Previously, SkTextBlob was built on every paint in
DisplayListPlayerSkia::draw_glyph_run(), which meant:
- Repeated work when the same display list is painted multiple times
- Glyph arrays were allocated and populated on each paint
Now the blob is built once during display list recording and cached in
GlyphRun.
ApplyTransform is no longer recorded to the display list. Transforms are
now applied inline during display list execution when switching between
accumulated visual contexts.
Change apply_transform to accept parameters directly instead of the
ApplyTransform struct.
Previously, both mask and clip-path were rendered to separate mutable
Gfx::Bitmap objects which forced CPU rasterization. They were then
combined using a CPU pixel-by-pixel operation before being returned
as an ImmutableBitmap.
Instead of including mask in the final bitmap as already rasterized
images, we now use display lists which opens opportunity to utilize
GPU if available.
Bitmap::apply_mask() and ApplyMaskBitmap display list command are no
longer used and have been removed.
Previously, clip-path was applied only during painting in
StackingContext::paint(), which meant hit testing did not respect
clip-path boundaries. Clicks outside the visible clipped region but
inside the element's bounding box would incorrectly register as hits.
By moving clip-path into AccumulatedVisualContext, it becomes part of
the same system that handles transforms, clips, and scroll offsets for
both painting and hit testing, ensuring consistent behavior.
Remove the PushStackingContext and PopStackingContext display list
commands that are no longer used after the AccumulatedVisualContext
integration.
Previously, PushStackingContext was responsible for:
- Applying CSS transforms via its StackingContextTransform field
- Managing opacity layers
- Handling clip paths
- Tracking blend modes
All of this functionality has been replaced by:
- Transform/perspective tracking via AccumulatedVisualContext nodes
- The ApplyEffects command for opacity, blend modes, and filters
- The AddClipPath command for clip paths
Integrate AccumulatedVisualContext with display list recording and
playback. This is the main commit of the refactoring that delivers the
architectural improvements enabled by AccumulatedVisualContext.
Recording changes:
Each display list command now stores a single
RefPtr<AccumulatedVisualContext> instead of separate scroll_frame_id
and ClipFrame. The recorder simply captures the current accumulated
context when appending commands.
The before_paint()/after_paint() hooks that pushed/popped scroll frame
IDs are replaced by directly setting accumulated_visual_context on the
recorder before painting each element.
Playback changes:
The display list player now uses LCA (Lowest Common Ancestor) based
traversal to switch between visual contexts efficiently. When
transitioning from context A to context B:
1. Find the LCA of A and B in the context tree
2. Pop (restore) states back to the LCA depth
3. Push (save + apply) states from LCA down to B
This approach minimizes redundant save/restore operations. For example,
when rendering siblings that share a common scroll container, the
player keeps that scroll state applied and only switches the divergent
parts of their context chains.
Key deletions:
- Remove translate_by() from all 45 display list commands - commands
are now immutable
- Remove transform/perspective fields from PushStackingContext -
transforms are tracked via AccumulatedVisualContext
- Remove push_scroll_frame_id()/pop_scroll_frame_id() from
DisplayListRecorder
- Remove before_paint()/after_paint() hooks from Paintable
- Merge ApplyOpacity, ApplyCompositeAndBlendingOperator, ApplyFilter
into single ApplyEffects command
Stacking context painting changes:
The StackingContext::paint() method is significantly simplified.
Instead of building a PushStackingContextParams struct with transform
matrices and pushing/popping stacking contexts, it now:
1. Sets the accumulated visual context (which already contains
transforms)
2. Applies effects (opacity, blend mode, filters) if needed
3. Applies clip path if needed
4. Paints the content
5. Restores state
The visual state management that was interleaved throughout the
painting code is now handled uniformly by the context tree.
Introduce a new AddClipPath display list command that applies a
path-based clip region. This command is needed for the upcoming removal
of PushStackingContext, which currently handles clip paths as part of
its functionality. By extracting clip path handling into a dedicated
command, we can eliminate PushStackingContext entirely in favor of the
more granular AccumulatedVisualContext approach.
There's no need to have separate display list item for drawing triangle
wave when we could simply use StrokePathUsingColor. By switching to
StrokePathUsingColor we could also reduce painting because it supports
filtering out by bounding box.