It used to be an `AuOrAuto`, turning it into a `SizeConstraint` allows
passing the information about the min and max constraints when the
containing block doesn't have a definite block size.
This will be useful for table layout.
Note that in most cases we were already constructing the containing
block from a `SizeConstraint`, but we were calling `to_auto_or()` to
turn it into an `AuOrAuto`.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
Push the interior mutability into enum variants of `Fragment`, so that
they can be cloned. This saves memory in the `Fragment` tree as the
`Fragment` enum is now a relatively wee 16 bytes and the interior parts
can be a variety of sizes. Before, every `Fragment` was the size of the
biggest kind (`BoxFragment` - 248 bytes).
This a step on the way toward incremental layout.
Signed-off-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>
Co-authored-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
This is still not the right approach, because we are not painting
collapsed borders as a single thing. Instead, we are splitting them
into two halves and paint each half on a different cell. This only
looks good for solid borders.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
Just use the cached `TableLayout::pbm`. Also, `TableLayout::pbm` is now
computed with the right writing mode, but no change in practice since
we don't support vertical writing modes.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
- Fix a typo in a comment.
- Get the writing mode of the table in a less convoluted way.
- Check `is_horizontal()` instead of `!is_vertical()`
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
A box is usually sized by the formatting context in which it participates.
However, tables have some special sizing behaviors, and these were in
conflict.
Instead of letting tables attempting to re-resolve their inline table,
which failed to e.g. take flex properties into account or resolve sizing
keywords correctly, now tables will trust the inline size determined by
the parent. They will only floor it by the min-content size, and maybe
shrink the final size due to collapsed columns.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
When laying out a block-level box that avoids floats, if we know that
its size doesn't depend on the available space, we can take a fast path
and only lay it out once. If its size depends on the available space,
we may have to lay it out multiple times, which can be slower.
This patch improves the check for this dependency on the available space.
For example, `min-width: 200px; width: 100px; max-width: stretch` was
previously considered to depend on the available space because of
`max-width`. However, `max-width` is irrelevant when the min size is
greater than the preferred size.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
There is an early return for independent formatting contexts, so at this
point we don't need to handle them.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
`content_inline_size_for_table` is an override for table layout.
We only use taffy for grid layout, not for table layout.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
In the past this didn't hold, so we had to floor GRIDMAX by GRIDMIN.
We must have fixed some bugs because now it's fine to just assert it.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
`width` and `max-width` typically treat expressions with percentages as
their initial value, but for the min-content contribution of replaced
elements, they should instead be treated as zero.
https://drafts.csswg.org/css-sizing-3/#replaced-percentage-min-contribution
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
The new version of rust allows us to elide some lifetimes and clippy is
now complaining about this. This change elides them where possible and
removes the clippy exceptions.
Fixes#34804.
Signed-off-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>
Block layout uses some heuristics to guess whether margins are separated
by clearance and then don't collapse. These heuristics now take the
min-content, max-content, fit-content and stretch sizing keywords into
account.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
In order to compute the inline min-content and max-content contributions
of an anonymous block, we were finding its min-content and max-content
inline size with a SizeConstraint coming from the block size of the box.
However, anonymous blocks do not establish a containing block for their
contents, so this patch uses a SizeConstraint from the block size of the
containing block.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
If a table element had e.g. `width: 0px`, we were assuming that this was
its intrinsic min-content and max-content contributions.
However, tables are always at least as big as its min-content size, so
this patch floors the intrinsic contributions by that amount.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
When an element is a shadow root, lay out the shadow root elements
instead of the non-shadow children.
This fixes some tests and introduces some failures, due to bugs in the
Shadow DOM implementation. In general, this is very low impact as the
Shadow DOM is still disabled by default. At least this gets elements
rendering when the preference is turned on though.
Signed-off-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>
in each layout logic, in order to correctly resolve sizing keywords.
This patch adds a new `Sizes` struct which holds the preferred, min and
max sizing values for one axis, and unifies the logic to resolve the
final size into there.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
Consider:
```html
<div style="position: relative; width: 50px; height: 50px; border: solid; margin: 5px">
<div style="position: absolute; top: 0; bottom: 0; height: max-content">
<canvas width="25" height="25" style="background: cyan; height: 100%"></canvas>
</div>
</div>
```
In order to determine the inline min/max-content sizes, we need a
tentative block size as the input, which only takes extrinsic values
into account.
In this case `height: max-content` is intrinsic, so we were treating it
as `height: initial`, which would behave as a definite `height: stretch`.
Therefore, the canvas was able to resolve its percentage.
However, it seems weird to treat an explicitly intrinsic keyword in an
extrinsic way, and Blink doesn't do it. So now we treat the tentative
block size as indefinite, therefore the percentage behaves as auto.
This adds a new test, we were previously failing 6 subtests, now only 3.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
Adds support for min-content, max-content, fit-content and stretch,
for the case that was missing from #34568: block-level elements that
establish an independent formatting context, when there are floats.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
Manage `<iframe>` size updates in `Window`. In addition to removing
duplicated code, this will allow setting `<iframe>` sizes synchronously
on child `Pipeline`s of the same origin in the script process in a
followup change. The goal is remove flakiness from `<iframe>` sizing.
Signed-off-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>
Adds support for min-content, max-content, fit-content and stretch,
for block-level elements that don't establish an independent formatting
context, and for block-level elements when there is no float.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
It was a bit confusing that e.g. a float with `FloatSide::InlineStart`
would set `FloatBand::left`, or that `PlacementAmongFloats` would
compute `max_inline_start` from the various `FloatBand::left`.
So now all the float logic will consistently use logical terminoligy.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
Several structs and enums had a `inline_content_sizes()` method, but it
wasn't clear which ones would try to cache the result, and which ones
would always compute it.
Therefore, this performs some clarifying renaming:
- Cached ones stay as `inline_content_sizes()`
- Uncached ones become `compute_inline_content_sizes()`
Also, to simplify calls to `LayoutBoxBase::inline_content_sizes()`,
`compute_inline_content_sizes()` is moved into a new trait.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
Due to a typo, the containing block established by a table row for the
table cells had its block size set to the its inline size. However,
this block size is currently unused, so no change in behavior.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
Block-level elements that establish an independent formatting context
(or are replaced) need to avoid overlapping floats.
In the non-replaced case, we have two different subcases, depending on
whether the inline size of the element is known. This patch makes them
share more logic.
Then `solve_clearance_and_inline_margins_avoiding_floats()` would only
be used in the replaced case, so it's removed, inlining its logic.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
The refactoring in 264c0f972f stopped
caching the `inline_content_sizes()` calls from:
- `FlexItemBox::layout_for_block_content_size()`
- `IndependentFormattingContext::layout_float_or_atomic_inline()`
- `TaffyContainerContext::compute_child_layout()`
Also, the call from `OutsideMarker::layout()` was never cached.
This patch caches all of them.
It's not clear at all which `inline_content_sizes()` are cached and
which aren't, so I plan to improve the situation in a follow-up.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
- Remove the `LayoutBox::InlineBox` variant that was only used for
inline level boxes. Now they are stored in `LayoutBox::InlineLevel`
along with other kinds of out-of-flow and atomic inline items.
- Reduce the size of `InlineItem` by 260 bytes per item by using atomic
indirection / pointers. This adds a bit of overhead to access items in
exchange for a lot of memory saved.
Signed-off-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>
Co-authored-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
This might make caching these values a bit easier in the future.
Correcting the visibility of `ContainingBlock` also exposed some new
rustc and clippy warnings that are fixed here.
Signed-off-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>
Co-authored-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
Consider this testcase:
```html
<canvas style="aspect-ratio: 1; height: stretch; background: cyan"
width="200" height="100"></canvas>
```
To compute the intrinsic inline sizes we were treating `height: stretch`
as the natural height (100px) and then transferring that to the inline
axis through the preferred aspect ratio. So the element was 100px wide.
However, an indefinite `stretch` should be treated as an automatic size,
which wouldn't be transferred to the inline axis.
The fix actually makes the code slightly simpler.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
This allows `SameFormattingContextBlock` to cache inline content sizes
and will eventually allow it to participate in incremental layout.
Signed-off-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>
This allows cells to cache their inline content size and will eventually
allow them to participate in incremental layout.
Signed-off-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>
Add a new struct `LayoutBoxBase`, that will be used throughout the box
tree. The idea of this struct is that we have a place to consistently
store common layout information (style and node information) and also to
cache layout results such as content sizes (inline and maybe later box
sizes) and eventually layout results.
In addition to the addition of this struct,
`IndependentFormattingContext` is flattened slightly so that it directly
holds the contents of both replaced and non-replaced elements.
This is only added to independent formatting contexts, but will later be
added to all block containers as well.
Signed-off-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>
We were sizing absolutely positioned replaced elements within their
actual containing block instead of the inset-modified containing block.
Then the `stretch` keyword would result in a wrong size.
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
* Add missing support for some alignment keywords on absolutely positioned elements
Signed-off-by: taniishkaaa <tanishkasingh2004@gmail.com>
* Check the direction of the alignment container, nits, test expectations
In this case we need to check the direction of the static position
containing block, not the actual containing block:
```html
<!DOCTYPE html>
<div style="position: relative">
<div style="display: flex; flex-direction: column; width: 100px; height: 100px; border: solid; direction: rtl">
<div style="position: absolute; width: 20px; height: 20px; background: cyan; top: 20px; align-self: self-start"></div>
<div style="position: absolute; width: 20px; height: 20px; background: magenta; bottom: 20px; align-self: self-end"></div>
</div>
</div>
```
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
---------
Signed-off-by: taniishkaaa <tanishkasingh2004@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
Co-authored-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
* Obey min and max properties when computing main size of column flex
When laying out a column flex container with an auto preferred main size,
we were resolving the used main size to the intrinsic max-content size.
However, we weren't clamping this amount between the min and max sizes.
Co-authored-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
* Improve performance of flex column layouts by caching
We were already using a cache for layout_for_block_content_size(), but
we were only storing the intrinsic block size. Thus when laying out the
flex items for real, we would perform new layouts, triggering an
exponential complexity in case of nested flexboxes.
Now we cache the entire layout result so that we can avoid doing the
work again.
This improves the results of flexbox-deeply-nested-column-flow.html
(a Blink perf test) from ~40 runs/second to ~500 runs/second on my PC.
Co-authored-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
---------
Signed-off-by: Oriol Brufau <obrufau@igalia.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Robinson <mrobinson@igalia.com>