This is an encapsulation of the common work done by all of our
single-client IPC servers on startup:
1. Create a Core::LocalSocket, taking over an accepted fd.
2. Create an application-specific ClientConnection object,
wrapping the socket.
It's not a huge change in terms of lines saved, but I do feel that it
improves expressiveness. :^)
Normally, it's the TTY layer's job to translate '\n' into the separate
'\r' and '\n' control characters needed by the terminal to move the
cursor to the first column of the next line.
(see 5d80debc1f).
In HackStudio, we directly inject data into the TerminalWidget to
display command status. This means that this automatic translation
doesn't happen, so we need to explicitly give it the '\r' too.
When we run the Preprocessor from the CppComprehensionEngine of
the language server, we don't want the preprocessor to crash if it
encounters an invalid preprocessor statement (for example, an #endif
statement without an accompanying previous #if statement).
To achieve this, this commit adds an "ignore_invalid_statements" flag
to the preprocessor which is set by the CppComprehensionEngine.
Fixes#11064.
The maximal crash frequency of the language server was previously 3
seconds, but in practice it was too high.
When working with larger projects the language server can get into a
"crash and respawn" loop that takes more than 3 seconds.
10 seconds seems like a reasonable threshold beyond which we no longer
attempt to respawn the server.
When respawning the language server, we only need to send the content
of opened files to the server.
The on-disk content of files that are not currently open is up to
date, so the server can read them on its own.
With this change, System::foo() becomes Core::System::foo().
Since LibCore builds on other systems than SerenityOS, we now have to
make sure that wrappers work with just a standard C library underneath.
We now decrement the return address of the previous frame by one to get
the address of the call instruction and use this address in the
backtrace.
This results in more accurate source position information than what we
previously had when using the return address.
Derivatives of Core::Object should be constructed through
ClassName::construct(), to avoid handling ref-counted objects with
refcount zero. Fixing the visibility means that misuses like this are
more difficult.
Previously the autocomplete box would always close after applying a
suggestion. This is the desired behavior in almost all cases, but there
are some situations (like autocompleting paths) where it would be nicer
to keep the autocomplete box open after applying the suggestion.
Previously we had a special case in order to auto-append quotes or
angle brackets to #include statements. After the previous commit this
is no longer necessary.
There are times when it is nice to display one suggestion but fill
something different. This lays the groundwork for allowing
GMLAutocompleteProvider to automatically add ': ' to the end of
suggested properties, while keeping the ': ' suffix from cluttering up
the suggestion UI.
Instead of doing layout synchronously whenever something changes,
we now use a basic event loop timer to defer and coalesce relayouts.
If you did something that requires a relayout of the page, make sure
to call Document::set_needs_layout() and it will get coalesced with all
the other layout updates.
There's lots of room for improvement here, but this already makes many
web pages significantly snappier. :^)
Also, note that this exposes a number of layout bugs where we have been
relying on multiple relayouts to calculate the correct dimensions for
things. Now that we only do a single layout in many cases, these kind of
problems are much more noticeable. That should also make them easier to
figure out and fix. :^)
This is a helpful option to prevent unwanted side effects, distinguish
between user and programmatic input, etc. Sliders and SpinBoxes were
implementing it idiosyncratically, so let's generalize the API and
give Buttons and TextEditors the same ability.