SimpleWebKit

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SimpleWebKit

Background Information

  • originated in mySTEP
  • is completely written in Objective-C (1.0) so that it can be compiled on any system, even with gcc 2.95.3
  • aims at providing the most popular documented methods of Full WebKit for the classes WebView, WebFrame, WebDataSource, etc.
  • aims at rendering (X)HTML as well as possible (but not perfectly)
  • uses NSAttributedStrings passed into NSTextView as the rendering backend
  • already displays many pages
  • is used in the Vespucci.app Web Browser application for GNUstep

Source Code

svn+ssh://user@svn.gna.org/svn/gnustep/libs/simplewebkit/trunk

http://svn.gna.org/viewcvs/gnustep/libs/simplewebkit/trunk

Status

Features of the Subversion (SVN) trunk code:

  • parses (X)HTML into a DOM tree
  • renders approx. 98% of the HTML 4.0 tags in a reasonable way (e.g. < font color="#667788">, < center>, < h2>, works)
  • makes <a> links clickable and processes them
  • loads <img>
  • loads <script> etc. asynchronously i.e. loads them as subresources
  • loads CSS etc. asynchronously i.e. loads them as subresources
  • handles <frame>
  • handles <form>
  • handles (if the NSTextView backend can handle)
  • has an ECMAScript engine that parses 90% of the syntax and evaluates expressions (missing are Statements and the native Objects including "document", "window", "event" etc.)
  • Missing:

    • properly compile and run <script>
    • completion of the ECMAScript engine
    • properly parse and apply CSS

    SWK Browser

    SWK Browser is part of the SimpleWebKit project and more or less a test bed for it, although it has most features of a full browser. These are

    • multiple documents
    • shows (X)HTML, Images etc.
    • can show page source code
    • can show activities (i.e. subresources)
    • can show a DOM Tree inspector
    • has a JavaScript console

    We have compiled Simple WebKit and SWK Browser with Cocoa so that it runs natively on a Mac.

    Download it here: [1]

    Screenshots

    Some first screen shots (made from SWK Browser on a Mac)

    File:SimpleWebKit Example 1.png

    How it Works

    1. the WebView

    • is the master view object and there is only one per browser (or browser tab)
    • it holds the mainFrame which represents either the normal <body> or the top level <frame> or <frameset>
    • if there is a <frameset> hierarchy, there are additional child WebFrames

    2. the WebFrame

    • is repsonsible for loading and rendering content from a specific URL
    • it uses a WebDataSource to trigger loading and get callbacks
    • it is also the owner of the DOMDocument tree
    • JavaScript statements are evaluated in a frame context
    • it is also the target of user clicks on links since it knows the base URL (through the WebDataSource)

    3. the WebDataSource

    • is responsible for loading data from an URL
    • it may cache data and handle/synchronize loading fo subresources (e.g. for an embedded <img> tag)
    • it translates the request and the response URLs
    • it provides an estimated content length (for a progress indicator) and the MIMEType of the incoming data stream
    • as soon as the header comes in a WebDocomentRepresentation is created and incoming segments are notified
    • it also collects the incoming data, so that a WebDocumentRepresentation can handle either segments or the collected data

    4. the WebDocumentRepresentation(s)

    • there is one for each MIME type (the WebView provides a mapping database)
    • it is responsible for parsing the incoming data stream (either completely when finished, or partially)
    • and provide a better suitable representation, e.g. an NSImage or a DOMHTMLTree
    • finally, it creates a WebDocumentView as the child of the WebView and attaches it to the WebFrame as the -webFrameView
    • so, if you want to handle an additional MIME type, write a class that conforms to the WebDocumentRepresentation protocol

    5. NSXMLParser

    • a private variant is used that adds a stalling mechanism and selection of the file encoding
    • recognizes the <?xml> tag for XHTML and has a lazy mode for pure HTML
    • it also has an Entity table that translates the HTML entities to character strings

    6. the DOMHTMLTree

    • is used only for HTML content
    • is built in WebHTMLDocumentRepresentation by parsing segment of HTML data coming in
    • any change in the DOMHTMLTree is notified to the WebDocumentView (or one of its subviews) by setNeedsLayout
    • each class of potential DOMHTMLTree records has methods to denote how to handle tags
    • the tag to class mapping is table driven

    7. the WebDocumentView(s) an its subviews

    • are responsible for displaying the contents of its WebDataRepresentation
    • either HTML, Images, PDF or whatever (e.g. SVG, XML, ...)
    • they gets notified about changes either by updates of the WebDataSource (-dadaSourceUpdated:) or directly (-setNeedsLayout:)
    • if one needs layout, it must go to the DOM Tree to find out what has changed and update its size, content, children, layout etc.
    • this is a little tricky/risky since the -layout method is called within -drawRect: - so changing e.g. the View frame is very critical and may result in drawing glitches
    • for HTML, we do a simple trick: the WebDocumentView is an NSTextView and the DOMHTMLTree objects can be traversed to return an attributedString with embedded Tables and NSTextAttachments

    8. the JavaScript engine

    • is programmed according to the specificaion of [[2] ECMA-262]
    • uses a simple recursive stateless parser (could be optimized in stack useage and speed by a state-table driven approach)
    • parses the script into a Tree representation in a first step
    • then, evaluates the expressions and statements according to the current environement
    • this allows to store scripts in translated form and reevaluate them when needed (e.g. on mouse events)
    • uses Foundation for basic types (string, number, boolean, null)
    • uses WebScriptObject as the base Object representation
    • DOMObjects are a subclass of WebScriptObjects and therefore provide bridging, so that changing a DOMHTML tree element through JavaScript automativally triggers the appropriate WebDocumentView notification

    9. the CSS engine

    • has to be written
    • shall have three components: CSS database, CSS parser, CSS evaluator

    Contact

    Author: Nikolaus Schaller QuantumSTEP: http://www.quantum-step.com