This patch introduces code generation for the WindowServer IPC with
its clients. The client/server endpoints are defined by the two .ipc
files in Servers/WindowServer/: WindowServer.ipc and WindowClient.ipc
It now becomes significantly easier to add features and capabilities
to WindowServer since you don't have to know nearly as much about all
the intricate paths that IPC messages take between LibGUI and WSWindow.
The new system also uses significantly less IPC bandwidth since we're
now doing packed serialization instead of passing fixed-sized structs
of ~600 bytes for each message.
Some repaint coalescing optimizations are lost in this conversion and
we'll need to look at how to implement those in the new world.
The old CoreIPC::Client::Connection and CoreIPC::Server::Connection
classes are removed by this patch and replaced by use of ConnectionNG,
which will be renamed eventually.
Goodbye, old WindowServer IPC. You served us well :^)
This patch adds these I/O counters to each thread:
- (Inode) file read bytes
- (Inode) file write bytes
- Unix socket read bytes
- Unix socket write bytes
- IPv4 socket read bytes
- IPv4 socket write bytes
These are then exposed in /proc/all and seen in SystemMonitor.
Previously it was not possible to see what each thread in a process was
up to, or how much CPU it was consuming. This patch fixes that.
SystemMonitor and "top" now show threads instead of just processes.
"ps" is gonna need some more fixing, but it at least builds for now.
Fixes#66.
This opens the source of the current document in TextEditor.
For file:// URLs, we open the local file, but for all other protocols,
a temporary file is generated, containing the document source.
Longer-term we should build some kind of viewer into the Browser app
instead. That would avoid silly problems like how this forgets to
delete the temporary files, for instance :^)
Instead of implicitly copying whatever you select, and pasting when you
middle-click, let's have traditional copy and paste actions bound to
Ctrl+Shift+C and Ctrl+Shift+V respectively.
This patch adds pthread_create() and pthread_exit(), which currently
simply wrap our existing create_thread() and exit_thread() syscalls.
LibThread is also ported to using LibPthread.
The Launcher's functionality has been replaced by the app shortcuts in
the system menu.
There were various window management hacks to ensure that the launcher
stayed below all other windows while also being movable, etc.
This simple helper escapes '<', '>' and '&' so they can be used in HTML
text without interfering with the parser.
Use this in IRCClient to prevent incoming messages from messing with
the DOM :^)
Renamed "Position" to "Elapsed". "channel/channels" automatically
changes now when more than one channel exist. The current file name
is now displayed in the window title.
This seemed like a perfect fit for LibHTML. We can now style the IRC
channels and queries however we like with the power of HTML and CSS.
This patch doesn't do much in the way of styling, it just gets the
basic mechanism into place.
When attempting to open a file that doesnt exist or has permission
problems, the application would end after hitting OK on the message
box instead of starting up to an empty editor.
I believe this has something to do with the dialog event loop
interfering with the application event loop, or possibly the fact
that the window creation code is in the show() method.
To work around this I now call the open_file() method after the
show() method.
Instead of quitting the application immediately when the pty gives an
EOF, fire an on_command_exit hook so the TerminalWidget client can
decide for himself what to do.
Instead, have TerminalWidget provide an on_title_change hook.
This allows embedders to decide for themselves what to do if we receive
a "set terminal title" escape sequence.