First added in #161 this never ended up panning out, so let's remove the
experimental suport which isn't actually used by anything today and hold off on
any other changes until an RFC happens.
This commit migrates the `wasm-bindgen-webidl` crate from the `webidl` parser to
`weedle`. The main rationale for doing this is that `webidl` depends on
`lalrpop`, which is quite a large dependency and takes a good deal of time to
compile. The `weedle` crate, however, depends on `nom` and is much faster to
compile.
Almost all translations were pretty straightforward. Some abstractions changed
and/or were introduced in this commit when moving to `weedle` like the
`ToSynType` trait, but otherwise the generated bindings should be the same. It's
been verified that the `weedle`-generated bindings are exactly the same as the
`webidl`-generated bindings, with the one exception of `weedle` generates one
more method, `WebGpuCommandEncoder::transition_buffer`. It's not clear currently
why `webidl` didn't generate this method, as its [idl] is pretty straightforward!
This commit is using a [fork] of `weedle` currently which has a number of fixes
for parsing our WebIDL, although all the fixes are quite minor!
Closes#620
[idl]: d66b834afd/crates/web-sys/webidls/enabled/WebGPU.webidl (L499)
[fork]: https://github.com/alexcrichton/weedle/tree/fix-for-web-sys
We've gotten a number of reports that the interactive tests are a bit surprising
and confusing (also because it barely prints anything!). Instead let's default
to headless testing which matches the Rust style of testing much better.
The error message for a missing WebDriver binary has been updated with a note of
how to *not* do headless testing and the message for interactive testing was
also updated to display more information as well.
* Make ConvertToAst trait fallible
It's got some panics, and we'll be switching those to errors!
* First example of a diagnostic-driven error
Add a diagnostic-driven error `#[wasm_bindgen]` being attached to public
functions, and add some macros to boot to make it easier to generate errors!
* Result-ify `src/parser.rs`
This commit converts all of `src/parser.rs` away from panics to using
`Diagnostic` instead. Along the way this adds a test case per changed `panic!`,
ensuring that we don't regress in these areas!
This commit starts to add infrastructure for targeted diagnostics in the
`#[wasm_bindgen]` attribute, intended eventually at providing much better errors
as they'll be pointing to exactly the code in question rather than always to a
`#[wasm_bindgen]` attribute.
The general changes are are:
* A new `Diagnostic` error type is added to the backend. A `Diagnostic` is
created with a textual error or with a span, and it can also be created from a
list of diagnostics. A `Diagnostic` implements `ToTokens` which emits a bunch
of invocations of `compile_error!` that will cause rustc to later generate
errors.
* Fallible implementations of `ToTokens` have switched to using a new trait,
`TryToTokens`, which returns a `Result` to use `?` with.
* The `MacroParse` trait has changed to returning a `Result` to propagate errors
upwards.
* A new `ui-tests` crate was added which uses `compiletest_rs` to add UI tests.
These UI tests will verify that our output improves over time and does not
regress. This test suite is added to CI as a new builder as well.
* No `Diagnostic` instances are created just yet, everything continues to panic
and return `Ok`, with the one exception of the top-level invocations of
`syn::parse` which now create a `Diagnostic` and pass it along.
This commit does not immediately improve diagnostics but the intention is that
it is laying the groundwork for improving diagnostics over time. It should
ideally be much easier to contribute improved diagnostics after this commit!
cc #601
* Tweak the implementation of heap closures
This commit updates the implementation of the `Closure` type to internally store
an `Rc` and be suitable for dropping a `Closure` during the execution of the
closure. This is currently needed for promises but may be generally useful as
well!
* Support asynchronous tests
This commit adds support for executing tests asynchronously. This is modeled
by tests returning a `Future` instead of simply executing inline, and is
signified with `#[wasm_bindgen_test(async)]`.
Support for this is added through a new `wasm-bindgen-futures` crate which is a
binding between the `futures` crate and JS `Promise` objects.
Lots more details can be found in the details of the commit, but one of the end
results is that the `web-sys` tests are now entirely contained in the same test
suite and don't need `npm install` to be run to execute them!
* Review tweaks
* Add some bindings for `Function.call` to `js_sys`
Name them `call0`, `call1`, `call2`, ... for the number of arguments being
passed.
* Use oneshots channels with `JsFuture`
It did indeed clean up the implementation!
This commit starts migrating the `wasm_bindgen` tests to the `wasm_bindgen_test`
framework, starting to assemble the coffin for
`wasm-bindgen-test-project-builder`. Over time all of the tests in
`tests/all/*.rs` should be migrated to `wasm_bindgen_test`, although they may
not all want to go into a monolithic test suite so we can continue to test for
some more subtle situations with `#[wasm_bindgen]`.
In the meantime those, the `tests/all/api.rs` tests can certainly migrate!
In an actual browser, the changing of the history using the binding
worked a little too well, and caused the test to fail if you refreshed
the page or manually used the back and forward buttons. The stateful
stuff has been removed - the remaining two assertions should adequately
test that the binding works, which is the point of these tests anyways.