If no header includes the prototype of a function, then it cannot be
used from outside the translation unit it was defined in. In that case,
it should be marked as `static`, in order to avoid possible ODR
problems, unnecessary exported symbols, and allow the compiler to better
optimize those.
If this warning triggers in a function defined in a header, `inline`
needs to be added, otherwise if the header is included in more than one
TU, it will fail to link with a duplicate definition error.
The reason this diff got so big is that Lagom-only code wasn't built
with this flag even in Serenity times.
- Change min track sizing function to be "auto" when flex size is
specified.
- Never check if min track sizing funciton is flexible, because only
max is allowed to be flexible.
- Address FIXME in automatic_minimum_size to avoid regressions after
making two fixes mentioned above.
Enforce the use of the CPU backend in test mode to ensure that ref-tests
produce consistent results across different computers, as this
consistency cannot be achieved with the GPU backend.
We already have a FlyString of its value from parsing, and most users
also want a FlyString from it, so let's use that instead of converting
backwards and forwards.
The two users that did want a String are:
- Quotes, which make sense as FlyString instead, so I've converted that.
- Animation names, which should probably be FlyString too, but the code
currently also allows for other kinds of StyleValue, and I don't want
to dive into this right now to figure out if that's needed or not.
Each item in clip_paths represents a glyph run, and applying them as a
clip in intersection mode one by one results in an empty clip. Instead,
now all clip paths are joined and applied as a clip together.
This change fixes rendering of "background-clip: text" when an element
has more than one glyph run.
Fixed ref-test: Tests/LibWeb/Ref/css-background-clip-text.html
Couple fixes found by reading the spec:
- Repeating should also happen in negative direction, so the whole
[0, 1] is covered.
- Leftmost and rightmost stops should be clamped to [0, 1] range if
needed, because Skia ignores everything outside of this range.
We currently have 2 base64 coders: one in AK, another in LibWeb for a
"forgiving" implementation. ECMA-262 has an upcoming proposal which will
require a third implementation.
Instead, let's use the base64 implementation that is used by Node.js and
recommended by the upcoming proposal. It handles forgiving decoding as
well.
Our users of AK's implementation should be fine with the forgiving
implementation. The AK impl originally had naive forgiving behavior, but
that was removed solely for performance reasons.
Using http://mattmahoney.net/dc/enwik8.zip (100MB unzipped) as a test,
performance of our old home-grown implementations vs. the simdutf
implementation (on Linux x64):
Encode Decode
AK base64 0.226s 0.169s
LibWeb base64 N/A 1.244s
simdutf 0.161s 0.047s
When traversing the layout tree to find an appropriate box child to
derive the baseline from. Only the child's margin and offset was being
applied. Now we sum each offset on the recursive call.
The spec says to just call the XML serialization algorithm, but it
returns the "outer serialization", and we need the "inner" one. Let's
just concatenate serializations of children; then the result produced is
similar to one from Blink or Gecko.
Previously, the scrollbar thumbs were (almost) invisible, when the page
background color was similar to the scrollbar thumb color (DarkGray).
Now, in addition to the filled rounded rectangle, the scrollbar thumbs
are painted with a 1px solid LightGrey border. On a white or light color
background the border stays invisible.