"Replace" suggests this function either produces an updated set/map when done,
like +snap, or changes all values in-place, like +turn. In truth, it's more
similar to +roll, which does reduction/accumulation.
("Reduce" specifically was chosen because it maintains the mnemonic relation to
the arm name.)
Don't include pkg/arvo/tests and pkg/urbit/tests when running
git-archive(1).
Additionally, move the export-ignore declaration for
pkg/urbit/hashtable_tests into the pkg/urbit/.gitattributes files. For
default operation, git-archive(1) requires that these declarations be
located on the tree being archived.
Removes miscellaneous files that had lingered from pre-monorepoisation:
* pkg/arvo Travis and .gitignore, .gitattributes files
* pkg/urbit CONTRIBUTING.md (subsumed by file in repository root)
This reverts commit 94800ca79c, which
fixed a bug with mugs in Vere. Fixing it retroactively invalidated the
mugs in all event logs in the present era, however.
Due to asynchronicity, Ford can receive responses from Clay to requests
that it has already attempted to cancel. This removes some overzealous
assertions that this wouldn't happen.
Dynamically compute subject so that language server can see arms
from imports. Fall back to -:!>(..zuse) if the build is an app,
because of opaque payloads.
@ixv recently uncovered a bug (#2180) in Ford that caused certain
rebuilds to crash. @Fang- and I believe this change should fix the bug,
and we have confirmed that the reproduction that used to fail about two
thirds of the time now has not failed at all in the ten or so times
we've run it since then. @Fang- is still running more tests to confirm
the fix with more certainty.
It turned out the cause was that (depending on the rebuild order, which
is unspecified and should not need to be specified), Ford could enqueue
a provisional sub-build to be run but then, later in the same +gather
call, discover that the sub-build was in fact an orphan and delete it
from builds.state accordingly. Then when Ford tried to run the
sub-build, it would have already been deleted from the state, so Ford
would crash when trying to process its result in +reduce.
The fix was to make sure that when we discover a provisional sub-build
is orphaned, dequeue it from candidate-builds and next-builds to make
sure we don't try to run it. I'm about 95% sure this fix completely
solves the bug.
It's a UI, not a word -- it should be treated like a button.
This commit preserves it as its own block and pushes it
to the next line when it's overflowing.
The declaration was being stomped out in all viewports because
it wasn't being declared in the initial element.
This adds the XL's padding-bottom to the element's declarations, which
scales it accordingly.
* origin/m/dbug:
dbug: support app state printing
dbug: augment various apps with /lib/dbug
dbug: add agent wrapper for debugging pokes
Signed-off-by: Jared Tobin <jared@tlon.io>
Uses Zuse's previously unused +harden helper function to streamline
+task unwrapping in vanes.
(Arguably, in landlocked vanes like Ford, we should crash if we get a
%soft task, since no events should be coming in directly from the
outside.)