In the future all (normal) output should be written by any of the
following functions:
out (currently called new_out)
outln
dbg (currently called new_dbg)
dbgln
warn (currently called new_warn)
warnln
However, there are still a ton of uses of the old out/warn/dbg in the
code base so the new functions are called new_out/new_warn/new_dbg. I am
going to rename them as soon as all the other usages are gone (this
might take a while.)
I also added raw_out/raw_dbg/raw_warn which don't do any escaping,
this should be useful if no formatting is required and if the input
contains tons of curly braces. (I am not entirely sure if this function
will stay, but I am adding it for now.)
It wasn't actually possible to call
const LogStream& operator<<(const LogStream&, ReadonlyBytes);
because it was shadowed by
template<typename T>
const LogStream& operator<<(const LogStream& stream, Span<T> span);
not sure how I didn't find this when I added the overload.
It would be possible to use SFINAE to disable the other overload,
however, I think it is better to use a different method entirely because
the output can be very verbose:
void dump_bytes(ReadonlyBytes);
Prior to this, we wrote to the log every time the << operator
was used, which meant that only these parts of the log statement
were serialized. If the thread was preempted, or especially with
multiple CPUs the debug output was hard to decipher. Instead, we
buffer up the log statements. To avoid allocations we'll attempt
to use stack space, which covers most log statements.
This was supposed to be the foundation for some kind of pre-kernel
environment, but nobody is working on it right now, so let's move
everything back into the kernel and remove all the confusion.
Our C++ code generator tools have been relying on host-side dbg() being
forwarded to stdout until now. Now they use out() instead.
Hopefully this will make it easier and more enticing to use streams in
userspace programs as well. :^)
You can now #include <AK/Forward.h> to get most of the AK types as
forward declarations.
Header dependency explosion is one of the main contributors to compile
times at the moment, so this is a step towards smaller include graphs.
As suggested by Joshua, this commit adds the 2-clause BSD license as a
comment block to the top of every source file.
For the first pass, I've just added myself for simplicity. I encourage
everyone to add themselves as copyright holders of any file they've
added or modified in some significant way. If I've added myself in
error somewhere, feel free to replace it with the appropriate copyright
holder instead.
Going forward, all new source files should include a license header.
Using the new get_process_name() syscall, we can automatically prefix
all userspace debug logging.
Hopefully this is more helpful than annoying. We'll find out! :^)
Meet TStyle. It allows you to write things like this:
dbg() << TStyle(TStyle::Red, TStyle::Bold) << "Hello, friends!";
Any style used will be reset along with the newline emitted when the dbg()
temporary goes out of scope. :^)
This can definitely be improved, but I think it's a decent place to start.
The first implementation class is DebugLogStream, which can be used like so:
dbg() << "Hello friends, I am " << m_years << " years old!";
Note that it will automatically print a newline when the object created by
dbg() goes out of scope.
This API will grow and evolve, so let's see what we end up with :^)