Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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This was forbidden, but AndreyK points out cases in which LLParamSingleton::
initSingleton() should in fact be allowed to circle back to its own instance()
method. Use a recursive_mutex instead of plain mutex to permit that; remove
LL_ERRS preventing it.
Add LLParamSingleton::instance() method that calls
LLParamSingleton::getInstance(). Inheriting LLSingleton::instance() called
LLSingleton::getInstance() -- not at all what we want.
Add LLParamSingleton unit tests.
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Simplify LLSingleton::SingletonLifetimeManager to SingletonInitializer: that
struct has not been responsible for deletion ever since LLSingletonBase
acquired dependency-ordered deleteAll().
Move SingletonData::mInitState changes from SingletonLifetimeManager to
constructSingleton() method. Similarly, constructSingleton() now sets
SingletonData::mInstance instead of making its caller store the pointer.
Add variadic arguments to LLSingleton::constructSingleton() so we can reuse it
for LLParamSingleton.
Add finishInitializing() method to encapsulate logic reused for
getInstance()'s INITIALIZING and DELETED cases.
Make LLParamSingleton a subclass of LLSingleton, just as LLLockedSingleton is
a subclass of LLParamSingleton. Make LLParamSingleton a friend of LLSingleton,
so it can access private members of LLSingleton without also granting access
to any DERIVED_CLASS subclass. This eliminates the need for protected
getInitState().
LLParamSingleton::initParamSingleton() reuses LLSingleton::constructSingleton()
and finishInitializing(). Its getInstance() method completely replaces
LLSingleton::getInstance(): in most EInitStates, LLParamSingleton::getInstance()
is an error.
Use a std::mutex to serialize calls to LLParamSingleton::initParamSingleton()
and getInstance(). While LLSingleton::getInstance() relies on the "initialized
exactly once" guarantee for block-scope static declarations, LLParamSingleton
cannot rely on the same mechanism.
LLLockedSingleton is now a very succinct subclass of LLParamSingleton -- they
have very similar functionality.
Giving the LLSINGLETON() macro variadic arguments eliminates the need for a
separate LLPARAMSINGLETON() macro, while continuing to support existing usage.
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Use them in place of awkward try/catch test boilerplate.
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mail drop does not have any outstanding events.
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instead of a variable of type decltype(expression).
Using SHGetKnownFolderPath(FOLDERID_Fonts) in LLFontGL::getFontPathSystem()
requires new Windows #include files.
A variable with a constructor can't be declared within the braces of a switch
statement, even outside any of its case clauses.
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Use LLStringUtil::getenv() or getoptenv() whenever we fetch a string that will
be used as a pathname.
Use LLFile::tmpdir() instead of getenv("TEMP").
As an added extra-special bonus, finally clean up $TMP/llcontrol-test-zzzzzz
directories that have been accumulating every time we run a local build!
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Move Windows-flavored llstring_getoptenv() to Windows-specific section of
llstring.cpp.
boost::optional type must be stated explicitly to initialize with a value.
On platforms where llwchar is the same as wchar_t, LLWString is the same as
std::wstring, so ll_convert specializations for std::wstring would duplicate
those for LLWString. Defend against that.
The compilers we use don't like 'return condition? { expr } : {}', in which we
hope to construct and return an instance of the declared return type without
having to restate the type. It works to use an explicit 'if' statement.
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Add ll_convert<TO, FROM> template, used as (e.g.):
ll_convert<std::string>(value_of_some_other_string_type);
There is no generic template implementation -- the template exists solely to
provide generic aliases for a bewildering family of llstring.h string-
conversion functions with highly-specific names. There's a generic
implementation, though, for the degenerate case where FROM and TO are
identical.
Add ll_convert<> specialization aliases for most of the string-conversion
functions declared in llstring.h, including the Windows-specific ones
involving llutf16string and std::wstring.
Add a mini-lecture in llstring.h about appropriate use of string types on
Windows.
Add LL_WCHAR_T_NATIVE llpreprocessor.h macro so we can detect whether to
provide separate conversions for llutf16string and std::wstring, or whether
those would collide because the types are identical.
Add inline ll_convert_wide_to_string(const std::wstring&) overloads so caller
isn't required to call arg.c_str(), which naturally permits an ll_convert
alias.
Add ll_convert_wide_to_wstring(), ll_convert_wstring_to_wide() as placeholders
for converting between Windows std::wstring and Linden LLWString, with
corresponding ll_convert aliases. We don't yet have library code to perform
such conversions officially; for now, just copy characters.
Add LLStringUtil::getenv(key) and getoptenv(key) functions. The latter returns
boost::optional<string_type> in case the caller needs to detect absence of a
given environment variable rather than simply accepting a default value.
Naturally getenv(), which accepts a default, is implemented using getoptenv().
getoptenv(), in turn, is implemented using an underlying llstring_getoptenv().
On Windows, llstring_getoptenv() returns boost::optional<std::wstring> (based
on GetEnvironmentVariableW()), whereas elsewhere, llstring_getoptenv() returns
boost::optional<std::string> (based on classic Posix getenv()).
The beauty of generic ll_convert is that the portable LLStringUtilBase<T>::
getoptenv() template can call the platform-specific llstring_getoptenv() and
transparently perform whatever conversion is necessary to return the desired
string_type.
Add windows_message<T>(error) template, with an overload that implicitly calls
GetLastError(). We provide a single concrete windows_message<std::wstring>()
implementation because that's what we get from Windows FormatMessageW() --
everything else is a generic conversion to the desired target string type.
This obviates llprocess.cpp's previous WindowsErrorString() implementation --
reimplement using windows_message<std::string>().
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Instead of returning a wchar_t* and requiring the caller to delete it later,
return a std::basic_string<wchar_t> that's self-cleaning. If the caller wants
a wchar_t*, s/he can call c_str() on the returned string.
Default the code_page parameter to CP_UTF8, since we try to be really
consistent about using UTF-8 encoding for all our internal std::strings.
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breaks
Improve the implementation so that escaping is computed only once
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Specifically, introduce an LLEventMailDrop("LoginSync"). When the updater
detects that an update is required, it will post to that rendezvous point.
When login.cgi responds with login failure, make the login coroutine wait (a
few seconds) for that ping from the updater.
If we receive that ping and if it contains a "reply" key, make the fail.login
listener respond to the updater with an indication of whether to proceed with
update.
If both login.cgi and the updater concur that an update is required, produce a
new confirmation message for the user and then (once user responds) tell the
updater to proceed. Otherwise, produce the usual login-failure message and
tell the updater never mind.
Introduce LLCoro::OverrideConsuming to provide temporary save/restore of the
set_consuming() / get_consuming() flag. It's a good idea to set the consuming
flag when retrieving data from an LLEventMailDrop.
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The updater is required to survive beyond termination of the viewer that
launched it so it can launch the next installer, or a replacement viewer.
Having the old viewer forcibly terminate it on shutdown would be counter-
productive.
Introduce a third LLLeap::create() overload taking LLProcess::Params, which
gives access to autokill, cwd and other options previously unsupported by
LLLeap. Reimplement the existing create() overloads in terms of this new one,
since LLLeapImpl::LLLeapImpl() is already based on LLProcess::Params anyway.
Use LLProcess::Params in LLAppViewer::init() to specify the updater process,
setting autokill=false.
Refactoring LLLeapImpl() apparently involved engaging an LLInitParam::Block
feature never before used: had to drag operator() into Multiple from its base
class TypedParam (as has been done in other TypedParam subclasses).
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Previously, LLEventMailDrop would send only the first queued event to a
newly-connected listener. If you wanted to flush all queued events, you'd have
to "pump" the queue by repeatedly disconnecting and reconnecting -- with no
good way to know when you'd caught up.
The new behavior makes LLEventMailDrop resemble a multi-valued future: a
rendezvous between producer and consumer that, once connected, pushes values
rather than requiring them to be pulled (as with a simple queue) -- regardless
of the relative order in which post() and listen() are called.
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