LibC is always guaranteed to be loaded at program start, so its
thread-local variables live in the static TLS block. This permits us to
use the more optimal initial-exec TLS access model.
IFF was a generic container fileformat that was popular on the Amiga
since it was the only file format supported by Deluxe Paint.
ILBM is an image format popular in the late eighties/nineties
that uses the IFF container.
This is a very first version of the decoder that only supports
(byterun) compressed files with bpp <= 8.
Only the minimal chunks are decoded: CMAP, BODY, BMHD.
I am planning to add support for the following variants:
- EHB (32 colours + lighter 32 colours)
- HAM6 / HAM8 (special mode that allowed to display the whole Amiga
4096 colours / 262 144 colours palette)
- TrueColor (24bit)
Things that could be fun to do:
- Still images could be animated using color cycle information
This encoder can handle all integer formats and sample rates, though
only two channels well. It uses fixed LPC and performs a
close-to-optimal parameter search on the LPC order and residual Rice
parameter, leading to decent compression already.
I couldn't run the parser in a debugger like I normally would, so I
added printouts to understand where the parser is failing.
More could be added, but these are enough to get a good idea of what
the parser is doing. It's very spammy, though, so enable it by flicking
the IMAP_PARSER_DEBUG switch :^)
Two non-functional changes:
- Remove pointless `-latomic` flag. It was specified via
`add_compile_options`, which only affects compilation and not linking,
so the library was never actually linked into the kernel. In fact, we
do not even build `libatomic` for our toolchain.
- Do not disable `-Wnonnull`. The warning-causing code was fixed at some
point.
This commit also removes `-mstrict-align` from the userland. Our target
AArch64 hardware natively supports unaligned accesses without a
significant performance penalty. Allowing the compiler to insert
unaligned accesses into aligned-as-written code allows for some
performance optimizations in fact. We keep this option turned on in the
kernel to preserve correctness for MMIO, as that might be sensitive to
alignment.
We now apply MathML's default user agent style sheet along with other
default styles. This sheet is not mixed in with the other styles in
CSS/Default.css because it is a namespaced stylesheet and so has to
be its own sheet.
This does the exact same thing as the runtime initializer,
except it is faster and can catch some errors much earlier.
The code generator includes these important features:
- Automatic include generation where necessary
- Special-casing for TabWidget and ScrollableContainerWidget
- No use of DeprecatedString where possible
We weren't installing a lot of generated sources for the top level Lagom
build or for LibWeb, making it impossible to use LibWeb from a
find_package. ...And also Kernel/API/KeyCode.h, which is included by
no less than 8 different files in Userland/Libraries. We also weren't
installing any Ladybird header files.
This reduces the number of tasks to schedule, and the complexity of the
build system integrations for the BindingsGenerator. As a bonus, we move
the "only write if changed" feature into the generator to reduce the
build system load on generated files for this generator.
This does a few things:
- The decoder uses a 32- or 64-bit integer as a reservoir of the data
being decoded, rather than one single byte as it was previously.
- `read_bool()` only refills the reservoir (value) when the size drops
below one byte. Previously, it would read out a bit-sized range from
the data to completely refill the 8-bit value, doing much more work
than necessary for each individual read.
- VP9-specific code for reading the marker bit was moved to its own
function in Context.h.
- A debug flag `VPX_DEBUG` was added to optionally enable checking of
the final bits in a VPX ranged arithmetic decode and ensure that it
contains all zeroes. These zeroes are a bitstream requirement for
VP9, and are also present for all our lossy WebP test inputs
currently. This can be useful to test whether all the data present in
the range has been consumed.
A lot of the size of this diff comes from the removal of error handling
from all the range decoder reads in LibVideo/VP9 and LibGfx/WebP (VP8),
since it is now checked only at the end of the range.
In a benchmark decoding `Tests/LibGfx/test-inputs/4.webp`, decode times
are improved by about 22.8%, reducing average runtime from 35.5ms±1.1ms
down to 27.4±1.1ms.
This should cause no behavioral changes.
This partially implements CSS-Animations-1 (though there are references
to CSS-Animations-2).
Current limitations:
- Multi-selector keyframes are not supported.
- Most animation properties are ignored.
- Timing functions are not applied.
- Non-absolute values are not interpolated unless the target is also of
the same non-absolute type (e.g. 10% -> 25%, but not 10% -> 20px).
- The JavaScript interface is left as an exercise for the next poor soul
looking at this code.
With those said, this commit implements:
- Interpolation for most common types
- Proper keyframe resolution (including the synthetic from-keyframe
containing the initial state)
- Properly driven animations, and proper style invalidation
Co-Authored-By: Andreas Kling <kling@serenityos.org>
We already install C++ source files to allow debugging applications
in HackStudio.
Installing GML files can make editing application widgets a bit faster
and easier, as you no longer need to copy files to the system. :^)
GCC 13 was released on 2023-04-26. This commit fixes Lagom build errors
when using an updated host toolchain:
- Adds a workaround for a bug in constraint handling, which made LibJS
fail to compile: https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=109683
- Silences the new `-Wdangling-reference` diagnostic globally. It
produces multiple false positives with no clear way to silence them
without `#pragmas`.
- Silences `-Wself-move` in `RefPtr` tests as GCC 13 adds this
previously Clang-exclusive warning.
This class can be used to run a task in another thread, and allows the
caller to wait for the task to complete to retrieve any error that may
have occurred.
Currently, it doesn't support functions returning a value on success,
but with some template magic that should be possible. :^)
For the most part no behavior change, except that we now pass
-Wno-implicit-const-int-float-conversion and -Wno-literal-suffix
only to clang and gcc each in both lagom and serenity builds,
while we previously passed them to both in lagom builds (and
passed them to one each in serenity builds). The former is
a clang flag, the latter a gcc flag, but since we also use
-Wno-unknown-warning-option it doesn't really matter.
This is an implementation that tries to follow the spec as closely as
possible, and works with Qemu's Intel HDA and some bare metal HDA
controllers out there. Compiling with `INTEL_HDA_DEBUG=on` will provide
a lot of detailed information that could help us getting this to work
on more bare metal controllers as well :^)
Output format is limited to `i16` samples for now.
`SERENITYOS` is also set when compiling Lagom on SerenityOS, so we can't
just check it and expect `CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX` to be set.
Instead, check `CMAKE_STAGING_PREFIX` directly and use that as an
indicator for whether we can install a file there.