Add a specialization for a void ValueType. This is useful if a generic
function wants to return a Result<T, E> where the user might not
actually care abut the T, and default it to void. In this case it
basically becomes Unexpected<E> instead of Result, but hey, it works :)
Add a function to destroy any keys that were set on the current thread
using the algorithm from Dr. POSIX's pthread_key_create. Add some
defines to pthread.h for pthread key use, and implement
pthread_key_delete. It has a prototype in pthread.h, but any program
trying to actually use it would be in for a link-time surprise.
Currently, keys are destroyed either via global destructors, with the
s_key_destroyer object, or in exit_thread. exit_thread is invoked by
pthread_exit, and transitively by pthread_create, via the
pthread_create_helper that ensures all threads created with the pthread
API properly clean up for themselves when they exit gracefully.
A future patch might make s_key_destroyer a C++11 thread_local instead,
assuming we get thread_local and thread_local destructors working.
Instead of specifying the boot argument to be root=/dev/hdXY, now
one can write root=PARTUUID= with the right UUID, and if the partition
is found, the kernel will boot from it.
This feature is mainly used with GUID partitions, and is considered to
be the most reliable way for the kernel to identify partitions.
This fixes a weird dependency graph in DisplaySettings. The widget itself
(which is described in `gml` now), no longer contains `root_widget()`.
The widget itself has been moved into a tabbed pane, to get it ready
to add some more features and bring it more up to date with the current
UI code.
Now that we have RTTI in userspace, we can do away with all this manual
hackery and use dynamic_cast.
We keep the is<T> and downcast<T> helpers since they still provide good
readability improvements. Note that unlike dynamic_cast<T>, downcast<T>
does not fail in a recoverable way, but will assert if the object being
casted is not a T.
RTTI is still disabled for the Kernel, and for the Dynamic Loader. This
allows for much less awkward navigation of class heirarchies in LibCore,
LibGUI, LibWeb, and LibJS (eventually). Measured RootFS size increase
was < 1%, and libgui.so binary size was ~3.3%. The small binary size
increase here seems worth it :^)
The ellipsis (...) in a menu item traditionally means that the action
will require more input before executing. In this case, you need to
provide a search string. :^)
Use the GNU LD option --no-dynamic-linker. This allows uncommenting some
code in the Kernel that gets upset if your ELF interpreter has its own
interpreter.
This makes window modality a bit more discoverable by indicating to the
user that the modal window must be closed before mouse interaction is
possible in the clicked window.
When calling set_checked(true) on an exclusive button, we will now
transfer focus to the newly checked button if one of its now-unchecked
siblings had focus before.
This makes windows that place initial focus somewhere in a group of
radio buttons look nicer when they show up, since focus will be on
whichever radio button was pre-checked, which may not be the first one
in the group.
Making an AbstractButton exclusive means that we enforce that only one
of the exclusive buttons within the same parent widget can be checked
at a time.
RadioButton was doing exactly the same thing, except in a custom way.
So just remove the custom code and make it exclusive. :^)