This is the first step of getting rid of RenderLayer.
Instead of walking the RenderLayer tree, wall the RenderObject
tree and add any layers encountered to a vector to paint later.
This patch just consolidates and move the code from RenderLayer
to RenderBox and then changes the children painting to
iterate over the vector. Therefore we walk the RenderObject tree.
We still call out to RenderLayer in a bunch of places.
A followup patch will get rid of those.
R=esprehn@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/899753003
This is just a mechanical removal. No logic changes
beyond removing the PaintPhaseSelection checks.
Most of these are just early returns to avoid doing
unnecessary work if we're only painting selections.
But now that we paint selections during the foreground
paint phase, we no longer need the early returns since
we're going to paint everything anyways.
R=esprehn@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/886933002
These appear to have been for ensuring that you
only paint elements in a given subtree. It's not clear
to me exactly how you get to painting an element that
is not rooted at the RenderLayer you started with.
I think it's just not possible in Sky anymore.
This code was added in 2004 for drag images, which
we no longer support.
R=esprehn@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/882223005
Mostly just mechanical changes. The one surprising bit
is that RenderLayer no longer needs to explictly paint
outlines. I tested manually that before this patch,
the paintOutline call in RenderLayer was needed for
outlines on positioned elements and that after this
patch it's not.
R=esprehn@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/878023002
This is an optimization to avoid painting backgrounds
that are obscured. It's a lot of complexity that it's
not clear we'll need given that we're using a GL backend.
Also, we can add it back in more easily/efficiently in the future
once we have a display list architecture.
This also means we can remove the needsPaintInvalidation
dirty bit and some opacity information on filters.
R=esprehn@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/856563006
There is a slight change in behavior in FrameSelection::revealSelection.
If you have a non-collapsed selection, then we'll center the start
of the selection instead of the whole selection in some cases. There's
a ton of callers of this code, so it's hard to be sure if any of this
actually changes behavior for sky. In manual testing, I couldn't find
any scenarios where there was a difference. Almost universally,
when we call revealSelection, we have a CaretSelection. The only
case I could think of where we have a RangeSelection is when
modifying an off-screen selection (e.g. shift+right), but in that case
we pass the RevealExtent option, so this patch doesn't change behavior
there.
Removing that caller makes all the rest of this rect computing
code into dead code.
R=abarth@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/847303003
This caused us to lose our gn check certification. :(
Turns out gn check was just ignoring all the header
paths it didn't understand and so gn check passing
for sky wasn't meaning much. I tried to straighten
out some of the mess in this CL, but its going to take
several more rounds of massaging before gn check
passes again. On the bright side (almost) all of
our headers are absolute now. Turns out my script
(attached to the bug) didn't notice ../ includes
but I'll fix that in the next patch.
R=abarth@chromium.org
BUG=435361
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/746023002
Fix (most) generated includes to have gen/ in their path.
This makes it easier to tell where files exist on disk.
Unfortunately I had to leave the old include path
in engine/BUILD.gn to support all the v8 includes
which were too many to deal with in this patch.
It's a little nasty to have the raw build directory
in our include path, but it produces nicer paths.
R=abarth@chromium.org
This just removes a random subset of vertical writing mode bits
that I grepped for. There's a ton more to do, but it seems best to
do it in chunks.
The key things for understanding this patch, isWritingModeRoot is
always false and isHorizontalWritingMode is always true. Also,
we're never flipped* modes of any kind, so we can undo any flipping.
R=esprehn@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/688213002