This makes the Scheduler a lot leaner by not having to evaluate
block conditions every time it is invoked. Instead evaluate them as
the states change, and unblock threads at that point.
This also implements some more waitid/waitpid/wait features and
behavior. For example, WUNTRACED and WNOWAIT are now supported. And
wait will now not return EINTR when SIGCHLD is delivered at the
same time.
This adds the ability to pass a pointer to kernel thread/process.
Also add the ability to use a closure as thread function, which
allows passing information to a kernel thread more easily.
Use the TimerQueue to expire blocking operations, which is one less thing
the Scheduler needs to check on every iteration.
Also, add a BlockTimeout class that will automatically handle relative or
absolute timeouts as well as overriding timeouts (e.g. socket timeouts)
more consistently.
Also, rework the TimerQueue class to be able to fire events from
any processor, which requires Timer to be RefCounted. Also allow
creating id-less timers for use by blocking operations.
To initiate drag-to-select, the user can move the mouse to near the edge
of a cell, and click-and-drag when the cursor changes to a crosshair.
Fixes#4167.
When `DontInvalidIndexes` is passed, be optimistic and keep the old
indices when the model validates them.
This is currently fine, as the group of models that use
DontInvalidateIndexes use it as "The old indices are still ok" (there's
a note about this in ProcessModel.cpp).
Every time the scrollbar reaches the end, we append 100 more rows
(seamlessly!).
As a result of defaulting to 100 rows, we can also save with the
smallest number of rows required.
This partially deals with #4170.
If the offset is zero and we're already at the end of the lexer's input
an out of bounds read (m_source[m_position]) would occur.
Also check that the offset is not more than m_position (which should
never be the case, and would result in m_position underflowing).
Fixes#4253.
We were incorrectly hoisting non-inline children of inline-block boxes
to the nearest non-inline ancestor.
Since inline-block boxes are only inline on the *outside*, it's fine
for them to have non-inline children.
Eventually we should clarify these relationships by making the inside
and outside display types more explicit.
That's just silly :)
Also fix that one use of read_line() which assumes it will
null-terminated in mount.cpp (this would've blown up if the IODevice was
at EOF and had a line with the same size as max_size).
There are cases where Lagom will build with GCC but not Clang.
This often goes unnoticed for a while as we don't often build with
Clang.
However, this is now important to test in CI because of the
OSS-Fuzz integration.
Note that this only tests the build, it does not run any tests.
Note that it also only builds LagomCore, Lagom and the fuzzers.
It does not build the other programs that use Lagom.
This is a hack which can be removed once GitHub Actions changes the
default version to clang 11.
This is apparently sometime in mid-December.
Note, clang-11 is not currently available on Ubuntu 20.04. However,
GitHub Actions uses 20.04, which probably means clang-11 will
become available around that time for all 20.04 users.
We added OSS-Fuzz integration in #4154, but documentation about it
is spread across several pull requests, IRC, and issues. Let's collect
the important bits in the ReadMe.