Using mmap-allocated memory for backing stores does not allow us to
benefit from using GPU-accelerated painting, because all the performance
increase we get is mostly negated by reading the GPU-allocated texture
back into RAM, so it can be shared with the browser process.
With IOSurface, we get a framebuffer that is both shareable between
processes and can be used as underlying memory for an OpenGL/Metal
texture.
This change does not yet benefit from using IOSurface and merely wraps
them into Gfx::Bitmap to be used by the CPU painter.
We only need LibCoreMinimal for the lagom-tools build. In particular, by
removing LibUnicode, we remove the lagom-tools dependence on the system
ICU package, as we do not have vcpkg hooked into this build. (We could
probably add vcpkg here, but since this libraries aren't even needed, we
don't need to bother).
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.
FreeBSD and NetBSD don't have secure_getenv(3), same as macOS.
FreeBSD 13 and lower also don't allow setting environ pointers to null.
Co-Authored-By: Robert Clausecker <fuz@FreeBSD.org>
This reverts commit a362c37c8b.
The commit tried to add an unused function that continued our tradition
of not properly waiting for things but instead flooding event loop with
condition checks that delay firing of the event. I think this is a
fundamentally flawed approach. See also checks for
`fire_when_not_visible` in LibCore/EventLoopImplementationUnix.cpp.
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.
Previously sharing a Timer/Notifier between threads (or just handing
its ownership to another thread) lead to a crash as they are
thread-specific.
This commit makes it so we can handle mutation (i.e. just deletion
or unregistering) in a thread-safe and lockfree manner.
This will be used in the DynamicLoader code, as it can't do syscalls via
LibCore code.
Because we can't use most of the LibCore code, we convert the versioning
code in Version.cpp to use LibC uname() function.
This can cause issues with older versions of glibc warning when not
initializing the flexible array member for CMSG_DATA. Such as glibc
shipped with Ubuntu 20.04.
We don't need `file_actions` to be a constant-reference. It's created
in-place by its one user (HackStudio). Because it is currently a const-
ref, if we try to create a ProcessSpawnOptions like so:
Core::ProcessSpawnOptions options { .name = "foo"sv };
We get the following error with clang 18:
lifetime extension of temporary created by aggregate initialization
using a default member initializer is not yet supported; lifetime of
temporary will end at the end of the full-expression
This largely adapts the code from SingletonProcess.cpp to work a bit
closer with Core::Process. Ideally, we'll move the daemonizing feature
into Core::Process::disown() eventually.
We implement the move constructor already. A future commit will have
code of the form:
process = move(other_process);
which there is no reason to forbid.
This just moves the code to launch a single process such as SQLServer to
LibCore. This will allow re-using this feature for other processes, and
will allow moving the launching of SQLServer to Ladybird.
This will be needed to collect statistics from processes that do not
have anything to do with LibWebView. The ProcessInfo structure must be
virtual to allow callers to add application-specific information.
These new methods combine send/receive with send_fd/receive_fd.
This is the 'correct' way to use SCM_RIGHTS, rather than trying to
emulate the Serenity behavior on other Unixes.
Most JPEG2000 files put the codestream in an ISOBMFF box structure
(which is useful for including metadata that's bigger than the
~65k marker segment data limit, such as large ICC profiles), but
some files just store the codestream directly, for example
https://sembiance.com/fileFormatSamples/image/jpeg2000/balloon.j2c
See https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/image/j2c for the
mime type.
The main motivation is to be able to use the test data in J.10 in
the spec as a test case.
These changes are compatible with clang-format 16 and will be mandatory
when we eventually bump clang-format version. So, since there are no
real downsides, let's commit them now.