This URL library ends up being a relatively fundamental base library of
the system, as LibCore depends on LibURL.
This change has two main benefits:
* Moving AK back more towards being an agnostic library that can
be used between the kernel and userspace. URL has never really fit
that description - and is not used in the kernel.
* URL _should_ depend on LibUnicode, as it needs punnycode support.
However, it's not really possible to do this inside of AK as it can't
depend on any external library. This change brings us a little closer
to being able to do that, but unfortunately we aren't there quite
yet, as the code generators depend on LibCore.
These are standalone applications meant to be run by the user directly,
as opposed to other libexec processes which are programmatically forked
by the browser. To do this, we simply remove these processes from the
`ladybird_helper_processes` list. We must also explicitly list the
dependencies for these processes.
For Ninja Multi-Config, Xcode and Visual Studio, the way we set up our
output directories would result in exectuables that can't run from the
build directory. Add the same sauce that we added to Jakt to insert
``$<CONFIG>`` where appropriate.
After ea682207d0, we need Userland/
included directly in these application executables. This only impacts
the build with Ladybird/CMakeLists.txt as the top level CMakeLists, as
the Lagom/ directory includes Userland/ globally.
It aligns better with the Filesystem Heirarchy Standard[1] to put our
program-specific helper programs that are not intended to be executed by
the user of the application in $prefix/libexec or in whatever the
packager sets as the CMake equivalent. Namely, on Debian systems this
should be /usr/lib/Ladybird or similar.
[1] https://refspecs.linuxfoundation.org/FHS_3.0/fhs-3.0.html#usrlibexec
Don't put them in bin/ and then copy them to the bundle dir later, as
this means that they only get updated in the bundle directory if the
Ladybird binary itself needs updated. Which is not a fun workflow if you
are working on WPT and want to hack on the WebDriver binary.
We currently bundle AK with LibCore on Lagom. This means that to use AK,
all libraries must also depend on LibCore. This will create circular
dependencies when we create LibURL, as LibURL will depend on LibUnicode,
which will depend on LibCore, which will depend on LibURL.
When the `--dump-failed-ref-tests` flag is provided, screenshots of the
actual and reference pages will be placed in
`Build/lagom/ladbybird/test-dumps`. This makes it a lot easier to spot
what's wrong with a failing test. :^)
We now create a WorkerAgent for the parent context, which is currently
only a Window. Note that Workers can have Workers per the spec.
The WorkerAgent spawns a WebWorker process to hold the actual
script execution of the Worker. This is modeled with the
DedicatedWorkerHost object in the WebWorker process.
A start_dedicated_worker IPC method in the WebWorker IPC creates the
WorkerHost object. Future different worker types may use different IPC
messages to create their WorkerHost instance.
This implementation cannot yet postMessage between the parent and the
child processes.
Co-Authored-By: Andreas Kling <kling@serenityos.org>
If PulseAudio is available, the Qt6 audio plugin will never be used. So
let's remove it from the build.
Note that on macOS, the Qt6 audio plugin will be used if the Qt chrome
is enabled. Otherwise, Audio Unit will be used for the AppKit chrome.
This patch brings a service to handle image decompression. With it comes
security enhancement due to the process boundary. Indeed, consequences
of a potential attack is reduced as only the decoder will crash without
perturbing the WebContent process.
It also allows us to display pages containing images that we claim to
support but still make us crash, like for not-finished-yet decoders.
As an example, we can now load https://jpegxl.info/jxl-art.html without
crashing the WebContent process.
This commit includes only fetching the DOM tree from the WebContent
process and displaying it in an NSOutlineView. The displayed tree
includes some basic styling (e.g. colors).
This function used to live in AndroidPlatform.cpp, but was removed
during the transition to the new app. We still need to extract the
assets from the tarball that CMake creates. At least, until we come
up with a generic "Resource" concept in LibCore.
Timers run in their own thread, to take advantage of existing Java
Executor features. By hooking into ALooper, we can spin the main
Activity's UI thread event loop without causing a fuss, or spinning the
CPU by just polling our event loop constantly.
This allows our WebViewImplementationNative class to paint into an
Android Bitmap class from the onDraw() view event. We also set the
viewport geometry from the view since we're setting the Kotlin Bitmap
at the same time.
This ports over the `LADYBIRD_USE_LLD` option from the standalone
Ladybird build and generalizes it to work for mold as well: the
`LAGOM_USE_LINKER` variable can be set to the desired name of the
linker. If it's empty, we default to trying LLD and Mold on ELF
platforms (in this order).
This template app from Android Studio should hopefully be more fun to
work on than the Qt wrapped application we were using before. :^)
It currently builds the native code using gradle rules, and has a stub
WebViewImplementationNative class that will wrap a c++ class of the same
name that inhertis from WebView::ViewImplementation. Spawning helper
processes and creating proper views in Kotlin is next on the list.
These classes are used as-is in all chromes. Move them to LibWebView so
that non-Serenity chromes don't have to awkwardly reach into its headers
and sources.
This adds menu items to open an interactive JavaScript console for a web
page. This more or less mimics the Qt implementation of the console.
Hooks are included to tie the lifetime of the console window with the
tab it belongs to; if the tab is closed, the console window is closed.
Without setting the --resources flag, headless-browser defaults to /res
for all resources it tries to find, including the theme. It will not
find this path on Lagom, so our attempt to load the default theme does
not accomplish anything.
This adds an alternative Ladybird chrome for macOS using the AppKit
framework. Just about everything needed for normal web browsing has
been implemented. This includes:
* Tabbed, scrollable navigation
* History navigation (back, forward, reload)
* Keyboard / mouse events
* Favicons
* Context menus
* Cookies
* Dialogs (alert, confirm, prompt)
* WebDriver support
This does not include debugging tools like the JavaScript console and
inspector, nor theme support.
The Qt chrome is still used by default. To use the AppKit chrome, set
the ENABLE_QT CMake option to OFF.
By running ctest -C Integration -R WPT, you can run WPT. Adding just
-C Integration will run all other tests *and* the WPT test.
Also add support for ./Meta/serenity.sh test lagom WPT to serenity.sh
Non-Qt chromes will want to use the same Info.plist and bundle info as
the Qt chrome. This patch puts the CMake setup for the bundle into a
function that non-Qt chromes may call in their CMakeLists.txt. The Qt
chrome calls it automatically.