Similar to POSIX read, the basic read and write functions of AK::Stream
do not have a lower limit of how much data they read or write (apart
from "none at all").
Rename the functions to "read some [data]" and "write some [data]" (with
"data" being omitted, since everything here is reading and writing data)
to make them sufficiently distinct from the functions that ensure to
use the entire buffer (which should be the go-to function for most
usages).
No functional changes, just a lot of new FIXMEs.
`Stream` will be qualified as `AK::Stream` until we remove the
`Core::Stream` namespace. `IODevice` now reuses the `SeekMode` that is
defined by `SeekableStream`, since defining its own would require us to
qualify it with `AK::SeekMode` everywhere.
These are currently being implicitly including by FixedPoint.h by way of
Format.h. The former will soon be removed from the latter, which would
otherwise cause a compile error in these files.
We don't have anything fallible in there yet, but we will soon switch
the seekback buffer to the new `CircularBuffer`, which has a fallible
constructor.
We have to do the same for the internal `GzipDecompressor::Member`
class, as it needs to construct a `DeflateCompressor` from its received
stream.
This is to differentiate between the upcoming `AllocatingMemoryStream`,
which automatically allocates memory as needed instead of operating on a
static memory area.
This allows us to either pass a reference, which keeps compatibility
with old code, or to pass a NonnullOwnPtr, which allows us to
comfortably chain streams as usual.
Next to functions like `is_eof` these were really confusing to use, and
the `read`/`write` functions should fail anyways if a stream is not
readable/writable.
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.
The relevant RFC section from
https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc7932#section-9.2
MSKIPBYTES * 8 bits: MSKIPLEN - 1, where MSKIPLEN is
the number of metadata bytes; this field is
only present if MSKIPBYTES is positive;
otherwise, MSKIPLEN is 0 (if MSKIPBYTES is
greater than 1, and the last byte is all
zeros, then the stream should be rejected as
invalid)
So when skip_bytes is zero we need to break and
re-align bytes.
Added the relevant test case that demonstrates this from:
https://github.com/google/brotli/blob/master/tests/testdata/x.compressed
The test-case is heavily inspired by:
https://github.com/google/brotli/blob/master/tests/testdata/x.compressed.01
Or in words: A metadata meta-block containing `Y` (which should be
ignored), and then the actual data (a single `Z`). The bug used to skip
one metadata byte too few, and thus read garbage.
Previously we said that the window size was always 512 bytes, which
caused errors during decompressing in apps outside of Serenity that
actually use this information.
Now, the value is always 7 (32 KiB).
Fixes: #14503