Gets rid of some unnecessary String and Arc clones during text shaping and style matching.
r? @pcwalton
Source-Repo: https://github.com/servo/servo
Source-Revision: e2990766dc1c7461b55c96f0ce7116d35d4fd3c6
This builds on top of #10815, so it's really just the last commit the one that should be reviewed.
I tried to apply the new infrastructure to servo, but failed (for now?).
The problem with it is that it'd require `ThreadSafeLayoutElement` to implement `selectors::Element`, which is a lot of work and might be racy (not totally sure about it though). Thus, I prefered to keep selectors eager until knowing that it's safe to do it.
r? @mbrubeck for style changes, @bholley for the geckolib changes (minimal for now, glue + a list of lazy PEs must be added)
Source-Repo: https://github.com/servo/servo
Source-Revision: 29823cb378ad0b05a82cfdd133c401a678a19007
This allows geckolib to pass gecko style structs and have the style system write to them directly, provided we implement all the traits.
Source-Repo: https://github.com/servo/servo
Source-Revision: 605842f193aedc1151ab38a99c49f693c76e5cf3
They have styles just like elements do.
Allows a dynamic change of `display: none` to `display: inline` to work.
Closes#9868.
r? @mbrubeck
Source-Repo: https://github.com/servo/servo
Source-Revision: 437e875c2e874fe274d1f18615cb14c12ada7484
Right now, there's a huge amount of complexity in T{Node,Element,Document} and friends because of the lifetime parameter.
Before I started generalizing this code for use by Gecko, these wrappers were plain structs. They had (and still have) a phantom lifetime associated with them to prevent references to DOM nodes from leaking past the end of restyle, when they might be invalidated by a GC.
When I generalized them, I decided to put the lifetime on the trait as well, since there are some situations where the lifetime is, in fact, necessary. Specifically, they are necessary for the compiler to understand that all the things borrowed from all the nodes and elements and so on have the same lifetime (the lifetime of the restyle), rather than the lifetime of whichever particular element or node pointer the value was borrowed from. This come up in situations where we do |let el = node.as_element()| or |let n = el.as_node()| and then borrow something from the result. The compiler thinks the borrow lifetime is that of |el| or |n|, when it's actually longer.
In practice though, I think the style and layout algorithms we use don't run into this issue much, and we can hack around it where it comes up. So I think we should remove the lifetimes from the traits, which will let us aggregate the embedding-provided traits together onto a single meta-trait and significantly simplify the code.
Source-Repo: https://github.com/servo/servo
Source-Revision: aea8d8959dcb157a8cc381f1403246ce8ca1ca00
This allows, among other things, having different implementations for parsing pseudo{elements, classes} in both `ports/geckolib` and in servo.
Source-Repo: https://github.com/servo/servo
Source-Revision: c11844cbf28054784c8d65781cff20045d8ee48b
This commits updates rust-selectors to use the generic parser, and as
such it moves the element state into the style crate.
Source-Repo: https://github.com/servo/servo
Source-Revision: ae20f2556bc7807b39b6649ac1f738644abcc26a