When a file deletion event happens, we now iterate over all views of the
FileSystemModel and remove any selection & cursor indices that hold
dangling references do the deleted filesystem node.
This fixes#9602.
FileSystemModel will now react to specific events from Core::FileWatcher
in order to granularly update its data based on addition or removal of
files from the tree. Metadata changes are currently not handled, but in
the future they can be used to re-stat() a file to get its updated
statistics.
Most of the models were just calling did_update anyway, which is
pointless since it can be unified to the base Model class. Instead, code
calling update() will now call invalidate(), which functions identically
and is more obvious in what it does.
Additionally, a default implementation is provided, which removes the
need to add empty implementations of update() for each model subclass.
Co-Authored-By: Ali Mohammad Pur <ali.mpfard@gmail.com>
Adds a new on_rename_error handler and renames the old on_error handler
to on_directory_change_error in FileSystemModel. The on_rename_error
handler creates a MessageDialog with the error message.
This fixes#8204.
In the case that we just navigated up from a directory because it was
deleted, we can detect that easily by checking if the child directory
exists, and then remove the relevant breadcrumbs immediately.
However, it's harder to notice if a child directory for a breadcrumb
is deleted at another time. Previously, clicking that breadcrumb would
crash, but now we check to see if the directory it points to actually
exists. If it doesn't, we pop that breadcrumb and any after it, off
of the breadcrumbbar.
This may not be the ideal solution - maybe it should detect that the
directory is gone automatically - but it works and doesn't involve
managing additional directory watchers.
Previously, FileSystemModel would not notice if the directory it has
open (or a parent one) was deleted. Now, it scans for the closest
existing parent directory and opens that.
Also, deleted files and directories that are children of the open dir
now correctly refresh their parent node instead of their own node.
This changes the m_parts, m_dirname, m_basename, m_title and m_extension
member variables to StringViews onto the m_string String. It also
removes the m_is_absolute member in favour of computing if a path is
absolute in the is_absolute() getter. Due to this, the canonicalize()
method has been completely rewritten.
The parts() getter still returns a Vector<String>, although it is no
longer a const reference as m_parts is no longer a Vector<String>.
Rather, it is constructed from the StringViews in m_parts upon request.
The parts_view() getter has been added, which returns Vector<StringView>
const&. Most previous users of parts() have been changed to use
parts_view(), except where Strings are required.
Due to this change, it's is now no longer allow to create temporary
LexicalPath objects to call the dirname, basename, title, or extension
getters on them because the returned StringViews will point to possible
freed memory.
The LexicalPath instance methods dirname(), basename(), title() and
extension() will be changed to return StringView const& in a further
commit. Due to this, users creating temporary LexicalPath objects just
to call one of those getters will recieve a StringView const& pointing
to a possible freed buffer.
To avoid this, static methods for those APIs have been added, which will
return a String by value to avoid those problems. All cases where
temporary LexicalPath objects have been used as described above haven
been changed to use the static APIs.
With the new InodeWatcher API, the old style of creating a watcher per
inode will no longer work. Therefore the FileWatcher API has been
updated to support multiple watches, and its users have also been
refactored to the new style. At the moment, all operations done on a
(Blocking)FileWatcher return Result objects, however, this may be
changed in the future if it becomes too obnoxious. :^)
Co-authored-by: Gunnar Beutner <gunnar@beutner.name>
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 *
Instead of mixing directories and files, sorting a FileSystemModel by
the Name column will now give you all the directories first, followed
by all the files.
If you double-click on a symlink to a directory while browsing with
a FilePicker, you most likely want to open the directory the symlink
points to, not open the symlink itself. So let's do that. :^)
The previous names (RGBA32 and RGB32) were misleading since that's not
the actual byte order in memory. The new names reflect exactly how the
color values get laid out in bitmap data.
(...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.
For example, navigating File Manager to a directory that contains a vaild BMP file that
uses a palette, this code would end up trying to create an indexed thumbnail.
However, Painter asserts that the thumbnail that we paint on is *not* indexed,
usually crashing File Manager.
Partially fixes#5299, as it now crashes somewhere else.
This replaces the manual watch_file and Notifier handling with the new
Core::FileWatcher wrapper, which reduces the manual handling and makes
the code easier to reason about :^)