This removes the old autoplay allowlist file in favor of the new site
setting. We still support the command-line flag to enable autoplay
globally, as this is needed for WPT.
This replaces the existing menu item that would open the Qt settings
dialog. That menu item still exists, but is no longer the default
settings action.
This adds a basic settings page to manage persistent Ladybird settings.
As a first pass, this exposes settings for the new tab page URL and the
default search engine.
The way the search engine option works is that once search is enabled,
the user must choose their default search engine; we do not apply any
default automatically. Search remains disabled until this is done.
There are a couple of improvements that we should make here:
* Settings changes are not broadcasted to all open about:settings pages.
So if two instances are open, and the user changes the search engine
in one instance, the other instance will have a stale UI.
* Adding an IPC per setting is going to get annoying. It would be nice
if we can come up with a smaller set of IPCs to send only the relevant
changed settings.
This adds a WebView::Settings class to own persistent browser settings.
In this first pass, it now owns the new tab page URL and search engine
settings.
For simplicitly, we currently use a JSON format for these settings. They
are stored alongside the cookie database. As of this commit, the saved
JSON will have the form:
{
"newTabPageURL": "about:blank",
"searchEngine": {
"name": "Google"
}
}
(The search engine is an object to allow room for a future patch to
implement custom search engine URLs.)
For Qt, this replaces the management of these particular settings in the
Qt settings UI. We will have an internal browser page to control these
settings instead. In the future, we will want to port all settings to
this new class. We will also want to allow UI-specific settings (such as
whether the hamburger menu is displayed in Qt).
In order to maintain a consistent look and feel between internal about:
pages going forward, let's use a central CSS file to define Ladybird
colors and some common form control styles.
The select dropdown was doing its own ad-hoc method of handling DPR. We
now handle it just like other context menus. Previously, the drop down
in the AppKit chrome was twice as large as it should be.
The "disable DevTools" button looked like a "close this notification"
button to me, and although a tooltip was set, it only showed up
immediately on the AppKit UI and not the Qt version.
This makes the behavior of clicking the disable button a lot clearer by
showing a button with "Disable" as its title.
JsonParser only holds a view into the provided string, the caller must
keep it alive. Though we can actually just use JsonValue::from_string
here instead.
The intent is that this will replace the separate Task Manager window.
This will allow us to more easily add features such as actual process
management, better rendering of the process table, etc. Included in this
page is the ability to sort table rows.
This also lays the ground work for more internal `about` pages, such as
about:config.
This commit:
- Prevents path traversal via the about: scheme
- Prevents loading about:inspector
- Requires about: URIs to be opaque paths
- Prevents crashes with invalid percent encoded paths
For example, consider the following IPC message:
do_something(u64 page_id, String string, Vector<Data> data) =|
We would previously generate the following C++ method to encode/transfer
this message:
void do_something(u64 page_id, String string, Vector<Data> data);
This required the caller to either have to copy the non-trivial types or
`move` them in. In some places, this meant we had to construct temporary
vectors just to send an IPC.
This isn't necessary because we weren't holding onto these parameters
anyways. We would construct an IPC::Message subclass with them (which
does require owning types), but then immediate encode the message to
an IPC::MessageBuffer and send it.
We now generate code such that we don't need to construct a Message. We
can simply encode the parameters directly without needing ownership.
This allows us to take view-types to IPC parameters.
So the above example now becomes:
void do_something(u64, StringView, ReadonlySpan<Data>);
The `cursor` property accepts a list of possible cursors, which behave
as a fallback: We use whichever cursor is the first available one. This
is a little complicated because initially, any remote images have not
loaded, so we need to use the fallback standard cursor, and then switch
to another when it loads.
So, ComputedValues stores a Vector of cursors, and then in EventHandler
we scan down that list until we find a cursor that's ready for use.
The spec defines cursors as being `<url>`, but allows for `<image>`
instead. That includes functions like `linear-gradient()`.
This commit implements image cursors in the Qt UI, but not AppKit.
This information is not particularly interesting, and it can be quite
verbose (such as style-propagation-for-long-continuation-chain.html,
which would log hundreds of lines of "a"s and "b"s).
These were previously skipped on macOS, due to hard to
fix inconsistencies in the exact produced pixels.
Turns out, this is not just a macOS thing. The same sort
of hard-to-spot slight pixel deviations are present on
arm64 Linux as well.
Explicitly link final targets with OpenSSL to ensure that the vcpkg
version is loaded instead of the system one.
Before this change we would inherit `libcrypto.so` and `libssl.so` from
other dependencies, like Qt, that do not have their RPATH rewritten.
This would cause the loader to prefer the system libraries over the
vcpkg ones causing all sorts of version mismatch issues.
The effectiveness of this change can be verified with
`readelf -d ./bin/Ladybird` showing `libcrypto.so` and `libssl.so` as
direct dependencies, before they would not appear. Additionally, `ldd`
will show `libcrypto.so` and `libssl.so` pointing to the vcpkg builds.
Tests have the glob run against the relative path of the test file.
Since this was never set for crash tests the '-f' argument to
headless browser would never match the global against any crash test.