Now that we have an Element around on cascade, we can stop using the cascade
flags mechanism to pass various element-related state, like "is this element the
root", or "should it use the item-based display fixup".
That fixes handwaviness in the handling of those flags from style reparenting,
and code duplication to handle tricky stuff like :visited.
There are a number of other changes that are worth noticing:
* skip_root_and_item_based_display_fixup is renamed to skip_item_display_fixup:
TElement::is_root() already implies being the document element, which by
definition is not native anonymous and not a pseudo-element.
Thus, you never get fixed-up if your NAC or a pseudo, which is what the code
tried to avoid, so the only fixup with a point is the item one, which is
necessary.
* The pseudo-element probing code was refactored to return early a
Option::<CascadeInputs>::None, which is nicer than what it was doing.
* The visited_links_enabled check has moved to selector-matching time. The rest
of the checks aren't based on whether the element is a link, or are properly
guarded by parent_style.visited_style().is_some() or visited_rules.is_some().
Thus you can transitively infer that no element will end up with a :visited
style, not even from style reparenting.
Anyway, the underlying reason why I want the element in StyleAdjuster is because
we're going to implement an adjustment in there depending on the tag of the
element (converting display: contents to display: none depending on the tag), so
computing that information eagerly, including a hash lookup, wouldn't be nice.
This more concrete wrapper type can write a prefix the very first time something
is written to it. This allows removing plenty of useless monomorphisations caused
by the former W/SequenceWriter<W> pair of types.
It is bogus, because it depends on the display property as it's cascaded, but
the display property can change afterwards, for example, if we get blockified
because we're the root element or a flex item.
Replace it with a normal field instead.
Also, it carries some weight, because it's the last property that uses this
concept of "derived" property, and "custom cascade". So we can remove some code
after this.
Compute it after the cascade process in StyleAdjuster.
Servo currently uses `heapsize`, but Stylo/Gecko use `malloc_size_of`.
`malloc_size_of` is better -- it handles various cases that `heapsize` does not
-- so this patch changes Servo to use `malloc_size_of`.
This patch makes the following changes to the `malloc_size_of` crate.
- Adds `MallocSizeOf` trait implementations for numerous types, some built-in
(e.g. `VecDeque`), some external and Servo-only (e.g. `string_cache`).
- Makes `enclosing_size_of_op` optional, because vanilla jemalloc doesn't
support that operation.
- For `HashSet`/`HashMap`, falls back to a computed estimate when
`enclosing_size_of_op` isn't available.
- Adds an extern "C" `malloc_size_of` function that does the actual heap
measurement; this is based on the same functions from the `heapsize` crate.
This patch makes the following changes elsewhere.
- Converts all the uses of `heapsize` to instead use `malloc_size_of`.
- Disables the "heapsize"/"heap_size" feature for the external crates that
provide it.
- Removes the `HeapSizeOf` implementation from `hashglobe`.
- Adds `ignore` annotations to a few `Rc`/`Arc`, because `malloc_size_of`
doesn't derive those types, unlike `heapsize`.
Fixes warnings from rust-lang/rust#44229 when `--enable-commonmark` is
passed to rustdoc.
This is mostly a global find-and-replace for bare URIs on lines by
themselves in doc comments.
Parse sizes attribute values
Squashed version of #17808.
---
- [x] `./mach build -d` does not report any errors
- [x] `./mach test-tidy` does not report any errors
- [x] These changes fix (partially) #11416
- [x] There are tests for these changes
<!-- Reviewable:start -->
---
This change is [<img src="https://reviewable.io/review_button.svg" height="34" align="absmiddle" alt="Reviewable"/>](https://reviewable.io/reviews/servo/servo/18714)
<!-- Reviewable:end -->
This avoids grabbing the document when values that inherit from the body,
whatever that means, aren't under the body.
In that case we'll get a semi-random value, but that's also mishandled by Gecko
anyways (and probably Blink, though haven't tested), and doesn't really make
much sense.
This avoids grabbing the document when values that inherit from the body,
whatever that means, aren't under the body.
In that case we'll get a semi-random value, but that's also mishandled by Gecko
anyways (and probably Blink, though haven't tested), and doesn't really make
much sense.
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>)