Also do this for Shell.
This greatly simplifies the CMakeLists in Lagom, replacing many glob
patterns with a big list of libraries. There are still a few special
libraries that need some help to conform to the pattern, like LibELF and
LibWebView.
It also lets us remove essentially all of the Serenity or Lagom binary
directory detection logic from code generators, as now both projects
directories enter the generator logic from the same place.
WebDriver aims to implement the WebDriver specification found at
https://w3c.github.io/webdriver/webdriver-spec.html . It's an HTTP
server that can create Browser sessions and control them.
Co-authored-by: Florent Castelli <florent.castelli@gmail.com>
This new code generator takes all the .idl files in LibWeb, looks for
each top level interface in there with an [Exposed=Foo] attribute, and
adds code to add the constructor and prototype for each of those exposed
interfaces to the realm of the relevant global object we're initialzing.
It will soon replace WindowObjectHelper as the way that web interfaces
are added to the Window object, and will be used in the future for
creating proper WorkerGlobalScope objects for dedicated and shared
workers.
This is a preparation to check if our users find noticeable bugs in the
x86-64 target, before we can decide if we want to remove the i686 target
for good.
This code generator no longer creates JS wrappers for platform objects
in the old sense, instead they're JS objects internally themselves.
Most of what we generate now are prototypes - which can be seen as
bindings for the internal C++ methods implementing getters, setters, and
methods - as well as object constructors, i.e. bindings for the internal
create_with_global_object() method.
Also tweak the naming of various CMake glue code existing around this.
Parse emoji from emoji-serenity.txt to allow displaying their names and
grouping them together in the EmojiInputDialog.
This also adds an "Unknown" value to the EmojiGroup enum. This will be
useful for emoji that aren't found in the UCD, or for when UCD downloads
are disabled.
Newer cmake's have internal functions to un-compress files. These
functions will work on pure windows - as well as linux. This
eliminates the need to search for external tools (TAR,GZIP,ZIP) - and
helps fixing #9866.
In order to finally fix#9866 we need to decide to bump the cmake
version requirements and remove the checks. If we demand a newer cmake
version, we will loose Ubuntu 20.04 as a build target - as it ships
with CMake 3.16.
For now - we keep compatibility with CMake 3.16 - and only if CMake
3.18 as been found - we use its new functionality.
Remove the Corrosion dependency, and use the now-builtin
add_jakt_executable function from the Jakt install rules to build our
example application.
By using find_package(Jakt), we now have to set ENABLE_JAKT manually on
both serenity and Lagom at the same time, so the preferred method to do
this for now is:
cmake -B Build/superbuild<arch><toolchain> \
-S Meta/CMake/Superbuild \
-DENABLE_JAKT=ON \
-DJAKT_SOURCE_DIR=/path/to/jakt
Where omitting JAKT_SOURCE_DIR will still pull from the main branch of
SerenityOS/jakt. This can be done after runing Meta/serenity.sh run.
According to TR #51, the "best definition of the full set [of emojis] is
in the emoji-test.txt file". This defines not only the emoji themselves,
but the order in which they should be displayed, and what "group" of
emojis they belong to.
To enable incremental movement towards the removal of DOM object
instance wrappers, this patch adds a NO_INSTANCE argument that can be
passed to libweb_js_wrapper().
Currently, LibUnicodeData contains the generated UCD and CLDR data. Move
the UCD data to the main LibUnicode library, and rename LibUnicodeData
to LibLocaleData. This is another prepatory change to migrate to
LibLocale.
To prepare for placing all CLDR generated data in a new library,
LibLocale, this moves the code generators for the CLDR data to the
LibLocale subfolder.
The FLAC "spec tests", or rather the test suite by xiph that exercises
weird FLAC features and edge cases, can be found at
https://github.com/ietf-wg-cellar/flac-test-files and is a good
challenge for our FLAC decoder to become more spec compliant. Running
these tests is similar to LibWasm spec tests, you need to pass
INCLUDE_FLAC_SPEC_TESTS to CMake.
As of integrating these tests, 23 out of 63 fail. :yakplus:
The current emoji_txt.cmake does not handle download errors (which were
a common source of issues in the build problems channel) or Unicode
versioning. These are both handled by unicode_data.cmake. Move the
download to unicode_data.cmake so that we can more easily handle next
month's Unicode 15 release.
Instead of manually updating emoji.txt whenever new emoji are added,
we use Unicode's emoji-test.txt to generate emoji.txt on each build,
including only the emojis that Serenity supports at that time.
By using emoji-test.txt, we can also include all forms of each emoji
(fully-qualified, minimally-qualified, and unqualified) which can be
helpful when double-checking how certain forms are handled.
We are downloading these directly into the build directory now, and
generating the source code from there, so we no longer need the
manually created directory.
While we are at it, remove two variables that seem to be no longer in
use, and at least one of which is confusing regarding a missing prefix.
This abstraction layer is mainly for ATA ports (AHCI ports, IDE ports).
The goal is to create a convenient and flexible framework so it's
possible to expand to support other types of controller (e.g. Intel PIIX
and ICH IDE controllers) and to abstract operations that are possible on
each component.
Currently only the ATA IDE code is affected by this, making it much
cleaner and readable - the ATA bus mastering code is moved to the
ATAPort code so more implementations in the near future can take
advantage of such functionality easily.
In addition to that, the hierarchy of the ATA IDE code resembles more of
the SATA AHCI code now, which means the IDEChannel class is solely
responsible for getting interrupts, passing them for further processing
in the ATAPort code to take care of the rest of the handling logic.
Parts of our build system and scripts rely on the fact that we are
cross-compiling. For now, remove the "try to build natively" part to get
the build running and leave a TODO for later.
Plural rules in the CLDR are of the form:
"cs": {
"pluralRule-count-one": "i = 1 and v = 0 @integer 1",
"pluralRule-count-few": "i = 2..4 and v = 0 @integer 2~4",
"pluralRule-count-many": "v != 0 @decimal 0.0~1.5, 10.0, 100.0 ...",
"pluralRule-count-other": "@integer 0, 5~19, 100, 1000, 10000 ..."
}
The syntax is described here:
https://unicode.org/reports/tr35/tr35-numbers.html#Plural_rules_syntax
There are up to 2 sets of rules for each locale, a cardinal set and an
ordinal set. The approach here is to generate a C++ function for each
set of rules. Each condition in the rules (e.g. "i = 1 and v = 0") is
transpiled to a C++ if-statement within its function. Then lookup tables
are generated to match locales to their generated functions.
NOTE: -Wno-parentheses-equality is added to the LibUnicodeData compile
flags because the generated plural rules have lots of extra parentheses
(because e.g. we need to selectively negate and combine rules). The code
to generate only exactly the right number of parentheses is quite hairy,
so this just tells the compiler to ignore the extras.
Add overrides for serenity_bin and serenity_lib to allow the actual
CMakeLists.txt from Userland to be used to build as many services as
possible without adding more clutter to Meta/Lagom/CMakeLists.txt
In preparation for future refactoring of Lagom, let's use the variables
from GNUInstallDirs as much as possible for the helper macros and other
scripts used by the main build already.
The Mach-O file format does not have ELF's interposition rules, so this
flag does not make sense for macOS builds. While GCC silently accepts
the unsupported option, Clang issues a warning for it.
This commit makes it possible to build Lagom with LLVM from Homebrew.