By factoring their shared logic out into +build-dependency, which gets
passed the relevant details about how to track the file being built in
the dependency stack.
Hoon files may want to import nouns from all files in a given directory.
/~ lets you do so, importing as a (map @ta *) (but with typed values).
Note the description as "directories" here, instead of "path prefix".
The behavior, as implemented, will not include /path/hoon for /~ /path,
instead only including /path/more/hoon and more deeply nested files.
This seems to be, generally, the behavior you want, for example when
importing from /app/myapp/* for /app/myapp/hoon.
Actually using the resulting map requires some manual casting, which is
not ideal. Some code style improvement work remains to be done as well.
~littel-ponnys no longer maintains Eyre, so I will take over.
/lib/test goes without a dedicated maintainer for now.
Additionally, #4463 and follow-up work sees me taking charge of the terminal
stack, so I will take over formal ownership of that going forward.
When we receive a notification, it might not affect our count because
it’ll get merged on the server side, but we unconditionally increment
our count on the client if the notification hasn’t been loaded yet.
Addresses this by storing a set of time, index so we can compute whether
or not the notification is merged or unloaded and change the count
accordingly.
Fixesurbit/landscape#276
Fixes#4598.
#4474 made the JSON time conversion no longer invertible, which caused
problems for chat, which uses message timestamp in milliseconds as a key
-- so chat would send a message with ms timestamp x, it would get
encoded as @da x, but then when it went back through the conversion to
milliseconds, it would often (not always) get encoded as x-1.
I still do not fully understand why this is -- and why it doesn't seem
to be a problem with seconds based on cursory testing -- but integer
multiplication and division generally do not invert. And adding a half a
millisecond to the input date before converting it resolves the issue
and makes the functions invertible.
I added a regression test, so hopefully the next courageous adventurer
who winds up here after wondering why +unm looks funny will have a
safeguard against some of the mistakes I made.