This was added in commit f2663f477f as a
partial implementation of what is now LibWeb's forgiving Base64 decoder.
All use cases within LibWeb that require whitespace skipping now use
that implementation instead.
Removing this feature from AK allows us to know the exact output size of
a decoded Base64 string. We can still trim whitespace at the start and
end of the input though; for example, this is useful when reading from a
file that may have a newline at the end of the file.
This encoding scheme comes from section 5 of RFC 4648, as an
alternative to the standard base64 encode/decode methods.
The only difference is that the last two characters are replaced
with '-' and '_', as '+' and '/' are not safe in URLs or filenames.
This commit un-deprecates DeprecatedString, and repurposes it as a byte
string.
As the null state has already been removed, there are no other
particularly hairy blockers in repurposing this type as a byte string
(what it _really_ is).
This commit is auto-generated:
$ xs=$(ack -l \bDeprecatedString\b\|deprecated_string AK Userland \
Meta Ports Ladybird Tests Kernel)
$ perl -pie 's/\bDeprecatedString\b/ByteString/g;
s/deprecated_string/byte_string/g' $xs
$ clang-format --style=file -i \
$(git diff --name-only | grep \.cpp\|\.h)
$ gn format $(git ls-files '*.gn' '*.gni')
Note that in some cases (in particular SQL::Result and PDFErrorOr),
there is no Formatter defined for the error type, hence TRY_OR_FAIL
cannot work as-is. Furthermore, this commit leaves untouched the places
where MUST could be replaced by TRY_OR_FAIL.
Inspired by:
https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/pull/18710#discussion_r1186892445
We have a new, improved string type coming up in AK (OOM aware, no null
state), and while it's going to use UTF-8, the name UTF8String is a
mouthful - so let's free up the String name by renaming the existing
class.
Making the old one have an annoying name will hopefully also help with
quick adoption :^)
In the long-term, we should probably have a way to signal decoding
failure. For now, it should suffice to at least not crash. This is
particularly relevant because apparently this can be triggered while
parsing a PEM certificate, which happens during every TLS connection.
Found by OSS Fuzz
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=38979