* BMediaRosterEx::ReleaseNodeAll(): if media_server isn't available,
try to contact the node locally.
* BMediaRoster::UnregisterNode(): if media_server isn't available,
try to get the addon_id from the local node.
* BMediaNode::AddOn() as a pure virtual methode isn't available in the
BMediaNode destructor. Workaround that by calling UnregisterNode()
in DeleteHook() instead of the destructor.
* MediaAddonServer::_DestroyInstantiatedFlavors(): give time to each
flavor to clean up.
* Not having them here breaks the "ABI" for scripts and YAB-based apps.
* They will point to the system non-packaged directory, where you are
likely to have old non-packaged BeOS stuff living now.
* This is limited to the constants that were already defined on BeOS.
None of the new ones was re-added.
- When searching for the symbol table, first see if the normal SHT_SYMTAB
section is present. If not, fall back to trying to use SHT_DYNSYM if
present. This allows us to resolve non-static functions/symbols
in stripped binaries for the purposes of crash reports/disassembly.
This method fills out the passed-in BList of modified utf-8 characters for
a given utf-8 character and set of modifiers.
For example if you pass in "=" and B_SHIFT_KEY the list will get filled
out with each character in the shift map that has "=" in the normal map.
Each supported keymap modifier combination is available.
The reason this is useful will soon become apparent.
A BList is used because the character might be mapped multiple times,
for example if you have a Mac keyboard you've got two "=" keys, one in
0x1d and one in 0x6a.
The caller is responsible for creating the BList and destroying it as well as
freeing the resulting character strings.
* Now takes ownership of headers, form data and input data
* Split Set* and Adopt* methods to help with proper use of this (Set
does a copy)
* Write documentation.
This builds off of hrev46243 adding add-on directories all in one place
in AddOnMonitorHandler instead of repeating the code 3 times in
IndexServer, AddOnManager, and MediaAddOnServer.
The safe mode checking in InputServer is now redundant since it all
gets funneled into AddOnMonitorHandler::AddAddOnDirectories()
and the safe mode flags are checked there.
We should probably remove the InputServer::SafeMode() method, but,
I didn't want to break anything that depended on it so I left it.
* The RFC provide a regular expression for URI parsing, so just use it.
* Allows parsing URIs with missing components (no scheme or authority)
* This allows to parse relative URLs as expected
* Can also handle things such as data: or mailto:
* Also more fixes to handling of incomplete URIs, some flags weren't
always set to the right values.
This gets Windows Live Mail (or is it called Outlook?) working, with
some other fixes on WebKit side.
* There actually is a way to count the matches, so use it instead of
attempting to guess
* In some cases (when using optional groups (xxx)?, for example), there
may be a non-matching group (with offsets set to -1) and matching groups
after it, so the binary search wasn't quite working
* Instead, we always return the number of capturing groups in the in
the given expression, which is the maximal number of matches. Some (or
all) of these may not have any content. We do return 0 matches on any
error, including when the regular expression didn't match anything.
* It would not work for cookies set to expire tomorrow or later, since
setting the time in a BDateTime does not overflow to the date.
* The BDateTime API could be improved to make this look nicer.
* @ is a separator (between user:password and host) only if there are
no slashes before it
* All slashes in user and password should be urlencoded (as well as any
@ and :)
* On the other hand, it's possible to have @ as part of an URL path or
query. An example is Google Maps.
Gets Google Maps working.
* With so long class names, there's no way I'm going to follow the 64
char limit on commit headlines.
* The class share the same API, so having them separate is not very
useful.
* This makes it possible to use the same listener in either synchronous
or asycnhronous mode (or both, for different requests)
- If a package is already installed, look up its installed location and
use that when initializing the package manager for uninstallation,
otherwise we'd potentially fail to find the package, and consequently
fail to remove it.
* When the tree constructor failed, the InodeAllocator would try to remove
the tree from the transaction. However, in that case, it was never added
to it.
* Inode::fTree is no longer set if the tree constructor failed.
* This fixes bug #10089.
* Add some error handling in NetworkCookie and don't add broken cookies
(or should I say crumbs?) to the cookie jar
* More control on the path and domain, as well as the expiration time
We now pass Opera cookie testsuite functionality tests, as well as some
of the negative tests (we even do better than curl). Not going further
right now as this works well enough for positive cases and most
security/privacy issues are fixed (cross domain and cross path cookie
setting or spying).
* It's "new" operator does not fail or throw on allocation problems, but
just lets the constructor do its work (and likely crash because of
accessing a null pointer).
- The checkfs help text is worded such that it would appear to require
both a device name and volume name when it actually requires either one
or the other.