It's not possible anymore, in the presence of min() / max(), to split a
<length-percentage> value into a <length> and a <percentage> component.
Tweak word_spacing to do what Gecko does (resolving it in advance).
We can encounter control characters here, for example when processing a
<pre> element which contains newlines. Control characters are inherently
non-printing, therefore if we try to call find_by_codepoint for these
characters we will end up triggering an unnecessary font fallback
search.
Unfortunately, this required quite a bit of changes to the non-test
code. That's because FontContext depends on a FontCacheThread, which in
turn depends on a CoreResourceThread and therefore lots of other data
structures.
It seemed like it would be very difficult to instantiate a FontContext
as it was, and even if we could it seems like overkill to have all these
data structures present for a relatively focused test.
Therefore, I created a FontSource trait which represents the interface
which FontContext uses to talk to FontCacheThread. FontCacheThread then
implements FontSource. Then, in the test, we can create a dummy
implementation of FontSource rather than using FontCacheThread.
This actually has the advantage that we can make our dummy
implementation behave in certain specific way which are useful for
testing, for example it can count the number of times
find_font_template() is called, which helps us verify that
caching/lazy-loading is working as intended.
This is a step towards fixing #17267. To fix that, we need to be able to
try various different fallback fonts in turn, which would become
unweildy with the prior eager-loading strategy.
Prior to this change, FontGroup loaded up all Font instances, including
the fallback font, before any of them were checked for the presence of
the glyphs we're trying to render.
So for the following CSS:
font-family: Helvetica, Arial;
The FontGroup would contain a Font instance for Helvetica, and a Font
instance for Arial, and a Font instance for the fallback font.
It may be that Helvetica contains glyphs for every character in the
document, and therefore Arial and the fallback font are not needed at
all.
This change makes the strategy lazy, so that we'll only create a Font
for Arial if we cannot find a glyph within Helvetica. I've also
substantially refactored the existing code in the process and added
some documentation along the way.
First, we define computed::CSSPixelLength which contains a CSSFloat, a
pixel value, and then we replace computed::Length with CSSPixelLength.
Therefore, the |ComputedValue| of NoCalcLength, AbsoluteLength,
FontRelativeLength, ViewportPercentageLength, CharacterWidth, and
PhysicalLength is CSSPixelLength.
Besides, we drop NonNegativeAu, and replace computed::NonNegativeLength
with NonNegative<computed::Length>. (i.e. NonNegative<CSSPixelLength>)
The alias is left there temporarilly and will be removed completely in a later commit where
also components/style/gecko/generated/structs_{debug|release}.rs are re-generated (they still
use the old alias).
Remove incomplete and buggy support for text-orientation in Servo.
Make the property values align with Gecko and the latest draft of CSS
Writing Modes Level 3.