Clients of LaunchServer can now provide a list of allowed handlers,
optionally with a specific set of URLs. The list can be sealed to
prevent future additions to it.
If LaunchServer receives a request to open something not on the allowed
handlers list, it will disconnect the client immediately.
The main idea here is to allow otherwise restricted programs to launch
specific things, e.g "Help" to open their manual, or "Browser" to load
the SerenityOS home page. :^)
...as well as the few remaining references to set_foreground_color().
These properties are not being used for rendering anymore, presumably
because they completely mess up theming - assigning random white and
gray backgrounds just doesn't work with dark themes.
I've chosen to not replace most of the few remaining uses of this
broken functionality with custom palette colors (the closest
replacement is background_role) for now (except for Minesweeper where
squares with mines are painted red again now), as no one has actually
complained about them being broken, so it must look somewhat decent
(some just look right anyway). :^)
Examples of this are the taskbar buttons, which apparently had a
DarkGray foreground color for minimized windows once - this has since
been replaced with bold/regular font. Another one is the Profiler's
ProfileTimelineWidget, which is supposed to have a white background -
which it didn't have for quite some time, it's grey now (with the
default theme, that is). Doesn't look bad either.
Previously notifications were (partially) drawn outside the screen rect if
they were created before changing the screen resolution to smaller
dimensions. This prevented the user from dismissing the notification as the
close button was no longer clickable.
This makes window modality a bit more discoverable by indicating to the
user that the modal window must be closed before mouse interaction is
possible in the clicked window.
Just constructing one of these guys on the stack willy nilly will leak
the first reference to them. There might be other C_OBJECTs that have
public constructors, seems like a good place for some static analysis
checks :).
Force users to call the construct() method for it.
Compared to version 10 this fixes a bunch of formatting issues, mostly
around structs/classes with attributes like [[gnu::packed]], and
incorrect insertion of spaces in parameter types ("T &"/"T &&").
I also removed a bunch of // clang-format off/on and FIXME comments that
are no longer relevant - on the other hand it tried to destroy a couple of
neatly formatted comments, so I had to add some as well.
When a new modal window is created, we still want to forward the
WindowDeactivated event to its parent window, despite it being blocked
by the newly created modal (which causes WindowServer's Window::event()
to ignore all incoming events from WindowManager for that window).
This fixes the "terminal doesn't stop blinking when blocked by modal
window" bug.
This patchset makes ProtocolServer stream the downloads to its client
(LibProtocol), and as such changes the download API; a possible
download lifecycle could be as such:
notation = client->server:'>', server->client:'<', pipe activity:'*'
```
> StartDownload(GET, url, headers, {})
< Response(0, fd 8)
* {data, 1024b}
< HeadersBecameAvailable(0, response_headers, 200)
< DownloadProgress(0, 4K, 1024)
* {data, 1024b}
* {data, 1024b}
< DownloadProgress(0, 4K, 2048)
* {data, 1024b}
< DownloadProgress(0, 4K, 1024)
< DownloadFinished(0, true, 4K)
```
Since managing the received file descriptor is a pain, LibProtocol
implements `Download::stream_into(OutputStream)`, which can be used to
stream the download into any given output stream (be it a file, or
memory, or writing stuff with a delay, etc.).
Also, as some of the users of this API require all the downloaded data
upfront, LibProtocol also implements `set_should_buffer_all_input()`,
which causes the download instance to buffer all the data until the
download is complete, and to call the `on_buffered_download_finish`
hook.
This patch removes size policies and preferred sizes, and replaces them
with min-size and max-size for each widget.
Box layout now works in 3 passes:
1) Set all items (widgets/spacers) to their min-size
2) Distribute remaining space evenly, respecting max-size
3) Place widgets one after the other, adding spacing in between
I've also added convenience helpers for setting a fixed size (which is
the same as setting min-size and max-size to the same value.)
This significantly reduces the verbosity of widget layout and makes GML
a bit more pleasant to write, too. :^)
This makes them shrink when the taskbar fills with too many buttons.
It doesn't scale to infinity open windows, but it's better than them
escaping off screen after 6 open windows. :^)
The compose() function is supposed to be fast since it can execute
60 times per second. Let's not do obviously avoidable things like
configuration value lookups in there. :^)
This was mentioned in #4574, and the more I think about it the more it
feels just right - let's move it there! :^)
Having to link LaunchServer against LibGUI explicitly should've been
telling enough...
The DevFS along with DevPtsFS give a complete solution for populating
device nodes in /dev. The main purpose of DevFS is to eliminate the
need of device nodes generation when building the system.
Later on, DevFS will assist with exposing disk partition nodes.
clang trunk with -std=c++20 doesn't seem to properly look for an
aggregate initializer here when the type being constructed is a simple
aggregate (e.g. `struct Thing { int a; int b; };`). This template fails
to compile in a usage added 12/16/2020 in `AK/Trie.h`.
Both forms of initialization are supposed to call the
aggregate-initializers but direct-list-initialization delegating to
aggregate initializers is a new addition in c++20 that might not be
implemented yet.
Move the shadow 1 more pixel away from the unhovered icon location,
making a total 2 pixel distance between the icon and the shadow.
Also tweak the shadow color to be a darkened variant of the base color
underneath the icon.
Browser supports very few protocols (http, https, gemini, file) at the
moment, so there's no point in using it as a catch-all and default
protocol handler. I added an explicit association for gemini to
/bin/Browser instead.
This stops Desktop::Launcher::open() from reporting success for any URL,
which really isn't the case (Browser shows an error page...).
POSIX allows the default streams (stdin, stdout and stderr) to be
macros, which means that on such systems (musl libc is one) building
Lagom will fail due to the File::std*() names.
Also fix any files that use these identifiers.
Problem:
- `(void)` simply casts the expression to void. This is understood to
indicate that it is ignored, but this is really a compiler trick to
get the compiler to not generate a warning.
Solution:
- Use the `[[maybe_unused]]` attribute to indicate the value is unused.
Note:
- Functions taking a `(void)` argument list have also been changed to
`()` because this is not needed and shows up in the same grep
command.
This adds the ability to specify cursor attributes as part of their
file names, which allows us to remove hard coded values like the hot
spot from the code. The attributes can be specified between the last
two dots of the file name. Each attribute begins with a character,
followed by one or more digits that specify a uint value.
Supported attributes:
x: The x-coordinate of the cursor hotspot
y: The y-coordinate of the cursor hotspot
f: The number of animated frames horizontally in the image
t: The number of milliseconds per frame
For example, the filename wait.f14t100.png specifies that the image
contains 14 frames that should be cycled through at a rate of 100ms.
The hotspot is not specified, so it defaults to the center.