state, so of
course the active time will always be undefined. If this was cancelled
via a call to cancel(), we can save the time at that point. Otherwise,
just send 0.
This means that userspace breakpoint traps no longer panic the kernel.
This also causes us to no longer panic on failed assertions in userspace
when using gcc, as gcc compiles __builtin_trap to breakpoint
instructions on RISC-V.
I saw a null pointer dereference here on GitHub once, but don't know how
to reproduce, or how we'd get here. Nevertheless, null-checking the
navigable is reasonable so let's do it.