SDL brings with it an annoying issue whereby trying to resize the window
before Serenity starts up prevents it from automatically resizing to fit
the screen.
This patch makes the previous behavior (i.e using the GTK backend) the
default unless SERENITY_SCREENS is greater than 1.
We need some overflow checks due to the implementation of TmpFS.
When size_t is 32 bits and off_t is 64 bits, we might overflow our
KBuffer max size and confuse the KBuffer set_size code, causing a VERIFY
failure. Make sure that resulting offset + size will fit in a size_t.
Another constraint, we make sure that the resulting offset + size will
be less than half of the maximum value of a size_t, because we double
the KBuffer size each time we resize it.
This test exposed a kernel panic in is_user_range calculations, so let's
convert it to be a LibTest test so we can prevent regressions in mmap,
the page allocator, and the memory manager.
We had an inconsistency in valid user addresses. is_user_range() was
checking against the kernel base address, but previous changes caused
the maximum valid user addressable range to be 32 MiB below that.
This patch stops mmap(MAP_FIXED) of a range between these two bounds
from panic-ing the kernel in RangeAllocator::allocate_specific.
Previously we would simply assume that Region allocation always
succeeded. There is still one such assumption when splitting user
regions inside a Space. That will be dealt with in a separate commit.
Let's bring this class back, but without the confusing resize() API.
A FixedArray<T> is simply a fixed-size array of T.
The size is provided at run-time, unlike Array<T> where the size is
provided at compile-time.
It is not legal to resize a VMObject after it has been created.
As far as I can tell, this code would never actually run since the
object was already populated with physical pages due to using
AllocationStrategy::AllocateNow.
Previously, VirtualFileSystem::mkdir() would always return ENOENT if
no parent custody was returned by resolve_path(). This is incorrect when
e.g. the user has no search permission in a component of the path
prefix (=> EACCES), or if on component of the path prefix is a file (=>
ENOTDIR). This patch fixes that behavior.
This was only used by a single class (AK::ByteBuffer) in the kernel
and not in an OOM-safe way.
Now that ByteBuffer no longer uses it, there's no need for the kernel
heap to burden itself with supporting this.
This class is the only reason we have to support krealloc() in the
kernel heap, something which adds a lot of complexity.
Let's move towards a simpler path and do malloc+memset in the
ByteBuffer code (where we know the sizes anyway.)
C++14 gave us sized operator delete, but we haven't been taking
advantage of it. Let's get to a point where it can help us by
adding kfree_sized(void*, size_t).
`Element::tag_name` return an uppercase version of the tag name. However
the `Web::HTML::TagNames` values are all lowercase.
This change fixes that using `Element::local_name`, which returns a
lowercase value.