We were mimicking Firefox' behavior that whenever a programmatic change
to an <input>'s or <textarea>'s selection happened, the new selection
focus is brought into view by scrolling. Currently we run a layout
update synchronously for that to make sure we have the fragment's
correct dimensions, which caused a significant performance regression in
Speedometer.
Since this is non-standard behavior, let's mimic Chromium instead which
does not scroll at all - only for direct user initiated input such as
typing.
Relevant issues:
* https://github.com/whatwg/html/issues/6217
* https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=232405
* https://issues.chromium.org/issues/41081857
When the mouse is dragged from inside a scrollable container to outside
of it, we now automatically scroll the container so the selection can be
extended. Scroll speed scales with the distance past the scrollport
edge, capped at a maximum. Edges close to the viewport boundary get a
wider activation zone so the speed ramp works predictably even when the
mouse has limited room to move.
The logic is encapsulated in AutoScrollHandler, which EventHandler
creates lazily on mouse selection start.
Resulting in a massive rename across almost everywhere! Alongside the
namespace change, we now have the following names:
* JS::NonnullGCPtr -> GC::Ref
* JS::GCPtr -> GC::Ptr
* JS::HeapFunction -> GC::Function
* JS::CellImpl -> GC::Cell
* JS::Handle -> GC::Root