This is not simply an inversion of the Slightly Smiling Face emoji.
The facial features were flipped vertically but the underlying "face"
was kept the same, because for both emojis the top is lighter than the
bottom.
This fixes an issue where continuously posting new events to the queue
would keep the event loop saturated, causing it to ignore notifiers.
Since notifiers are part of the big select(), we always have to call
wait_for_events() even if there are pending events. We're already smart
enough to select() without a timeout if we already have pending events.
In the case of a syntax error the shell parser prints an error message
to stderr and returns an empty Vector<Command> - in that case we
shouldn't try to determine whether or not we can continue parsing but
abort immediately - is_complete() expects that *something* was parsed
successfully.
Fixes#2251.
Instead of relying on the GUI code to handle UTF-8, we now process
and parse the incoming data into 32-bit codepoints ourselves.
This means that you can now show emojis in the terminal and they will
only take up one character cell each. :^)
You can now mark String message parameters with the [UTF8] attribute.
This will cause the generated decoder to perform UTF-8 validation and
reject the message if the given parameter is not a valid UTF-8 string.
This frees up the receiving side from having to do this validation at
a higher level.
This was a holdover from the old times when each Process had a special
main thread with TID 0. Using it was a total crapshoot since it would
just return whichever thread was first on the process's thread list.
Now that I've removed all uses of it, we don't need it anymore. :^)
Instead of falling back to the suspicious "any_thread()" mechanism,
just fail with ESRCH if you try to kill() a PID that doesn't have a
corresponding TID.
This was supposed to be the foundation for some kind of pre-kernel
environment, but nobody is working on it right now, so let's move
everything back into the kernel and remove all the confusion.
We stopped using gettimeofday() in Core::EventLoop a while back,
in favor of clock_gettime() for monotonic time.
Maintaining an optimization for a syscall we're not using doesn't make
a lot of sense, so let's go back to the old-style sys$gettimeofday().
This stopped working quite some time ago due to Clang losing track of
typestates for some reason and everything becoming "unknown".
Since we're primarily using GCC anyway, it doesn't seem worth it to try
and maintain this non-working experiment for a secondary compiler.
Also it doesn't look like the Clang team is actively maintaining this
flag anyway. So good-bye, -Wconsumed. :/
Store the offset in the string table for the DT_SONAME entry. Now that
the build uses cmake, cmake is helpfully passing --Wl,-soname to the
linker for shared objects. This makes the LinkDemo run again.
It will listen for clipboard content changes in the backgroud. Once you click
on its icon, it will pop up a window listing all recorded clipboard contents.
You can then double-click on an item to copy it again.
We will now actually use MIME types for clipboard. The default type is now
"text/plain" (instead of just "text").
This also fixes some issues in copy(1) and paste(1).