Previously, has_scrollable_overflow was a purely geometric check, true
whenever content extended beyond the padding box regardless of the
overflow property. This caused unnecessary scroll frame allocation for
boxes with `overflow:visible`.
Per CSS Overflow 3, scrollable overflow is only defined for scroll
containers (overflow: auto/hidden/scroll). Gate the flag on
`is_scroll_container()` so that only actual scroll containers get scroll
frames assigned.
Inline nodes in our layout tree have a position, so let's show it. By
centralizing the logic for this, block nodes now lose their redundant
'content-size' dump info which is already part of the box model dump.
Browsers such as Chrome and Firefox apply an arbitrary scale to the
current font size if `normal` is used for `line-height`. Firefox uses
1.2 while Chrome uses 1.15. Let's go with the latter for now, it's
relatively easy to change if we ever want to go back on that decision.
This also requires updating the expectations for a lot of layout tests.
The upside of this is that it's a bit easier to compare our layout
results to other browsers', especially Chrome.
Although the flex algorithm as specified does say to determine the cross
size of the flex container, this is not how our layout engine works.
The parent formatting context is responsible for sizing its children,
and since that's already happening, we can simply remove the cross
sizing step from FFC.
If box is sized as replaced it still could be anything, not only SVG.
This fixes crashing on https://www.shopify.com/ that was caused by a
missing paintable for a box that has a layout node. This occurred
because the box was not laid out in dimension_box_on_line().