Utf8View wraps a StringView and implements begin() and end() that
return a Utf8CodepointIterator, which parses UTF-8-encoded Unicode
codepoints and returns them as 32-bit integers.
This is the first step towards supporting emojis in Serenity ^)
https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/issues/490
When printing hex numbers, we were printing the wrong thing sometimes. This
was because we were dividing the digit to print by 15 instead of 16. Also,
dividing by 16 is the same as shifting four bits to the right, which is a
bit closer to our actual intention in this case, so let's use a shift
instead.
This way, primitive JsonValue serialization is still handled by
JsonValue::serialize(), but JsonArray and JsonObject serialization
always goes through serializer classes. This is no less efficient
if you have the whole JSON in memory already.
We use consumable annotations to catch bugs where you get the .value()
of an Optional before verifying that it's okay.
The bug here was that only has_value() would set the consumed state,
even though operator bool() does the same job.
Normally you want to access the T&, but sometimes you need to grab at
the NonnullPtr, for example when moving it out of the Vector before
a call to remove(). This is generally a weird pattern, but I don't have
a better solution at the moment.
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! :^)
Add the concept of a PeekType to Traits<T>. This is the type we'll
return (wrapped in an Optional) from HashMap::get().
The PeekType for OwnPtr<T> and NonnullOwnPtr<T> is const T*,
which means that HashMap::get() will return an Optional<const T*> for
maps-of-those.
Okay, so, OwnPtr<T>::release_nonnull() returns a NonnullOwnPtr<T>.
It assumes that the OwnPtr is non-null to begin with.
Note that this removes the value from the OwnPtr, as there can only be
a single owner.
The printf formatting mini-language actually allows you
to pass a '*' character in place of the fill width specification,
in which case it eats one of the passed in arguments and uses it
as width, so implement that.
This replaces Optional<T>(U&&) which clang-tidy complained may hide the
regular copy and move constructors. That's a good point, clang-tidy,
and I appreciate you pointing that out!
This allows us to take advantage of the now-optimized (to do memmove())
Vector::append(const T*, int count) for collecting these strings.
This is a ~15% speedup on the load_4chan_catalog benchmark.
This can definitely be improved with better trivial type detection and
by using the TypedTransfer template in more places.
It's a bit annoying that we can't get <type_traits> in Vector.h since
it's included in the toolchain compilation before we have libstdc++.
This has several significant changes to the networking stack.
* Significant refactoring of the TCP state machine. Right now it's
probably more fragile than it used to be, but handles quite a lot
more of the handshake process.
* `TCPSocket` holds a `NetworkAdapter*`, assigned during `connect()` or
`bind()`, whichever comes first.
* `listen()` is now virtual in `Socket` and intended to be implemented
in its child classes
* `listen()` no longer works without `bind()` - this is a bit of a
regression, but listening sockets didn't work at all before, so it's
not possible to observe the regression.
* A file is exposed at `/proc/net_tcp`, which is a JSON document listing
the current TCP sockets with a bit of metadata.
* There's an `ETHERNET_VERY_DEBUG` flag for dumping packet's content out
to `kprintf`. It is, indeed, _very debug_.