AK's version should see better inlining behaviors, than the LibM one.
We avoid mixed usage for now though.
Also clean up some stale math includes and improper floatingpoint usage.
This is to implement constexpr template based implementations for
mathematical functions
This also changes math.cpp to use these implementations.
Also adds a fastpath for floating point trucation for values smaller
than the signed 64 bit limit.
The state of the formatter for the previous element should be thrown
away for each iteration. This showed up when trying to format a
Vector<String>, since Formatter<StringView> was unhappy about some state
that gets set when it's called. Add a test for Formatter<Vector>.
This is trivial, and makes it easier to get the code point compared to
the previous `.code_points()[index]` (which was not actually checked
for in-bounds length).
There is still an offset to consider, a zero-length view is very
different from a nonexistent string :P
Co-authored-by: Timothy Flynn <trflynn89@pm.me>
This implements a simple bootloader that is capable of loading ELF64
kernel images. It does this by using QEMU/GRUB to load the kernel image
from disk and pass it to our bootloader as a Multiboot module.
The bootloader then parses the ELF image and sets it up appropriately.
The kernel's entry point is a C++ function with architecture-native
code.
Co-authored-by: Liav A <liavalb@gmail.com>
The previous implementation was too generic, and would cause conflicting
operator overload errors when included in certain code paths. Fix this
by restricting the template parameters to types which have the same
member names as `struct timespec`.
This is a much more ergonomic option than getting a
`VERIFY_NOT_REACHED()` failure at run-time. I encountered this issue
with Clang, where sized deallocation is not the default due to ABI
breakage concerns.
Note that we can't simply just not declare these functions, because the
C++ standard states:
> If this function with size parameter is defined, the program shall
> also define the version without the size parameter.
Prior to this, it'd try to stuff them into an i64, which could fail and
give us nothing.
Even though this is an extension we've made to JSON, the parser should
be able to correctly round-trip from whatever our serialiser has
generated.
Note: this exact implementation is needed for __atomic_is_lock_free to
link with both GCC (for the SerenityOS build) and Clang (for the Fuzzer
build). The size argument must be a compile-time constant, otherwise it
fails to link with both compilers. Alternatively, the following
definition links with GCC but fails with Clang:
template<size_t S>
static inline bool atomic_is_lock_free(volatile void* ptr = nullptr)
{
return __atomic_is_lock_free(S, ptr);
}
When repeatedly enqueing and dequeing a single item in a Queue we end
up faulting in all the pages for the underlying Vector. This is a
performance issue - especially where the element type is large.
Previously the Queue class used a SinglyLinkedList to manage its queue
segments. This changes the Queue class to use the IntrusiveList class
instead which saves us one allocation per segment.
For debugging purposes, it is very useful to look at a Vector in a
simple list representation. Therefore, the new Formatter for Vector
provides a string representation of the following form:
```
[ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ]
```
This requires the content type of Vector to be formattable with default
arguments.
The current implementation ignores width and precision, which may be
accounted for later or passed down to the content formatter.
This commit un-confuses the many specialisations of AK::Traits, and
makes it work correctly for all integral types.
Prior to this, `AK::Traits<size_t>` would've been instantiating the
base Traits implementation, not `Traits<u32>` or `Traits<u64>`.
This is an AK::GenericLexer that exposes helper methods for parsing
date and time related literals (years, months, days, hours, minutes,
seconds, fractional seconds & more)
Let's bring this class back, but without the confusing resize() API.
A FixedArray<T> is simply a fixed-size array of T.
The size is provided at run-time, unlike Array<T> where the size is
provided at compile-time.
This was only used by a single class (AK::ByteBuffer) in the kernel
and not in an OOM-safe way.
Now that ByteBuffer no longer uses it, there's no need for the kernel
heap to burden itself with supporting this.
This class is the only reason we have to support krealloc() in the
kernel heap, something which adds a lot of complexity.
Let's move towards a simpler path and do malloc+memset in the
ByteBuffer code (where we know the sizes anyway.)