The current 'setInterval/setTimeout' implementation is
moved to 'core/src/timers.rs', and now works with both
AVM1 and AVM2 objects. The `flash.utils.Timer` class is implemented
mostly in ActionScript, with minimal modifications to the actual
Ruffle timer code.
* avm2: implement string replace where pattern is string and replacement is a function
* * removed unnecessary vec!
* fixed "no newline at the end of file"
This commit adds support for combining instance allocators with
ActionScript playerglobal class definitions. This is activated
by defining the metadata `[Ruffle(InstanceAllocator = "true")]`
on the ActionScript class definition.
The implementation of this feature is very similar to native methods:
`build_playerglobal` checks for the metadata described above,
and defines a const `NATIVE_INSTANCE_ALLOCATOR_TABLE` mapping
class ids to function pointers.
To demonstrate this feature, I've converted `Event` to ActionScript
(keeping the existing instance allocator function).
I've also converted `ActivityEvent` and `ContextMenuEvent` to
`ActionScript`, to demonstrate how this simplifies inheritance.
In a future PR, we can convert the remaining events to ActionScript,
and remove the `EventData` enum entirely.
Unfortunately, `flex-sdk`'s `asc.jar` compiler strips out all metadata
when the `-optimize` option is passed. As a result, I forked
`flex-sdk` and disabled this behavior:
https://github.com/ruffle-rs/flex-sdk/releases/tag/ruffle-1.0.0
The modified `asc.jar` (built from the forked repository)
is included in this PR, and replaces the our previous 'asc.jar'
downloaded from the official Flex SDK release.
* Change metadata to `[Ruffle(InstanceAllocator)]`
* Strip out metadata before saving bytecode
* avm2: implement string.replace(...) with fn, for now regex only.
* string - added path for replacing regex with fn (replacing string
with fn is still unimplemented)
* regex - factored out common replace logic for when replacement is
a string and when it is a function
* added tests
* Addressed review comments
* removed tinkering cruft; formatting
* addressed review comments
This commit adds support for marking methods as `native`
in ActionScript classes defined in playerglobal. The
`build_playerglobal` now checks for native methods, and
generates Rust code linking them to a corresponding Rust
function definition in the codebase.
To test this functionality, I've reimplemented several
functions as native methods (and moved related code to
pure ActionScript).
* avm2: implement string.split for regex
* Compressed the testing for regexp and unwrapping thereof
* * Moved the split logic into the regex object
* Factored out a method for utf-16 matching
* Added tests
* formatting
* * replaced manual counting with storage.length()
* clippy cleanup
* Address review comments
* fix import path for WString
* remove redundant variable in return statement
* error passing via '?' instead of unwrap()
Though https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-clippy/pull/8355 has been
merged, it seems to still report false-positives on nightly channel.
For now just fix the instances reported by stable clippy, and keep
`needless_borrow` allowed.
The register index was not being increment when preloading the
`super` register which would cause issues when multiple registers
were preloaded.
Fixes#7338.
Alongside comment wordings, fix handling of non-`u8` characters by
replacing `as u8` conversions with `u8::try_from()`, that doesn't
wrap around, but rather fails gracefully.
Based on the work in #6717, plus additional adaptions mentioned in
https://github.com/gfx-rs/wgpu/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md#wgpu-013-2022-06-30,
and more not-mentioned but required changes.
Also bump `wasm-bindgen` to `0.2.81` (along with its helper crates), as
required by the new `wgpu` version.
Note that I don't fully understand some of the required changes, notably:
* `wgpu::PresentMode::Mailbox` no longer works on my machine (Windows 11) -
The `wgpu` documentation says that `wgpu::PresentMode::Fifo` is the
only guaranteed to be supported, so I switched over to it instead.
* `self.staging_belt.recall()` doesn't return a `Future` anymore -
I assume it became synchronous so I simply removed the `executor`
from there.
Properties can be declared with a type
(e.g. `var foo:MyClass = new MyClass();`). When
`set_property`/`init_property` is invoked for that property,
the VM will attempt to coerce the value to the provided type,
throwing an error if this fails. This can have observable behavior
consequences - if a property has type `integer`, for example, then
storing a floating point `Number` to that property will cause the
value to be coerced to an integer. Some SWFs (e.g. 'Solarmax') rely
on this behavior in order to implicitly coerce a floating point value
that's later used for array indexing.
This PR implements property type coercions in Ruffle. There are several
important considerations:
* The class lookup for property types needs to be done lazily, since
we can have a cycle between two classes (e.g. `var prop1:Class2;`
and `var prop2:Class1` in two different classes).
* The class lookup uses special rules (different from
`resolve_definition`), and does *not* use `ScopeStack/`ScopeTree`
This means that a private class can specified as a property name -
the lookup will succeed without using a scope, even though
`flash.utils.getDefinitionByName` would fail with the same name
* The specialized 'Vector' classes (e.g "Vector$int") can be used
as property types, even though they cannot be lookup up normally.
Some Ruffle class definitions were previously using nonexistent
classes as property types (e.g. "BareObject") - these are fixed
in this PR.
- Handle the case where both preload aud suppress flags are
set for the same variable;
- Remove `arguments` field in `Activation`; instead use a normal
local definition;
- When `suppress_this` is set, inherit the `this` value from parent
activation. (This isn't entirely correct, as FP's `this` is mutable
and seems to be part of the scope chain, but this would require a
larger refactoring)
Currently, all three render backends hold on texture-related
resources indefinitely (`register_bitmap` pushes to a `Vec`,
and never removes anything). As a result, the resources used
by the render backend (which may include GPU memory) will grow
over time, even if the corresponding `BitmapData` has been deallocated.
This commit adds a new `unregister_bitmap` method, which is called from
`BitmapData.dispose`. All render backs are changed to now use an
`FnvHashMap<BitmapHandle, _>` instead of a `Vec`, allowing us to
remove individual entries.
Currently, we only call `unregister_bitmap in response to
`BitmapData.dispose` - when `BitmapData` is freed by the
garbage collector, `unregister_bitmap` is *not* called.
This will be addressed in a future PR.