pledge_domains() that takes only one String argument was specifically
added as a shortcut for pledging a single domain. So, it makes sense to
use singular here.
This option is already enabled when building Lagom, so let's enable it
for the main build too. We will no longer be surprised by Lagom Clang
CI builds failing while everything compiles locally.
Furthermore, the stronger `-Wsuggest-override` warning is enabled in
this commit, which enforces the use of the `override` keyword in all
classes, not just those which already have some methods marked as
`override`. This works with both GCC and Clang.
The settings for Terminal are extracted into their own application,
TerminalSettings, which is reachable over the normal Settings menu as
well as the same place in the Terminal menu. The font settings are moved
into these settings as well, which are now split up into the "Terminal"
and "View" tabs. The font settings themselves receive an option to
override the selected font with the system default on the user side.
The live update behavior of all of the terminal settings is retained.
The layout of the new TerminalSettings is based around the other
Settings applications, but pixel-perfectness is missing in some places.
It's a bit fiddly and I'd like to have some better GUI::Label auto-size
behavior, but oh well :^)
With this change, System::foo() becomes Core::System::foo().
Since LibCore builds on other systems than SerenityOS, we now have to
make sure that wrappers work with just a standard C library underneath.
This simplifies a bunch of error handling and makes the main function
quite a bit shorter.
It will become shorter yet, as we get better at propagating errors. :^)
This removes the awkward String::replace API which was the only String
API which mutated the String and replaces it with a new immutable
version that returns a new String with the replacements applied. This
also fixes a couple of UAFs that were caused by the use of this API.
As an optimization an equivalent StringView::replace API was also added
to remove an unnecessary String allocations in the format of:
`String { view }.replace(...);`
This allows for typing [8] instead of [8, 8, 8, 8] to specify the same
margin on all edges, for example. The constructors follow CSS' style of
specifying margins. The added constructors are:
- Margins(int all): Sets the same margin on all edges.
- Margins(int vertical, int horizontal): Sets the first argument to top
and bottom margins, and the second argument to left and right margins.
- Margins(int top, int vertical, int bottom): Sets the first argument to
the top margin, the second argument to the left and right margins,
and the third argument to the bottom margin.
Previously the argument order for Margins was (left, top, right,
bottom). To make it more familiar and closer to how CSS does it, the
argument order is now (top, right, bottom, left).
When exiting the terminal settings window, the opacity, bell and
maximum history size will be saved to the application config file.
Because the color scheme is neither configurable nor
will it be loaded on startup, it will not get saved for now.
Applications previously had to create a GUI::Menubar object, add menus
to it, and then call GUI::Window::set_menubar().
This patch introduces GUI::Window::add_menu() which creates the menubar
automatically and adds items to it. Application code becomes slightly
simpler as a result. :^)
This commit introduces color scheme support to Terminal. These are found
in `/res/terminal_colors` and the default color scheme can be set in
`~/.config/Terminal.ini`. Furthermore, a combo box is added for
setting the color scheme at runtime.
The previously used default color scheme has been added to
`/res/terminal-colors/Default.ini`.
To make the implementation more compatible with other color schemes,
`TerminalWidget` now supports overriding the default foreground and
background colors.
This adds support for shift+return key combo in single line TextEditor
fields. Used in this case for searching backwards/forwards in the
Terminal find window.
This changes (context) menus across the system to conform to titlecase
capitalization and to not underline the same character twice (for
accessing actions with Alt).
Since applications using Core::EventLoop no longer need to create a
socket in /tmp/rpc/, and also don't need to listen for incoming
connections on this socket, we can remove a whole bunch of pledges!
Only keep track of that (and eventually close() it) internally instead.
This argument is not present on other systems, so we were running into
compatibility issues with ports.
Also bring the implementation closer to Linux and OpenBSD by making sure
to close the slave pty fd in the fork()'d child as well as _exit()'ing
on login_tty() failure - it's non-POSIX, so those are our references
here. :^)
SPDX License Identifiers are a more compact / standardized
way of representing file license information.
See: https://spdx.dev/resources/use/#identifiers
This was done with the `ambr` search and replace tool.
ambr --no-parent-ignore --key-from-file --rep-from-file key.txt rep.txt *
I hereby declare these to be full nouns that we don't split,
neither by space, nor by underscore:
- Breadcrumbbar
- Coolbar
- Menubar
- Progressbar
- Scrollbar
- Statusbar
- Taskbar
- Toolbar
This patch makes everything consistent by replacing every other variant
of these with the proper one. :^)
(...and ASSERT_NOT_REACHED => VERIFY_NOT_REACHED)
Since all of these checks are done in release builds as well,
let's rename them to VERIFY to prevent confusion, as everyone is
used to assertions being compiled out in release.
We can introduce a new ASSERT macro that is specifically for debug
checks, but I'm doing this wholesale conversion first since we've
accumulated thousands of these already, and it's not immediately
obvious which ones are suitable for ASSERT.
Now that WindowServer broadcasts the system theme using an anonymous
file, we need clients to pledge "recvfd" so they can receive it.
Some programs keep the "shared_buffer" pledge since it's still used for
a handful of things.