Bytes in the 0x80..0x9F range were treated as C1 control codes,
which prevented them from being parsed as UTF-8 bytes.
This caused some characters (like U+DF, encoded as 0xC3 0x9F)
from being recognized as printable characters.
Since we now store intermediate characters separately, the intermediates
should be checked for the presence of the '?' DEC private marker, not
the first parameter.
This commit replaces the former, hand-written parser with a new one that
can be generated automatically according to a state change diagram.
The new `EscapeSequenceParser` class provides a more ergonomic interface
to dealing with escape sequences. This interface has been inspired by
Alacritty's [vte library](https://github.com/alacritty/vte/).
I tried to avoid changing the application logic inside the `Terminal`
class. While this code has not been thoroughly tested, I can't find
regressions in the basic command line utilities or `vttest`.
`Terminal` now displays nicer debug messages when it encounters an
unknown escape sequence. Defensive programming and bounds checks have
been added where we access parameters, and as a result, we can now
endure 4-5 seconds of `cat /dev/urandom`. :D
We generate EscapeSequenceStateMachine.h when building the in-kernel
LibVT, and we assume that the file is already in place when the userland
library is being built. This will probably cause problems later on, but
I can't find a way to do it nicely.
SPDX License Identifiers are a more compact / standardized
way of representing file license information.
See: https://spdx.dev/resources/use/#identifiers
This was done with the `ambr` search and replace tool.
ambr --no-parent-ignore --key-from-file --rep-from-file key.txt rep.txt *
I hereby declare these to be full nouns that we don't split,
neither by space, nor by underscore:
- Breadcrumbbar
- Coolbar
- Menubar
- Progressbar
- Scrollbar
- Statusbar
- Taskbar
- Toolbar
This patch makes everything consistent by replacing every other variant
of these with the proper one. :^)
(...and ASSERT_NOT_REACHED => VERIFY_NOT_REACHED)
Since all of these checks are done in release builds as well,
let's rename them to VERIFY to prevent confusion, as everyone is
used to assertions being compiled out in release.
We can introduce a new ASSERT macro that is specifically for debug
checks, but I'm doing this wholesale conversion first since we've
accumulated thousands of these already, and it's not immediately
obvious which ones are suitable for ASSERT.
Don't fire the on_terminal_size hook while we're in relayout.
This fixes the terminal window flopping around during interactive
resizing. (It was mostly noticeable if something else was hogging
the CPU at the same time.)