Just because we may compile serenity with or without NDEBUG doesn't
mean that consuming projects or Ports will share the setting.
Always define the custom assertion function so that we don't have to
keep the same debug settings between all projects.
This reverts the SystemServer exec() logic to how it was before
81bd91c, but now with some extra TRY()s. This allows the HOME var
to always be propagated from LoginServer which prevents needing
to unveil() /etc/passwd everywhere.
This was called from LibCore and passed raw StringView data that may
not be null terminated, then incorrectly passed those strings to
getenv() and also tried printing them with just the %s format
specifier.
This API is only used by Jakt to implement weak reference unwrapping.
By making it return a NonnullRefPtr, it can be assigned to anything
that accepts a NonnullRefPtr, unlike the previous T* return type (since
that can also be null).
Instead of iterating through the needle being searched one byte at a
time (like an ascii string), we calculate its unicode code points first
and then iterate through those.
Template argument are checked to ensure that the `Out` type is equal or
convertible to the type returned by the invokee.
Compilation now fails on:
`Function<void()> f = []() -> int { return 0; };`
But this is allowed:
`Function<ErrorOr<int>()> f = []() -> int { return 0; };`
It seems like a lot (most?) places where InputBoxes are used check if
the retrieved string isn't empty anyway - make this be reflected in
the user interface, by disabling (graying out) the "OK" button when
nothing is entered, so empty input isn't a viable option at all.
Pretty much no other read function does this, and getting rid of the
typename template parameter for the stream makes the transition to the
new AK::Stream a bit easier.
Similar to the return values earlier, a signed value doesn't really make
sense here. Relying on the much more standard `size_t` makes it easier
to use Stream in all contexts.
This function is made from what composed `set_file()` (which now calls
the new function). It allows to create a `HexDocumentFile` without
calling the hackish `set_file(move(m_file))`.
Before 6490529ef7, all programs in the
SPECIAL_TARGETS list were built because they didn't have an
EXCLUDE_FROM_ALL property set.
That commit set the property for all targets, but because of this, the
minimal "Required" build configuration no longer built, as CMake failed
to rename every special target. Even the not built ones.
This commit makes the rename action run only if the executable exists,
which makes us build Serenity without the `install` utility, and also
by using the minimal configuration set. :^) :^)
Previously the tool was removing the Root directory after configuring
cmake which was breaking the build, as some cmake rules put some
necessary files there.
Moving the cmake command to be the last one makes it regenerate those
files automatically. :^)
This filesystem is based on the code of the long-lived TmpFS. It differs
from that filesystem in one keypoint - its root inode doesn't have a
sticky bit on it.
Therefore, we mount it on /dev, to ensure only root can modify files on
that directory. In addition to that, /tmp is mounted directly in the
SystemServer main (start) code, so it's no longer specified in the fstab
file. We ensure that /tmp has a sticky bit and has the value 0777 for
root directory permissions, which is certainly a special case when using
RAM-backed (and in general other) filesystems.
Because of these 2 changes, it's no longer needed to maintain the TmpFS
filesystem, hence it's removed (renamed to RAMFS), because the RAMFS
represents the purpose of this filesystem in a much better way - it
relies on being backed by RAM "storage", and therefore it's easy to
conclude it's temporary and volatile, so its content is gone on either
system shutdown or unmounting of the filesystem.
Instead of explaining custom build directories first and then following
that up with a an explainer that Meta/serenity.sh is the easiest way to
get the browser up and running to try it out was not very ergonmic.
Also reorganize some of the per-distro documentation to put the compiler
requirements front and center.