As a consequence, move to use an explicit handshake() method rather than
calling virtuals from the constructor. This seemed to not bother
AClientConnection, but LibGUI crashes (rightfully) because of it.
The center of this is now an ABuffer class in LibAudio.
ABuffer contains ASample, which has two channels (left/right) in
floating point for mixing purposes, in 44100hz.
This means that the loaders (AWavLoader in this case) needs to do some
manipulation to get things in the right format, but that we don't need
to care after format loading is done.
While we're at it, do some correctness fixes. PCM data is unsigned if
it's 8 bit, but 16 bit is signed. And /dev/audio also wants signed 16
bit audio, so give it what it wants.
On top of this, AudioServer now accepts requests to play a buffer.
The IPC mechanism here is pretty much a 1:1 copy-paste from
LibGUI/WindowServer. It can be generalized more in the future, but for
now I want to get AudioServer working decently first :)
Additionally, add a little "aplay" tool to load and play a WAV file. It
will break with large WAVs (run out of memory, heh...) but it's a start.
Future work needs to make AudioServer block buffer submission from
clients until it has played the buffer they are requesting to play.
Update ProcessManager, top and WSCPUMonitor to handle the new format.
Since the kernel is not allowed to use floating-point math, we now compile
the JSON classes in AK without JsonValue::Type::Double support.
To accomodate large unsigned ints, I added a JsonValue::Type::UnsignedInt.
This needs more work and polish, but it's a step in a more pleasant and
useful direction.
Also turn QuickShow into a fully-fledged "application". (By that, I really
just mean giving it its own Applications/ subdirectory.)
It's kinda funny how I can make a mistake like this in Serenity and then
get so used to it by spending lots of time using this API that I start to
believe that this is how printf() always worked..
We'll now try to detect crashes that were due to dereferencing nullptr,
uninitialized malloc() memory, or recently free()'d memory.
It's not perfect but I think it's pretty good. :^)
Also added some color to the most important parts of the crash log,
and added some more modes to /bin/crash for exercising this code.
Fixes#243.
I originally called it "linear" because that's how the Intel manual names
virtual addresses in many cases. I'm ready to accept that most people know
this as "virtual" so let's just call it that.
LookupServer can now take two types of requests:
* L: Lookup
* R: Reverse lookup
The /bin/host program now does a reverse lookup if the input string is a
valid IPv4 address. :^)
* allow specifying files as arguments, e.g. `head a b c`
* support multiple files
* print a filename header when multiple files are being printed
* allow suppression or forcing of filename header via flags
This change drops support for the legacy `-123` syntax in favour of the
more widely-supported `-n 123` form.
fixes#105