This reverts commit e72e8b8556.
Now that the SQL category works in isolation, it is possible to hide
quickmarks/bookmarks when those categories are empty.
Fixes#960
While QSortFilterProxyModel emits layoutChanged when changing the
pattern, QSqlQueryModel emits modelReset. As only layoutChanged was
connected, a HistoryCategory would only work in a model that also had at
least one ListCategory.
The simplest solution is to have the parent model emit the signal
directly. This also emits a single signal on a pattern change rather
that one for each child model.
Resolves#3016.
If we don't do this, earlier tests can affect later ones when e.g. using "...
should not be logged", as we don't really wait until a test has been fully
finished.
The signal we were using to inject greasemonkey scripts registered to
run at document-start (javaScriptWindowObjectCleared) was unreliable to
non-existant. The initialLayoutCompleted signal is a bit of an odd duck
too I suppose. Anyway, we don't anticipate any scripts would break from
being injected when the page is finished loaded that wouldn't already
have been flaky due to the complexities of the modern web. If there is
an issue hopefully someone raises an issue and we can look into it.
Test document-end and noframes. Because coverage.py told me to.
Hopefully this doesn't slow the test run down too much, particularly the
"should not be logged" bit.
I'm just reusing and existing test html page that used an iframe because
I'm lazy.
We weren't actually picking up the @noframes greasemonkey directive
because of this. I haven't tested this very extensively but it seems to
work for making the property value optional.
Use the `QWebPage.frameCreated` signal to get notifications of subframes
and connect the javascript injection triggering signals on those frames
too.
I had to add a `url = url() or requestedUrl()` bit in there because the
inject_userjs method was getting called to early or something when
frame.url() wasn't set or was set to the previous page so we were
passing the wrong url to greasemonkey.scripts_for().
I ran into a bizarre (I maybe it is completely obvious and I just don't
see it) issue where the signals attached to the main frame that were
connected to a partial function with the main frame as an argument were
not getting emitted, or at least those partial functions were not being
called. I worked around it by using None to mean defaulting to the main
frame in a couple of places.
Just runs a greasemonkey script on a test page and uses console.log to
ensure it is running.
Tests @include, and basic happy path greasemonkey.py operation (loading
and parsing script, scrip_for on webkit), only testing document-start
injecting point but that is the troublsome one at this point.
Tested on py35 debian unstable (oldwebkit and qtwebengine5.9) debian
stable qtwebengine5.7.
Note the extra :reload call for qt5.7 because document-start scripts
don't seem to run on the first page load with the current insertion
point. I need to look into this more to look at ways of fixing this.
Thanks to @sandrosc. A few breaking changes fixed (default method to
GM_xhr not working, GM_listvalues not cleaning up output, GM_setvalue
param checking logic wrong) and a few hygenic changes made.
Add qute version to GM_info object in GM wrapper.
Support using the greasemonkey @namespace metadata for its intended
purpose of avoiding name collisions.
Get a nice utf8 encoded string from a QUrl more better.
QTWebEngine 5.8 added support for parsing greasemonkey metadata blocks
and scripts added to the QWebEngineScriptCollection of a page or its
profile and then deciding what urls to run those scripts on and at what
point in the load process to run them. For earlier versions we must do
that work ourselves. But with the additional handicap of the less rich
qtwebengine api.
We have acceptNavigationRequest, loadStarted, loadProgress,
loadFinished, urlChanged to choose from regarding points at which to
register scripts for the current page.
Adding scripts on acceptNavigation loadStarted and loadFinished causes
scripts to run too early or too late (eg on the pages being navigated
from/to) and not run on the desired page at the time they are inserted.
We could maybe do some more sophisticated stuff with loadProgress but it
didn't have any better behaviour in the brief testing I gave it.
Registering scripts on the urlChanged event seems to work fine. Even if
it seems like there could be problems with the signal firing too often,
due to not necessarily being tied to the page load progress, that
doesn't seem to have an effect in practice. The event is fired when, for
example, the url fragment changes and even if we add a new script to the
collection (or remove an existing one) it doesn't have an effect on what
is running on the page.
I suspect all of those timing issues is due to the signals being
forwarded fairly directly from the underlying chomium/blink code but the
webengine script stuff only being pushed back to the implementation on
certain events.
Anyway, using urlChanged seems to work fine due to some quirk(s) of the
implementation. That might change with later development but this
codepath is only ever going to be used for version 5.7.
There are other potential optimizations like not removing and then
re-adding scripts for the current page. But they probably wouldn't do
anything anyway, or at least anything that you would expect.
This change requires urls specified in @include, @exclude and @matches
directives in metadata blocks to be in the same form that
QUrl.toEncoded() returns. That is a punycoded domain and percent encoded
path and query. This seems to be what Tampermonkey on chrome expects to.
Also changes the scripts_for() function to take a QUrl arg so the caller
doesn't need to worry about encodings.
This regex was broken since the original PR and subsequent code seemed to be
working around it. Before re.split was returning [everything up to
/UserScript, everything else], now it returns [before UserScript, metadata,
after /UserScript], which is good.
Also I added the check for the UserScript line starting at column 0 as per
spec.
These argument type restrictions are mentioned on the greasespot pages for
these value storage functions. We could call JSON.dumps() instead but better
to push that onto the caller so we don't have to try handle deserialization.
Also removes the check for localstorage because everyone has supported that
for years.
WebEngine only. Previously we were just removing every script from the
main world. But some other scripts might got here in the future so new
we are overriding the name field to add a GM- prefix so hopefully we
only remove greasemonkey scripts before adding new ones.