The previous system primarily relied on `Executable` to automatically start and continue a super chain. This works, but only for class hierarchies without *override gaps* - methods that override another method not defined by the direct superclass of the method. In that case, the override method would be called twice as the `base_class` was moved up one prototype at a time, which is wrong.
The new system relies on the call site to accurately report the prototype from which the current method was retrieved from. Super calls then start the resolution process *from the superclass of this prototype*, to ensure that the already-called method is skipped.
It should be noted that the proper `base_class` for things like `callmethod`, `callstatic`, `call`, `get`/`set` methods, and other call opcodes that don't use property look-up are best-effort guesses that may need to be amended later with better tests.
To facilitate `base_proto` resolution, a new `Object` method has been added. It's similar to `get_property`, but instead returns the closest prototype that can resolve the given `QName`, rather than the actual property's `ReturnValue`. Call operations use this to resolve the `base_proto`, and then resolve the method being called in `base_proto`. The existing `exec_super` method was removed and a `base_proto` method added to `exec` and `call`.
This works primarily by retaining the current superclass prototype in the activation object and then using it to retrieve the super method.
For constructors, we implement the `constructor` property, which is probably not the correct way to do this.
This currently treats `coerce_a` as a no-op. Strictly speaking, this is for type verification purposes, but we currently don't type-verify ABC code. Ergo, this requires no VM support at this time.
Also, implement a method table that method traits can optionally add themselves to.
Also also, add the ability to invoke a method without a `this` object. This required a non-trivial refactoring of the activation machinery, and changes to the signature of `NativeFunction`, and all native AVM2 functions.
In the future, the `unwrap_stack_frame` mechanism should be expanded upon to allow running exception handlers and recovering from a Rust error - but not today.
Notably, this also removes `new_closure_scope` as it is not needed. AVM1 does not capture `with` scopes in closures, but AVM2 (as well as modern ECMAScript) does.
We already have a menagerie of `install_*` functions for adding static properties to a an object; and we don't have to support any kind of asinine nonsense liks `ASSetPropFlags` here. Ergo, we don't need this.
In AVM1, these are necessary because `ActionGetVariable` et. all directly interface with the scope chain. In AVM2, you `findpropstrict` up the scope chain, which gives you a normal object that you can interact with as you like. Ergo, the scope chain doesn't need set/get property methods.
All constant pools in an ABC file are actually numbered starting from one; there's an implicit 0 entry not stored in the file that the runtime is expected to retrieve when pulling constants from the pool.
The AVM2/ABC spec only mentions this in passing.