I accidently wrote `Span<RemoveConst<T>>` when I meant
`Span<RemoveConst<T>::Type>`.
Changing that wouldn't be enough though, this constructor can only be
defined if T is not const, otherwise it would redefine the copy
constructor. This can be avoided by overloading the cast operator.
There's no great advantage to using MMX instructions here on modern
processors, since REP MOVSB/STOSB are optimized in microcode anyway
and tend to run much faster than MMX/SSE/AVX variants.
This also makes it much easier to implement high-level emulation of
memcpy/memset in UserspaceEmulator once we get there. :^)
Fixes#2776.
This fixes, among other things, JSON serialization.
The underlying bug was that 'print_double' defined fraction_length
as a function argument with a default value, whereas
printf_internal *always* provided a value, even if nothing was read.
The 'use 6 by default' logic has been moved to printf_internal instead.
I totally forgot about the C++ basics here. There are three distinct
types: "char", "signed char" and "unsigned char". Whether "char" is
signed or unsigned is implementation specific.
This allows performing an action based on whether something
was actually added or removed without having to look it up
prior to calling set() or remove().
The fact that JsonValues can contain 64-bit values isn't a JavaScript
compatible behavior in the first place, but as long as we're supporting
this, we should make sure it works correctly.
Prior to this, we wrote to the log every time the << operator
was used, which meant that only these parts of the log statement
were serialized. If the thread was preempted, or especially with
multiple CPUs the debug output was hard to decipher. Instead, we
buffer up the log statements. To avoid allocations we'll attempt
to use stack space, which covers most log statements.
This was showing up in Browser profiles, which is silly, so write a new
version that doesn't create a temporary String object.
There are a whole bunch of these and long-term it would be nice to find
a way to share all the very similar logic instead of duplicating it.
- Parsing invalid JSON no longer asserts
Instead of asserting when coming across malformed JSON,
JsonParser::parse now returns an Optional<JsonValue>.
- Disallow trailing commas in JSON objects and arrays
- No longer parse 'undefined', as that is a purely JS thing
- No longer allow non-whitespace after anything consumed by the initial
parse() call. Examples of things that were valid and no longer are:
- undefineddfz
- {"foo": 1}abcd
- [1,2,3]4
- JsonObject.for_each_member now iterates in original insertion order
Get rid of the weird old signature:
- int StringType::to_int(bool& ok) const
And replace it with sensible new signature:
- Optional<int> StringType::to_int() const
Before this, it has been possible to assign a RefCounted object to another
RefCounted object. Hilariosly (or sadly), that copied the refcount among
the other fields, meaning the target value ended up with a wrong refcount.
Ensure this never happens by disallowing copies and moves for RefCounted types.
This fixes all sorts of race conditions, primarily in the kernel, where till
now it's been possible to obtain either double free or use-after-free by
exploiting refcounting races.
I've been using this in the new HTML parser and it makes it much easier
to understand the state of unfinished code branches.
TODO() is for places where it's okay to end up but we need to implement
something there.
ASSERT_NOT_REACHED() is for places where it's not okay to end up, and
something has gone wrong.
The SDL port failed to build because the CMake toolchain filed pointed
to the old root. Now the toolchain file assumes that the Root is in
Build/Root.
Additionally, the AK/ and Kernel/ headers need to be installed in the
root too.
.. and make travis run it.
I renamed check-license-headers.sh to check-style.sh and expanded it so
that it now also checks for the presence of "#pragma once" in .h files.
It also checks the presence of a (single) blank line above and below the
"#pragma once" line.
I also added "#pragma once" to all the files that need it: even the ones
we are not check.
I also added/removed blank lines in order to make the script not fail.
I also ran clang-format on the files I modified.
And move canonicalized_path() to a static method on LexicalPath.
This is to make it clear that FileSystemPath/canonicalized_path() only
perform *lexical* canonicalization.
The CMake runner looks at the return code if you don't set
the pattern. Since the AK test suite setup doesn't use return
codes, we were missing test failures.
FileSystemPath::has_extension was jumping through hoops and allocating
memory to do a case insensitive comparison needlessly. Extend the
existing String::ends_with method to allow the caller to specify the
case sensitivity required.
Previously, passing a fragment string ("#section3") to the complete_url
method would result in a URL that looked like
"file:///home/anon/www/#section3" which was obviously incorrect. Now the
result looks like "file:///home/anon/www/afrag.html#section3".
We shouldn't just drop leading ..-s for relative paths. At the same time,
we should handle paths like
../foo/../../bar
correctly: the first .. after the foo cancels out the foo, but the second
one should get treated as a leading one and not get dropped.
Note that since this path resolution is purely lexical, it's never going to be
completely correct with respect to symlinks and other filesystem magic. Better
don't use it when dealing with files.
If these methods get inlined, the compiler is able to statically eliminate most
of the assertions. Alas, it doesn't realize this, and believes inlining them to
be too expensive. So give it a strong hint that it's not the case.
This *decreases* the kernel binary size.
In order to remove libstdc++ completely, we need to give up on their
implementation of abi::__cxa_demangle. The demangler logic will actually
have to be quite complex, and included in both the kernel and userspace.
A definite fixme for the future, to parse the mangled names into real
deal names.
This allows operator new and operator delete to be available to anyone
that links -lc (everyone) rather than just people that include
kmalloc.h (almost no one).
Use the AK version of std::initializer_list in AK::Vector, but only
when in serenity. When building AK for a non-serenity target, the header
<initializer_list> should be always available.
This was supposed to be the foundation for some kind of pre-kernel
environment, but nobody is working on it right now, so let's move
everything back into the kernel and remove all the confusion.
This stopped working quite some time ago due to Clang losing track of
typestates for some reason and everything becoming "unknown".
Since we're primarily using GCC anyway, it doesn't seem worth it to try
and maintain this non-working experiment for a secondary compiler.
Also it doesn't look like the Clang team is actively maintaining this
flag anyway. So good-bye, -Wconsumed. :/
With 0 initial capacity, we don't allocate an underlying ByteBuffer
for the StringBuilder, which would then lead to a null String() being
returned from to_string().
This patch makes sure we always build a valid String.
StringUtils::equals_ignoring_case() already operates on a StringView&,
so StringView should have the method directly without having to go
through a temporary String (which also has the method).
As suggested by @awesomekling in a code review and (initially) ignored
by me :^)
Implementation is roughly based on LibJS's trim_string(), but with a fix
for trimming all-whitespace strings.
When we switched the Bitmap code to operating 32 bits at a time,
we neglected to look in the trailing remainder bits after the last
full 32-bit word.
This patch fixes that and adds a couple of tests for Bitmap that I
hacked up while tracking down this bug.
I found this bug when noticing that the kernel would OOM while there
were still some pages left in the physical page allocator.
This allows easy creation of a new string from an existing StringView.
Can be used e.g. for output with printf(..., view.to_string().characters())
instead of writing printf(..., String{view}.characters()).
zeroPad => zero_pad
leftPad => left_pad
fieldWidth => field_width
These were the only variables with names in camelCase.
We were not consistent with the naming of these variables: some times we
called them zeroPad, leftPad, fieldWidth; other times we called them
zero_pad, left_pad, field_width.
These inconsistencies made the code hard to read, so I changed their
names to snake_case.
Also rename width => field_width in AK::print_hex()
These methods search from the beginning or end of a string for the
first character in the input StringView and returns the position in
the string of the first match. Note that this is not a substring match.
Each comes with single char overloads for efficiency.
Due to us using size_t for the length, the actual value will always be positive.
If, for example, we calculate the length as "0 - 1", we'll get SIZE_T_MAX. What
we can do is check that adding the characters pointer and the length together
doesn't overflow.
And switch the two-argument version of Checked::multiplication_would_overflow()
to use __builtin_mul_overflow_p(). This helps GCC optimize the code better.