SpiderMonkey was updated to mozjs24. If you want to build elinks
with ecmascript support, you must compile using g++ with -fpermissive .
There is a lot of warnings.
There are some memleaks in ecmascript code, especially related to JSAutoCompartment.
I don't know yet, where and how to free it.
Debian does not support mozjs24, so I'm going to gradually update SpiderMonkey version.
Weak points:
- alignof
- js problems
Todo:
- make js work with C++ and mozjs-17
- then mozjs-24
- then mozjs-52
- then mozjs-60
- decrease number of warnings
After the recent ecmascript_get_interpreter change, I got an assertion
failure in render_document, which calls ecmascript_reset_state and
then asserts that it has set vs->ecmascript != NULL.
ecmascript_reset_state cannot guarantee that because there might not
even be enough free memory for mem_calloc(1, sizeof(struct
ecmascript_interpreter). So, replace the assertion in render_document
with error handling, and likewise in call_onsubmit_and_submit.
This simplifies the callers a little and may help implement
simultaneous support for different charsets on different terminals
of the same type (bug 1064).
cache_entry.id => cache_entry.cache_id
document.id => document.cache_id
ecmascript_interpreter.onload_snippets_owner => .onload_snippets_cache_id
This is a combination of:
commit 232c07aa7f
bug 1009: id variables renamed, added document_id to the document.
commit 6007043458bf8f14abfc18b9db60785bdc0279f6
Revert addition of document.document_id
Anything that frees or reallocates struct form_state must now call the
new functions ecmascript_detach_form_state or ecmascript_moved_form_state.
These functions should then clear out any dangling pointers, but that has
not yet been implemented.
Do not retain changed values in form fields when the user reloads. Doing
so can be confusing or even cause data-loss when new default values are
specified in the updated document. For example, when editing an article on
Wikipedia, one loads the edit page for the article, makes and submits
changes, goes back to the edit page to make further modifications, and
reloads to get the new article text. Before this change, reloading the
edit page would not update the textarea on the page with the new article
source, which can lead one (and has led me) to make changes to the original
version of the article by accident.
This fixes bug 620.
(cherry picked from commit 9e1e94bee0)
Do not retain changed values in form fields when the user reloads. Doing
so can be confusing or even cause data-loss when new default values are
specified in the updated document. For example, when editing an article on
Wikipedia, one loads the edit page for the article, makes and submits
changes, goes back to the edit page to make further modifications, and
reloads to get the new article text. Before this change, reloading the
edit page would not update the textarea on the page with the new article
source, which can lead one (and has led me) to make changes to the original
version of the article by accident.
This fixes bug 620.
cached->id => cached->cache_id
document->id => document->cache_id
onload_snippets_owner => onload_snippets_document_id
Added the distinct document->document_id.
Always reset ecmascript when a document changes for example a next chunk
of it is loaded.
Instead, convert the element pointers inside the comparison functions.
The last argument of qsort() is supposed to be of type
int (*)(const void *, const void *). Previously, comp_links() was
defined to take struct link * instead of const void *, and the type
mismatch was silenced by casting the function pointer to void *.
This was in principle not portable because:
(1) The different pointer types may have different representations.
In a word-oriented machine, the const void * might include a byte
selector while the struct link * might not.
(2) Casting a function pointer to a data pointer can lose bits in some
memory models. Apparently this does not occur in POSIX-conforming
systems though, as dlsym() would fail if it did.
This commit also fixes hits_cmp() and compare_dir_entries(), which
had similar problems. However, I'm leaving alias_compare() in
src/intl/gettext/localealias.c unchanged for now, so as not to diverge
from the GNU version.
I also checked the bsearch() calls but they were all okay, apart from
one that used the alias_compare() mentioned above.