In 7c5e30daaa, the focus was "only" on
Userland/Libraries/, whereas this commit cleans up the remaining
headers in the repo, and any new badly-formatted include.
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 :^)
Previously, the build directory for building serenity components was a
temporary directory in /tmp which was generated whenever a different
serenity component was built.
Instead of doing that, Hack Studio now simply uses the Build/ directory
inside the Serenity repository, similar to what is done in host builds.
This makes it so we don't re-build when switching back and forth between
different components.
It also makes it easier to inspect the build products.
Previously when generating the HackStudio CMake build file,
we used all dependency libraries that are specified in
target_link_libraries commands as the dependencies of a library.
The recent addition of LibCryptSHA2 broke things because that library
is not declared with serenity_lib like most other libraries
(it uses special linking properties).
This means that we don't declare it in the CMake file we generate.
To fix this, we now filter the dependencies and only include libraries
that we define in the build CMake file.
ProjectBuilder takes care of building and running the current project
from Hack Studio.
The existing functionality of building javascript and Makefile projects
remains, and in addition to it the ability to build standalone serenity
components is added.
If the Hack Studio project is the serenity repository itself,
ProjectBuilder will attempt building the component that the currently
active file belongs to.
It does so by creating a new CMake file which adds the component as a
build subdirectory.
It also parses all CMake files in the serenity repository to gather all
available libraries. It declares the libraries and their dependencies in
this CMake file.
It then uses the HACKSTUDIO_BUILD CMake option to direct the build
system to use this CMake file instead of doing a full system build.