This change fixes accessible-name computation for:
- an element that has empty text content but that also has a title
attribute (“tooltip”) with a non-empty value
- an img element whose alt attribute is the empty string but that also
has a “title” attribute with a non-empty value
Otherwise, without this change, the accessible name unexpectedly isn’t
computed correctly for those cases.
A few are skipped for now:
- A few ref tests fail
- Crash tests are not supported by our runner and time out
- top-level-is-scope.html crashes and needs further investigation
This causes 36 new subtests to pass locally. :^)
Unfortunately at least one of these is flaky when it's able to load the
font file, apparently because we don't wait for the font and its
stylesheet to actually load before the tests run.
This fixes structured serialization of DataView. It was expected
to be uniform with TypedArray, which returns u32 for byte_offset().
This was covered by a number of WPT infrastructure tests, which this
commit also imports.
This change implements the “is a descendant of a native host language
text alternative element” condition in the “F: Name From Content” step
at https://w3c.github.io/accname/#step2F in the “Accessible Name and
Description Computation” spec — to ensure that all descendant nodes get
included as expected in computations for accessible names for elements.
Otherwise, without this change, Ladybird unexpectedly skips descendant
element nodes when computing accessible names — which can result in the
wrong accessible name being returned.
This change imports the WPT accname/name/comp_embedded_control.html
test, along with related resources files it depends on.
Note that in the wai-aria/scripts/aria-utils.js file, this changes the
get_computed_label call to use our window.internals.getComputedLabel.
...when running in test mode. This cuts down on the time it takes to run
the imported WPT tests, and you can still get the full error by opening
tests in the browser.
This change imports the WPT html/dom/aria-attribute-reflection.html test
into being an in-tree test — and deletes the related existing test
from https://github.com/LadybirdBrowser/ladybird/commit/a924e8747a4
previously “ported” from the WPT with changes to run under our (non-WPT)
in-tree test harness.
And here's the wild part: instead of cloning WPT tests, import the
relevant WPT tests that this fixes into our own test suite.
This works by adding a small Ladybird-specific callback in
resources/testharnessreport.js (which is what that file is meant for!)
Note that these run as text tests, and so they must signal the runner
when they are done. Tests using the "usual" WPT harness should just
work, but tests that do something more freestyle will need manual
signaling if they are to be imported.
I've also increased the test timeout here from 30 to 60 seconds,
to accommodate the larger WPT-style tests.