This is limited by the fact that we currently cannot store type metadata in static tables. I don't think it's necessary to do so as of yet as pretty much every actual parameter type I *could* shove in here turned out to be optional and broke tests if it wasn't. Still, it's probably useful enough for new classes to include.
This pushes a few more ancillary changes:
* `has_proto_in_chain` no longer checks interfaces (since it exists to serve `instanceof`, which does not respect them)
* Interfaces no longer live on prototypes. They now live on class constructors.
For various reasons, this is kind of incomplete:
1. We need to support native event subclasses, so we can't just pull one class from `activation` (yet).
2. We can't run native instance initializers without overwriting the native object.
I expect these to be fixed in a future PR where I start adding native event types.
All native object allocation in the project now pulls prototypes or constructors as necessary from the following sources:
* System prototype or constructor lists
* Instance `constr`s
This also resulted in the removal of a few unnecessary prototype accesses.
This also incurred a large number of ancillary changes, as it turns out nearly every native object is currently pulling a prototype and sticking it into an object. Right now, I have it instead pulling the constructor out of the prototype, but a future PR will also remove `system_prototypes` as well.
Other ancillary changes include:
* `Domain` now supports partial initialization to avoid an order-of-events issue. Accessing domain memory on a partially-initialized `Domain` will panic.
* `Domain` construction requires a full `activation` now, except for `global_scope` which needs to be initialized later with valid domain memory before user code runs.
* Pretty much every native object constructor now takes a proto/constr pair
* Trait lookup was rewritten to handle this. It's still buggy - seven tests don't work
* `TObject.construct` now actually does the full object construction dance. This allows `ClassObject` to implement the ES4 object construction pathway directly while `FunctionObject` maintains ES3 compatibility.
This is a tentative commit; there are still seven failing tests that I need to fix.
This entirely abolishes the "global scope object" in AVM2. I even had to redefine several global object functions to work with the bottom of the scope stack, which seems to be where ASC likes to stick the script scope.
This is the same way that AVM1 actions run and it appears that frame scripts work exactly the same way. It fixes all outstanding bugs with movie clip navigation in AVM2 and allows me to remove a lot of weird workarounds I was writing for the old, incorrect behavior.
I'm also removing the "last run script frame" rule as `run_frame_internal` already had rules to prevent stopped clips from rerunning actions.
This requires the use of an intermediary enum called `AvmObject` which can hold either object representation. Currently, it's mostly just being unwrapped as AVM1 objects, which we will need to fix.
This has some particularly annoying consequences for initialization order: notably, we can't actually create any ES4 classes using the standard machinery until after the three objects I just mentioned get created. Ergo, we have to create them through lower-level means, handing prototypes around, and then initialize AVM2's system prototypes list for it.
When we start adding more system prototypes, we'll also have to fill the extras with blank objects and then slot them in as we create them.
This was surprisingly tricky - due to the need to look up superclasses, class trait instantiation requires an active `Activation` and `UpdateContext`. We can't get those during VM instance creation, since the player needs the VM first before it can give it a context to work with. Ergo, we have to tear the global scope initialization in two. At the first possible moment, the player calls a new `load_player_globals` method that initializes all class traits in global scope.
Namespaces as values adds a bunch of extra special cases to the coercion and equality rules that don't really belong there. Namespace itself just returns it's URI as a string, so we can just make `NamespaceObject` do that and then treat it the same way we treat boxed primitives.
This also results in a far reduced role for `ReturnValue`, since I also took the liberty of removing most of it's use. Furthermore, I also made it apply equally to native and AVM2 code, which ensures all native implementations of methods don't double-borrow.
In AVM1, `ReturnValue` was actually removed entirely, because it's not needed. I attempted to do the same, but the fact that we're currently embedding `ScriptObjectData` in native objects means that we need it for virtual properties. Otherwise, virtual property implementations will see locked objects, which is bad.