StringView character buffer is not guaranteed to be null-terminated;
in particular it will not be null-terminated when making a substring.
This means it is not correct to check whether we've reached the end
of a StringView by comparing the next character to null; instead, we
need to do an explicit length (or pointer) comparison.
Without this function, comparing a String to a const char* will instantiate
a temporary String which is obviously not great.
Also add some missing null checks to StringView::operator==(const char*).
String&& is just not very practical. Also return const String& when the
returned string is a member variable. The call site is free to make a copy
if he wants, but otherwise we can avoid the retain count churn.
This is useful when you want to ensure some little thing happens when you
exit a certain scope.
This patch makes use of it in LibC's netdb code to make sure we close the
connection to the LookupServer.
This is a small change to the existing split() functionality to support
the case of splitting a string and stopping at a certain number of
tokens. This is useful for parsing e.g. key/value pairs, where the value
may contain the delimiter you're splitting on.
We should work towards a pattern where we take StringView as function
arguments, and store String as member, to push the String construction
to the last possible moment.
Also run it across the whole tree to get everything using the One True Style.
We don't yet run this in an automated fashion as it's a little slow, but
there is a snippet to do so in makeall.sh.
This is in preparation for eventually using it in userspace.
LinearAddress.h has not been moved for the time being (as it seems to be
only used by a very small part of the code).
The scheduler expects m_select_timeout to act as a deadline. That is, it
should contain the time that a task should wake at -- but we were
directly copying the time from userspace, which meant that it always
returned virtually immediately.
At the same time, fix CEventLoop to not rely on the broken select behavior
by subtracting the current time from the time of the nearest timer.
This makes out-of-tree linking possible. And at the same time, add a
CMakeToolchain.txt file that can be used to build arbitrary cmake-using
applications on Serenity by pointing to the CMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE when
running cmake:
-DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=~/code/serenity/Toolchain/CMakeToolchain.txt