It is now possible to unmount file systems from the VFS via `umount`.
It works via looking up the `fsid` of the filesystem from the `Inode`'s
metatdata so I'm not sure how fragile it is. It seems to work for now
though as something to get us going.
Using the new get_process_name() syscall, we can automatically prefix
all userspace debug logging.
Hopefully this is more helpful than annoying. We'll find out! :^)
WindowServer was led to believe that the Terminal window had an alpha
channel that had to be respected by the compositor. This caused us to
always consider it as non-opaque when culling dirty rects in compose.
We can't rely on all hardware to give us a way to flip between the back
and front buffer.
This mode should actually perform slightly better but may show some tearing
as we don't have a way to know when we're in vertical retrace.
We were forced to do this because the page fault code would fall apart
when trying to generate a backtrace for a non-current thread.
This issue has been fixed for a while now, so let's go back to lazily
loading executable pages which should make everything a little better.
This needs to be applied consistently in the rest of this UI, but here
is a start. I can't figure out what the right look should be right now
so I'm just gonna commit it this way and we'll work it out later. :^)
You can now set a GTableCellPaintingDelegate per column in GTableView.
For columns with a painting delegate set, the view will defer to the
delegate for painting each cell in that column.
Add the concept of a PeekType to Traits<T>. This is the type we'll
return (wrapped in an Optional) from HashMap::get().
The PeekType for OwnPtr<T> and NonnullOwnPtr<T> is const T*,
which means that HashMap::get() will return an Optional<const T*> for
maps-of-those.
Okay, so, OwnPtr<T>::release_nonnull() returns a NonnullOwnPtr<T>.
It assumes that the OwnPtr is non-null to begin with.
Note that this removes the value from the OwnPtr, as there can only be
a single owner.
This optimization was broken since who-knows-when. Now we once again do
our best to only repaint the lines that had the "dirty" flag set.
This dramatically reduces the amount of work done by an idle Terminal
since the cursor blinking won't redraw the whole window anymore. :^)
This patch adds the mprotect() syscall to allow changing the protection
flags for memory regions. We don't do any region splitting/merging yet,
so this only works on whole mmap() regions.
Added a "crash -r" flag to verify that we crash when you attempt to
write to read-only memory. :^)
We manage the checked state of these buttons manually in the code, and
we don't want the user to interfere with it, which would be possible if
we put them in checkable state.
This changes the behavior of the "is_checkable" flag on GAbstractButton
to only be about user interaction checkability. In other words, it now
only prevents the user from checking/unchecking the button, the code.
This fixes an issue where we'd send a "cursor has left the window"
message incorrectly to the client after a button was clicked and the
user moved the cursor a little without releasing the button.
The issue was that we didn't update the 'hovered_window' out param
in mouse event processing in the case where we had an active input
window set.
Now that we're bringing back the in-kernel virtual console, we should
move towards having a single implementation of terminal emulation.
This patch rips out the emulation code from the Terminal application
and turns it into the beginnings of LibVT.
The basic design idea is that users of VT::Terminal will implement and
provide a VT::TerminalClient subclass to handle presentation-specific
things. We'll need to iterate on this, but it's a start. :^)
TTY::emit is called from an IRQ handler, and is used to push input data
into a buffer for later retrieval. Previously this was using DoubleBuffer,
but that class wants to take a lock. Our lock code wants to make sure
interrupts are enabled, but they're disabled while an IRQ handler is
running. This made the kernel sad, but this CircularQueue cheers it up by
avoiding the lock requirement completely.
This should probably call out to a login program at some point. Right now
it just puts a root terminal on tty{1,2,3}.
Remember not to leave your Serenity workstation unattended!
Our logic for using the ATA_CMD_CACHE_FLUSH functionality was a bit wrong,
and now it's better.
The ATA spec says these two things:
> The device shall enter the interrupt pending state when:
> 1) any command except a PIO data-in command reaches command completion
> successfully;
> ...
> The device shall exit the interrupt pending state when:
> 1) the device is selected, BSY is cleared to zero, and the Status
> register is read;
This means that our sequence of actions was probably never going to work.
We were waiting in a loop checking the status register until it left the
busy state, _then_ waiting for an interrupt. Unfortunately by checking the
status register, we were _clearing_ the interrupt we were about to wait
for.
Now we just wait for the interrupt - we don't poll the status register at
all. This also means that once we get our `wait_for_irq` method sorted out
we'll spend a bunch less CPU time waiting for things to complete.