On macOS, CMake incorrectly tries to add and/or remove rpaths from files
that it has already processed when it performs installation. Setting the
rpaths during the build process ensures that they are only set once, and
as a bonus, makes installation slightly more performant.
Fixes#10055.
When deleting a directory, the rmdir syscall should fail if the path was
unveiled without the 'c' permission. This matches the same behavior that
OpenBSD enforces when doing this kind of operation.
When deleting a file, the unlink syscall should fail if the path was
unveiled without the 'w' permission, to ensure that userspace is aware
of the possibility of removing a file only when the path was unveiled as
writable.
When using the userdel utility, we now unveil that directory path with
the unveil 'c' permission so removal of an account home directory is
done properly.
This ensures that the RAM does not fill up with already processed
coredumps when many tests crash (as is the case on AArch64). We only
do this in self-test mode so as to avoid racing CrashDaemon.
Previously `usleep()` was being used, which was being passed a 32-bit
signed integer as a parameter. This caused an overflow for intervals
larger than 2147 seconds.
URL filtering was taking up a huge amount of time when burning through
the tests. We're not gonna have a bunch of ads to block in our local
tests, so let's just turn it off when running them.
This will make it a lot easier to understand what went wrong, especially
when the failure occurs on CI but not at home.
And of course, use LibDiff to generate the diff! :^)
Neither Azure Pipelines' log viewer, nor macOS Terminal.app support full
24-bit RGB color codes, causing the text output to be displayed
incorrectly. Fix this by using one of the 16 standard colors.
Most terminal emulators use a relatively dark shade for red by default,
as seen in the "ANSI escape code" Wikipedia article, so change the
foreground color to white to preserve contrast.
Instead of starting a new headless-browser for every layout & text test,
headless-browser now gets a mode where it runs all the tests in a single
process.
This is massively faster on my machine, taking a full LibWeb test run
from 14 seconds to less than 1 second. Hopefully it will be a similarly
awesome improvement on CI where it has been soaking up more and more
time lately. :^)
This is a clear sign that they want to use a UnixDateTime instead.
This also adds support for placing durations and date times into SQL
databases via their millisecond offset to UTC.
"Wherever applicable" = most places, actually :^), especially for
networking and filesystem timestamps.
This includes changes to unzip, which uses DOSPackedTime, since that is
changed for the FAT file systems.
That's what this class really is; in fact that's what the first line of
the comment says it is.
This commit does not rename the main files, since those will contain
other time-related classes in a little bit.
This is useful for timing just decoder performance.
(It'd be nice to add a `-t` flag that prints timings for all
the different phases, but for now just disabling writing is
sufficient for me.)
Previously, we were comparing the "tty" value from
`/sys/kernel/processes` to the TTY value from
`/var/run/utmp` directly. This caused the "WHAT" column to always show
"N/A", because the former is the TTY pseudo name, while the latter is
the full device name.