This code generator no longer creates JS wrappers for platform objects
in the old sense, instead they're JS objects internally themselves.
Most of what we generate now are prototypes - which can be seen as
bindings for the internal C++ methods implementing getters, setters, and
methods - as well as object constructors, i.e. bindings for the internal
create_with_global_object() method.
Also tweak the naming of various CMake glue code existing around this.
This is a monster patch that turns all EventTargets into GC-allocated
PlatformObjects. Their C++ wrapper classes are removed, and the LibJS
garbage collector is now responsible for their lifetimes.
There's a fair amount of hacks and band-aids in this patch, and we'll
have a lot of cleanup to do after this.
The FLAC "spec tests", or rather the test suite by xiph that exercises
weird FLAC features and edge cases, can be found at
https://github.com/ietf-wg-cellar/flac-test-files and is a good
challenge for our FLAC decoder to become more spec compliant. Running
these tests is similar to LibWasm spec tests, you need to pass
INCLUDE_FLAC_SPEC_TESTS to CMake.
As of integrating these tests, 23 out of 63 fail. :yakplus:
Add a variant of auto formatting using clang-format that doesn't use
additional packages. It works by adding a buffer-local hook to
`'before-save` for all C++ project files.
The current compilerArgs will cause an error when VSCode's C++ extension
queries the compiler for defaults, causing it to revert to the system's
default compiler.
The generate-manpages script needs to be updated again to handle the new
PNGs in section 1. (I'm intentionally not making this a multi-directory
glob.)
This PR includes information that highlights the importance of
updating Xcode on MacOS. I ran into problems building serenity
on MacOS because I had Xcode installed but not updated in a while.
This triggered seemingly unrelated errors that were easily solved
by updating Xcode.
Even though we tell the user to change the version manually if it
doesn't match with the current
`Toolchain/Local/i686/i686-pc-serenity/include/XX.X.X` version, it
doesn't hurt to update it properly now that versions differ by major
version.
This commit bumps the required QEMU version to 6.2 and updates the
version checking logic in Meta/run.sh to support checking against
major and minor version numbers instead of checking against the major
version only
By default we enable the Kernel Undefined Behavior Sanitizer, which
checks for undefined behavior at runtime. However, sometimes a developer
might want to turn that off, so now there is a easy way to do that.
The qemu-emulators-full package installs qemu backends for *all*
supported architectures, but we only need x86 and AArch64.
This decreases the installed size of dependencies by 800 MiB.
- Delete the part about removing `[Exposed=Window]` since that's not
necessary and we may want that information there to generate the
Window object.
- Mention adding `#import`s.
- Outline the requirements for the implementation class.
- Mention the non-Event wrapper factories that need to know about
certain types.
I tend to refer to this document every time I add an IDL type so it's
helpful if it's comprehensive.
This option sets -fprofile-instr-generate -fcoverage-mapping for Clang
builds only on almost all of Userland. Loader and LibTimeZone are
exempt. This can be used for generating code coverage reports, or even
PGO in the future.
Now that clang-format-14 ubuntu packages are available, it's time to
finally upgrade our clang-format version. This version brings with it
a bunch of useful features with const-placement being the most notable.
These will be enabled in the following commits.
Moves the nix script to setup the build environment from Documentation
into the Toolchain as a callable script. I also modified the script
to accept a "pkgs" argument to make it easy to override the nixpkgs
version from the command-line when calling the script.
This document is meant to cover every significant step in the journey
from giving a page URL to LibWeb, and pixels showing up on screen.
It's by no means complete, but I wrote a fair chunk already, so I'll
commit at this stage and we can expand on it in-tree.
This should prevent a build issue caused by a potential
conflicting zstd installation on M1 Mac.
This was manifested in a linker error when building
the GNU toolchain:
```
Undefined symbols for architecture arm64:
[gcc/build] "_ZSTD_compress", referenced from:
```
This commit adds support for building the SerenityOS userland with the
new [mold linker].
This is not enabled by default yet; to link using mold, run the
`Toolchain/BuildMold.sh` script to build the latest release of mold, and
set the `ENABLE_MOLD_LINKER` CMake variable to ON. This option relies on
toolchain support that has been added just recently, so you might need
to rebuild your toolchain for mold to work.
[mold linker]: https://github.com/rui314/mold
It's not at all obvious how we need three different array-like types.
This change to the Patterns documentation attempts to explain why they
exist, how they differ (mostly in allocation behavior) and what their
use cases are. This builds on #11844 which fixates and tests the
hereby-described allocation behavior of FixedArray.
Some archive tools can open ext2 images like an archive, which is very
convenient for people that already have such tools like 7zip.
This also contains information for WSL users on where to find the
_disk_image in Explorer.
Remove note about CMake Tools as version 1.9.0 has shipped and no longer
needed. Update details for files to latest versions and allow easier
copy and paste into an empty file.
We used to build with -Os in order to fit within a certain size, but
there isn't really a good reason for that kind of restriction.
Switching to -O2 yields a significant improvement in throughput,
for example `test-js` is roughly 20% faster on my machine. :^)
As of qemu 6.0.0, it should already have the entitlement to access the
Hypervior.framework by default, so re-codesigning the binary is
no-longer necessary.
8a74ce618b
I intentionally don't document the format specifics, to prevent this
file from becoming outdated. Hence, only a list with pointers to where
to find details.
Apparently, qemu-system-* changed its name.
On Debian/Ubuntu, genext2fs does not make a difference: The only user of
this command, Meta/build-image-qemu.sh, runs as root anyway, and tries
to do 'mount _disk_image mnt/' first. Debian/Ubuntu always have drivers
for ext2 available, so this command has no good reason to fail, and
trying to use genext2fs might only obscure any problems that mount
encountered.
Finally, Debian Bullseye (released 2021-08-14) contains gcc-10, so the
instructions on how to upgrade are now obsolete.
'bootmode' now only controls which set of services are started by
SystemServer, so it is more appropriate to rename it to system_mode, and
no longer validate it in the Kernel.
Bootmode used to control framebuffers, panic behavior, and SystemServer.
This patch factors framebuffer control into a separate flag.
Note that the combination 'bootmode=self-test fbdev=on' leads to
unexpected behavior, which can only be fixed in a later commit.
After setting up the toochain on manjaro linux (new install) the build
of the toolchain failed as unzip was not found. The unzip package is
listed in the documentation for debian (apt) but is was missing for arch
linux.
This was straight up the wrong CMake variable to set. We care about
where the project will find Lagom, not where it wants to install its own
binaries to.
Extra configure options may need passed to CLion in order for it not to
choke on the new CMake setup. In particular, it's now a very bad idea to
pass CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER and CMAKE_C_COMPILER to the target build.
People seem to easily miss the "Setting up build tools" section, so I
have moved that step above the filesystem information and linked
directly to BuildInstructions.md to hopefully make it harder to skip.
Also, added mention of `\\wsl$` since that regularly comes up in
Discord.
I was building serenity on quite a fresh NixOS system and it turns
out `unzip` and `qemu` were missing from this nix expression to
compile and run serenity.
The default template argument is only used in one place, and it
looks like it was probably just an oversight. The rest of the Kernel
code all uses u8 as the type. So lets make that the default and remove
the unused template argument, as there doesn't seem to be a reason to
allow the size to be customizable.
This is a combination of the efforts of multiple people and hours of
pain trying to configure VSCode properly. This should give a good
baseline for anyone trying to develop Serenity with VSCode.
Co-authored-by: Hendiadyoin1 <leon2002.la@gmail.com>
Serenity build tooling autodetects gcc 10 so update-alternatives
is not necessary. Also, switching apt repositories on the fly can
cause issues with dependencies, package downgrades and leave the
system in a broken state.
After discussing on Discord about how to speed up the build time, I
received lots of helpful advice on measuring the build time, but none of
it was easily accessible. I thought other people might find it useful,
so I've written it down! :^)
Thanks goes to @bgianfo and @nico.
GCC and Clang allow us to inject a call to a function named
__sanitizer_cov_trace_pc on every edge. This function has to be defined
by us. By noting down the caller in that function we can trace the code
we have encountered during execution. Such information is used by
coverage guided fuzzers like AFL and LibFuzzer to determine if a new
input resulted in a new code path. This makes fuzzing much more
effective.
Additionally this adds a basic KCOV implementation. KCOV is an API that
allows user space to request the kernel to start collecting coverage
information for a given user space thread. Furthermore KCOV then exposes
the collected program counters to user space via a BlockDevice which can
be mmaped from user space.
This work is required to add effective support for fuzzing SerenityOS to
the Syzkaller syscall fuzzer. :^) :^)
This removes the '$' character so that it is easier to copy commands
directly from the build instructions and then executing them without
first having to remove the '$' character.
The WASM spec tests caused a stack overflow when generated with wat2wasm
version 1.0.23, which ships with homebrew. To give feature parity,
manually download the same version from GitHub packages for Ubuntu.
Document the dependencies of the WASM spec tests option, as well.
This is no longer relevant for most users because due to an
unrelated change to Meta/run.sh the default display backend is now
SDL which does not exhibit this problem.
The x86_64 QEMU binary supports both i386 as well as x86_64 guests.
By using the x86_64 binary users won't have to change anything when
switching between i386 and x86_64 builds.
People are commonly asking about a package manager in
serenity. This patch adds an answer the FAQ, explaining
why there is no need for packages as well as different
possible ways to add or remove software installed on the
system.
This workaround disables the in-kernel interrupt controller.
This impacts the VM performance and should probably be removed
when the workaround is no longer needed.
This workaround was posed by stelar7.
See #7523
Mention the "Open Project Wizard" where you can set
the CMake options before making the cache.
Remind users to use the "Default" build type
and to build the Toolchain so CMake does not complain.
Because of the added complexity of *non-throwing* `new`, helper methods
for correctly constructing smart pointers were added in a previous
commit. This commit changes the documentation to recommend using these,
and adds examples to aid in correctly determining when to use
non-throwing new when manually creating smart pointers.
Components are a group of build targets that can be built and installed
separately. Whether a component should be built can be configured with
CMake arguments: -DBUILD_<NAME>=ON|OFF, where <NAME> is the name of the
component (in all caps).
Components can be marked as REQUIRED if they're necessary for a
minimally functional base system or they can be marked as RECOMMENDED
if they're not strictly necessary but are useful for most users.
A component can have an optional description which isn't used by the
build system but may be useful for a configuration UI.
Components specify the TARGETS which should be built when the component
is enabled. They can also specify other components which they depend on
(with DEPENDS).
This also adds the BUILD_EVERYTHING CMake variable which lets the user
build all optional components. For now this defaults to ON to make the
transition to the components-based build system easier.
The list of components is exported as an INI file in the build directory
(e.g. Build/i686/components.ini).
Fixes#8048.
PR #7970 added a line clarifying the requirement for QEMU 5.
Unfortunately, this location this line was added changed the meaning
of the following line, referencing the availability of GCC in Ubuntu
20.04.
QEMU 5 is not available in Ubuntu 20.04, so this change is incorrect,
as well as misleading.
These are pretty common on older LGA1366 & LGA1150 motherboards.
NOTE: Since the registers datasheets for all versions of the chip
besides versions 1 - 3 are still under NDAs i had to collect
several "magical vendor constants" from the *BSD driver and the
linux driver that i was not able to name verbosely, and as such
these are labeled with the comment "vendor magic values".
This is a fairly small change; removed the statement "Pointer and
reference types in C++ code" as it does not provide any additional
knowledge that contributors are or will be aware of after further
reading into the "Pointers and References" section. It seems
unnecessary and redundant given the sentence adjacent to it.
Unfortunately we cannot enforce this with clang-format yet, as that
feature is not available. Until then, let's try to write new code
with this in mind, and convert old code as we go.
This option replaces the use of ENABLE_ALL_THE_DEBUG_MACROS in CI runs,
and enables all debug options that might be broken by developers
unintentionally that are only used in specific debugging situations.
When debugging kernel code, it's necessary to set extra flags. Normal
advice is to set -ggdb3. Sometimes that still doesn't provide enough
debugging information for complex functions that still get optimized.
Compiling with -Og gives the best optimizations for debugging, but can
sometimes be broken by changes that are innocuous when the compiler gets
more of a chance to look at them. The new CMake option enables both
compile options for kernel code.
This only tests "can it be parsed", but the goal of this commit is to
provide a test framework that can be built upon :)
The conformance tests are downloaded, compiled* and installed only if
the INCLUDE_WASM_SPEC_TESTS cmake option is enabled.
(*) Since we do not yet have a wast parser, the compilation is delegated
to an external tool from binaryen, `wasm-as`, which is required for the
test suite download/install to succeed.
This *does* run the tests in CI, but it currently does not include the
spec conformance tests.
This was hiding on the serenityos.org website previously, where not
many people found it. Let's put it in a more natural location, and
also make sure to link to it from the README.
The current ProtocolServer was really only used for requests, and with
the recent introduction of the WebSocket service, long-lasting
connections with another server are not part of it. To better reflect
this, this commit renames it to RequestServer.
This commit also changes the existing 'protocol' portal to 'request',
the existing 'protocol' user and group to 'request', and most mentions
of the 'download' aspect of the request to 'request' when relevant, to
make everything consistent across the system.
Note that LibProtocol still exists as-is, but the more generic Client
class and the more specific Download class have both been renamed to a
more accurate RequestClient and Request to match the new names.
This commit only change names, not behaviors.
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 *
This command line flag can be used to disable VirtIO support on
certain configurations (native windows) where interfacing with
virtio devices can cause qemu to freeze.
Helps with bare metal debugging, as we can't be sure our implementation
will work with a given machine.
As reported by someone on Discord, their machine hangs when we attempt
the dummy transfer.
We do support AHCI now, but the implementation could be incomplete for
some chipsets.
Also, we should write the acronym "Non-volatile Memory Express" as
NVMe. not NVME.
If you don't need/want to use Fuse+ex2 then half of the existing
install command is unnecessary, and it's hard to pick out which you
do and don't need to, for example, build Lagom. This makes it clear
which commands you can skip if you don't need ex2 support.
- Fix headings
- Consistent & more accurate code block language specifiers
- Add some newlines where appropriate
- Remove the strange "run ninja but actually you don't have to run ninja
as ninja install takes care of that" part
- Don't repeat specific build commands in "Ports" section
- Reword "Keymap" section to more generic "Customize disk image"