By default, aplay now prints the played time, the remaining time and the
total duration of the file in seconds and minutes. This is much more
intuitive. The old sample-based format is kept and hidden behind the -s
flag.
You now cannot get an unconnected LibIMAP::Client, but you can still
close it. This makes for a nicer API where we don't have a Client object
in a limbo state between being constructed and being connected.
This code still isn't as nice as it should be, as TLS::TLSv12 is still
not a Core::Stream::Socket subclass, which would allow for consolidating
most of the TLS/non-TLS code into a single implementation.
The special URL links (help://man) and the application opening links now
work on the man page website. While the page links are translated
correctly, the application launch can't be implemented. For this reason,
an explanatory error page is shown instead.
Add them in `<Kernel/API/Device.h>` and use these to provides
`{makedev,major,minor}` in `<sys/sysmacros.h>`. It aims to be more in
line with other Unix implementations and avoid code duplication in user
land.
Instead of making it a void function, checking for an exception, and
then receiving the relevant result via VM::last_value(), we can
consolidate all of this by using completions.
This allows us to remove more uses of VM::exception(), and all uses of
VM::last_value().
This utility helps to dump the physical memory space from /dev/mem.
It supports both read(2) and mmap(2) on it so we could use mmap(2) for
fast dumping of the memory, or read(2) when we need to read unaligned
physical regions.
Previously, man would only check if a path is not associated with a
manpage when no section was specified via the command line.
So `man gibberish` would fail with "no man page for gibberish", but `man
2 gibberish` would fail with a runtime error and still open a pipe to
the pager leading to a nasty crash.
Moving the check outside the "if (!section)" block fixes this.
Also: if a section is specified, the error message now echoes it back
(no manpage for foo in section bar).
In CI / or local testing when you run `serenity.sh tests`, the system
will boot itself in self test mode, and the test runner will be launched
by SystemServer. Previously we were setting up settings for that
environment in the `SystemServer.ini`. This makes reproducing CI
failures a bit confusing, as the system will behavior differently if you
run in self-test mode, vs running `run-tests-and-shutdown.sh` or
`run-tests` manually in a session.
This change moves the settings to `run-tests`, so no matter how you try
to run the test runner, it will always behave the same.
Makes CharacterMapFile::load_from_file and CharacterMap::load_from_file
return ErrorOr instead of Optional. This makes them a little nicer to
use and a little easier to read, as they seem to have been approximating
this.
This includes:
- Parsing proper LabelledStatements with try_parse_labelled_statement()
- Removing LabelableStatement
- Implementing the LoopEvaluation semantics via loop_evaluation() in
each IterationStatement subclass; and IterationStatement evaluation
via {For,ForIn,ForOf,ForAwaitOf,While,DoWhile}Statement::execute()
- Updating ReturnStatement, BreakStatement and ContinueStatement to
return the appropriate completion types
- Basically reimplementing TryStatement and SwitchStatement according to
the spec, using completions
- Honoring result completion types in AsyncBlockStart and
OrdinaryCallEvaluateBody
- Removing any uses of the VM unwind mechanism - most importantly,
VM::throw_exception() now exclusively sets an exception and no longer
triggers any unwinding mechanism.
However, we already did a good job updating all of LibWeb and userland
applications to not use it, and the few remaining uses elsewhere don't
rely on unwinding AFAICT.