This speeds things up noticeably :^)
The idea here is that a directory fd is a way to hold onto
the results of path resolution that the kernel has already done
for us. This way we don't ask the kernel to resolve the same
parent directories over and over.
The `-z,text` linker flag causes the linker to reject shared libraries
and PIE executables that have textrels. Our code mostly did not use
these except in one place in LibC, which is changed in this commit.
This makes GNU ld match LLD's behavior, which has this option enabled by
default.
TEXTRELs pose a security risk, as performing these relocations require
executable pages to be written to by the dynamic linker. This can
significantly weaken W^X hardening mitigations.
Note that after this change, TEXTRELs can still be used in ports, as the
dynamic loader code is not changed. There are also uses of it in the
kernel, removing which are outside the scope of this PR. To allow those,
`-z,notext` is added.
System Monitor can already be accessed quickly by clicking one of the
resource graph applets in the task bar, so this icon was redundant.
Assistant can be opened with the Super+Space hotkey, so we don't need a
dedicated icon for it.
Put the "Open in terminal" action next to the other navigation actions.
And separate the "New File" and "New Directory" actions from the actions
that operate on existing items.
Combine the "PCI devices" and "Processors" tabs into a "Hardware" tab.
And then remove the "Interrupts" tab because the number of received
IRQ's per device is not really useful information to expose in this GUI.
If the user needs this, he can check lsirq.
When entering FastBoxBlurFilter::apply_single_pass(), we VERIFY that the
bitmap format is BGRA8888.
This invariant allows us to use get_pixel<BGRA8888>() instead of the
generic get_pixel() throughout the function. This removes a lot of
branches and makes the filter significantly faster. :^)
We want to use use the 'du' option '--apparent-size' which is a
GNU coreutils extension. GNU coreutils is a build dependency so
we know it is available. With this commit we first try to pick up
du as 'gdu', and if that fails, try 'du' instead.
This allows the address bar to "select all" when initially gaining focus
as Firefox and Chrome do. A future improvement on this would be for the
Widget class to mange and provide focus transition as part of the events
instead of the UrlBox class. Currently focus is updated before the event
is provided to the UrlBox class.
This patchs adds a way for widgets exclude themselves from being a focus
candidate in Window::focus_a_widget_if_possible().
This is to allow the URL box to not get auto-focused when the browser
is loaded.
If the font-family property is set to a StyleValueList, we now iterate
through it, looking up each font in turn until one is found.
StyleResolver no longer needs to handle FontFamily specifically, which
is a nice bonus.
Serenity's current dependence on bitmap fonts leads to some weirdness
here - for example, the `if (!found_font)` path can trigger even if a
generic font family like "sans-serif" is used, since our default
sans-serif font might not be available in the desired size or weight.
The `monospace` variable only exists for that reason.
This is not a complete solution, by a long way! Serenity's font support
is still quite basic, so more work needs to be done there before we can
start implementing the spec's font-matching algorithm. But this is still
an improvement. :^)
The code was assuming the font-weight would be a Length, apparently
since NumericStyleValue didn't exist at the time. Now, it's always a
numeric value, so treat it as such.
We also replace the hardcoded numbers with references to the FontWeight
enum.
Also, it was always setting the weight to 900, so that has been fixed.
Previously, this made the same "everything is px" assumption as in
`StyleProperties::load_font()`, so I've replaced it with the calculation
from there.
The previous code assumed all font sizes were in px, but now we perform
the conversion. There is an existing bug with em sizes returning 0,
which seems to affect other places too - see
`NodeWithStyle::apply_style()`.
This also implements 'larger', 'smaller' and calc() font-sizes.
- More combinations of values
- Testing a font (Liberation Serif) which has multiple faces
- Add calc() tests for font-size and weight
- Check fallback when a font isn't available
While I was at it, reorganized the file so the CSS is inline - this
keeps it close to the relevant test case.
This allows for typing [8] instead of [8, 8, 8, 8] to specify the same
margin on all edges, for example. The constructors follow CSS' style of
specifying margins. The added constructors are:
- Margins(int all): Sets the same margin on all edges.
- Margins(int vertical, int horizontal): Sets the first argument to top
and bottom margins, and the second argument to left and right margins.
- Margins(int top, int vertical, int bottom): Sets the first argument to
the top margin, the second argument to the left and right margins,
and the third argument to the bottom margin.
Previously the argument order for Margins was (left, top, right,
bottom). To make it more familiar and closer to how CSS does it, the
argument order is now (top, right, bottom, left).
There was previously a case where the build-image-qemu.sh script
decided to mount an existing disk image, but without creating the
memory disk device and recording its /dev file name.
After this commit, We create the memory disk device just before
it is used to mount the disk image.
This typo / bug in the Traits<T> implementation for StringView caused
AK::HashMap methods to return a `String` when looking up values out of
a hash map of type HashTable<StringView,StringView>.
This change fixes the typo, and fixes the only consumer, the kernel
Commandline class.
We were over-hashing for the GNU build on GitHub Actions by including
the LLVM patch as well. The GNU Toolchain doesn't care about our LLVM
patches.
For Azure, fix the inversion of the condition for which jobs check which
Build*.sh script, and add the Toolchain patch files to the cache
hash calculation.
We don't need to access the Custody cache in IRQs or anything like that,
so it should be fine to use a regular Mutex (via ProtectedValue.)
This allows threads to block while waiting for the custody cache.
Thanks to Sergey for pointing this out. :^)