This fixes a CI flake we've been seeing lately in TestLibCoreStream.
The solution itself is somewhat of a stop-gap as there are more thorough
event loop threading improvements in the works.
We should only look at the framebuffer structure members if the
MULTIBOOT_INFO_FRAMEBUFFER_INFO bit is set in the flags field.
Also add some logging if we ignored the fbdev command line argument
due to either not having a framebuffer provided by the bootloader, or
because we don't support the framebuffer format.
This allows forcing the use of only the framebuffer set up by the
bootloader and skips instantiating devices for any other graphics
cards that may be present.
Use the same trick as SlavePTY and override unref() to provide safe
removal from the sockets_by_tuple table when destroying a TCPSocket.
This should fix the TCPSocket::from_tuple() flake seen on CI.
The generator parses metaZones.json to form a mapping of meta zones to
time zones (AKA "golden zone" in TR-35). This parser errantly assumed
this was a 1-to-1 mapping.
In Unicode::get_time_zone_name(), we don't need to require that the time
zone is UTC for long- and short-style name lookups. This is required for
other styles, because they will depend on TZDB data - so move the VERIFY
to that scope.
As it was, negative predicate test for remove_all_matching was
run on empty hash map, and could not remove anything, so test always
returned true. By duplicating it in state where hash maps contains
elements, we make sure that negative predicate has something to
do nothing on.
This implements the rotate cw/ccw actions in PDFViewer.
Since the rendered pages are stored in a HashMap for caching,
the bitmap is wrapped in a struct with the current rotation.
This way the caching works as expected while zooming, and a new bitmap
is rendered when the page is rotated.
The rotate clockwise/rotate counterclockwise actions can be added to
CommonActions since they are repeated in FontEditor, ImageViewer and
PixelPaint. This keeps the shortcuts and icons consistent across
applications.
The open_outline_action logic was backwards resulting in it
being closed on the first click and opened on the second,
and opposite if document->outline() was true.
There was also a collision with the Ctrl+O shortcut for opening a
document, this changes it to Ctrl+S instead.
This commit also changes the wording to 'Toogle' instead of 'Open/Close'
since the text wasn't updated as expected, and lastly, add a View menu
with the action.
This snaps vertices to 1/32 of a pixel before rasterization resulting
in smoother movement and less floaty appearance of moving triangles.
This also reduces the severity of the artifacts in the glquake port.
5 bits should allow up to 1024x1024 render targets. Anything larger
needs a different implementation.
KeyboardMapperWidget's load_map_from_file, load_map_from_system, save,
and save_to_file now all return ErrorOr<void> and no longer handles
alerting the user to potential errors.
main is now responsible for handling errors originating from its calls
to these four functions; it will simply alert the user using the new
method KeyboardMapperWidget::show_error_to_user(Error), which simply
creates a MassageBox displaying the error's string_literal.
This makes the whole program slight more clean feeling :^).
Makes CharacterMapFile::load_from_file and CharacterMap::load_from_file
return ErrorOr instead of Optional. This makes them a little nicer to
use and a little easier to read, as they seem to have been approximating
this.
When depressing a key, KeyboardMapperWidget::keydown_event() will now
update only the pressed state of the button associated with the specific
key, instead of also setting the pressed state of the all the buttons to
false.
This makes it possible to highlight multiple pressed keys at once and
makes the code more consistent; the implementation of keyup_event
implied that this was a feature of the program.
Extract the mapping of a name to a character map into its own method.
This only slightly reduces the number of lines, going from 24 to 17
lines, but makes the code somewhat more readable and reduces repetition.
Extract the creation of map-selection radio buttons from create_frame
into the new private method add_map_radio_button(map_name, button_text)
turning 24 lines into 4 + 6 lines. This makes create_frame a little
easier to read. :^)
When a user is navigating a table view with arrow keys and a row is
outside of the current view, then scroll_into_view is called, and the
position of the rectangle passed to this should take into account the
column headers.
This can be seen making more pleasant the navigation in the System
Monitor in the Processes view, for example.
When a user is navigating a table view with arrow keys and a row is
outside of the current view, then scroll_into_view is called, and the
position of the rectangle passed to this should take into account the
column headers.
This can be seen making more pleasant the navigation in the System
Monitor in the Processes view, for example.
This includes:
- Parsing proper LabelledStatements with try_parse_labelled_statement()
- Removing LabelableStatement
- Implementing the LoopEvaluation semantics via loop_evaluation() in
each IterationStatement subclass; and IterationStatement evaluation
via {For,ForIn,ForOf,ForAwaitOf,While,DoWhile}Statement::execute()
- Updating ReturnStatement, BreakStatement and ContinueStatement to
return the appropriate completion types
- Basically reimplementing TryStatement and SwitchStatement according to
the spec, using completions
- Honoring result completion types in AsyncBlockStart and
OrdinaryCallEvaluateBody
- Removing any uses of the VM unwind mechanism - most importantly,
VM::throw_exception() now exclusively sets an exception and no longer
triggers any unwinding mechanism.
However, we already did a good job updating all of LibWeb and userland
applications to not use it, and the few remaining uses elsewhere don't
rely on unwinding AFAICT.
Instead of slapping 0..N labels on a statement like the current
LabelableStatement does, we need the spec's LabelledStatement for a
proper implementation of control flow using only completions - it always
has one label and one labelled statement - what appears to be 'multiple
labels' on the same statement is actually nested LabelledStatements.
Note that this is unused yet and will fully replace LabelableStatement
in the next commit.
Sometimes, pumping the event loop will cause new events to be
generated. For example, an IPC message could be delivered which then
dispatches a new event to be handled by the GUI. To the invoker of
`EventLoop::pump()`, it is not obvious if any events were processed at
all.
Libraries like SDL2 might not have the opportunity to run the event
loop often enough that events can be processed swiftly, since it might
spend time doing other things. This can result in stuttering GUI
interactions.
This changes `EventLoop::pump()` to return the number of processed
events. This functionality will be used by our SDL2 port in another PR.
Previously, only terminal output aligned table column contents
correctly. Now, we apply a `text-align` to each cell. This does not
actually *work* however, since LibWeb's table layout code is not yet
fully functional.