These are pretty rare, but they do come up in some places and it's not
hard to support. The Gfx::Font information is approximate (and bad)
but we can fix that separately.
Right now we just guess that the x-height is glyph_height/2, which is
obviously not accurate. We currently don't store the x-height in fonts,
so that's something we'll need to fix.
The way getsockopt is implemented for socket types requires us to push
down Userspace<T> using into those interfaces. This change does so, and
utilizes proper copy implementations instead of the kind of haphazard
pointer dereferencing that was occurring there before.
When using Userspace<T> there are certain syscalls where being able
to cast between types is needed. You should be able to easily cast
away the Userspace<T> wrapper, but it's perfectly safe to be able to
cast the internal type that is being wrapped.
When compiling with "-Os", GCC produces the following pattern for
atomic decrement (which is used by our RefCounted template):
or eax, -1
lock xadd [destination], eax
Since or-ing with -1 will always produce the same output (-1), we can
mark the result of these operations as initialized. This stops us from
complaining about false positives when running the shell in UE. :^)
A ListValue never stores null Values, so it makes sense to restrict it.
This also propagates use of NonnullRefPtr to the create() helpers.
There's a small bit of awkwardness around the use of initializer_list,
since we cannot directly construct a NonnullRefPtrVector from one.
It backward-deletes a word like Ctrl-W, but it has a slightly
different definition of what a word is. For example, with the
caret behind `gcc -fsanitize=address`, Ctrl-W would delete
'-fsanitize=address' but Alt-backspace would only delete 'address'.
All these shortcuts treat consecutive alnums as a word, not consecutive
non-spaces.
For example, `alias KILL='kill -9'` can now be written by typing it
out lowercase, then hitting ctrl-a alt-f alt-u.
Ctrl-W still treats a word as a sequence of non-spaces. Alt-backspace
in a future patch will add the ability to backward-delete a word
that's a sequence of alnums.