The proper syntax for defining user-defined literals does not require a
space between the `operator""` token and the operator name:
> error: identifier 'sv' preceded by whitespace in a literal operator
> declaration is deprecated
This change introduces HeapFunction, which is intended to be used as a
replacement for SafeFunction. The new type behaves like a regular
GC-allocated object, which means it needs to be visited from
visit_edges, and unlike SafeFunction, it does not create new roots for
captured parameters.
Co-Authored-By: Andreas Kling <kling@serenityos.org>
IFF was a generic container fileformat that was popular on the Amiga
since it was the only file format supported by Deluxe Paint.
ILBM is an image format popular in the late eighties/nineties
that uses the IFF container.
This is a very first version of the decoder that only supports
(byterun) compressed files with bpp <= 8.
Only the minimal chunks are decoded: CMAP, BODY, BMHD.
I am planning to add support for the following variants:
- EHB (32 colours + lighter 32 colours)
- HAM6 / HAM8 (special mode that allowed to display the whole Amiga
4096 colours / 262 144 colours palette)
- TrueColor (24bit)
Things that could be fun to do:
- Still images could be animated using color cycle information
The web specs do not expect decoding or decoding to happen when calling
these helpers. This allows us to remove the raw_fragment helper function
from the URL class.
This encoder can handle all integer formats and sample rates, though
only two channels well. It uses fixed LPC and performs a
close-to-optimal parameter search on the LPC order and residual Rice
parameter, leading to decent compression already.
Just like with input buffered streams, we don't currently have a use
case for output buffered streams which aren't seekable, since the main
application are files.
To ensure this happens without duplicating code, we allow forcing a
StringBuilder object to only use the inline buffer, so the code in the
AK/Format.cpp file doesn't need to deal with different underlying
storage types (expandable or inline-fixed) at all.
I couldn't run the parser in a debugger like I normally would, so I
added printouts to understand where the parser is failing.
More could be added, but these are enough to get a good idea of what
the parser is doing. It's very spammy, though, so enable it by flicking
the IMAP_PARSER_DEBUG switch :^)
Instead, use the FixedCharBuffer class to ensure we always use a static
buffer storage for these names. This ensures that if a Process or a
Thread were created, there's a guarantee that setting a new name will
never fail, as only copying of strings should be done to that static
storage.
The limits which are set are 32 characters for processes' names and 64
characters for thread names - this is because threads' names could be
more verbose than processes' names.
This class encapsulates a fixed Array with compile-time size definition
for storing ASCII characters.
There are also new Kernel StdLib functions to copy user data into such
objects so this class will be useful later on.
The spec indicates we should support serializing opaque hosts, but we
were assuming the host contained a String. Opaque hosts are represented
with Empty. Return an empty string here instead to prevent crashing on
an invalid variant access.
Now that ""_string is infallible, the only benefit of explicitly
constructing a short string is the ability to do it at compile-time. But
we never do that, so let's simplify the API and remove this
implementation detail from it.
This could happen if a sequence of '0' parts was followed by a longer
sequence of '0' parts at the end of the host. The first sequence was
being used for the compress, and not the second.
For example, [1:1:0:0:1:0:0:0] was being serialized as: [1:1::1:0:0:0]
instead of [1:1:0:0:1::].
Fix this by checking at the end of the loop if we are in the middle of a
sequence of '0' parts that is longer than the current longest.
Everywhere only ever expects percent encoding to occur, so let's just
remove this flag altogether. At the same time, replace some
DeprecatedString with StringView.
Parsing 'data:' URLs took it's own route. It never set standard URL
fields like path, query or fragment (except for scheme) and instead
gave us separate methods called `data_payload()`, `data_mime_type()`,
and `data_payload_is_base64()`.
Because parsing 'data:' didn't use standard fields, running the
following JS code:
new URL('#a', 'data:text/plain,hello').toString()
not only cleared the path as URLParser doesn't check for data from
data_payload() function (making the result be 'data:#a'), but it also
crashes the program because we forbid having an empty MIME type when we
serialize to string.
With this change, 'data:' URLs will be parsed like every other URLs.
To decode the 'data:' URL contents, one needs to call process_data_url()
on a URL, which will return a struct containing MIME type with already
decoded data! :^)