* Those classes are not ready for public consumption. Ideally,
I'd add a well designed BCodecRoster wrapping them. This is part
of the general cleanup I am doing to get the code in a good state
before going to finalize the design.
* I don't plan to reintroduce BMediaFile in the media2 API, and
I'd like to remove any (explicit) usage of entry_refs and things
like that.
* I plan to introduce BMetaData and BMediaFormat which is going
to be different than what we do now.
* We need to explicitly use the mime type when it's available and
it is another design consideration when CodecRoster will be introduced.
The size was in fact the count of physical entries that were used. That
number must necessarily be the same as the number given when adding to
the queue, so that number isn't really interesting. Consequently none
of the users of that API made use of it.
Return the used length instead, which is the way virtio signals how much
valid data resides in the dequeued buffer. This is for example important
to know the frame length of incoming packets in virtio_net.
* I mean, qemu 3.0 supports it.
* Nobody get excited, we need all the triplets added to
our gcc buildtools. clang 7.0 seems to be cool with riscv though.
Change-Id: I17728163e4f28a3c16cee482a253364724b06f3a
* Adds max width and height arguments to
instantiate_deskbar_(item|entry).
* Old applications just stay with a 16x16 scaled icon, though.
* All used apps within the repository are converted to the new call
besides the input_server input method icon (that will need further
API changes in the input_server).
Change-Id: I29cc439396917be2c24135888459d31364997dff
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/656
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
* Actually draw the string at the bottom of the frame.
* Unfortunately BStringList cannot be cached because there is no
space left in the class.
* Change SGI and PNG translators to use it in place of BTextView.
Change-Id: I07e12bf1a8dc956d18c9624604c7b63453ad15a2
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/620
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
* I have not idea what this is for. Seems stuff from a long time ago
when for some reason someone wanted an audio driver implemented in
a kernel module. It is not used anywhere. If someone feels this should
be reverted please let me know and add an explanation.
This should prevents GCC from throwing -Werror=return-type when
pthread_exit is used in place of return
Change-Id: Ied7da58b671e77b53d859b67193259aa78ec27d6
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/632
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
When URLs combine a base URL with a relative part, the relative part's
path component was being pre-processed. This removed any ".." from the
path and in some cases in the unit test cases, the ".." should have been
retained and then only later applied to the base URL. This changes
fixes this so that the relative part is not pre-processed and is applied
with it's path in a raw state.
Completes Fixes for #14377
Change-Id: I9cebb8599889494e11f40a3b54c87ebca3ed1a21
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/529
Reviewed-by: Jérôme Duval <jerome.duval@gmail.com>
These are really only defined during the build of Haiku itself,
so we don't want them in a system header. Since none of these
functions are virtual, leaving them as declared but not defined
should be fine.
string_for_size uses KiB, etc., and so when the two are combined (e.g.
pkgman's progress display), it looked especially strange to have two
different units.
* PRE_BETA_2 is now the default in master.
* For libbe: R1/alpha4 used internal=8, but nobody bumped master
at the same time, so now we are on internal=9.
Replace class with struct, since BJobStateListener is previously declared
as a struct in Job.h
Pointed by clang [-Wmismatched-tags]
Change-Id: I75293b48bcb521d25e98702d1fc1e0ab1008d504
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/482
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
Replace struct with class, since it is previously declared as a class
in SharedBufferList.h
Pointed by clang [-Wmismatched-tags]
Change-Id: I3ff4e285862f31a2088a773be2967102bc8b18b6
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/480
Reviewed-by: Barrett17 <b.vitruvio@gmail.com>
TeamDebugger:
- When a job is aborted, instead of calling into the user interface directly
to reset the status message, post a message to do so. Also, only post the
message if we aren't already in a terminating state. Otherwise, if jobs
were still running while the team debugger is executing its destructor, it
would attempt to make calls to the already destroyed user interface. This
bug has likely been with us for quite some time, but was hidden by incorrect
ref counting in the past (see #12343).
Replace 'class' with 'struct', since they are already defined as 'struct'
in PackageInfoAttributeValue.h
Pointed by clang [-Wmismatched-tags]
Change-Id: I094d32c3444fe4299a3afe0872ade296f92debf9
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/471
Reviewed-by: waddlesplash <waddlesplash@gmail.com>
The ICU class is named MessageFormat, but on Haiku, it sounds too much
like something related to BMessage (which it isn't in the slightest)
and not part of the Locale system. It works almost entirely with BStrings,
so naming it BStringFormat makes much more sense.
OK'ed by PulkoMandy and Humdinger.
Remove index of portInfos[], since gcc8 warns -Werror=array-bounds
in UserlandFSServer::_Announce().
Change-Id: I79c4ee9d7dc301c54454974698ebd88d1a30750a
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/428
Reviewed-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@gmail.com>
* Consolidate all fdt code into fdt bus_manager
* Build boot and kernel static libraries
Change-Id: I2a69cd7e1f1276999a80734ff12918fd49b599e5
Reviewed-on: https://review.haiku-os.org/440
Reviewed-by: Alexander von Gluck IV <kallisti5@unixzen.com>
memset uses rep stosb on x86 during boot, with memory
not set to write-combining, which makes it slow.
Instead we do aligned writes of 2 x four bytes at once.
Only clear the minimum of size and width * height * 4
UEFI framebuffer size can be huge, upto 512MB here,
and rep stosb seems to be around 25-30MB/s
This is written as generic as possible to work on
old compilers and different platforms, without
expecting boot memset to be optimized.
This makes it almost unnoticable compared to not
clearing.
It will probably be just stubs for the significant future, but,
here it is anyway.
Regarding the naming: Yes, the official name is "aarch64." However,
Linux, FreeBSD, and Zircon all call it "arm64", and so we will do the same.
I've configured it initially to be a Clang-only port, making no
changes to GCC buildtools whatsoever here. We'll see if that sticks,
however.
It seems not all of the kernel includes this, but some use new/delete
anyway. Further, operator delete[] was not implemented at all.
Possibly fixes the ARM build.
Writes to videomem is slow without memory remapping
Can't do the mapping without leaving UEFI, so skipping
the clear. Afaict it should always be cleared by UEFI
This saves ~10 seconds of booting on my machine
(1920*1080*4 bytes)
EFI video mode (should have been it's own commit)
* Only do strcmp if there are enough params
* break when found
* gcc 7.x defines __arm__ and __ARM__ (and others)
* clang defines __arm__ and __arm
* cleanup a few related ifdef vs if macros
Change-Id: I5da4bafac590f6fa3e10e543688001c2449f840d
This reverts commit ec1b18c58a.
This was not well enough reviewed, and it seems that at least some
consumers of the old API (e.g. WebPositive) need more than the new one provides.
Change-Id: Ie7ad1fc70dab889922424298661504b00f66d31d
Fixes#9137
Move scroll bar drawing into HaikuControlLook
Added B_SCROLLABLE flag to BControlLook
Update FakeScrollBar in Appearance to also draw using HaikuControlLook.
Focus works on scroll bars again, used by FakeScrollBar... and probably
nowhere else.
Added private _ScrollingEnabled() convenience method to BScrollBar and
use it in a few places making.
Create ScrollBarPrivate.h header to share a couple of scroll bar related
enums with HaikuControlLook that come from BeOS Scroll Bar prefs.
Stuff arrow_direction enum into BScrollBar::Private as it has been
succeeded by a similar enum already present in BControlLook and is only
around now for BScrollBar::Private::DrawScrollBarButton.
Change-Id: Idc31ee41de091ba45ded2f0315a004af00143803
Repositories are identified with a 'url' in the
remote 'repo.info' file. There is also a
'base url' which is the URL locally with which
the system is able to access the repository
data on. There is some confusion between these
two terms in the source. This change aims to
separate the two out and consistently name them.
The settings for the repository locally also was
not storing these values and that has been fixed.
Debug info about the repositories also did not
display the two urls consistently and will now
also do so. Finally, HaikuDepot now correlates
locally configured repositories with the data in
HaikuDepotServer using the identifier URL; this
makes the use of mirrors with HaikuDepot possible.
Fixes#13888
Change-Id: I66dfe589b05c24e1ab123a6945352e0f24b60bf1
FreeBSD's is presently 46 bytes. CID 1422869 warns that it can get overrun
in if_attach() in copying if_xname which is IF_NAMESIZE bytes (32).
This breaks ABI, but BeOS did not have sockaddr_dl, it is only a modern-GCC
ABI break. Since most applications assume that sockaddr_dl is variable-length
and is null-terminated, as well as not used very often, hopefully this will
require relatively few rebuilds.
Some users of MK_ERROR pass in parameters from a variable called "res",
which is obviously not what they want to do, as that will use this "res"
and not theirs.
Spotted by Clang.
This reverts commit c558f9c8fe.
This reverts commit 44f24718b1.
This reverts commit a69cb33030.
This reverts commit 951182620e.
There have been multiple reports that these changes break mounting NTFS partitions
(on all systems, see #14204), and shutting down (on certain systems, see #12405.)
Until they can be fixed, they are being backed out.
* define compat_thread_info, compat_rlim_t, compat_rlimit and
compat_thread_creation_attributes to be used when applicable in compatibility
mode.
* handle 32-bit types in _user_spawn_thread(), _user_get_thread_info(),
_user_get_next_thread_info(), _user_getrlimit(), _user_setrlimit(),
other syscalls are compatible as is.
* init TLS for compatibility mode threads.
Change-Id: I483ba95e6198ddac9d240671bcb56fcd2ad831d2
* in load_image_internal(), elf32_load_user_image checks whether the binary
format requires the compatibility mode.
* we then set up the flag THREAD_FLAGS_COMPAT_MODE and the address space size.
* the compatibility mode runtime_loader is hardcoded with x86/runtime_loader.
* if needed, the 64-bit flat_args structure is converted in-place to its 32-bit
layout.
* a 32-bit flat_args isn't handled yet (a 32-bit team execs a 64-bit binary).
Change-Id: Ia6a066bde8d1774d85de29b48dc500e27ae9668f
* define compat_area_info to be used when applicable in
compatibility mode.
* handle 32-bit types in _user_reserve_address_range(), _user_get_area_info(),
_user_get_next_area_info(), _user_transfer_area(), _user_clone_area(),
_user_create_area(), _user_map_file(), other syscalls are compatible as is.
* _get_next_area_info() doesn't work well with a 32-bit address cookie (address
could be in 64-bit range). Instead use _compat_get_next_area_info() which uses
the area id as cookie, though the areas are not ordered by address any more.
Change-Id: Ic7519ca8824aa2d534b0f03ea75a1bf6ae321535
* handle 32-bit types in _user_send_signal(), _user_sigaction(), _user_sigwait(),
_user_set_signal_stack(), _user_restore_signal_frame(), other syscalls are
compatible as is.
Change-Id: I4c8dc47bfa80f36e363d444d2a5a7be6c621606d
* define compat_image_info, compat_extended_image_info
to be used for respective 32-bit types of syscalls in compatibility mode.
* handle 32-bit types in _user_register_image, _user_get_image_info,
_user_get_next_image_info, other syscalls are compatible as is.
Change-Id: Ibbd33e6796208dfa70d869e36bf745bc3e18d330
* define compat_flock, compat_timespec, compat_stat, compat_attr_info,
compat_fs_info, compat_fd_info to be used for respective 32-bit types
of syscalls in compatibility mode.
* handle 32-bit types in common_fcntl(), _user_read_stat(), _user_stat_attr(),
_user_read_index_stat, _user_read_fs_info, _user_write_fs_info,
_user_get_next_fd_info, other syscalls are compatible as is.
Change-Id: I5b372169fe142f67b81fd6c27e0627d5119ba687
This reverts commit 4f059c1fc5.
From discussion on the mailing list, it seems I was correct the first time
and Broadwell is Gen8. The confusion comes from the SER5/SOC distinction,
which is not in the Linux driver, and I still don't know which one it really
belongs in.
- Allow to configure the baudrate (it is set by the printer settings,
but the transport didn't care)
- Implement reading from the serial port (some printers will need us to
poll the status and the like, as there is usually no hardware flow
control)
Change-Id: I70ba2566595d5dfa5eda3d518614db6514cb2398
* File locks created by flock should only apply for the file descriptor
that was used to lock the file. Another fd on the same file should then
be denied access (calling flock should fail).
* fcntl based locks, however, are in a separate namespace and are global
to a team.
* This issue was found when running webkitpy test suite, and should close
ticket #13795.
* Don't use session or team as comparison in release_advisory_lock(), as
that information might not be available anymore (e.g. when called from
Team::~Team()). This fixes#14121.
Change-Id: I9efb96cfcefe7e72b0060220c635a665e7e643cc
Co-authored-by: Axel Dörfler <axeld@pinc-software.de>
* GCC7's static analysis found this one and it still
took #gcc and me a while to spot. Nice work gcc7!
* Should help DisplayPort training issues :-)
Change-Id: I9b47f13c95e622a2c08ff329ec9c3fc7e3db493d
* x86 uses a commpage with 32-bit addresses, incompatible with the one used for
x86_64. For this reason, a compatibility commpage is needed to support a 32-bit
userland on x86_64.
* define ADDRESS_TYPE as a macro for addr_t (default) or uint32 (for the 32-bit
commpage).
* team_create_thread_start_internal() will use clone_commpage_area() with
KERNEL_USER_DATA_BASE or clone_commpage_compat_area() with
KERNEL_USER32_DATA_BASE, to setup the correct commpage.
* real_time_clock (in compatibility mode) also updates the compatibility
commpage with real time data.
Change-Id: I61605077ce0beabab4439ef54edd1eae26f26fd2
* define ELF32_COMPAT to enable ELF32 macros.
* add a flag ELF_LOAD_USER_IMAGE_TEST_EXECUTABLE to only check the format.
It will be used by load_image_internal() to check which mode to use when
loading an image.
* in arch_elf_relocate_rel(), switch to elf_addr instead of addr_t, which
would be the wrong size for elf32 on x86_64.
* the ELF compat loader reuses the relevant parts of elf.cpp and arch_elf.cpp,
excluding for instance load_kernel_add_on() or dump functions.
Change-Id: Ifa47334e5adefd45405a823a3accbd12eee5b116
* also adjust BOOT_GDT_SEGMENT_COUNT for x86, the definition is used by the
boot loader.
* add some 32-bit definitions.
* add a UserTLSDescriptor class, this will be used by 32-bit threads.
Change-Id: I5b1d978969a1ce97091a16c9ec2ad7c0ca831656
the size of BAffineTransform is architecture dependent, so we transmit
its contents in a standard array instead.
Change-Id: I907110742168846a869a48bb2d116cc5292ec7d0
This was done using macros before, which isn't the way we have things set up.
In theory that method should work, however if not all consumers include the
libroot_build headers properly, then it breaks in subtle but confusing ways,
which is not what we want at all.
Thanks to Jessica for advice.
Change-Id: Idd45df5547daecf8239932957088da03ddfccf87
* free interrupts, free queues, return to init state.
* this will be used by virtio_net on interface uninit.
Change-Id: I7c1e6facc37cf6bfe19628576fdf2c0bac9e5c38
* enable to iterate on available entries in one interrupt call.
* negociate -> negotiate, (void *) -> (void* ), thanks axel and philippe!
Change-Id: Ie2d290797abcbf4c0f3cb5bfff71d091bb800fa6
It was limited to a uint32 and could for example be overflown by the
slab MemoryManager that uses size_t on a 64 bit system.
This aligns the signature with create_area() that already uses size_t
for the size argument.
Note that the function is currently private, so the impact should be
limited.
John's revert of my removal commit dragged back a bunch of cygwin/sunos
cruft, as well as re-adding RegExp.cpp to the host libshared, that we don't
need.
Instead, remove this and add libgnuregex_build to just the tools/keymap
link alongside the FreeBSD gnuregex case.
* At this point we want to avoid the user calling the callbacks
in the form of BMediaConnection. Instead we force to use the
BMediaInput and BMediaOutput versions.
TypeHandler:
- Add name field for presentation purposes. Adapt subclasses accordingly.
TypeHandlerRoster:
- Add methods to count and retrieve all type handlers for a given type,
and adjust CreateValueNode to allow for passing in an explicit handler.
Adjust callers accordingly.
VariablesViewState:
- Add helpers to store an explicitly chosen type handler for a node.
TypeHandlerMenuItem:
- ActionMenuItem subclass that takes care of reference management
for its contained type handler.
VariablesView:
- Add context menu for choosing type handlers if applicable. Implement
support for invoking said type handlers in a similar manner to explicit
typecasts.
- Adjust saving/restoring the view state so that hidden nodes are taken
into account as well. This is necessary since it may be the case that
the handler had to be applied to the hidden child rather than the visible
node (i.e. the BMessage handler when applied to a pointer to a BMessage).
All together, these changes allow choosing to switch between views of a type
when the Debugger has multiple handlers for it. For example, for BMessages
this allows switching between displaying the raw underlying structure vs
the decoded message content.
SMAP will generated page faults when the kernel tries to access user pages unless overriden.
If SMAP is enabled, the override instructions are written where needed in memory with
binary "altcodepatches".
Support is enabled by default, might be disabled per safemode setting.
Change-Id: Ife26cd765056aeaf65b2ffa3cadd0dcf4e273a96
The scheduler uses the load tracking logic to compute the load of
threads to be enqueued into the run queue. The time delta between the
last enqueue and the next enqueue may grow very large for threads
that mostly wait on conditions. In such cases the int "n" period count
variable would become too small and wrap around, leading to an
assertion failure.
For this to happen, the thread in question would have to have slept for
at least ~25 days and then wake up. Threads often affected would be ones
waiting for some other process to end, for example shell threads waiting
for a long running process to exit.
Fixes#13558.
Following recent changes to use libroot_build on Haiku also, it is now
actually impossible to build Haiku components on non-Haiku platforms
(BeOS R5, Dan0, BONE, Zeta), so we can remove any logic related to this.
This is only the first part; still to be removed are:
* SetSubDirSupportedPlatformsBeOSCompatible
* HOST_PLATFORM_BEOS_COMPATIBLE
* TARGET_PLATFORM_BEOS_COMPATIBLE
As it turns out, using the xattr emulation layer plus "libgnu"
causes some strange mixups at package build time, and so packages
built with it were winding up with no attributes at all.
So I've just bitten the bullet and written a full passthrough layer
to the system attributes. Verified using a full build of haiku.hpkg
this time ... after a lot of painful debugging of symlink mixups.
Hopefully I am finally rid of this plague...
To quote jscipione (from 95e8362c52),
"Let me tell you a story about a bug" -- though this tale spans a much
lesser time than that one did.
In 5e19679ea3, I enabled libroot_build for
Haiku, instead of using the system libroot as we had before. There were
a number of bugs introduced along with this that I hadn't fixed (and there
may be more after this), but most of the obvious ones (crashes on x86_64...)
were fixed shortly enough.
Attribute usage, though, was a different story. Unlike most of the POSIX
calls in libroot, which were aliasing system functions no matter what the
platform, the attribute calls were not, as they are specific to Haiku.
Initially I had completely forgot about them, and it wasn't until a few days
later when I noticed that I had an "attributes" directory in my generated
that I realized that the "generic" attribute layer was being used on Haiku.
I attempted a fix for this in 5e19679ea3,
thinking that would clear the problem up, but I didn't actually run a test
beyond seeing that my BuildConfig had been updated properly. In fact,
BuildSetup was hard-wired to not even pass that definition through on
Haiku, and so that commit had in effect caused nothing.
My initial "fix" of just changing BuildSetup then caused a build failure,
as while libroot_build itself compiled, it ran into errors whenever attributes
were used, because in letting the real libroot's attribute calls shine
through, I had bypassed libroot_build's FD emulation/shim layer.
Then I tried and failed at three separate attempts to solve this with code:
- a version of the "fs_attr_...h" interface for Haiku. This proved possible
in theory, but in practice I would need to reimplement a lot of attribute
handling code in it, because all I had access to from there was syscalls.
- a version of "fs_attr_untyped" that bypassed its reimplementations of
the "fs*attr" functions for the libroot ones, only using the FD shim layer.
This proved possibly not even theoretically possible because it would have
caused preprocessor hell in some of the build headers, and also assumptions
about how attributes are read were totally different.
- a completely new "fs_attr_haiku" that was a completely new interface to
the fs*attr functions. This proved practically impossible because of the
need to include structures from the system libroot to call out to readdir,
etc. that attempts to solve would also have caused preprocessor hell.
Then I realized that the Linux xattr emulation library, which I'd used
as a reference when attempting the first solution, was shipped by default
as a system library in all builds of Haiku ... and so I could just tell
fs_attr_untyped to use the Linux xattr handler, and then link against libgnu.
So that is how I arrived at this strange and decidedly unorthodox solution
to a problem of my own creation.
Not in the POSIX specification, but defined (not behind any guards)
in (at least) FreeBSD, NetBSD, glibc, and macOS.
Found by miqlas and myself while working on porting GNU inetutils.
I've updated the docs to match the current BMailComponent, documented
new functions, and cleaned up the MailComponent.h file to at least
somewhat match our coding style.
First in a series (there are 3 more old API docs on the Mail Kit in that
"Public API" folder.)
It was needed on macOS for a time when BUrl used regexes for parsing.
Now it does not, and so we can remove libshared's RegExp from build
libshared, and thus also libgnuregex.
The feature gives user ability to choose the position of notifications
out of Follow Deskbar, Lower Right, Lower Left, Upper Right and Upper
Left. Fixes#9749 - Notification_Server: add the ability to choose the
position of notifications (easy).
Signed-off-by: Adrien Destugues <pulkomandy@pulkomandy.tk>
I didn't notice this in the previous commit because apparently GCC2
just links against libroot's versions of them. On GCC5, however,
the version from libroot_build was used even for calls from libroot itself,
which led to infinite loops and then stack overflows.
So instead we must have the "syscall" functions in libroot_build shadow
the real ones by being named differently, which I did by changing their
prefix from "_kern" to "_kernbuild" via preprocessor macros.
Since the build syscalls.h is now substantially different than the non-
build one (and has not been synchronized in nearly a decade anyway),
I've just stripped out all the syscall defns except for the ones actually used
in the build.
Thanks to kallisti5 for helping me debug and test.
Previously we just used the system libroot, which of course meant
that when libroot's ABI changed, the build broke. Now we use the full
libroot_build that we do on non-Haiku platforms. The logic for "BeOS-compatible
but not Haiku" does not really apply anymore, so it has been gutted where
appropriate (and libhaikucompat has been decoupled from the build.)
The only caveat here is the change to Errors.h -- we really should be using
the system's one where I included the one from the tree, but for whatever
reason, GCC2 refused to handle the #include_next properly.
Fixes the build breakage of Haiku-on-Haiku by my prior commits (sorry).
Technically a "hack" (but then again most of the config/build stuff is);
as we need to use the system's config/types.h in order to get stdint
definitions and the like.
Previously there was a config_build directory which allowed the existence
of two types.h -- the system one, and the headers/build one, but seeing
as we only need this to provide Haiku-specific core types on other platforms,
using the system's one should be fine.
Our core type definitions have not changed in some time (and it's unclear
when they would change aside from potential new platforms), breakage of the
Haiku-on-Haiku build due to this should not happen often (if ever.)
Since it's just a C compiler "technically" the ABI does not matter,
but since it also can target other ABIs from one toolchain (e.g. x64),
just treat it as GCC4 ABI unilaterally.
Fixes#13847.
Now that we do not target BeOS and also do not include the main headers
directory when building "build" binaries, we can drop the separate
config_build directory and thus also the separate BeBuild.h, and just
..-include the regular one.
The build BeBuild.h defined empty _IMPEXP_ROOT and _IMPEXP_BE preprocessor
macros that the regular one does not; so I also re-synchronized
headers which used these as needed.
This file was apparenly based off the BeOS one (as is evidenced
by the "Be Incorporated" copyright ... which is problematic.)
Now it's directly based off of the non-build one.
The base VMCache class changed to the generic_ types with their
introduction in in *2011* (435c43f591),
but these classes were never properly adapted. These functions should not
be called here (they panic() -- but the base class only returns B_ERROR,
so that is a difference at least.)
Found by Clang's -Woverloaded-virtual.
That requires more padding (1 byte vs 4 or 8 depending on integer size),
so just use regular loops and chained ==s.
Caught by Clang. No functional change intended.
* Expects its config files in /boot/home/test_launch.
* Uses standard I/O, and is always in user mode.
* Also added test_launch_roster command that is able to talk to the test
server like it does to the real thing.
Add methods to get and set "Always on top", "Auto raise", and "auto hide"
which are all booleans which control aspects of the Deskbar window to
BDeskbar.
Set the bool to the default value initially. Check if sending the
message succeeds, if so check the reply which also fills out the bool.
Don't check to see if reply succeeded because the bool will only be
overwritten if it did.
Follow the BDeskbar convention Is...() for getter, Set...() for setter
e.g IsAlwaysOnTop() is the getter, SetAlwaysOnTop() is the setter.
Define new message constants to call the newly created methods.
Follow BDeskbar convention: 'gtla' is used for getter, 'stla' for setter.
g/s for getter/setter, tla is an all-lowercase code unique to each
getter/setter pair.
Copy/paste these message constants into BarApp.h unchanged. Replace four
letter codes with imported message constants in BarApp.cpp and
BarWindow.cpp. Much nicer than using bare codes.
The new BDeskbar methods are all handled by TBarApp. The getters send
back a reply message containing the bool while the setters fall through
to existing setter cases.
Fixes#13733.
Unlike written in the ticket, the string length is 136 (not 135),
and the code checks for rejects anything greater or equal to the max
value. So set the constant to 137.
At present, does not work (it fails to properly set up interrupts,
resulting in thousands of unhandled ones which all but grinds the system
to a halt) but this at least is some progress.
It is not a good idea to have a thread get an address from the request
cache, while another thread is deleting said address as the cache has
grown too large. Add a lock around the cache access to make it safe.
Since it handles physical address it should really be this.
It's not like many drivers actually used it anyway. It shouldn't harm
compatibility, drivers calling it with only 32bit would leave garbage in
the higher bits but since on x86 it's a noop anyway, it would end up in
the MSB register tha's ignored because it expects a 32bit result.
Accelerant interface:
Introduce new hooks B_SET_BRIGHTNESS and B_GET_BRIGHTNESS. Brightness is
a float in the 0..1 range.
App_server:
Forward brightness things between BScreen and the accelerant.
intel_extreme:
Implement the hooks. Note that this only works for laptop panels, but
the driver will pretend to support it in other cases as well.
Screen preferences:
If the accelerant supports the B_GET_BRIGHTNESS hook, allow to set
brightness with a slider. Otherwise, the slidere is hidden and these
changes aren't visible.
This should have been done along with the time_t change, but I forgot
to check this then.
Technically this breaks ABI against BeOS, but:
1. BeOS used an int32, so we'd already slightly broken ABI here
2. Only one thing at HaikuArchives (VMwareAddons) and one recipe at HaikuPorts
(samba) uses this function at all.
If it turns out some critical BeOS app uses this, then I guess we can enclose
GCC2 guards around it, but since I can't find any evidence of that, I'm
pushing it without them for now.