Fixes a bug introduced in 4798b9d.
This, uh, fell into the same old case of using an arm from a |_ without
initializing that core with a sample first. In this case, that resulted
in the bowl in connect being the default bowl here. This is fine for
~zod, since it's the default ship, but gives incorrect behavior for
anyone else.
Pretty simple really, fixes issue #2131.
Decided to use padding instead of margin because the underflow is nice,
but not at the detriment of being able to see the last chat preview
Instead of providing a (unit path), allows for (list path), which better
supports the "update to path and subpath cases".
For example, if /things wants updates about everything, and
/things/specific wants updates about the specific thing, they'll both
need to receive a %fact when the specific thing changes.
Previously, these would have been two separate moves. Now, gall handles
the multi-targeting for you.
Add a regex check for non-lowercase, non-slash, non-hyphen characters,
or numerals, and a quick check for starts-with-slashes, double-slashes,
to a boolean before creating a chat at that path.
OTAs commonly end up in an inconsistent state if apps depend on changes
to /sys. For example, the %sift changes break on OTA because %spider
needs to be reloaded so that it's aware of the new thread type. This
adds a %goad app, which reloads all apps after every change to /sys.
Getting this to start OTA is nontrivial, but this pattern should work
for apps in the future. The changes to clock shouldn't generally be
necessary; they are only necessary here because we can't rely on hood to
start goad, since hood fails to compile if it's run before zuse is
reloaded. Once goad is active, this will cease to be a problem.
Renamed to eth-sender. Can still sign eth-txs at multiple gas prices,
fan transactions to multiple nodes, wait for confirmation between
transaction batches (now of user-specified size).
The previous nonce reading implementation was broken beyond belief and
has been taken out. Can be reimplemented once RLP decoding is in the
stdlib.
This resolves a number of issues that were keeping communications with
foreign ships from working.
- there was no link-update mark
- there was no +on-arvo handling in link-listen-hook
- link-listen-hook was subscribing to the non-existent "link-hook"
- link-proxy-hook permission check was looking at a wrong path
Also makes link-listen-hook aware that subscriptions might get rejected
because of permissions, so that it ignores failed subscriptions instead
of being loud about it.
link-server-hook exposes (parts of) the link-store over eyre, on the
condition that the client is authenticated as the host ship.
link-webext as committed is a very minimal web extension. When its
toolbar button is clicked, it saves the current webpage to /private
in the link-store.
In the future, this should support choosing a target to save to,
highlighting already-saved pages, and many other features.
Stores URLs and their titles for the local ship. Can listen to
"submissions" on foreign ships.
Has a primitive perspective on groups, treating them as
always-interesting. Auto-subscribes to all ships in all groups.
Foreign communications untested.
Largely one-to-one port feature-wise.
Support for document polls was added.
Command preparation and verification got split out into
/ted/claz/prep-command, and got a dedicated +prep-result type to
facilitate future support for more complex preparation steps.
Turns out this wasn't a regression, it was intended behavior. I
continue to believe it's the wrong behavior, but that will require a
longer discussion.