This is the initial part of a series which splits up the API interface
definitions for the frontends removing a great deal of unnecessary file
inclusion and further isolates the fronted API usage from the core
Let the front end pass its own types around, rather than core ones.
This removes one "bw->current_content" from window.c.
Now the current content is only accessed where its needed, in the
favicon handler, and it is accessed via the appropriate API.
The netsurf.h header should *only* contain the registration, core
initialisation and finalisation methods. Version information is best
placed in its own header.
Also remove any unneeded inclusion of this header limiting it to
solely the places the relevant API is required.
The netsurf core is driven from numerous operation tables most of
which are now set through a common netsurf_register() interface. The
font and plotting interfaces are currently separate and unlike all the
other operation tables are modified for differing contexts.
This change moves the font operations alongside all the other
operations table and remove unnecessary interaction with the renderers
font internals. Further this also removes the need for css internals
to be visible in frontends.
The core no longer needs to run the event polling loop as fetches are now
scheduler driven. This is part of a series which will ultimately remove
netsurf_poll callback altogether.
The core no longer needs to run the event polling loop as fetches are now
scheduler driven. This is part of a series which will ultimately remove
netsurf_poll callback altogether.
The core no longer needs to run the event polling loop as fetches are now
scheduler driven. This is part of a series which will ultimately remove
netsurf_poll callback altogether.
The core no longer needs to run the event polling loop as fetches are now
scheduler driven. This is part of a series which will ultimately remove
netsurf_poll callback altogether.
The core no longer needs to run the event polling loop as fetches are now
scheduler driven. This is part of a series which will ultimately remove
netsurf_poll callback altogether.
The core no longer needs to run the event polling loop as fetches are now
scheduler driven. This is part of a series which will ultimately remove
netsurf_poll callback altogether.
The Atari maintainer probably wants to look at moving the ami_quit
handling inside atari_poll() to further reduce overhead.
The core no longer needs to run the event polling loop as fetches are now
scheduler driven. This is part of a series which will ultimately remove
netsurf_poll callback altogether.
The Amiga maintainer probably wants to look at moving the ami_quit
signalling inside ami_handle_msg() to further reduce overhead.