These were a feature for allowing multiple
scripting contexts to access the same global
state without leaking wrappers between them.
For example, if the inspector wanted to
modify window.Array.dangerousFunction = ...
it wouldn't want the author's content to have
access to that.
This feature is not part of Sky's security model
and thus this is just dead code.
I tried to remove worlds all together, but there
is something special about how we use a
"fake" world (which is neither main nor isolated)
for GC, regexp and testing.
R=rafaelw@chromium.org, abarth@chromium.org
BUG=
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/776143003
Particularly, this deletes RenderLayerCompositor. After this,
there's just CompositingState left to remove.
This is all dead code, so there should be no change in behavior.
R=abarth@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/758843004
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
We only allow overflow scrolling. The frame isn't special.
This is a first step in making that happen. There's a lot of
code to remove after this patch, but this gets rid of
ScrollView and a bunch of frame-level scrolling code.
Had to add in a FrameWidget class so that Scrollbar.cpp had
a way of getting to FrameView::removeChild without pulling
a core class into platform. This might go away when we rip
out the Widget tree if we made it so that FrameView didn't
keep a list of Scrollbar instances.
Modified scrollbar.html to use overflow scrolling instead of
frame level scrolling. Once we get rid of the split between
Document and documentElement, we'll be able to make the root
element in the page scrollable as well (i.e. any child of the
Document).
R=abarth@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/646273006