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141 lines
5.4 KiB
Plaintext
141 lines
5.4 KiB
Plaintext
[[ecmascript]]
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ECMAScript support?!
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Yes, there is some ECMAScript support in ELinks. There isn't anything we could
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call complete, but some bits could help with the most common ECMAScript usage
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cases - help you (and then us ;) get into your banking account, pass through
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those ignorant page redirects done by JavaScript code snippets and so.
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ELinks does not have own ECMAScript parser and compiler; instead it reuses
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other people's work (this may eventually change, see the bottom of this file).
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First we aimed at the NJS engine, which is easy to install, small and compact;
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has nice naming scheme, horrible calling conventions and very lacking
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documentation; is not actively developed; and generally looks broken and
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extremely clumsy to work with. So we instead went the way of the SpiderMonkey
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(SM) engine (property of Mozilla), which is hard to install, bigger (mind you,
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it comes from Mozilla ;), has ugly naming scheme but nice calling conventions,
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acceptable documentation, is actively developed and ought to work.
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Ok, so how to get the ECMAScript support working?
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Some systems come with either the SpiderMonkey installed or as an option. It
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would be good to test if you can take the easy path and let the system take
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care of installation through a package system. Below are listed instructions
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on what package you need to install on various systems (please help improve
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the list). If all goes well you can proceed to rebuilding ELinks.
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On Debian testing (Etch) or unstable (SID), run the following:
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$ apt-get install libmozjs-dev
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On Debian stable (Sarge), run the following:
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$ apt-get install libsmjs-dev
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Installing the -dev package will automatically pull in the library package.
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Once this is done, rebuild ELinks. The configure script should detect
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the SpiderMonkey library--check for this line in the features summary:
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ECMAScript (JavaScript) ......... SpiderMonkey document scripting
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After following these instructions on a Debian system, you are done and should
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ignore the following directions.
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The rest is only for non-Debian system.
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Note that this procedure enables you to install SpiderMonkey, but in such a
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way that it might not work with anything else but ELinks. It is unlikely that
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anything else is ever going to use SpiderMonkey on your system, but if you
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want to take the safe way, get SM and follow the instructions in
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`src/README.html` instead. You will probably need to do some checkouting of
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bits of the Mozilla CVS tree and so, have fun.
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To get SpiderMonkey source, go at
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link:ftp://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/js/[] and fetch the newest `js-`
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tarball there (`js-1.5-rc6a.tar.gz` at the time of writing this; you may try
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the RPMs, but we didn't test them).
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$ cd elinks
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$ wget ftp://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/js/js-1.5-rc6a.tar.gz
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$ tar xvzf js-1.5-rc6a.tar.gz
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Next, you need to patch it so that you will have any chance to install it as
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you fetched it. Grab it in ELinks at `contrib/js-1.5-rc6a+elinks.patch` (if
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you have a different version, still try to go ahead, you might have some
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success), then go to the SpiderMonkey directory (called js) and apply it as
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$ cd js
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$ patch -p1 <../contrib/js-1.5-rc6a+elinks.patch
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$ cd src
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Now, edit config.mk and adjust the `$PREFIX` variable - you probably won't
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like the default value - ELinks will find it there, but your dynamic linker
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likely won't.
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E.g., for /usr/local installation:
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$ sed 's#^PREFIX = /opt/spidermonkey#PREFIX = /usr/local#' < config.mk > config.mk.t
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$ mv -f config.mk.t config.mk
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Now you can finally go for it:
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$ make -f Makefile.ref
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$ make -f Makefile.ref export
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Now install it:
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$ su -c 'make -f Makefile.ref install && (ldconfig -v | grep libjs)'
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Check for:
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libjs.so -> libjs.so
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If you don't get such result, check that the library's installation path
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(e.g. /usr/local/lib) is present in /etc/ld.so.conf (man 8 ldconfig).
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If all went well, you can proceed to rebuild ELinks now. If something broke,
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see you on #elinks @ FreeNode or in the mailing list.
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You may add your options to `./configure` as usual; SpiderMonkey should be
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autodetected.
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$ cd ../..
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$ ./configure
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Check for the following line in the features summary:
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ECMAScript (JavaScript) ......... SpiderMonkey document scripting
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Then run:
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$ make
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$ su -c 'make install'
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Enjoy.
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The ECMAScript support is buggy! Shall I blame Mozilla people?
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Likely not. The ECMAScript engine provides only the language compiler and some
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basic built-in objects, and it's more than likely that the problem is on our
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side in the implementation of some of the HTML/DOM objects (perhaps we just
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haven't bothered to implement it at all yet). So better tell us first, and if
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we think it's not our fault we will tell you to go complain to Mozilla (better
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yet if it does not work in the Mozilla browsers neither ;-).
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Now, I would still like NJS or a new JS engine from scratch...
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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...and you don't fear some coding? That's fine then! ELinks is in no way tied
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to SpiderMonkey, in fact the ECMAScript support was carefully implemented so
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that there are no SpiderMonkey references outside of
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`src/ecmascript/spidermonkey.*`. If you want to implement an alternative
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ECMAScript backend, go ahead - you will just need to write an autoconf
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detection for it and tie it to `src/ecmascript/ecmascript.c`, which should be
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easy. We await your patches eagerly.
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