Before, we wouldn't enable virtualization on Windows anymore unless
SERENITY_VIRTUALIZATION_SUPPORT was set explicitly. As far as we know,
there's no automatic way of detecting whether WHPX is enabled or not. So
we'll just enable virtualization on Windows by default, and if that
doesn't work the user can still disable it manually with
SERENITY_VIRTUALIZATION_SUPPORT=0.
Previously we would quit the event loop of a dialog without checking if
it is still alive in the Window::close overload. This patch updates the
implementation to make use of the existing done method, handling closes
more gracefully.
This fixes a CommandPalette crashing when opening an about dialog, as
since 1074c399f3 the command palette
dialog would handle a WindowBecameInactive event after closing itself
due to the action already being called.
I've noticed that the KVM hypervisor vendor ID string contained null
terminators in the serialized JSON string in /proc/cpuinfo - let's avoid
that, and err on the side of caution and strip them from all strings
built from CPUID register values. They may not be fixed width after all.
Various Clang binaries are now considered when choosing the compiler for
Lagom.
The selection precedence is as follows:
1. Use the compiler set via CC/CXX if it's a supported version
2. Use newest available GCC if it's supported
3. Use newest available Clang if it's supported
Note that Apple Clang is still not supported, as its versioning scheme
and the fact that it masquerades as both GCC and Clang would complicate
this logic even more.
Fixes#12253
With this flag set to true only the icon of the title button is painted.
This is useful for themes with a more non-serenity look such as
Coffee and Cupertino (that currently try to hide the button).
The issue was caused by the usage of the
selection_end_column_within_line variable as if it was the visual line.
This is fixed by taking the minimum between this value and the length of
a visual line.
Previously, when you selected to have a custom format, whatever was in
the custom-format box would get replaced with the format for
12-hour-without-seconds. Now, it keeps whatever was in the box before -
which is less disorientating, and lets you tweak the existing format.
This means that if you save and close ClockSettings with "24-hour"
and "Show seconds" both checked, then they will both be checked when
you re-open ClockSettings, instead of it showing as a "Custom" format.