CSC/ECE 517 Spring 2016/Mozilla Implement HTML5 form validation
Implementation of HTML5 form validation in servo
Servo is a prototype web browser engine being developed by Mozilla and written in the Rust language. This project implements HTML5 validations for servo.
Introduction
The HTML5is a markup language used for displaying content on the World Wide Web
HTML5 defines set of specification which users needs to follow to make web pages HTML5 compliant. HTML 5 defines a mechanism by which contents of forms can be validated before user is allowed to submit them. Servo currently implements support for few of the form elements. This project is intended to implement client-side validations for these elements and extend the existing form element subset to include additional form elements that will support client side validation.
Servo
Servo is an open source prototype web browser layout engine that is being developed by Mozilla Research. It is written in Rust language. Current browser engines are mostly based on single-threaded model. Although there are some tasks (as decompressing images) which can be done on separate processor cores but most of the work of interpreting HTML and laying out pages is single-threaded. Motivation behind servo is to create a highly parallel environment, where different components (such as rendering, layout, HTML parsing, image decoding, etc.) can be handled by fine-grained, isolated tasks.
Rust
Rust is an open source systems programming language developed by Mozilla Research. Rust is designed to provide the same level of performance and power as C++, but without the risk of bugs and security flaws, and also with built-in mechanisms for exploiting multi-core processors.
Project Description
- The project requirement initially stated that we build and Compile servo. Following are the steps for this:
Servo is built with Cargo, the Rust package manager. Mozilla's Mach tools are used to orchestrate the build and other tasks.
git clone https://github.com/servo/servo cd servo ./mach build --dev ./mach run tests/html/about-mozilla.html
- The next requirement was to uncomment the attributes in ValidityState.weidl and fix the resulting build errors by implementing appropriate stub methods in validitystate.rs
- Next, we had to modify the ValidityState constructor to take an &Element argument and store it as element variable of JS<Element> type member in the ValidityState.
- The changes to the constructor resulted in build errors in following files
htmlselectelement.rs
htmloutputelement.rs
htmlobjectelement.rs
htmlfieldsetelement.rs
htmlbuttonelement.rs
So, the constructors called in these files were modified to send the required extra parameter.
- Next, we had to add a new enum “ValidityStatus” in ValidityState having each possible validity check in ValidityState.
- Next, we had to define a new trait Validatable having method “is_instance_validatable”. (which takes the new ValidityStatus enum as an argument.)
- Next, we implemented this trait and the corresponding method in the following files
htmltextareaelement.rs
htmlselectelement.rs
htmllabelelement.rs
htmlinputelement.rs
htmlbuttonelement.rs
htmlanchorelement.rs
- Then, we had to define method as_maybe_validatable in file “element.rs” which returns an &Validatable value if the element implements the newly defined trait.
- Finally, we added a new html file “form_html5_validations.html” to test the HTML5 validation for the mentioned conditions
Design Patterns & OO Practices
We were not supposed to modify the existing design apart from adding a new behaviour/ability for HTML Element. We attempted to follow good OO practices throughout development. Servo has it's own coding standards which are checked by running following command
./mach test-tidy
Issues reported by test are to be fixed before pull request can be generated. This ensures that developers would adhere to coding standards
Conclusion
As a result of these initial changes, currently validation of the form elements has a basic implementation of the code required. The enum “ValidityStatus” is used to identify different states for the element. For each element in the form, the flow goes in this manner - First the “as_maybe_validatable” method in the element.rs file is called, which in turn finds out the type of the element and then calls the “is_instance_validatable” method on that element.
References
1. https://doc.rust-lang.org/stable/book/
2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rust_(programming_language)
3. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Servo_(layout_engine)
4. https://github.com/servo/servo/wiki/Form-validation-student-project
5. https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/