This adds two new icons for browser context menu items "Close Other
Tabs" and "Download".
This adds existing icons where they were missing in context menu items.
- Use the border box of the floated element when testing if something
needs to flow around it.
- Take the floated element's containing block size into account (instead
of the BFC root) when calculating available space on a line where a
right-side float intrudes.
This adds icons for folder paths ending in ".git". This adds 16x16 and
32x32 versions of a folder with a Git logo for both the closed and open
versions of the folder icon.
This changes the open parent directory, open recent, and open folder
16x16 icons to be more consistent with the other folder icons. This
also improves the other elements on these icons by adding tinting
and shading.
Doing these together since (like the names) the flags are similar,
especially at this 7x10 scale and I wanted to make sure they can be
disginguished. I hope our Slovenian friends will like it.
Made inside Serenity using pp :^)
More similar in style to U+203C:
⁉️ - U+2049 EXCLAMATION QUESTION MARK
Add transparency:
📧 - U+1F4E7 E-MAIL
📨 - U+1F4E8 INCOMING ENVELOPE
📩 - U+1F4E9 ENVELOPE WITH ARROW
No joy in a joystick without an action-button!
🕹️ - U+1F579 JOYSTICK
Wand Selection tool uses similar logic to the Bucket Tool. Flood filling
and threshold calculations to determine the affected area just in this
case we do not set the pixels of the selected area, instead we use
those pixels to alter the selection mask.
In the future we can probably abstract out the shared flood logic so
both tools can share the code.
Before of this patch, we supported two methods to address a boot device:
1. Specifying root=/dev/hdXY, where X is a-z letter which corresponds to
a boot device, and Y as number from 1 to 16, to indicate the partition
number, which can be omitted to instruct the kernel to use a raw device
rather than a partition on a raw device.
2. Specifying root=PARTUUID: with a GUID string of a GUID partition. In
case of existing storage device with GPT partitions, this is most likely
the safest option to ensure booting from persistent storage.
While option 2 is more advanced and reliable, the first option has 2
caveats:
1. The string prefix "/dev/hd" doesn't mean anything beside a convention
on Linux installations, that was taken into use in Serenity. In Serenity
we don't mount DevTmpFS before we mount the boot device on /, so the
kernel doesn't really access /dev anyway, so this convention is only a
big misleading relic that can easily make the user to assume we access
/dev early on boot.
2. This convention although resemble the simple linux convention, is
quite limited in specifying a correct boot device across hardware setup
changes, so option 2 was recommended to ensure the system is always
bootable.
With these caveats in mind, this commit tries to fix the problem with
adding more addressing options as well as to remove the first option
being mentioned above of addressing.
To sum it up, there are 4 addressing options:
1. Hardware relative address - Each instance of StorageController is
assigned with a index number relative to the type of hardware it handles
which makes it possible to address storage devices with a prefix of the
commandset ("ata" for ATA, "nvme" for NVMe, "ramdisk" for Plain memory),
and then the number for the parent controller relative hardware index,
another number LUN target_id, and a third number for LUN disk_id.
2. LUN address - Similar to the previous option, but instead we rely on
the parent controller absolute index for the first number.
3. Block device major and minor numbers - by specifying the major and
minor numbers, the kernel can simply try to get the corresponding block
device and use it as the boot device.
4. GUID string, in the same fashion like before, so the user use the
"PARTUUID:" string prefix and add the GUID of the GPT partition.
For the new address modes 1 and 2, the user can choose to also specify a
partition out of the selected boot device. To do that, the user needs to
append the semicolon character and then add the string "partX" where X
is to be changed for the partition number. We start counting from 0, and
therefore the first partition number is 0 and not 1 in the kernel boot
argument.