This changes Web::Bindings::throw_dom_exception_if_needed() to return a
JS::ThrowCompletionOr instead of an Optional. This allows callers to
wrap the invocation with a TRY() macro instead of making a follow-up
call to should_return_empty(). Further, this removes all invocations to
vm.exception() in the generated bindings.
This also required converting URLSearchParams::for_each and the callback
function it invokes to ThrowCompletionOr. With this, the ReturnType enum
used by WrapperGenerator is removed as all callers would be using
ReturnType::Completion.
On my machine, this script took about 3.4 seconds, and was responsible
for essentially all of the time taken by the precommit hook.
The script is a faithful 1:1 reimplementation, even the regexes are
identical. And yet, it takes about 0.02 seconds, making the pre-commit
hook lightning fast again. Apparently python is just faster in this
case.
Fun fact:
- Just reading all ~4000 files took bash about 1.2 seconds
- Checking the license took another 1.8 seconds in total
- Checking for math.h took another 0.4 seconds in total
- Checking for '#pragma once' took another 0.4 seconds in total
The timing is highly load-dependent, so they don't exactly add up to 3.4
seconds. However, it's good enough to determine that bash is no longer
fit for the purpose of this script.
'bootmode' now only controls which set of services are started by
SystemServer, so it is more appropriate to rename it to system_mode, and
no longer validate it in the Kernel.
Bootmode used to control framebuffers, panic behavior, and SystemServer.
This patch factors framebuffer control into a separate flag.
Note that the combination 'bootmode=self-test fbdev=on' leads to
unexpected behavior, which can only be fixed in a later commit.
This makes all pages look and feel the same, because they all use the
default CSS generated by pandoc. Also, it inserts the banner everywhere
at the top, not only into the top-level index.html.
Credit to @xSlendiX for suggesting that `-B` works here.
To ensure everything works as expected, a unit test was added with
multiple scenarios.
This binary has to have the SetUID flag, and we also bind-mount the
/usr/Tests directory to allow running of SetUID binaries.
Both at the same time because many of them call construct() in call()
and I'm not keen on adding a bunch of temporary plumbing to turn
exceptions into throw completions.
Also changes the return value of construct() to Object* instead of Value
as it always needs to return an object; allowing an arbitrary Value is a
massive foot gun.
The old versions were renamed to JS_DECLARE_OLD_NATIVE_FUNCTION and
JS_DEFINE_OLD_NATIVE_FUNCTION, and will be eventually removed once all
native functions were converted to the new format.
Adds support for methods whose last parameter is a variadic DOMString.
We constructor a Vector<String> of the remaining arguments to pass to
the C++ implementation.
As of the Clang 13 upgrade, we only need to build the toolchain once and
can use that toolchain for both x86_64 and i686. To do this, this breaks
the main Azure configuration into 3 "stages" (Lagom, Toolchain, and
Serenity), where the Serenity stage depends on the Toolchain stage.
This has the added benefit of uploading a new prebuilt toolchain cache
sooner than before, which should help alleviate pressure from PRs.
This commit updates the Clang toolchain's version to 13.0.0, which comes
with better C++20 support and improved handling of new features by
clang-format. Due to the newly enabled `-Bsymbolic-functions` flag, our
Clang binaries will only be 2-4% slower than if we dynamically linked
them, but we save hundreds of megabytes of disk space.
The `BuildClang.sh` script has been reworked to build the entire
toolchain in just three steps: one for the compiler, one for GNU
binutils, and one for the runtime libraries. This reduces the complexity
of the build script, and will allow us to modify the CI configuration to
only rebuild the libraries when our libc headers change.
Most of the compile flags have been moved out to a separate CMake cache
file, similarly to how the Android and Fuchsia toolchains are
implemented within the LLVM repo. This provides a nicer interface than
the heaps of command-line arguments.
We no longer build separate toolchains for each architecture, as the
same Clang binary can compile code for multiple targets.
The horrible mess that `SERENITY_CLANG_ARCH` was, has been removed in
this commit. Clang happily accepts an `i686-pc-serenity` target triple,
which matches what our GCC toolchain accepts.