* Added a FixedWidthPointer template class which uses 64-bit storage to hold
a pointer. This is used in place of raw pointers in kernel_args.
* Added __attribute__((packed)) to kernel_args and all structures contained
within it. This is necessary due to different alignment behaviour for
32-bit and 64-bit compilation with GCC.
* With these changes, kernel_args will now come out the same size for both
the x86_64 kernel and the loader, excluding the preloaded_image structure
which has not yet been changed.
* Tested both an x86 GCC2 and GCC4 build, no problems caused by these changes.
I've tested this change on x86, causing no issues. I've checked over the code
for all other platforms and made the necessary changes and to the best of my
knowledge they should also still work, but I haven't actually built and
tested them. Once I've completed the kernel_args changes the other platforms
will need testing.
Pointers in kernel_args are going to be changed to unconditionally use 64-bit
storage (to make kernel_args compatible with both the x86 and x86_64 kernels).
KMessage stores a pointer to its buffer, however since KMessage is used
outside of the boot code it is undesirable to change it to use 64-bit storage
for the pointer as it may add additional overhead on 32-bit builds. Therefore,
only store the buffer address and size and then construct a KMessage from
those in the kernel.
The whole kernel now builds and there are no undefined references when
linking, I just need to fix some strange relocation errors I'm getting
(probably a problem with the linker script) and then I'll have a kernel
image.
Since ICI arguments are used to send addresses in some places, uint32 is
not sufficient on x86_64. addr_t still refers to the same type as uint32
(unsigned long) on other platforms, so this change only really affects
x86_64.
* x86_64 is using the existing *_ia32 boot platforms.
* Special flags are required when compiling the loader to get GCC to compile
32-bit code. This adds a new set of rules for compiling boot code rather
than using the kernel rules, which compile using the necessary flags.
* Some x86_64 private headers have been stubbed by #include'ing the x86
versions. These will be replaced later.
* gPeripheralBase keeps track of the device
peripherals before and after mmu_init
* Add ability to disable mmu for troubleshooting
* Remove static FB_BASE, we actually don't know
where the FB is yet. (depends on firmware used)
* BCM2708 defines no longer assume 0x20 address
We will be throwing away the blob memory mapping
and using our own.
* Use existing blob mapping to turn GPIO led on pre mmu_init
* Remap MMU hardware addresses from 0x7E. We could map each device,
however the kernel will throw away the mappings again anyway. For
now we just map the whole range and use offsets.
* Serial uart no longer works, however at least
we know why now :). Serial driver now needs to
use mapped address.
* Use U-Boot mmu code as base
* This will be factored out someday into common arch mmu
code when we can read Flattened Device Trees
* Move mmu_init after serial_init.
Temporary change as we will want serial_init to use
memory mapped addresses... for debugging.
* introduce a DebugUART baseclass,
* rework 8250 and PL011 implementations from kallisti5 to inherit DebutUART,
* each arch should override the IO methods to access registers.
* on ARM registers are 32bit-aligned.
* U-Boot still works for the verdex target.
* rPi still compiles, needs testing.
* Still some more consolidation needed to allow runtime choice of the UART type (as read from FDT blobs for ex.).
* serial.cpp should probably mostly be made generic as well.
* didn't touch x86 or ppc yet.
* Enable/Disable makes more sense and matches
platform loader serial functions.
* Rework PL011 code after finding a PDF covering
the details of it.
* Rename UART global defines in loader to be more
exact about location
* This makes things a little more flexible and
the interface to use the uarts cleaner.
* May want to make a generic Uart wrapper
class in uart.h / uart.cpp and call drivers
as needed from there.
* Avoid name collisions
* This uart stuff may work better as a class at
some point, however I didn't want to rock the
u-boot boat *too* much as I don't have the
hardware to test.
* Add nested function wrappers to allow usage of other
uart drivers depending on board. We may want to use this
on other platforms at some point (haha, maybe)
* Make Kernel ARM UART slightly more generic
through (BOARD_UART_CLOCK) configured per board
* Add initial Raspberry Pi serial code
* Still rough and non-working
* Change ShowTip() point parameter name to where.
* Add a parameterless ResetWindowFrame() overload that get's the current
where and calls ResetWindowFrame(BPoint where) which does the actual
work. FrameResized() calls this parameterless ResetWindowFrame()
method instead of doing the work in that method. This is functionaly
the same but allows me to call the parameterless ResetWindowFrame()
elsewhere.
SharedSolver was archiving too many constraints, partly because of
multiple typos, also because it archived some which were just artifacts
of the layout process. These extra constraints are created when the
layout calls SetRange() on the left/top/right/bottom tabs during layout.
* LinearSpec/ActiveSetSolver had to be adjusted to get access to the
constraints added by the SetRange() calls.
* BALM::TabBase was adjusted to avoid a segfault during unarchiving,
caused by an unitialized member.
* ALMFriendLayoutTest was adjusted to include a more obvious custom
constraint for testing.
Also make ALMGroup totally self-contained, i.e. BALMLayout no longer
does the parsing, and is completely unaware of ALMGroup. A small touch
of refactoring as well.
* allow for independent left, top, right and bottom insets
* allow for independent vertical and horizontal spacing between tabs
* allow for the usage of Haiku's spacing constants such as B_USE_WINDOW_INSETS
* The areas allocated for BBitmaps were never deleted, even though the
app_server deleted its part when the memory got freed.
* This resulted in a constant memory increase if the application in question
would operate on many changing large bitmaps, like photos.
* Since the bitmaps are reference counted, we don't actually know when to delete
the areas, so that the app_server now notifies the client whenever that is
possible.
* This might fix#6824.
* This removes the fVisibleToolTip member from BView, and fixes bug #5669;
BToolTipManager::ShowTip() now gets the owner of the tool tip as an extra
parameter.
* Removed the work-around to hide that bug.
* Improved ToolTipTest application to include more test cases like a view that
periodically update its tool tip via SetToolTip(const char*), and one that
sets a new tool tip every second.
* Furthermore, added a test that shows that inner views inherit the tool tip
of their parents.
* Fixed another bug in BToolTipManager::ShowTip() that would release an
extra reference to the tool tip currently shown.
* First steps at getting card command processor wired
up to the ring buffers.
* Code doesn't run yet as I have *no* idea what happens
when these rings are in an invalid state.
* rename B_TRANSLATE_CONTEXT to B_TRANSLATION_CONTEXT and
B_TRANSLATE_WITH_CONTEXT to B_TRANSLATE_CONTEXT, squashing a TODO
* adjust all uses of both macros in Haiku's source tree
* use correct header guard for collecting/Catalog.h
The renamed macros require adjustments to all external applications
using catalogs.
* Not turned on for default buttons and menuframes right now.
* Updated Deskcalc and Keymap to use buttons with rounded corners.
* Overloaded methods with radium parameters are not virtual right
now so as to not break vtables. Added /*virtual*/ before each
method that should be made virtual in ControlLook.h
* Added a light line to the left border of the down arrow frame
on menu frames as a small visual tweak.
* Replace StrokeRect() with StrokeRoundRect() when drawing the
default button indicator. This gives them a rounded
appearance if the button is also rounded.
* Added protected methods _DrawMenuFieldBackgroundOutside and
_DrawMenuFieldBackgroundInside.
* Created some protected methods to get the edge, frame, and bevel
colors from a passed in base color because it was a mess and I
needed to calculate the colors from mutiple methods. It is much
cleaner now.
* Added myself to ControlLook.cpp authors list. Assigned copyright
to Haiku, Inc. Stippi also retains his copyright.
* Tons of style fixes.
- Change all instances of `if (flags & B_FLAG)` to
`if ((flags & B_FLAG) != 0)`
- Reorder some methods.
- Reorder includes.
- Spacing.
- Updated comments.
* move versions of the B_TRANSLATE_...-macros used during collecting
of catalog keys to a specific header file, which will only be picked
up when running collectcatkeys
* fix a couple of build problems during the preprocessing of the libbe-
sources when extracting catalog keys, all due to private headers not
being found
* move ZombieReplicantView.h from kits/interface to
headers/private/interface, as this way it can be picked up when
building the libbe catalog
* rename BCatalogAddOn to BCatalogData, since it doesn't represent an
add-on, but rather the catalog data provided by an add-on
* move BCatalogData out of Catalog.{h,cpp} into its own header and
implementation file
* drop BCatalogData::MarkForTranslation() methods, they're not needed
* drop BCatalog::GetNoAutoCollectString() methods, they're not being
used anywhere
* cleanup the B_TRANSLATE_... macros somewhat
* add versions of the B_TRANSLATE_MARK_... macros that are meant to be
used in void context (when the string isn't being used by the program,
just meant to be picked up by collectcatkeys).
* adjust several apps to use B_TRANSLATE_MARK_..._VOID where needed
* adjust users of BCatalogAddOn accordingly
* it's bad practice to do a 'using <namespace>' in a header, as that
is very likely to have unintended effects, so drop those from a couple
of private Locale headers
* adjust files all over the locale kit in order to fix the problems
(by explicitly importing the required classes in the implementation
files)
* move EditableCatalog to its own header and implementation file
* move problematic BCatalog::CatalogAddOn() to EditableCatalog
* adjust Locale tools accordingly
Added two new methods to the Locale Kit in order to create a custom time
formats from a format string. One method is outputs into a char* array,
the other into a BString() and you can set the timezone.
These methods should be cleaned up, we only need 2, one to get
the time in a predefined style, the other to get a custom time format.
Also should probably do the same for dates and datetimes. But I'll let
this go for now.
I added myself to the Locale.cpp file. I retained the copyright instead
of assigning it to Haiku, Inc. because the file is under the OpenBeOS
license and I don't know what the concequences of copyright sharing are
for that license, unlike MIT.
These new methods are used to generate custom time formats in Deskbar.
Instead of using a set of Radio Buttons to choose between the predefined
time options I build my own by creating a format string and passing it
to the Locale Kit. The format string is generated from 3 checkboxes,
show seconds, show day of week, and show time zone. You can mix and match
between them choose any that you like. By default they are all off.
There are 3 new deskbar settings associated with these new options:
showSeconds, showDayOfWeek, and showTimeZone. timeFormat has gone away.
The time format string gets cached and updated only when Update() gets called
on the TimeView class.
In order to fit all the options in (there is 1 more than before) I had to
reduce the font size of the clock to 11pt when all options are turned on in
12 hour mode. For those with no imagination it looks like this:
http://imagebin.org/208162
Renamed "Open time preferences..." menuitem to "Time preferences...".
Renamed "Show Time" and "Hide Time" to "Show time" and "Hide time".
Other changes include refactoring the header files a bit. There were a lot
of headers included by header files uneccessarily. For instance BarWindow.h
now only includes <Window.h> and <Deskbar.h>. This change is mainly to
to speed up the compile time since it takes a while right now.
I copy the fBarView pointer from BarWindow in the BarApp constructor and then
use that throughout the file rather than getting the pointer from the window
each time by calling BarView(). BarView() is still available in the header
for other classes though.
I moved some message constants around since it was getting a bit jumbled.
Most of the messages related to settings are in PreferenceWindow.h.
fChangeState is moved to BarView.h since that is where the ChangeState()
function is and BarView.cpp uses that constant.
The time interval and format constants are in TimeView.h.
Make some methods public in their respective classes where it made sense.
The preference window methods to update dependent items are public, that
might get called from BarWindow when a message gets received at some point.
Also made ShowHideTime() and Time() public in StatusView.h. These methods
activate showing and hiding the clock and return the fTime clock object.
No reason they should be private.
I reindented the StatusView.h and PreferenceWindow.h headers to the standard
style. Question here, are the public: protected: and private: lines inside
of classes suppose to get indented 1 tab or not? I've seen both, the style
guide says no indent but 1 indent seems reasonable and looks pretty good.
Style fixes here and there. That's enough for one commit I think.
AMD C1E is a BIOS controlled C3 state. Certain processors families
may cut off TSC and the lapic timer when it is in a deep C state,
including C1E state, thus the cpu can't be waken up and system will hang.
This patch firstly adds the support of idle selection during boot. Then
it implements amdc1e_noarat_idle() routine which checks the MSR which
contains the C1eOnCmpHalt (bit 28) and SmiOnCmpHalt (bit 27) before
executing the halt instruction, then clear them once set.
However intel C1E doesn't has such problem. AMD C1E is a BIOS controlled
C3 state. The difference between C1E and C3 is that transition into C1E
is not initiated by the operating system. System will enter C1E state
automatically when both cores enters C1 state. As for intel C1E, it
means "reduce CPU voltage before entering corresponding Cx-state".
This patch may fix#8111, #3999, #7562, #7940 and #8060
Copied from the description of #3999:
>but for some reason I hit the power button instead of the reset one. And
>the boot continued!!
The reason is CPUs are waken up once power button is hit.
Signed-off-by: Fredrik Holmqvist <fredrik.holmqvist@gmail.com>
* make the system catalog a BCatalog instead of a BCatalogAddOn*,
such that using a non-existing system catalog won't crash but
simply return the untranslated string instead
* rename MutableLocaleRoster::GetSystemCatalog() to LoadSystemCatalog()
and adjust it to use BCatalog::SetTo() in order to replace the
data used by the given catalog
* adjust all users of gSystemCatalog accordingly
* use a locker to protect the CatalogAddOn-chain against parallel
access
* rename BCatalog::SetCatalog() to SetTo() and make it a proper
initializing function
* adjust implementation of BLocaleRoster accordingly
* unify pointer style (to type* )
* always use boolean expressions in if
* introduce some spacing for better readability
* make a couple inline methods non-inline
The gcc2 cross-compiler built on Mac OS X Lion has a bug in it
where it is erroring with 'cast specifies signature type' when
assigning 0 or NULL to a pointer to a member fuction. NULL in this
instance is correctly converted to 0 since it is illegal to assign
((void*)0) to a pointer to a member function. However, it should
be legal to assign 0 to a pointer to a member function. Thus, there
is a bug. Since I can't fix the gcc2 compiler I am working around
this bug by assigning the pointer to a do nothing function instead.
My host compiler version is
i686-apple-darwin11-gcc-4.2.1 (GCC) 4.2.1 (Apple Inc. build 5666) (dot 3)
The same error occurs using the default gcc-llvm compiler and
a standard gcc 4.61 built from source. This bug does not occur on
Mac OS X 10.6 gcc2 or gcc4, nor does it occur on Mac OS X 10.7 with
the gcc4 cross-compiler.
If and when we decide to finally leave gcc2 behind we can revert this
change.
* General DisplayPort functions in common dp.cpp
* DP port information struct in common header
* Please don't use this private accelerant common DP
code just yet as it is very early.
* If dladdr can't find an exact match, it returns the nearest symbol
less than the given address.
* If no suitable symbol can be found, but the address is within a
loaded library, dladdr returns the library name and base address.
Signed-off-by: Ingo Weinhold <ingo_weinhold@gmx.de>
* Make the locale kit a part of libbe.
* Drop the LocaleBackend kludge used from within libbe (and from
other places, too) in order to access system catalog strings.
This is now done via gSystemCatalog, which is provided and initialized
by libbe.
* Drop all references to liblocale.so from all Jamfiles.
* Add legacy symlink liblocale.so in order to keep optional packages
that rely on it in a working state.
TODO: the documentation hasn't been updated.
* added optional feature package for freetype 2.4.6 gcc4/gcc2 x86 and gcc4 ppc.
* FT_CONFIG_OPTION_SUBPIXEL_RENDERING is disabled, --include-patented-code doesn't
change this setting anymore. This would require different packages.
* drop freetype sources and headers from the tree.
* fix decorators, test app server and appearance to use feature package headers.
* hybrid build untested.
* The AtomBIOS timeout fix has made my DP bridge
stop working
* The current DisplayPort code is a little lacking
on DP link training... I think thats the cause.
* This puts the first steps towards DP training
in place.
* I plan on trying to make some of this DP stuff
common accelerant stuff after it works.
* This makes future changes less troublesome, although we should also add
some virtual slots there (probably just dozens of it, though, that's why
I was being lazy).
* Don't pass messages by value; they are copied twice this way.
* Minor coding style corrections, automatic whitespace cleanup.
* Rather than duplicating the decision taking logic involving wheter or not to draw
the outline or glow in every replicant, update be_control_look to make it more
generic.
* The Monitoring of the background preferences is now only done in Tracker (where it
was already being done).
* Add a BControlLook::B_IGNORE_OUTLINE flag to avoid this new behaviour.
* Remove that said logic from ActivityMonitor and use be_control_look.
* Use the ignore flag in DeskCalc to avoid the outline in its case.
Should fix#7716, #7291.
* Prepend x86_ to non-static x86 code
* Add x86_init_fpu function to kernel header
* Don't init fpu multiple times on smp systems
* Verified fpu is still started on smp and non-smp
* SSE code still generates general protection faults
on smp systems though
* maintain a list of all BPictures to do so
* BView downloads the BPicture data after recording the picture. This could probably done more efficiently using shared memory in the first place.
* Rename init_sse to init_fpu and handle FPU setup.
* Stop trying to set up FPU before VM init.
We tried to set up the FPU before VM init, then
set it up again after VM init with SSE extensions,
this caused SSE and MMX applications to crash.
* Be more logical in FPU setup by detecting CPU flag prior
to enabling FPU. (it's unlikely Haiku will run on
a processor without a fpu... but lets be consistant)
* SSE2 gcc code now runs (faster even) without GPF
* tqh confirms his previously crashing mmx code now works
* The non-SSE FPU enable after VM init needs tested!
* add Wcscoll() and Wcsxfrm() ICU locale backend
* provide implementations of wcscoll() and wcsxfrm() that are using
the respective methods of the locale backend
* Casts like BReference<Derived> to BReference<Base> are now possible.
* This cast for BWeakReference is, because of the underlying structure, not automatically type safe. I used a simple hack to make the compiler complain if the cast
is not type safe. Please take a look if that can be done better.
* Smaller style and bug fixes.
* make room in mbstate_t for containing an ICU-converter's state
(well, in fact the whole converter object)
* adjust libroot's locale add-on to clone converters into a given
mbstate_t directly
* adjust ICUThreadLocalStorageValue to contain the converter pointer
instead of a converter-ID (if the converter is related to an
mbstate_t, it points into the mbstate_t).
* adjust users of converters to directly use converter pointers
instead of ICUConverterRef
* drop now unused ICUConverterManager and ICUConverterRef
* update gcc4 optional package
This brings our multibyte implementation into a fully working state,
both non-ascii and non-8-bit characters can now be handled normally
in the Terminal, i.e. this finally fixes#6276.
N.B.: Since the size of mbstate_t has changed, everything (including
the compiler!) needs to be rebuilt.
* I'd rather this be common code, but I don't have access
to the DisplayPort specifications. If I added it as common
code I would want to be 100% it was complete and variables
were named properly.
* For now putting in radeon_hd private headers
* add MultibyteStringToWchar() to ICU locale backend
* implement mbsrtowcs() and mbsnrtowcs() on top of
MultibyteStringToWchar()
* drop respective glibc files
It turns out,this is an old method added by Be, and is not really related to BView::InvalidateLayout(bool). In fact BMenu::InvalidateLayout() does something separate, but related to the BView method. I was wrong to delete this method, since it needs to have action taken each time it is called, so moving these actions into LayoutInvalidated() only worked sometimes (when the BView was considered to have a valid layout).
I have added a comment for future hackers so that they don't delete this method.
This one works with non-terminated strings that we may need to handle.
It also validates that the sequence is valid UTF-8 so it results in
the same behaviour as the version that is used when converting to
codes (syncing the enumeration and drawing behaviour).
This allows to use the debug features of the guarded heap also on
allocations made through the object cache API. This is obivously
horrible for performance and uses up huge amounts of memory, so the
initial and grow sizes are adjusted accordingly.
Note that this is a rather simple hack, using the object_cache pointer
to transport the allocation size. The alignment is neglected completely.
This adds a pair of functions vm_prepare_kernel_area_debug_protection()
and vm_set_kernel_area_debug_protection() to set a kernel area up for
page wise protection and to actually protect individual pages
respectively.
It was already possible to read and write protect full areas via area
protection flags and not mapping any actual pages. For areas that
actually have mapped pages this doesn't work however as no fault, at
which the permissions could be checked, is generated on access.
These new functions use the debug helpers of the translation map to mark
individual pages as non-present without unmapping them. This allows them
to be "protected", i.e. causing a fault on read and write access. As they
aren't actually unmapped they can later be marked present again.
Note that these are debug helpers and have quite a few restrictions as
described in the comment above the function and is only useful for some
very specific and constrained use cases.
They can be used to mark pages as present/non-present without actually
unmapping them. Marking pages as non-present causes every access to
fault. We can use that for debugging as it allows us to "read protect"
individual kernel pages.
* The vm86 code or the code running in virtual 8086 mode may clobber the
%fs register that we use for the CPU dependent thread local storage
(TLS). Previously the vm86 code would simply restore %fs on exit, but
this doesn't always work. If the thread got unscheduled while running
in virtual 8086 mode and was then rescheduled on a different CPU, the
vm86 exit code would restore the %fs register with the TLS value of
the old CPU, causing anything using TLS in userland to crash later on.
Instead we skip the %fs register restore on exit (as do the other
interrupt return functions) and explicitly update the potentially
clobbered %fs by calling x86_set_tls_context(). This will repopulate
the %fs register with the TLS value for the right CPU. Fixes#8068.
* Made the static set_tls_context() into x86_set_tls_context() and made
it available to others to faciliate the above.
* Sync the vm86 specific interrupt code with the changes from hrev23370,
using the iframe pop macro to properly return. Previously what was
pushed in int_bottom wasn't poped on return.
* Account for the time update macro resetting the in_kernel flag and
reset it to 1, as we aren't actually returning to userland. This
didn't cause any harm though as only the time tracking is using that
flag so far.
* Some minor cleanup.
Apparently I should have done a complete rebuild after moving
directories.h from headers/private/libroot to .../system, since a lot of
stuff didn't build anymore.
The implementation is temporary. Currently it reads through the packages
in the respective packages directory and checks against the package
links. Once package activation is tracked explicitly we'll use the
activation file/directory.
A BPackageContentHandler subclass that initializes a BPackageInfo from
the read package attributes. Pulled out of RepositoryWriterImpl's
PackageContentHandler.
* Remove InitCheck() and the initializing constructor.
* Rename PackageCount() to CountPackages().
* Use BOpenHashTable instead of HashMap for the internal PackageMap.
* Allow multiple packages with the same name. Equally named packages are
in a singly linked list after the first package with that name.
* Add an Iterator inner class and a GetIterator() method, so one can now
iterate through the packages in the repository.
The attribute is intended for simplifying package building. The
package's install path will be used for the package's .self package
symlink, allowing installation to a temporary directory when building
the package.
* AVLTreeMap::_GetKey(): Change return type from const Key& to Key, so
the strategy can do that as well and doesn't have have a Key object in
the node.
* Fix the Auto strategy: It was using the undefined _GetKey() instead
of GetKey().
Extended policy by IndexIteratorSuspend() and IndexIteratorResume()
methods that are invoked for the index iterator by Query::GetNextEntry()
after entering respectively before exiting.
both:
* Add Previous()/Next().
* Add Insert() version that returns a Node* instead of an Iterator.
* Add Remove() version that takes a Node* instead of a key.
TwoKeyAVLTree:
* Add GetIterator() version that takes an additional Node*, i.e.
initializing an iterator to point to the node.
* Add Iterator::CurrentNode().
This is a tree implementation with elements with primary and secondary
key. The code is a cleaned up version of ramfs's implementation. ramfs
doesn't use this version yet.
Add flags parameter to BPackageWriter::Init() (and the private
implementation classes) to indicate that an existing package file shall
be updated instead of created. Currently that always happens in-place.
When compression doesn't save space, using it nonetheless results in a
file that the reader complains about. So we fall back to writing an
uncompressed package attributes section in such a case.
The same still needs to be done for the TOC section.
* Add hooks HandleSectionStart() and HandleSectionEnd(). They are
invoked to bracket package file section, so the handler can
discriminate which section the attributes belong to.
HandleSectionStart() features a return parameter _handleSection, which
allows to handler to pick which sections it wants to handle.
* "package dump" does now print the section names.
If a FD is specified, instead of using the file with the given the FD is
used. Allows for adding entries without first copying them into the
directory structure.
This makes opening symlinks work universally in the build system tools.
Two mechanisms have been implemented, both of which don't always work.
The first is remapping via preprocessor macros. This fails where equally
named methods are used (e.g. STL fstream::open()). The other is using
hidden functions in the new libroot_build_function_remapper.a that is
linked into everything that is linked against libroot_build.so. This one
fails for functions that are defined inline in headers (Linux/glibc does
that). Together they seem to cover our build system needs ATM.
To avoid a clash with the regular version or an extra attribute level we
use the "package:provides.compatible" package attribute instead of
"package:version.major".
* The version string pattern is now:
<major>[.<minor>[.<micro>]][-<pre>][-<release>]
* Introduce B_HPKG_ATTRIBUTE_ID_PACKAGE_VERSION_PRE_RELEASE package
attribute.
* Add "preRelease" field to BPackageVersionData.
* Add "preRelease" property to BPackageVersion and packagefs's Version.
* Adjust package reader and writer code accordingly.
* Add support function vfs_get_mount_point(), so a file system can get
its own mount point (i.e. the node it covers). Re-added
fs_mount::covers_vnode for that purpose -- the root node isn't know to
the VFS before the mount() hook returns.
* Add function vfs_bind_mount_directory() which bind-mounts a directory
to another. The Vnode::covers/covered_by mechanism is used, so this
isn't true bind-mounting, but sufficient for what we need ATM and
cheaper as well. The vnodes connected thus aren't tracked yet, which
is needed for undoing the connection when unmounting.
* get_vnode_name(): Don't use dir_read() to read the directory. Since we
have already resolved vnode to the covered vnode, we don't want the
dirents to be "fixed" to refer to the covering nodes. Such a vnode
simply wouldn't be found.
* Introduce Vnode flags for covered and covering. Can be used as a quick
check when one doesn't already hold sVnodeLock.
* Rename resolve_mount_point_to_volume_root() to
resolve_vnode_to_covering_vnode().
* Adjust all code that deals with transitions between mount points and
volume root vnodes to generally support covered/covering vnodes.
Bring the changes that aren't package management related and the ones
that are but don't take effect as long as they are ignored by the build
system into the master.
Summary of changes:
* Introduce private header <directories.h> with constants for a good
deal of paths that should usually be retrieved via find_directory().
* Replace hard-coded paths by using find_directory() or the
<directories.h> constants (e.g. in drivers and the kernel).
* Add find_directory() constants needed for package management.
* Add __HAIKU_ABI_NAME and B_HAIKU_ABI_NAME macros.
* src/apps/deskbar: BeMenu.* -> DeskbarMenu.*,
DeskBarUtils.* -> DeskbarUtils.*
* Change deskbar menu settings directory from ~/config/be to
~/config/settings/deskbar.
* Other smaller cleanups, changes, and fixes.
* add temperature query support for Juniper, Sumo, Evergreen, and North Islands
* add missing thermal defines for evergreen cards
* northern island cards use the evergreen thermal calculations
* add errno_private.h, which defines the __set_errno() macro with
and without tracing
* instead of setting errno manually, all libroot's code now invokes
__set_errno(), which makes it much easier to trace changes to errno
* redirect glibc's use of __set_errno() to our own version
* update copyrights of locale backend files
Multibyte-support has been rewritten to use ICU as backend.
While this does not necessarily work properly in every aspect
(e.g. the shell still has [different] problems with multibyte-
characters now), it does fix#6263 and #7700.
* add implementations for the following multibyte-related
functions:
btwoc()
mblen()
mbrlen()
mbrtowc()
mbsinit()
mbtowc()
wcrtomb()
wcswidth()
wctob()
wctomb()
* the implementation of the above function live in a symbol
named __<name>, the above symbol names are defined as a weak
alias to the internal ones - TODO: we need to make sure to
only invoked the internal functions (i.e. prepended with __)
in order to avoid problems with symbol preemption.
* deactivate the limited mb implementation we provided before,
as well as respective stuff from glibc
* This doesn't necessarily belong here, but we're going to make use
of it in the next changeset. Additionally, this change to BeBuild.h
will trigger a rebuild of nearly all files, and applying it during
the multibyte-related work will skip another full rebuild ...
* add actual converter methods MultibyteToWchar() and WcharToMultibyte()
to locale backend and implement them in the ctype subpart
* add management code for maintaining converters referenced by mbstate_t
* add a few missing/needed header defines
* show GPU temp in millidegrees C on r600/r700
* evergreen+ support soon
* function may be moved to driver long term once testing done
* Each class has a Socket() method to retrieve the underlaying file descriptor
to be able to do the more advanced stuff, if necessary.
* A server socket is yet missing, but the rest is pretty much covered.