This patch adds a limit of 200 unsent messages per client. If a client
does not handle its incoming messages and we manage to queue up 200
messages for it, we'll now disconnect that client. :^)
If an IPC client is giving us EAGAIN when trying to send him a message,
we now queue up the messages inside the CoreIPCServer::Connection and
will retry flushing them on next post/receive.
This prevents WindowServer from freezing up when one of its clients is
not taking care of its incoming messages.
Ports/.port_include.sh, Toolchain/BuildIt.sh, Toolchain/UseIt.sh
have been left largely untouched due to use of Bash-exclusive
functions and variables such as $BASH_SOURCE, pushd and popd.
This patch adds three separate per-process fault counters:
- Inode faults
An inode fault happens when we've memory-mapped a file from disk
and we end up having to load 1 page (4KB) of the file into memory.
- Zero faults
Memory returned by mmap() is lazily zeroed out. Every time we have
to zero out 1 page, we count a zero fault.
- CoW faults
VM objects can be shared by multiple mappings that make their own
unique copy iff they want to modify it. The typical reason here is
memory shared between a parent and child process.
This makes it so that "on_connected" always gets called first.
Since accepted sockets are connected before construction, they have
to manually set CSocket::m_connected.
GEventLoop was just a dummy subclass of CEventLoop anyway. The only
thing it actually did was make sure a GWindowServerConnectionw was
instantiated. We now take care of that in GApplication instead.
CEventLoop is now non-virtual and a little less confusing. :^)
Okay, I've spent a whole day on this now, and it finally kinda works!
With this patch, CObject and all of its derived classes are reference
counted instead of tree-owned.
The previous, Qt-like model was nice and familiar, but ultimately also
outdated and difficult to reason about.
CObject-derived types should now be stored in RefPtr/NonnullRefPtr and
each class can be constructed using the forwarding construct() helper:
auto widget = GWidget::construct(parent_widget);
Note that construct() simply forwards all arguments to an existing
constructor. It is inserted into each class by the C_OBJECT macro,
see CObject.h to understand how that works.
CObject::delete_later() disappears in this patch, as there is no longer
a single logical owner of a CObject.
We were only deleting the pointee when the ObjectPtr was destroyed.
If the ObjectPtr is cleared before that, we should also delete the
pointee. This is not the most important class to get right, since
it will go away as soon as we're able to switch to RefPtr.
It's pretty confusing when a CObject is owned both by its parent-child
relationship, but also by an ObjectPtr member in the parent.
In those cases, we have to make sure we both unparent the child *and*
reove it from the ObjectPtr.
This will become a bit less confusing when ObjectPtr becomes RefPtr,
although still not crystal clear. I'm not sure what the solution is.
Subclasses of CNetworkJob handle this by overriding shutdown().
This patch implements it for CHttpJob by simply tearing down the
underlying socket.
We also automatically call shutdown() after the job finishes,
regardless of success or failure. :^)
The C_OBJECT macro now also inserts a static construct(...) helper into
the class. Now we can make the constructor(s) private and instead call:
auto socket = CTCPSocket::construct(arguments);
construct() returns an ObjectPtr<T>, which we'll later switch to being
a NonnullRefPtr<T>, once everything else in in place for ref-counting.
With this patch, CEvents no longer stop at the target object, but will
bubble up the ancestor chain as long as CEvent::is_accepted() is false.
To the set accepted flag, call CEvent::accept().
To clear the accepted flag, call CEvent::ignore().
Events start out in the accepted state, so if you want them to bubble
up, you have to call ignore() on them.
Using this mechanism, we now ignore non-tabbing keydown events in
GWidget, causing them to bubble up through the widget's ancestors. :^)
Long-term we should use reference counting for the CObject hierarchy.
Since we've already accumulated a fair amount of code, this is quite a
large task, so I'm breaking it into some steps.
So, ObjectPtr is a "smart" pointer for CObject-derived types.
It becomes null when moved from, and will destroy unparented CObjects
in its destructor.
The idea here is to convert the codebase over to ObjectPtr piece by
piece, and then when everything is moved and CObject itself refactored
for ref-counting, we can just replace ObjectPtr with RefPtr everywhere.
RPC clients now send JSON-encoded requests to the RPC server.
The connection also stays alive instead of disconnecting automatically
after the initial CObject graph dump.
JSON payloads are preceded by a single host-order encoded 32-bit int
containing the length of the payload.
So far, we have three RPC commands:
- Identify
- GetAllObjects
- Disconnect
We'll be adding more of these as we go along. :^)
Both overloads should know how to set up a notifier callback in case
we get EINPROGRESS from connect().
It might be even better to merge the connect() overloads into a single
function..
We were returning a zero-length ByteBuffer in some cases. We should be
consistent about this and always return a null ByteBuffer if nothing
was read at all.
This was a workaround to be able to build on case-insensitive file
systems where it might get confused about <string.h> vs <String.h>.
Let's just not support building that way, so String.h can have an
objectively nicer name. :^)
The Inspector app quickly exposes crappy flat object hiearchies without
parent/child relationships. This is one of many commits that improves
the situation by making parent/child CObject relationships explicit.
All programs that have a CEventLoop now allow local socket connections
via /tmp/rpc.PID and will dump a serialized JSON array of all the live
CObjects in the program onto connecting sockets.
Also added a small /bin/rpcdump tool that connects to an RPC socket and
produces a raw dump of the JSON that comes out.