Having an alias function that only wraps another one is silly, and
keeping the more obvious name should flush out more uses of deprecated
strings.
No behavior change.
For now, this is limited to strings that are 3 bytes or less. We can use
7 bytes on 64-bit platforms, but we do not yet assume 64-bit for Lagom
hosts (e.g. wasm).
These instances were detected by searching for files that include
AK/Concepts.h, but don't match the regex:
\\b(AnyString|Arithmetic|ArrayLike|DerivedFrom|Enum|FallibleFunction|Flo
atingPoint|Fundamental|HashCompatible|Indexable|Integral|IterableContain
er|IteratorFunction|IteratorPairWith|OneOf|OneOfIgnoringCV|SameAs|Signed
|SpecializationOf|Unsigned|VoidFunction)\\b
(Without the linebreaks.)
This regex is pessimistic, so there might be more files that don't
actually use any concepts.
In theory, one might use LibCPP to detect things like this
automatically, but let's do this one step after another.
These instances were detected by searching for files that include
AK/StdLibExtras.h, but don't match the regex:
\\b(abs|AK_REPLACED_STD_NAMESPACE|array_size|ceil_div|clamp|exchange|for
ward|is_constant_evaluated|is_power_of_two|max|min|mix|move|_RawPtr|RawP
tr|round_up_to_power_of_two|swap|to_underlying)\\b
(Without the linebreaks.)
This regex is pessimistic, so there might be more files that don't
actually use any "extra stdlib" functions.
In theory, one might use LibCPP to detect things like this
automatically, but let's do this one step after another.
The underlying reason is an unconditional call to consume(), even if
there is no reason to expect that the string continues.
This crash was discovered by OSS-Fuzz:
https://bugs.chromium.org/p/oss-fuzz/issues/detail?id=42354
This bug exists since the code was first written in April 2021:
13abbc5ea8
Note that this still keeps the old behaviour of putting things in std by
default on serenity so the tools can be happy, but if USING_AK_GLOBALLY
is unset, AK behaves like a good citizen and doesn't try to put things
in the ::std namespace.
std::nothrow_t and its friends get to stay because I'm being told that
compilers assume things about them and I can't yeet them into a
different namespace...for now.
This will make it easier to support both string types at the same time
while we convert code, and tracking down remaining uses.
One big exception is Value::to_string() in LibJS, where the name is
dictated by the ToString AO.
We have a new, improved string type coming up in AK (OOM aware, no null
state), and while it's going to use UTF-8, the name UTF8String is a
mouthful - so let's free up the String name by renaming the existing
class.
Making the old one have an annoying name will hopefully also help with
quick adoption :^)
Otherwise, we end up propagating those dependencies into targets that
link against that library, which creates unnecessary link-time
dependencies.
Also included are changes to readd now missing dependencies to tools
that actually need them.
Even though the toolchain implicitly links against -lc, it does not know
where it should get LibC from except for the sysroot. In the case of
Clang this causes it to pick up the LibC stub instead, which might be
slightly outdated and feature missing symbols.
This is currently not an issue that manifests because we pass through
the dependency on LibC and other libraries by accident, which causes
CMake to link against the LibC target (instead of just the library),
and thus points the linker at the build output directory.
Since we are looking to fix that in the upcoming commits, let's make
sure that everything will still be able to find the proper LibC first.
SignedBigInteger::operator==(const UnsignedBigInteger&) was rejecting
all negative value before testing for equality. It now accepts negative
zero and test for a value equality with the UnsignedBigInteger.
Instead we just use a specific constructor. With this set of
constructors using curly braces for constructing is highly recommended.
As then it will not do too many implicit conversions which could lead to
unexpected loss of data or calling the much slower double constructor.
Also to ensure we don't feed (Un)SignedBigInteger infinities we throw
RangeError earlier for Durations.
This means it can take any (un)signed word of size at most Word.
This means the constructor can be disambiguated if we were to add a
double constructor :^).
This requires a change in just one test.
This allows using different options for rounding, like IEEE
roundTiesToEven, which is the mode that JS requires.
Also fix that the last word read from the bigint for the mantissa could
be shifted incorrectly leading to incorrect results.
SignedBigInteger can immediately use this by just negating the double if
the sign bit is set.
For simple cases (below 2^53) we can just convert via an u64, however
above that we need to extract the top 53 bits and use those as the
mantissa.
This function currently does not behave exactly as the JS spec specifies
however it is much less naive than the previous implementation.
Each of these strings would previously rely on StringView's char const*
constructor overload, which would call __builtin_strlen on the string.
Since we now have operator ""sv, we can replace these with much simpler
versions. This opens the door to being able to remove
StringView(char const*).
No functional changes.
These are mostly minor mistakes I've encountered while working on the
removal of StringView(char const*). The usage of builder.put_string over
Format<FormatString>::format is preferrable as it will avoid the
indirection altogether when there's no formatting to be done. Similarly,
there is no need to do format(builder, "{}", number) when
builder.put_u64(number) works equally well.
Additionally a few Strings where only constant strings were used are
replaced with StringViews.