Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
|
|
|
|
DRTVWR-412 Bento (avatar skeleton extensions)
|
|
The present CMake logic wants to pass FIXED:NO to the linker for 64-bit
builds, which on the face of it seems like a Good Thing: it permits code to be
relocated in memory, preventing collisions if two libraries happen to want to
load into overlapping address ranges.
However the way it's being specified is wrong and harmful. Passing /FIXED:NO
to the compiler command line engages /FI (Forced Include!) of a nonexistent
file XED:NO -- producing lots of baffling fatal compile errors.
Thanks Callum for diagnosing this!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Some day llmake() will be unnecessary because compiler deduction of class
template arguments from constructor arguments has been approved by ISO.
|
|
LLPrivateMemoryPool and LLPrivateMemoryPoolManager have assumed that it's
always valid to cast a pointer to U32. With 64-bit pointers, no longer true.
|
|
with tests on ADDRESS_SIZE, which is now set on the compiler command line.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
autobuild 1.1 now supports expanding $variables within a config file --
support that was explicitly added to address this very problem. So now the
windows platform in autobuild.xml uses $AUTOBUILD_ADDRSIZE,
$AUTOBUILD_WIN_VSPLATFORM and $AUTOBUILD_WIN_CMAKE_GEN, which should handle
most of the deltas between the windows platform and windows64.
This permits removing the windows64 platform definition from autobuild.xml.
The one remaining delta between the windows64 and windows platform definitions
was -DLL_64BIT_BUILD=TRUE. But we can handle that instead by checking
ADDRESS_SIZE. Change all existing references to WORD_SIZE to ADDRESS_SIZE
instead, and set ADDRESS_SIZE to $AUTOBUILD_ADDRSIZE. Change the one existing
LL_64BIT_BUILD reference to test (ADDRESS_SIZE EQUAL 64) instead.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Visual C++ runtime produces typeid(MyClass).name() as "class MyClass".
It's prudent to check for the presence of that prefix before stripping off the
first six characters, but if the first comparison should ever fail, find()
would continue searching the rest of the string for "class " -- a search
guaranteed to fail. Use compare() instead.
|
|
|
|
A shocking number of LLSingleton subclasses had public constructors -- and in
several instances, were being explicitly instantiated independently of the
LLSingleton machinery. This breaks the new LLSingleton dependency-tracking
machinery. It seems only fair that if you say you want an LLSingleton, there
should only be ONE INSTANCE!
Introduce LLSINGLETON() and LLSINGLETON_EMPTY_CTOR() macros. These handle the
friend class LLSingleton<whatevah>;
and explicitly declare a private nullary constructor.
To try to enforce the LLSINGLETON() convention, introduce a new pure virtual
LLSingleton method you_must_use_LLSINGLETON_macro() which is, as you might
suspect, defined by the macro. If you declare an LLSingleton subclass without
using LLSINGLETON() or LLSINGLETON_EMPTY_CTOR() in the class body, you can't
instantiate the subclass for lack of a you_must_use_LLSINGLETON_macro()
implementation -- which will hopefully remind the coder.
Trawl through ALL LLSingleton subclass definitions, sprinkling in
LLSINGLETON() or LLSINGLETON_EMPTY_CTOR() as appropriate. Remove all explicit
constructor declarations, public or private, along with relevant 'friend class
LLSingleton<myself>' declarations. Where destructors are declared, move them
into private section as well. Where the constructor was inline but nontrivial,
move out of class body.
Fix several LLSingleton abuses revealed by making ctors/dtors private:
LLGlobalEconomy was both an LLSingleton and the base class for
LLRegionEconomy, a non-LLSingleton. (Therefore every LLRegionEconomy instance
contained another instance of the LLGlobalEconomy "singleton.") Extract
LLBaseEconomy; LLGlobalEconomy is now a trivial subclass of that.
LLRegionEconomy, as you might suspect, now derives from LLBaseEconomy.
LLToolGrab, an LLSingleton, was also explicitly instantiated by
LLToolCompGun's constructor. Extract LLToolGrabBase, explicitly instantiated,
with trivial subclass LLToolGrab, the LLSingleton instance.
(WARNING: LLToolGrabBase methods have an unnerving tendency to go after
LLToolGrab::getInstance(). I DO NOT KNOW what should be the relationship
between the instance in LLToolCompGun and the LLToolGrab singleton instance.)
LLGridManager declared a variant constructor accepting (const std::string&),
with the comment:
// initialize with an explicity grid file for testing.
As there is no evidence of this being called from anywhere, delete it.
LLChicletBar's constructor accepted an optional (const LLSD&). As the LLSD
parameter wasn't used, and as there is no evidence of it being passed from
anywhere, delete the parameter.
LLViewerWindow::shutdownViews() was checking LLNavigationBar::
instanceExists(), then deleting its getInstance() pointer -- leaving a
dangling LLSingleton instance pointer, a land mine if any subsequent code
should attempt to reference it. Use deleteSingleton() instead.
~LLAppViewer() was calling LLViewerEventRecorder::instance() and then
explicitly calling ~LLViewerEventRecorder() on that instance -- leaving the
LLSingleton instance pointer pointing to an allocated-but-destroyed instance.
Use deleteSingleton() instead.
|
|
|
|
Until we reimplement LLCoros on Boost.Fiber, we must hand-implement
coroutine-local data. That presently takes the form of a map keyed on
llcoro::id, whose values are the stacks of currently-initializing LLSingleton
instances.
But since the viewer launches an open-ended number of coroutines, we could end
up with an open-ended number of map entries unless we intentionally prune the
map. So every time we pop the stack to empty, remove that map entry.
This could result in thrashing, a given coroutine's 'initializing' stack being
created and deleted for almost every LLSingleton instantiated by that
coroutine -- but the number of different LLSingletons is necessarily static,
and the lifespan of each is the entire rest of the process. Even a couple
dozen LLSingletons won't thrash that badly.
|
|
The stack we maintain of which LLSingletons are currently initializing only
makes sense when associated with a particular C++ call stack. But each
coroutine introduces another C++ call stack!
Move the initializing stack from function-static storage to
LLSingletonBase::MasterList. Make it a map keyed by llcoro::id. Each coro then
has a stack of its own.
This introduces more dependencies on the MasterList singleton, requiring
additional LLSingleton_manage_master workarounds.
|
|
|
|
Previous logic could possibly leave mStartTime uninitialized, producing fatal
warnings with gcc 4.7.
|
|
Until now, the "main coroutine" (the initial context) of each thread left
LLCoros::Current() NULL. The trouble with that is that llcoro::get_id()
returns that CoroData* as an opaque token, and we want distinct values for
every stack in the process. That would not be true if the "main coroutine" on
thread A returned the same value (NULL) as the "main coroutine" on thread B,
and so forth. Give each thread's "main coroutine" a dummy heap CoroData
instance of its own.
|