| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
| |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Use content type attributes so e.g. git.cgi can set the title even with
a text/x-ansi content type.
(This commit also fixes some bugs in content type attribute handling.)
|
|
|
|
| |
it's an unnecessary abstraction here
|
|
|
|
|
| |
it doesn't change anything in the dom, but this way it's easier to
compose with other commands
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
This way they are no longer compatible, but we no longer need them to
be compatible anyway.
(This also forces us to throw out the old serialize module, and use
packet writers everywhere.)
|
|
|
|
|
| |
this way its output can be embedded into documents without a pointless
DT declaration
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
Originally we had several loader processes so that the loader did not
need asynchronity for loading several buffers at once. Since then, the
scope of what loader does has been reduced significantly, and with
that loader has become mostly asynchronous.
This patch finishes the above work as follows:
* We only fork a single loader process for the browser. It is a waste of
resources to do otherwise, and would have made future work on a
download manager very difficult.
* loader becomes (almost) fully async. Now the only sync part is a)
processing commands and b) waiting for clients to consume responses.
b) is a bit more problematic than a), but should not cause problems
unless some other horrible bug exists in a client. (TODO: make it
fully async.)
This gives us a noticable improvement in CSS loading speed, since all
resources can now be queried at once (even before the previous ones
are connected).
* Buffers now only get processes when the *connection* is finished. So
headers, status code, etc. are handled by the client, and the buffer
is forked when the loader starts streaming the response body.
As a result, mailcap entries can simply dup2 the first UNIX domain
socket connection as their stdin. This allows us to remove the ugly
(and slow) `canredir' hack, which required us to send file handles on
a tour accross the entire codebase.
* The "cache" has been reworked somewhat:
- Since canredir is gone, buffer-level requests usually start
in a suspended state, and are explicitly resumed only after
the client could decide whether it wants to cache the response.
- Instead of a flag on Request and the URL as the cache key,
we now use a global counter and the special `cache:' scheme.
* misc fixes: referer_from is now actually respected by buffers (not
just the pager), load info display should work slightly better, etc.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
* Get rid of sostream hack
This is no longer needed, and was in fact causing loadStream to get
stuck with redirects on regular files (i.e. the common case of receiving
<file on stdin without a -T content type override).
* Unify loading from cache and stdin regular file code paths
Until now, loadFromCache was completely sync. This is not a huge
problem, but it's better to make it async *and* not have two separate
procedures for reading regular files. (In fact, loadFromCache had
*another* bug related to its output fd not being added to outputMap.)
* Extra: remove ansi2html select error handling
It was broken, because it didn't handle read events before the
error. Also unnecessary, since recvData breaks from the loop on n == 0.
|
|
|
|
| |
whoops
|
|
Handling text/plain as ANSI colored text was problematic for two
reasons:
* You couldn't actually look at the real source of HTML pages or text
files that used ANSI colors in the source. In general, I only want
ANSI colors when piping something into my pager, not when viewing any
random file.
* More importantly, it introduced a separate rendering mode for
plaintext documents, which resulted in the problem that only some
buffers had DOMs. This made it impossible to add functionality
that would operate on the buffer's DOM, to e.g. implement w3m's
MARK_URL. Also, it locked us into the horribly inefficient line-based
rendering model of entire documents.
Now we solve the problem in two separate parts:
* text/x-ansi is used automatically for documents received through
stdin. A text/x-ansi handler ansi2html converts ANSI formatting to
HTML. text/x-ansi is also used for .ans, .asc file extensions.
* text/plain is a separate input mode in buffer, which places all text
in a single <plaintext> tag. Crucially, this does not invoke the HTML
parser; that would eat NUL characters, which we should avoid.
One blind spot still remains: copiousoutput used to display ANSI colors,
and now it doesn't. To solve this, users can put the x-ansioutput
extension field to their mailcap entries, which behaves like
x-htmloutput except it first pipes the output into ansi2html.
|