When merging, +reachable-takos is called roughly once per merge commit
in the ancestry of the new commit. +reachable-takos was exponential in
the number of merge commits in the ancestry of the commit it's looking
at, due to mishandling of the accumulator. This makes it linear.
Of course, linear x linear is still quadratic, which is not great. I
doubt +reachable-takos can be made asymptotically better, but
+reduce-merge-points/+find-merge-points probably can. 50 merge commits
already gives about 14.000 iterations through the loop in
+reachable-takos. Another option is to try to memoize this somehow, but
a simple ~+ is insufficient since `s` is usually different.
In local tests on macOS with a -L copy of ~wicdev-wisryt, this speeds up
OTAs significantly. The majority of time was spent on this.
Attempt to convert the scry result to the mark that was asked for,
failing the scry (with ~) if the conversion fails.
Eyre's scry logic, then, can pass the requested mark directly into gall.
Exposes a scry endpoint. Any requests made to the /app/scry.mark url
under the endpoint will scry into %app using a %gx scry, at the
/scry/noun path, and attempt to convert the scry result into the %mark,
before converting that into the %mime mark, and sending that as an http
response.
In addition to producing the action bound for a given request, now also
produces the subset of the request url that comes _after_ the path at
which the binding has been established.
Will allow some bindings to more easily dispatch off the relevant part
of the url.
If we failed the password check, the login page served to us would never
include any redirect details, even if they were there in the original request.
Now we simply (attempt to) parse out the redirect field a little earlier.
Associates channels with the authentication sessions that opened them,
and deletes the channel when its associated session expires.
Also updates the debug dashboard to display channel counts per session.
Turns +on-channel-timeout into +discard-channel, which cleans up the
entirety of the channel, based on its current state. This allows us to
simplify the %delete channel request into a simple function call.
Changes the HTTP status code of the redirect that occurs upon a
successful login from 307 to 303. 307 preserves the method of the
original request, so the redirected request is a POST. With the new SPA,
this causes a 404 as app/file-server validates the method of the
request, something that did not happen in earlier versions of landscape.
303 instead changes the method to always produce a GET request.
Set up, by default, on /~/logout.
Sending a POST request to this expires the current session and redirects
to the login page. If the "all" key is set in the request body, expires
all open sessions.
We build a reef for each desk but use the compiler from our kernel. At
some point we should use the compiler from the desk, but then we need to
validate any results we get from it.